๐จTHIS SHOULD SCARE EVERYONE๐จ
While Prime Minister Carney deepens Canadaโs partnership with the UK โ including co-developing โnation-building digital public infrastructureโ and aligning on child safety โ the UK just ordered Apple and Google to install scanning software on every phone and computer sold in the country.
Not an app. Not social media. On the device itself. Your camera. Your photos. Your messages. Scanned before they can even be encrypted.
Signal โ one of the most trusted privacy companies on Earth โ called it exactly what it is: โinvisible surveillance infrastructure switched on by default.โ
The governmentโs excuse? Protecting children.
But hereโs the part that should terrify every Canadian:
The same law requires the Prime Ministerโs personal sign-off to spy on a politicianโฆ while ordinary citizens get zero protection and no opt-out.
Once this infrastructure exists, history shows the scope never shrinks. Today itโs โnudity.โ Tomorrow itโs whatever the government decides is a threat โ including political speech.
Carneyโs Liberals already rammed through their own censorship and backdoor bills before vanishing for summer. Now theyโre actively aligning Canada with the exact UK model thatโs turning every citizenโs pocket into a government listening post.
This isnโt about child safety. Itโs about control.
They always sell it as โcommon senseโ and โfor your own protection.โ
Until itโs not.
Canada First means rejecting the surveillance state before itโs installed by default in every Canadian device.
We donโt need invisible backdoors. We donโt need government scanning our private lives. And we sure as hell donโt need to import the UKโs authoritarian tech agenda.
#cdnpoli #Carney #SurveillanceState #DigitalPrivacy #BillC22 #ChildSafetyExcuse #CanadaFirst
A spiral carved on a stone, sealed in the dark for 4,000 years. ๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ท๓ ฌ๓ ณ๓ ฟ๐ฌ๐ง
Nobody knows what it means. But once a year, the sun still finds it.
Around 3,000 BC, a Welsh farming community on Anglesey cut massive slabs of stone and raised a chamber inside a mound. Then they did something extraordinary. They aligned the passage to the rising sun on the summer solstice.
Once a year, on the longest day, sunlight threads the doorway and floods the chamber for three minutes. Then it moves on.
Inside, they carved a single stone with a tight spiral. One of the oldest carved stones in Britain. Welsh hands cut it 5,000 years ago, and to this day nobody can say what it represents.
They gathered there for two thousand years. Then they sealed the chamber and walked away. The mound held the dark until Victorian archaeologists opened the passage and the summer sun threaded the doorway again. ๐
It still does. Every June 21st, locals walk back to Bryn Celli Ddu and stand at the chamber wall, lit by the same sun through the same stone door their ancestors built.
Welsh people built it. Welsh people kept it. Welsh people still walk to it.
Help us remember who we are. Help us remember every British achievement. ๐๐
๐ https://t.co/rih7iKwnvf ๐
Be part of us. โ๏ธ๐ฌ๐ง
Be Proud Of Us. ๐๐ฌ๐ง
You were told mathematics began with the Greeks or the Arabs. ๐ค
Three carved chalk drums from a Yorkshire grave might prove otherwise. ๐ฅ๐ฌ๐ง
In 1889 they were found buried with a five year old child. For 130 years nobody knew what they were for. โณ
Then in 2018 researchers measured them. The proportions appear to encode a standard unit of length. ๐
Wind a cord ten times around the smallest drum and you get the โlong footโ, about 32cm. The same unit researchers believe was used to lay out Stonehenge. ๐ชจ
A fourth drum later turned up over 200 miles south in Sussex. Same measurements. The chalk ones were likely replicas of working tools carved in wood. ๐ชต
Not in a kingโs grave. Not in a treasury. Buried with a small child, so the knowledge would be remembered. ๐ฏ๏ธ
British people were measuring the world before England had a name. ๐ฌ๐ง
Long before we had a name, this island was measuring the world.
Help us make sure that our history is never forgotten again. ๐๐
๐ https://t.co/rih7iKwnvf ๐
Be part of us. โ๏ธ๐ฌ๐ง
Be Proud Of Us. ๐๐ฌ๐ง
When two groups of penguins meet, they often pause for what looks like a brief exchange before continuing on their way. If one joins the wrong group, a companion may follow to guide it back ๐ง
At first glance, it looks like a group of fluffy kittens crossing the road. But in reality, these are Pallasโs cats, also known as manuls โ one of the rarest and most elusive wild cats on the planet.
