An OT cheery & bright, Loves Wrexham FC with all of her might, A wannabe twitcher, An 80’s hit switcher, Take That fan dancing all night! GB#116. Own views.
HE KNEW THE DOSSIER WAS FAKE. WEEKS LATER HE WAS DEAD IN A FIELD
Dr David Kelly was Britain's foremost weapons inspector. He spent years inspecting Iraqi facilities, earned a Nobel Peace Prize nomination, and knew more about Saddam's arsenal than almost anyone in government.
In 2002, Tony Blair's government published a dossier claiming Iraq could deploy chemical and biological weapons within 45 minutes. Britain went to war on the back of it. No weapons were ever found.
Kelly knew the dossier was rubbish. He said so, quietly, to a @BBC journalist. That conversation ended his career, his privacy, and ultimately his life.
The MOD carefully allowed his name to leak to the press as the BBC's source. He was then hauled before parliamentary committees, stripped apart by his own employer, and thrown to a media frenzy he never asked for.
Two days after giving evidence to MPs, the 59-year-old was found dead in woodland near his Oxfordshire home.
Instead of a proper inquest, Tony Blair asked Lord Hutton to run a private inquiry. Hutton concluded suicide. The inquest was opened, then suspended, and never resumed.
Eight senior legal and medical figures, including a coroner, later wrote to @thetimes saying the verdict was unsafe. They argued the wound found on Kelly's wrist, a severed ulnar artery, would not have caused sufficient blood loss to kill a healthy person.
There were no fingerprints on the knife found beside his body, even though he was not wearing gloves.
In 2011, Attorney General Dominic Grieve rejected all calls for a new inquest. He said the Hutton Inquiry was "tantamount to an inquest" and that further investigation would be dismissed by judges with irritation.
A man challenged the government's justification for a war that killed hundreds of thousands of people. He was publicly destroyed, died in mysterious circumstances, never got a proper inquest, and the people who sent him into that media storm faced no consequences whatsoever.
Tony Blair became a Middle East Peace Envoy the following year. You genuinely could not make it up.
Sources: @BBCNews, openDemocracy, Hansard, @thetimes | Hutton Report
A farmer dies in April 2026.
His son inherits the farm. The farm has been in the family since 1847.
The farm consists of: 300 acres of grazing pasture, a farmhouse built in 1892, a barn, a milking parlour, two tractors of varying ages, a Land Rover that runs about 70% of the time, and a herd of 180 Hereford-cross cattle.
On paper, the farm is worth approximately £3.2 million. This is because land near him has been bought recently by a London hedge fund looking for carbon credits, which has dragged the comparable value of every field within forty miles upward to a number nobody local can justify.
In cash, the farm produces a profit of about £28,000 a year in a good year. In a bad year it loses money. The son also works as a fencing contractor three days a week to keep the operation viable.
The inheritance tax bill on a £3.2 million estate, even at the reduced 20% rate, comes to approximately £140,000 after the increased threshold is applied. The son does not have £140,000. The son has never had £140,000. The son has £4,200 in his current account and an overdraft.
The son sells 60 acres to a developer to pay the tax. The developer puts solar panels on the 60 acres. The remaining herd cannot be sustained on the reduced land. The herd is sold. The barn becomes a holiday let.
A different family eats Brazilian beef this Christmas without knowing why the price went up.
The Treasury collects £140,000.
The land never produces British food again.
🚨 After a year of intensive research, Dr. William Makis presents what he calls the most critical graph of his career: the ivermectin dosing schedule for cancer.
@Ivermectincure
According to Dr. Makis, for most cancers — including breast, colon, lung, pancreatic, renal, gastric cancers, and leukemias — a starting dose of 1 mg per kg of body weight per day is recommended.
For a 60 kg individual, this equates to 60 mg daily:
• Five 12 mg pills
• Or 6 mL of liquid (approximately one teaspoon plus 1 mL)
The evidence for efficacy is described as compelling and dose-dependent:
• Dr. Shankara Chetty reportedly observed a prostate cancer patient’s PSA level drop from 89 to 11 on 45 mg/day.
• A case shared by Dr. Tess Lawrie showed CA-125 (an ovarian cancer marker) dropping from 288 to 22 on just 0.2 mg/kg.
• A long-term Castro study involving children with leukemia reportedly found no side effects after six months at 1 mg/kg.
For aggressive cancers (such as pancreatic or brain cancer), the blood-brain barrier may require higher doses. Dr. Makis cites:
• Dr. Landrito’s colleague with terminal gallbladder cancer, whose cancer reportedly disappeared after 14 months at 2 mg/kg/day.
The highest documented dose mentioned is 2.5 mg/kg (by Dr. Chetty), with only transient visual side effects that reportedly resolved.
Mainstream oncology does not currently offer this treatment. Supporters argue this is because ivermectin is generic, off-patent, and unprofitable, resulting in limited funding for large clinical trials.
Dr. Makis’s conclusion:
“Using ivermectin in cancer is honestly very straightforward. It is a very, very safe drug.”
His strong suggestion for those struggling: start at 1 mg/kg/day. According to anecdotal reports, it can be taken for many months — even over a year — with an excellent safety profile.
The power to fight may already be on your shelf.
Visit: https://t.co/REwGZCdhg9
#CancerResearch #Ivermectin #Fenbendazole
@MontgomeryToms One thing I will say, despite disagreeing, he did actually listen to the other side. He didn’t spit or name call, he walked alongside and had a debate. We can disagree, that’s life, but if you really believe then listen to other opinions anyway…
@DikenaClinton If all babies were spoken to like this from the beginning, the world would be a better place and communication skills would be formed earlier in life.
@exitthelemming Time passes so quickly. My eldest turned 22 yesterday, all I thought of all day was what we were doing 22 years ago. Being able to enjoy watching them grow is a privilege. Happy 12th Birthday to D1 - I hope you have a wonderful day!