The scale of what the Telegraph has uncovered requires the country to stop and process it methodically.
Between 2015 and 2021, more than £28 billion of British taxpayer money — through foreign aid payments and Covid emergency loans — was appropriated by terrorists, hostile foreign states and organised criminal networks.
The money is described as “beyond reach.”
Those who took it are “unpunished.”
Russia received grants via state-linked companies.
Islamic State received Covid loans.
Chinese military-linked firms received research investment.
And behind all of this sits a Cabinet Office report — the first government assessment ever to quantify this catastrophic leakage — that was deliberately suppressed to spare ministers embarrassment.
Now consider the timeline.
This covers six years spanning three Prime Ministers — Cameron, May, and Boris Johnson — and into the early Starmer era.
It covers the 2015-2019 Conservative governments, the pandemic response, and the transition to Labour.
Multiple Cabinets.
Multiple Chancellors. Multiple foreign secretaries.
All of them operating a foreign aid and emergency lending apparatus that — by the government’s own secret reckoning — channelled tens of billions to Britain’s worst enemies.
None of the money recovered.
None of the recipients punished.
And the report — rather than triggering urgent cross-party accountability — was quietly buried.
The public paid for this report.
They paid for the £28 billion it documents.
They were then deliberately denied the right to know either existed.
If there is a cleaner definition of contempt for the electorate, it is hard to imagine.
SERIOUSLY. Are we living in a parallel universe?
OpenAI paused its UK data centre project last month. Energy too expensive. Too hostile. Even for them. Starmer found out this morning apparently.
Because he spent today at a tech conference selling Britain's AI future. The same week OpenAI quietly walked away from it. He didn't mention that bit.
UK electricity prices 125% above the EU average. Four times higher than the United States. Highest in Europe. Data centres consume 5.8% of national electricity and rising. Your energy bills going UP because of it.
The Unilever factory employed hundreds of Warrington families for 130 years. Closed 2021. 116 job losses. The data centre replacing it? 20 to 50 permanent jobs. No legal obligation to create even those. THREE permanent AI job vacancies in Warrington in 2025. Three. Specialist roles brought in on fast tracked visas. Not for local kids.
Manufacturing creates thousands of jobs. Data centres create dozens. 8 million UK jobs at risk from AI. UK hit harder than any other major economy.
Your pension redirected by ministers into the tech companies building those data centres. Without your consent. Funding the machine that's replacing you.
And while he stood on that stage. 1,200 children safeguarded from grooming gangs every single month. Child abuse conviction data buried for years.
The world's biggest AI company just walked away from Britain because it couldn't afford to run here.
And he called that confidence.
Genetically Modified Mayo: Hellmann's 'Real' Mayonnaise now requires a bioengineered label on its jars.
Less than 2% of each jar is egg...98% is chemicals, oils, corn starch, EDTA & thickened with gums.
This isn’t food anymore — it’s a Frankenstein experiment in a jar. GMO corn, seed oils that inflame your arteries and disrupt hormones, EDTA that leaches minerals from your body, and synthetic gums that wreck your gut lining. Every spoonful is quietly feeding chronic disease, autoimmune chaos, and the slow poisoning of America’s families.
They slapped a “bioengineered” warning on it like it’s no big deal — because they know most people won’t read it. Hellmann’s sold its soul for profit while we were busy trusting the brand our grandparents used.
STOP FEEDING THIS TO YOUR KIDS.
Boycott it. Throw it out. Make your own in 60 seconds with real ingredients. Your body will thank you.
Quick Homemade Butter Mayo (Immersion Blender – makes about 1 cup)
Ingredients:
- 1 large egg (room temperature)
- 2 teaspoons fresh lemon juice
- 2 teaspoons Dijon mustard (or prepared mustard)
- ¼ teaspoon salt (or to taste; use ½ tsp if butter is unsalted)
- 1 cup (2 sticks) butter, melted and cooled slightly to warm (not hot)
Directions:
1. Place the egg, lemon juice, mustard, and salt in a tall narrow jar or container that just fits your immersion blender head.
2. Insert the immersion blender to the bottom and blend for a few seconds until combined.
3. With the blender running, slowly pour in the melted butter. Move the blender up and down gently as it thickens into creamy mayo (about 30-60 seconds total).
4. Taste and adjust salt or lemon if needed.
Store in a glass jar in the refrigerator for up to 1 week.