๐ฌ๐ง On a Berkshire hillside there is a chalk horse 3,000 years old.
100 generations of British people have refused to let it fade.
Its name is the Uffington White Horse. It sits on the chalk of the Berkshire Downs. And it was cut around 1,000 BC by Britons of the Late Bronze Age.
They cut a trench into the turf. And filled it with crushed chalk. They cut a horse 110 metres long. Visible from miles.
Chalk hillside art does not last. Grass grows. Silt fills. Without care, a chalk figure disappears within a generation.
๐๏ธ The Uffington White Horse should have vanished by the Iron Age. It did not.
Because every generation that has lived near it has scoured it. Cleared the grass. Refilled the chalk. Kept the design alive.
The Iron Age tended it. Rome tended it. The Anglo-Saxons named the hill after it. A Welsh poem of 600 AD mentioned it as already ancient. Medieval villagers held a festival to scour it. Victorian villagers wrote songs about it. And every year, modern volunteers continue.
3,000 years of British people. Bronze Age carvers. Iron Age tribes. Roman Britons. Anglo-Saxon farmers. Medieval villagers. Victorian families. And the British still here today.
The carvers who cut the horse became Britons. Their descendants became the British. 100 generations have tended the same horse. 100 generations have refused to let it fade. The horse is alive because the people have stayed.
This is what continuity looks like. Not a memory. Not a museum. A horse kept alive by hand.
๐ฌ๐ง If you want to know whether the British are still here, look up.
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The chalk has been re-cut by hand for 3,000 years.
Most British kids have never been up the hill.
Our work is made in Britain, for Britain.
Take your kids up the hill. ๐
๐ https://t.co/rih7iKwnvf ๐
Be part of us. โ๏ธ๐ฌ๐ง
Be Proud Of Us. ๐๐ฌ๐ง
There are a number of deer in the Loire valley in France that have been consuming fermented fruits and are โfranklyโ pissed. Police have issued alerts to drivers telling them to beware.
๐ฅ Channel 4: https://t.co/RV39nSdd5J
๐ฌ๐ง In a Welsh sea cave 33,000 years ago... ๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ท๓ ฌ๓ ณ๓ ฟ
A young man was buried by his people with red ochre and grave goods.
It is the oldest formal burial ever found in Western Europe. ๐ฌ๐ง๐ช๐บ
Goat's Hole cave sits high in a Welsh sea cliff on the Gower Peninsula. Above the sea, beneath the headland.
33,000 years ago, this coast looked nothing like it does today. The sea was lower. The land was colder. The Bristol Channel was mammoth steppe.
But the cave was already there.
A young man died. He was around 21 years old. Slender.
๐ฏ๏ธ And his people prepared him.
They wrapped him in cured hide. They covered him with red ochre โ a pigment they used only for the dead. They placed grave goods beside him. A carved rod of mammoth ivory. Perforated wolf teeth. Periwinkle shells from the shore.
They did not bury him quickly. They did not bury him alone. They did not bury him without his things. They buried him with grief.
Time passed. The sea rose. The cliff stayed. And the young man slept.
In 1823, the Reverend William Buckland of Oxford found the bones. And got everything about them wrong.
He decided the bones belonged to a Roman-era prostitute.
He called the burial the ๐Red Lady of Paviland๐
He was wrong on three counts.
The bones were not Roman. They were Paleolithic.
The bones were not female. They were male.
And the bones were not a prostitute. They were a young man buried by his people with dignity and grief.
The people who buried him did not vanish. Their descendants moved across these islands as the climate changed.
They became Britons. Their descendants became the British. And the British still bury their dead with care.
๐ฌ๐ง Dignity is one of the oldest things on these islands. And the people who feel it are still here.
โโโโโโโโโโโโโโ
The Red Lady is not a lady.
He is our oldest link to the world that made us.
This video was made in Britain. So our children inherit what made us.
We can't do it without you. ๐
๐ https://t.co/rih7iKwnvf ๐
Be part of us. โ๏ธ๐ฌ๐ง
Be Proud Of Us. ๐๐ฌ๐ง
The United Nations has scrapped its worstโcase climate scenario.
Now is the time for a reckoning.
