We make our own bread and as a result of the UK government's mandate to include folic acid (which is not the natural folate) in white flour, we are voting with our feet.
Money talks so we're switching to Stoate and Sons.
#FolicAcid
Adding uncontrolled doses of Folic Acid to our flour is setting a precedent for medication of all kinds to be added to all our food!
Alarm bells are ringing!
Please sign and share the petition.
🔥🔥 WEDNESDAY THE 8TH OF JULY 2026 A VERY IMPORTANT UPDATE WITH TWO SIGNIFICANT DEVELOPMENTS 🔥🔥
Link one, confirmation from the IOPC, the Metropolitan Police Professional Standards Directorate have been advised to investigate my complaint.
https://t.co/ryiMdyxHyW
Link two, confirmation from The Scottish Police Authority via an FOI response, thirty six complaints have been received and many are being actively investigated.
Point number 7 refers.
https://t.co/RFs7ts8qXf
Video explaining all attached below.
Thank you Ian Clayton @EthicalApproach Lawyer and lead investigator at Ethical Approach UK and Solicitor Philip Hyland of PJH Law @pjhlaw for your continued hard work, support of me and for your unwavering dedication in exposing these crimes and to hold those responsible to account.
Most people don't even know there's a difference between folate and folic acid.
Folate is the natural form of vitamin B9 found in foods. Folic acid is the synthetic form that's being added to much of the UK's non-wholemeal wheat flour.
Just look at the ingredient list for M&S Wholemeal bread!
This is just one example of why it's now important to read the labels if you don't want loads of extras @marksandspencer
Just a reminder that the forced medication this is Folic acid is everywhere now. We all need to check very hard when buying. @marksandspencer people do not want this and will stop buying your products containing it. I’m binning these and won’t buy again. #folicacid
If, like my household, yours contains zero people at risk of benefiting from folic acid supplementation, and non-zero people at risk of harm from it, the weekly shop is going to become even more of an obstacle course after December. So many family staples besides bread and breakfast cereals will contain folic acid.
And to those who say "you shouldn't be eating processed junk like this" I say two things:
1. Government and Big Food shouldn't be making shopping healthily so difficult. Government is supposed to serve us. Not every family has the time or money to cook everything from scratch, or research whether the ingredients the government says are safe really are;
and
2. Do you think they will stop at adding folic acid to flour and, therefore, processed food? Rice will be next. Then all pasta (currently durum wheat is exempt). Where will it all end? What other "completely harmless medicines" will they add, to which other staple foods? Statins in pies? Metformin in fizzy drinks? Bisoprolol in bacon?
One day the technocrats will come for your staple food of choice. If we lose this fight, your fight, over quinoa, or bulgur wheat, or organic free range quail's eggs, will be unwinnable.
Please sign and share the petition in the comments if you haven't already.
Sometimes the most revealing documents are not operational manuals. They are strategic planning documents.
In 2020, the College of Policing published Policing in England and Wales: Future Operating Environment 2040.
It is not a Covid document. It is something arguably more important.
It sets out how policing believed the next twenty years would evolve, identifying the strategic challenges which police leaders believed would increasingly shape policing.
Among those challenges are:
• artificial intelligence and surveillance;
• digital disinformation;
• declining trust in institutions;
• increasing societal complexity;
• climate change;
• technological convergence;
• growing influence of non-state actors;
• social fragmentation;
• expanding information spaces; and;
• the need for new models of governance.
One passage particularly caught my attention - The report states that policing's existing structures are essentially modelled on the early industrial period - vertical, hierarchical, fragmented and bureaucratic and questions whether incremental change will be sufficient.
It suggests policing may ultimately need radically different models of leadership, governance, citizen engagement and service delivery.
Elsewhere it acknowledges that future policing will face profound questions concerning AI, surveillance, disinformation, legitimacy and public trust.
It repeatedly emphasises that governance must develop alongside capability.
Read that alongside the documentary record which has now emerged concerning Operation Talla.
Compare it with the NPCC guidance.
Compare it with the Speirs Directive.
Compare it with the growing body of FOI disclosures from multiple public authorities.
Whether one ultimately agrees or disagrees with any particular conclusion is almost secondary.
The more important observation is this....
Britain was not simply policing events. It was operating within a sophisticated strategic environment in which governance, information, technology, legitimacy, public confidence and national coordination were already recognised as defining issues for the future.
The documentary record deserves to be read as a whole, not as isolated documents. Only then does the larger constitutional picture begin to emerge and make sense easily.
The report is well worth reading - Here's a link:
https://t.co/Hgxaxrvwe8
The easiest way to fight the evils of government and the establishment is to be optimistic, positive and cheerful, to resist their illogical, unjust and false demands, and answer only to a higher power than them.