🇺🇸🔥 IT’S OFFICIAL: RFK JR. SHATTERS GLOBAL ORDER – U.S. completes WHO withdrawal with final message: “WE WILL NEVER BE RULED BY THEM AGAIN” [VIDEO]
🇺🇸🔥 HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced the full U.S. withdrawal from the World Health Organization. In a historic speech, he exposed the WHO’s failures during COVID and declared that American health policy will no longer answer to unelected foreign officials. This move reclaims national sovereignty, ends U.S. funding, and reshapes global health leadership.
🇺🇸🔥 RFK Jr. Just Took Down the WHO – “We Will Never Be Ruled by Them Again”
The IPCC says snowfall should become less frequent in a warming world. Yet when Japan was buried by record snow in January 2026, the explanation changed. Researchers claimed global warming increased the snowfall.
The storm itself was straightforward: a prolonged surge of Arctic air crossed the Sea of Japan, producing intense snowbands.
Sapporo transport shut down.
Aomori set depth records.
Communities across northern Honshu were buried. And Japan's army was even deployed.
Instead of simply pointing to the cold air outbreak though, researchers at Japan's Meteorological Institute instead ran climate model simulations.
The models concluded warming increased snowfall by about 7%. So the theory now reads: global warming reduces snow, except when it increases snow...
Under this framework, every possible outcome appears to confirm the same conclusion.
"A theory that explains everything explains nothing."
Sent to me today
Please consider:-
Most people still can’t see it.
Not because the signs aren’t there—but because they’re trapped inside a system designed to keep them asleep.
Some call it programming. Some call it deception. Some call it a spell.
But those who can see through the illusion were never meant to fit in.
Think about it.
We’ve always been the black sheep. The outsiders. The ones who questioned everything while others blindly followed. We were ridiculed, rejected, and pushed to the edges long before any of this began.
Maybe that wasn’t a coincidence.
Maybe it was preparation.
Preparation for a time when standing for truth would come at a cost. When speaking openly would invite attacks. When seeing reality clearly would separate you from the crowd.
While others struggle to understand what’s happening, we’ve spent our entire lives learning how to stand alone.
That’s why we’re still standing.
It’s like entering a battlefield you’ve already trained for your whole life. The chaos doesn’t break you because you’ve seen enough to know how the game works.
The world is changing.
The question is: will people wake up in time?
It's the 8th of June. JUNE.
Take a look outside the window.
15 degrees. Raining. Cake of grey cloud.
Imagine the level of brainwashing involved in convincing people the planet is burning.
The government would like a round of applause for having just announced their plans to create 50,000 apprenticeships in Britain.
Before you're tempted to give it, take a closer look at that figure.
Apprenticeship starts have fallen by almost 40% since 2015. The collapse was worst exactly where it matters most: Level 2, the entry rung, the first qualification a 16-year-old with no money and no connections ever climbs onto, is down 72%.
At the same time £400 million a year is poured into Level 7 - postgraduate courses for people who already hold degrees, the management classes topping up their CVs at the public's expense - while the boy who wanted to be an electrician finds the bottom three rungs of the ladder sawn clean off. Hope you can jump-good.
The mechanism is its own scandal. The Apprenticeship Levy this same political class brought in to fund all this, back in 2017, achieved the opposite: between 2019 and 2022 some £3.3 billion of it went unspent and was handed straight back to the Treasury. So they returned, unused, more than four times the £725 million package they are asking you to cheer today. They had the money. They had it, and they posted it back, because they're clueless morons, inept to the very tips of their fingers, with no idea what to do with it.
And now that bill lands on everyone. The skills shortage costs Britain between £30 and £39 billion a year in lost output, and 76% of employers cannot fill the roles in front of them. None of it is fate. Germany and Switzerland send roughly half of every year's school-leavers through serious apprenticeships and build the most capable workforces in Europe; we closed our further-education colleges and watched adult enrolment fall from 3.2 million to 1.6 million in a single decade.
Where the government counts 50,000 places, we're going to build a consensus that counts every worker in the country. At the heart of plan I designed with Progress is the Hallmark: a verified, portable, nationally-stamped proof that you can do something of real worth - and a guarantee that every working adult earns at least one new one each year, for the first 15 years of a career. 15 skills, stamped and banked, each one worth more in your wages than the last. We will scrap the failed Levy for a Skill Capital Levy the Treasury is forbidden to raid; build 50 Hallmark Colleges, backed by £5 billion, the largest investment in technical education this country has ever made; and teach every child to code from the age of five.