Entire countries shut down oil and gas and made themselves poorer based on the climate hoax.
Climate alarmists must be discredited, defunded, and issue formal apologies.
๐ฌ๐ง Our island once stretched further. ๐ฌ๐ง
An entire country now lies beneath the North Sea.
And it still gives us new discoveries.
This is the story of Doggerland. The missing island of Europe.
10,000 years ago, the sea looked different. Britain was joined to Europe by a green plain. Wider than England is today.
Rivers, marshlands, low hills, herds of red deer.
And Mesolithic families followed those herds. Hunters. Fishermen. Mothers. Children.
They called it home for thousands of years.
๐ฅ Then the climate warmed. The ice retreated. The sea rose. The plain became marsh. The marsh became coast.
And around 6,200 BC, a submarine landslide off the coast of Norway tore loose. The Storegga slide. It sent a wave across the North Sea.
Doggerland drowned. The country was finished in a single afternoon.
Today, the country sits beneath 100 metres of water. But the sea is shallow. The trawlers reach the old land.
The first piece came up in 1931. A trawler off Norfolk hauled in a bone harpoon. Hand-carved. Barbed. Still sharp.
Older than every cathedral in Britain.
The trawler was called the Colinda.
๐๏ธ Because the people of Doggerland did not all drown. Some climbed higher. To the chalk hills of what is now Norfolk. To the moors of Yorkshire. To the river valleys of Cambridgeshire.
They became Britons. Their descendants became the British.
And the British are still here. Still walking the same hills. Still buried in the same chalk.
Britain is older than its coastline. Older than its name.
โโโโโโโโโโโโโโ
A country drowned.
The ones who climbed higher became the British.
Their story is yours to carry. ๐๐
๐ https://t.co/rih7iKwnvf ๐
Be part of us. โ๏ธ๐ฌ๐ง
Be Proud Of Us. ๐๐ฌ๐ง
๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ฅ๓ ฎ๓ ง๓ ฟ 50,000 people marched on London.โ๏ธ
The government said it wasn't that many. ๐ฌ๐ง
It was much, much more.
This is not the first time ๐
It is 1381. England. You wake. The frost is on the ground. You are a serf.
You cannot leave your village without permission. You cannot marry without permission. You cannot sell your own labour. The land you work belongs to a lord you have never met.
Your father was a serf. His father was a serf. You have been told your son will be a serf too.
So you were told.
But something had cracked ๐ The Black Death had taken half of England thirty years before. Labour was scarce. Wages had risen. For three decades, ordinary people had been quietly getting richer. The powerful hated it.
Every law they made, the people walked around.
Then John of Gaunt, the king's uncle and the richest man in England, taxed every adult the same shilling to pay for the war in France ๐ฐ
The Poll Tax.
In four years, they tried it three times. The third one was one too many.
In May 1381, a tax commissioner arrived in the Essex village of Fobbing. The villagers drove him out. The king sent soldiers. The villagers drove them out too.
You hear what happened at Fobbing. You hear what happened next.
Essex rose first. Then Kent. Then the eastern counties. Villages emptied.
In Kent, a man called Wat Tyler took command โ๏ธ His first move was to break open Maidstone Prison and free a radical priest called John Ball.
By the time they reached Blackheath, just south of the Thames, they were 50,000 strong.
That night, John Ball climbed onto a cart and asked a question that would echo for 600 years:
"When Adam delved and Eve span, who was then the gentleman?" ๐
They burned the Savoy Palace ๐ฅ Gaunt escaped on horseback to Scotland.
The next morning, the king rode out to meet them. Richard II. Fourteen years old. Just a boy on a horse, in front of 50,000 armed peasants.
He agreed to everything. End serfdom. End forced labour. End the Poll Tax. He had clerks write charters of freedom sealed with the royal seal ๐
You hold one in your hands. Freedom.
You have won.
The next day at Smithfield, the Lord Mayor of London stabbed Wat Tyler in the throat ๐ก๏ธ The king rode forward alone and persuaded the crowd to follow him out of London.
Then he revoked every promise.
"Serfs you are. And serfs you shall remain."
1,500 rebels were executed. John Ball was hanged, drawn and quartered at St Albans. The king was there to see it.
The dream is dead. Or so it looks.
But they thought they had lost. They had not ๐
The Poll Tax was never collected again in their lifetime. Or their children's lifetime. It would be 609 years before any government in England dared to try it again.
Within a hundred years, serfdom in England had effectively died out.
Not because the powerful chose to free their people. Because the powerful had learned what happened when they refused ๐๏ธ
The lesson did not die. The Putney Debates. The Levellers. The Chartists. The Tolpuddle Martyrs. The Suffragettes. Every uprising drew on what happened at Smithfield.
In 1990, a Prime Minister tried to bring the Poll Tax back. 200,000 people marched on London again. Following the same route the peasants took 600 years earlier.
The tax was withdrawn within a year. Within months, the Prime Minister was gone.
The powerful learned the same lesson. They always learn the same lesson.
Every right we have today was taken, not given. By people like the 50,000 on Blackheath.
๐ Read the full story, get the lesson plan, share the facts โ
https://t.co/16ieEBMbiK
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They are still here ๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ฅ๓ ฎ๓ ง๓ ฟ
In every protest. In every refusal. In every "enough" spoken to a power that demanded too much.
Same faces. Same blood. Same island ๐ฌ๐ง
This is our island. This is our story. This is our culture to keep ๐
Every story we tell, a supporter paid to keep alive.
Without them, these stories stay in the past.
Without you, the next one never comes out.
๐ https://t.co/rih7iKwnvf ๐
Be part of us. โ๏ธ๐ฌ๐ง
Be Proud Of Us. ๐๐ฌ๐ง
๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ท๓ ฌ๓ ณ๓ ฟ Modern Wales was written down 600 years before it existed.๐ ๐ฌ๐ง
By a Welshman who vanished into the mountains ๐๏ธ
On 16 September 1400, Owain Glyndลตr raised his banner at Glyndyfrdwy and declared himself Prince of Wales ๐
The Welsh came to him from every valley ๐
In 1402, he won the Battle of Mynydd Hyddgen โ๏ธ
By 1404, most of Wales was his ๐ฐ
That year, in Machynlleth, he did something no Welsh prince had ever done. He called a parliament ๐๏ธ
4 envoys from every commote in Wales. Envoys from France ๐ซ๐ท from Spain ๐ช๐ธ from Scotland ๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ณ๓ ฃ๓ ด๓ ฟ stood beside them.
Wales had a parliament. And a prince.
2 years later, at Pennal, he wrote to the King of France โ๏ธ It is called the Pennal Letter. It set out what Wales should be ๐
An independent Welsh church โช
2 Welsh universities. One in the north. One in the south ๐
The Welsh language recognised in law ๐
Welsh people governing themselves ๐๏ธ
All of it written down. On 31 March 1406.
This is what Wales would become.
The English crown sent army after army โ๏ธ Aberystwyth fell in 1408. Harlech fell in 1409.
His wife was taken. His daughter Catrin. His grandchildren. They died in the Tower of London ๐ฐ
By 1412, Glyndลตr was alone. He vanished into the mountains ๐๏ธ
He was never captured. He was never betrayed.
For 600 years, Wales had no parliament. The Welsh language was punished out of children.
But the Pennal Letter survived ๐ Held in the Archives Nationales in Paris ๐ซ๐ท Waiting.
In 1999, the Welsh had their assembly back ๐๏ธ In 2020, it was named the Senedd. The parliament of Wales ๐
The Welsh language is now official. 2 universities for the north and the south ๐
All that Owain wrote down. 616 years later.
He hadn't failed. He had been early.
โโโโโโโโโโโโโโ
He is one of many.
The Welsh have been writing themselves up for centuries ๐
Charter by charter. Parliament by parliament ๐๐๏ธ
From one Welsh prince in a stone hall in Machynlleth ๐
Will you help us tell that story to those who need to hear? ๐๐
๐ https://t.co/rih7iKwnvf ๐
Be part of us. โ๏ธ๐ฌ๐ง
Be Proud Of Us. ๐๐ฌ๐ง
๐๏ธโ๏ธ For a thousand years, the British people governed themselves without the state.
This is how they did it.
A thousand years ago in England, there were no police. There were no prisons. There was no central state strong enough to reach every village.
And yet, somehow, England worked.
The reason was something the Anglo-Saxons had built into the foundations of their society.
They called it frankpledge.