The government's ceiling is 50,000 young people. Our floor is the entire British people, and the aim is stated without embarrassment: that within a single generation, the British are the most skilled population on earth.
That is the gap between a state that administers your decline and one that means to end it. They count the places they have added back. We intend to count, one stamped skill at a time, the rebuilding of a country that had forgotten its own workers were worth anything at all.
People ask how I stay carnivore while travelling. I don't think about it for a second.
I look at the menu. I find the meat. I order the meat. I eat the meat and leave whatever garnish wandered onto the plate uninvited.
I don't interrogate the waiter about which oil the steak met. I'm not about to quiz a Greek man about his pan. Three hundred and sixty days a year I eat beef, eggs and butter, and that balance buys me a steak cooked in something I'd rather it wasn't, in a country I'm enjoying, without a flicker of guilt.
The people panicking over one restaurant meal have it backwards. A body kept robust all year can shrug off a single dinner. The entire point of eating well is that the odd exception can't lay a glove on you.
Rigidity gets mistaken for discipline. Most of the time it's just fragility wearing a costume.
Order the meat, leave the garnish, and enjoy the country you actually travelled to see.
A couple of weeks ago above average temperatures were greeted as absolute proof of man-made catastrophic climate change.
So the below average temps this week must therefore disprove the "climate change" theory.
"Oh but that's just weather!!!"
So was the sunshine, dumbass.
The best time to acquire bitcoin is when normies are convinced that it's 'dead', crypto bros are crying all over the timeline, and nocoiners are gloating, dunking on it, and talking about how it will never hit another all time high.
Do with this what you will.
They told you the planet is dying… and you’re the problem.
Your food.
Your habits.
Your existence.
Meanwhile, behind closed doors, something else is growing.
AI data centres in the UK alone could pump out 123 million tonnes of carbon emissions — the equivalent of millions of human lives over a decade.
But where’s the outrage?
Instead, they blame cows… tax farmers… and squeeze the people who actually feed you.
While tech giants expand quietly… signing deals… building systems that never sleep… and never get questioned.
Different rules.
Different targets.
Same script.
So let me ask you…
Why are everyday people being punished…
while the biggest emitters keep getting rewarded?
Is this really about saving the planet…
or controlling who pays the price?
Drop your thoughts below — I want to hear what you think.
And if this made you stop and think for even a second… share it.
More people need to see this.
I LOVE CO2: 💚
When you understand that CO2 is beneficial to all life on planet Earth, that vegetation loves it, as well as plankton and phytoplankton, and that our greenhouse gases are 95% water vapour, and that CO2 at current concentrations or higher has negligible impact on temperature compared to water vapour or indeed compared to Solar cycle trends which cause the warming itself, of which CO2 is just a result. And that life adapts faster to increases of temperature & CO2 than in decreases in either. Then you will love CO2 for the rest of your life!
CPI is just a metric to boil frogs.
It’s literally crowd control…
The real inflation rate is tied to the rate of monetary expansion (~7-8% annually)
If society knew that, we’d have riots
Even still, more people are becoming aware of this because energy bills, groceries, restaurants, gas and all of the important things that people buy have skyrocketed
The dollar has actually lost ~50% of its buying power since 2019
You can work as hard as you want and AI can give us as many productivity gains as you can think of, but all of that will never outrun the money printer
The money printer sets your hours no matter how productive society is
Bitcoin does and will fix this
With a fixed supply and nowhere to dilute the money, everyone sees those productivity gains in the form of lower prices
Deflation is only bad for a system designed to debase its participants
Deflation is the natural state of a free market. We deserve prices falling as we get better at doing stuff
This past week, on a test bed in Britain, a Rolls-Royce jet engine ran at full take-off power on pure hydrogen, putting out water vapour instead of carbon.
Nobody on Earth had managed it before. It is the sort of thing that ought to stop the country in its tracks, and it will be forgotten by the weekend.
Leave aside the recent paroxysms of renewed net-zero insanity from Derelict Ed and the pervasive atmosphere of offended envy that greets much homegrown achievement nowadays in Britain. This engineering is a wonder, and it's British to the bone.
We gave the world the jet engine in the first place - Frank Whittle, a Coventry man and an RAF officer, patented it in 1930 while the Air Ministry assured him it was a curiosity. Rolls-Royce is today one of perhaps three firms anywhere that can build a large aero engine at the outer edge of the possible, and it has just done what most of the industry swore was twenty years away.
As usual, you marvel at how little the people who govern us had to do with it. The engineers in Derby are world-class; the stewardship above them is third-rate. They pulled off a global first while paying the most expensive industrial electricity in the developed world to keep the power on over the bench - a weight no German, American or Gulf rival has to carry. We produce frontier brilliance on the shop floor and fritter it away at the despatch box, and we have done for two generations.
That is the maddening shape of modern Britain: brilliance from below, sub- (or, indeed, ultra-) mediocrity from above. The people here who actually make things are still among the best in the world; the state that is meant to back them treats a firm like Rolls-Royce as a photocall today and a takeover target tomorrow, and prices its energy as though it would prefer the next plant were built in Texas.
Progress starts from the other end. Give these people what every rival government gives its champions and we beg ours to do without: the cheap, abundant power their competitors already enjoy, a supply chain built around them, and a state that guards a national asset rather than auctioning it. The hard part of a British revival - the talent, the nerve, the engineering - is already done, and was done again this week, by people who deserve a far better country than the one currently sitting above them.
We just taught an engine to breathe fire and exhale water. The least we owe the men and women who managed it is a government and a state as brilliant as they are.
The very first food every human gets is high-fat, high-cholesterol, and entirely animal.
Breast milk takes about half its calories from fat. It is rich in cholesterol. It is built for the fastest brain growth of your whole life.
No fibre. No grains. No vegetables. Nature didn't think the newborn needed a scrap of any of it.
It floods the baby with saturated fat and cholesterol, on purpose, because that is what builds a brain.
That same baby grows up and is told the exact combination will kill him.
The first meal nature ever designed for you is the one the guidelines now warn you off.
Funny that nobody warns the baby.
The cholesterol appointment, translated. The director's cut.
"Your cholesterol is a little high." Your cholesterol has crossed a line drawn by a committee, a line that has quietly crept lower every few years, always just as a new drug needs a new market.
"We like to be proactive here." I have four minutes, a prescription pad, and a target someone above me would dearly like me to hit.
"It's just a precaution." We are treating a thing you do not have, to prevent a thing you probably won't get, with a tablet you'll take every day until something entirely unrelated finishes the job.
"The benefits are well established." In men who had already had a heart attack. You haven't. But the leaflet is printed and the afternoon is long.
"Diet and exercise first, naturally." He says, already writing the prescription.
"Most people tolerate it well." And when the aching legs and the brain fog arrive, we'll have a lovely long chat about how you're simply not as young as you were.
"Let's just get that number down." Let's. The number is the patient now. You're the cardboard box it was delivered in.
"See you in a year." By which point you'll have completely forgotten you walked in here feeling perfectly well.
"Safe and effective."
A statin works by blocking a single enzyme, HMG-CoA reductase, the tap at the very top of what biochemists call the mevalonate pathway.
The trouble is what else runs off that pathway. Turn the tap down and you turn all of this down with it:
- Cholesterol, the stuff of every cell membrane, every steroid hormone, and the raw material for vitamin D
- CoQ10, the spark plug your mitochondria use to make energy, packed most densely into the heart and the muscles
- Dolichols, which your cells need to build and tag their proteins correctly
- Heme A, a working part of the machinery that lets your cells use oxygen at all
- The prenylated proteins that run cell signalling, internal traffic, and repair
Choking that one enzyme is less a precision strike on a rogue molecule than a hand laid on the master valve, with everything downstream getting less.
They took the one product on that list they'd been taught to fear, built a drug to throttle the whole pathway that makes it, and printed "safe and effective" on the box.
The cholesterol goes down. So does everything it was sharing the pipe with.
Nobody put that on the leaflet.
BREAKING:
The world's 4th richest country just bought Bitcoin.
Luxembourg allocated 1% of its entire sovereign wealth fund into BTC.
Not a retail investor. Not a hedge fund.
A government putting national wealth into Bitcoin.
Norway is watching. Singapore is watching.
Every sovereign wealth fund on the planet is watching.
When the 4th richest country in the world chooses Bitcoin. The other 190 countries just took notes.
Governments don't allocate national wealth into experiments.
They allocate into inevitabilities.