Every man in every village belonged to a group of ten. They were called a tithing. โ๏ธ
And each man, by law, was responsible for the conduct of every other man in his tithing.
If one man committed a crime, his nine neighbours were responsible for bringing him to justice. If they failed, they paid the fine themselves.
The whole tithing answered for the crime of one man.
๐ The system was given the force of law by King Canute, the Anglo-Danish king who united England in peace. Between 1016 and 1035, Canute decreed that every man over the age of 12 must belong to a tithing.
When the Normans came in 1066, they could have abolished it.
They did the opposite.
William the Conqueror kept the Anglo-Saxon system. And he made it stronger.
โ๏ธ Twice every year, the Sheriff would arrive in the village. He would call the tithings together. He would check that every man was accounted for.
This was called the View of Frankpledge.
The system held England together for 300 years.
And when the king's courts eventually grew to replace it, two pieces of frankpledge stayed behind.
๐ฅ The first became the jury.
Twelve neighbours, called to judge another. The same idea, transplanted from the village to the courtroom.
The second became the constable.
The man chosen from among neighbours to keep the peace. Not imposed from above. Chosen from below.
Modern British policing began here. The jury system began here.
The principle that ordinary British people are responsible for ordinary British people began in an Anglo-Saxon village a thousand years ago.
โ๏ธ For a thousand years, we have been responsible for each other.
We do not need the state to teach us how to belong.
โโโโโโโโโโโโโโ
This channel has no ads. No sponsors. No state funding.
It is built the same way the tithing was built. By the people who choose to stand in it.
Be part of us ๐ฌ๐ง๐ https://t.co/rih7iKwnvf ๐๐ฌ๐ง
Be Proud Of Us. ๐๐ฌ๐ง
๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ณ๓ ฃ๓ ด๓ ฟ๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ฅ๓ ฎ๓ ง๓ ฟ The English were not the only ones to demand their king answer to them.
A century after Runnymede, fifty Scots sealed a declaration of their own. โ๏ธ
It went further than the English barons had ever dared.
Their king was excommunicated. Their country had been at war for 30 years. The Pope had refused to recognise that their kingdom existed at all.
So they wrote to him.
โ๏ธ They sealed the declaration with more than 50 personal seals. Not one king's seal. 50. Each man committing his own identity, his own house, and his own life, to the words on the page.
๐ The Declaration said something nobody in Christendom had ever put in writing before.
It said that a king of Scotland did not rule by his own right. He ruled by the consent of his people. If he ever submitted them back to English rule, the Scots would cast him out and choose another king from among themselves.
A medieval king, bound by the consent of his people, to be removed if he failed them.
This was 1320.
๐ฅ And then the Declaration said the line.
It said the Scots were not fighting for glory. They were not fighting for riches. They were not fighting for honours. They were fighting for one thing only.
For freedom alone, the Declaration said, no honest man surrenders, but with his life.
๐๏ธ That line was read at the dissolution of the Scottish Parliament in 1707. At the opening of the new Scottish Parliament in 1999. At Scottish memorial services for the wars of the 20th century.
For 700 years, the line has never gone out of use.
The original Declaration of Arbroath still exists. A single piece of vellum, the ink faded, some of the seals fallen off, the rest hanging from the bottom of the page on silk cords 700 years old.
It is held by the National Records of Scotland in Edinburgh. UNESCO added it to the Memory of the World register in 2016.
On these islands, the idea that a king rules by the consent of his people is ancient.
Older than the kings who tried to break it. Older than the countries we now live in. Older than the languages we now speak.
The English barons reformed the throne.
The Scots threatened it.
โ๏ธ One island. One spirit.
๐ฌ๐ง The British write their own history. They always have.
Help us remember who we are. Help us remember every British achievement. ๐๐
๐ https://t.co/rih7iKwVkN ๐
Be part of us. โ๏ธ๐ฌ๐ง
Be Proud Of Us. ๐๐ฌ๐ง
๐จ Rep. Tim Burchett says access to possible UFO evidence was BLOCKED by the Intelligence Community.
โIf someone can pierce the veil of government and block access to Congressโฆ who the hell is in control?โ
A very shy maned wolf stopping for a visit at a monastery in Brazil for a bite to eat provided by monks. Because of their super long legs, they walk more like giraffes than typical canines. Maned wolves pose no threat to humans ๐ฆ๐ฅบ