He's not bothered about child sexual exploitation on Pornhub, OnlyFans, Roblox, or any of the countless platforms where children are groomed, abused, and exploited. He's not demanding tougher sentences for predators. He's not demanding the closure of sites that profit from sexual content children can access. He wasn't particularly interested when the BBC spent decades covering for prolific celebrity nonces or when LBC parade around government psyop whore Bonnie Blue.
What he cares about is @X.
Because X is where people get news, compare notes, share evidence, and discover that what is happening in one town is happening in another. From Penzance to Portugal - we are one.
The pretence is that this is about "misinformation" and "encitement", but the actual target is the means by which ordinary people communicate with each other.
They've tried destroying our pubs and our churches and communities - where we congregate and talk and unite. But we found somewhere else, so that has to be destroyed too.
What they forget is that the British were organising long before mobile phones, the internet, social media, television, radio, or newspapers.
For a thousand years we organised rebellions, uprisings, protests, petitions, and resistance movements armed with little more than word of mouth, churchyards, market squares, pubs, and messengers on horseback.
The Iceni managed it.
The Cornish managed it.
The Levellers managed it.
The Chartists managed it.
The people who fought the Romans, the Vikings, the Normans, and every other power that tried to impose itself upon them managed it.
If people are angry enough, they will find each other.
They always have.
David Lammy’s proposals to restrict the right to jury trial have been examined by the Justice Committee of the House of Commons.
And. Well. Um.
It’s *quite* the report.
I think it’s actually worse than politely scathing.
It’s embarrassing 👇🏼🪡🧵
Great statement once again from fashion designer Jeff Banks on Henry Nowak.
Jeff has come up with a genuinely thoughtful and powerful idea to commemorate Henry and ensure that his memory lives on.
What does everyone think of Jeff’s idea is it something the nation can support?🇬🇧
Keith the Apocalypse Bringer received a visitor this week. A young woman with a clipboard, a fleece bearing the logo of a national rewilding charity, and the kind of clear-eyed certainty that comes from having read three books about ecosystems and never having stood in a wet field in February.
She had come to assess the farm for what she described as "rewilding potential."
Keith was eating a bramble at the time.
Visitor: Hello. I'm here to talk about transitioning the land away from livestock.
Farmer: Keith does most of the talking.
Visitor: I think we could really restore this landscape if we removed the grazing pressure.
Farmer: Have you noticed Keith.
Visitor: The goat? Yes. He'd be moved.
Farmer: Where to.
Visitor: A sanctuary, ideally.
Farmer: Keith was at a sanctuary. They asked us to take him back.
Visitor: Right. Well. Without the grazing, the natural succession would take over. Scrub, then woodland.
Farmer: That's bramble.
Visitor: Yes. Scrub is part of the natural process.
Farmer: Bramble is what Keith eats.
Visitor: The whole point is to let nature take its course without human interference.
Farmer: Keith is a goat. Goats are nature. Goats have been on this hill for several thousand years. The hill is the way it is because of goats.
Visitor: Domesticated goats aren't really wild.
Farmer: Neither are the trees you'd plant. Neither are you. What's your point.
Visitor: I think we could see the return of some really exciting species without the grazing.
Farmer: Like what.
Visitor: Well, eventually, lynx. Wolves.
Farmer: To eat Keith.
Visitor: ...
Farmer: You want to remove the goat to bring back the predator to eat the goat.
Visitor: When you put it like that.
Farmer: When you put it any way at all. Keith is doing the job. Keith is doing it for free. Keith has been doing it since the Neolithic. The bramble eats the field if Keith doesn't eat the bramble. You can hire a contractor to come up here once a year with a strimmer and do half as good a job for several thousand pounds, or you can have Keith, who works seven days a week for cheese.
Keith, at this point, kicked over the clipboard.
The visitor packed up. She left a leaflet.
Keith ate the leaflet.
The leaflet said "Wild By Nature."
So is Keith. Nobody at head office had thought about it for quite that long.
Watch how the cycle works:
1. An allegation is made.
2. Journalists report the allegation.
3. NGOs cite the reporting.
4. The UN cites the NGOs.
5. A strongly worded report is issued.
6. Everyone cites the UN report.
By the end, an unverified claim has been transformed into an accepted "fact" through repetition rather than evidence.
Elite hypocrisy in real time…
Bill Gates awarded Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez the 2025 Global Goalkeeper Award for ‘Saving the World’
Yesterday: Civil Guard raided PSOE HQ over corruption and illegal financing
Virtue signal globally…and then you get raided at home
I’ve never been much of a feminist as I always took women’s rights in Britain for granted
Now I see rapes unpunished or unprosecuted.
I see women excluded from local government in some areas.
I see women’s spaces regularly infringed upon
It’s like women are being erased. All women should be waking up to the fact that we are having our rights eroded to conform with progressive agendas that bizarrely take us back a century.
So as a woman who was never a self declared feminist. I am now.
Our rights are NON NEGOTIABLE
Thomas Sowell on engineers vs intellectuals:
“The engineer is judged by the end product. If he builds a building that collapses, it doesn’t matter how brilliant his idea was—he’s ruined.”
“Conversely, if an intellectual has an idea for rearranging society and that ends in disaster, he pays no price at all.”
There’s a generation a lot of people forget exists. We were born at the tail end of the Boomers, but we are not culturally the same as people born in the 40s and early 50s. We are Generation Jones.
And honestly, it explains a lot.
We grew up in a world that still felt fundamentally analog, but we were young enough to be dragged headfirst into the digital revolution. We are the bridge generation between rotary phones and smartphones, between slide rules and AI, between Walter Cronkite and algorithm driven media.
We remember when there were only a few television channels and the entire country watched the same thing at the same time. We also adapted to the internet, email, forums, social media, streaming and now artificial intelligence. We lived before and after the technological singularity hit everyday life.
That is not a small thing.
People born in the 40s came of age in a post World War II America that was still industrial, deeply hierarchical and institutionally stable. Their formative years were shaped by the Cold War, Vietnam, the civil rights era and a society where information moved slowly.
Generation Jones came later. We inherited the aftermath of all of that.
We were the kids who watched Watergate destroy blind trust in government. We watched manufacturing begin to collapse. We saw divorce rates explode. We were the first truly latchkey generation in massive numbers. We learned independence early because many of us had to.
We grew up with one foot in old America and one foot in whatever this new thing was becoming.
We played outside until the streetlights came on but we also learned DOS commands. We learned cursive and keyboarding. We had card catalogs and Google searches. We went from vinyl records to cassette tapes to CDs to MP3s to streaming in one lifetime.
We remember maps. We remember memorizing phone numbers. We remember life before GPS and before every human interaction became filtered through a screen.
And because of that, I think Generation Jones developed a very unique perspective. We are adaptable because we had no choice but to adapt. We learned technology as adults instead of being born into it. We remember a slower world but were forced to survive in a rapidly accelerating one.
That creates a very different mindset than either older Boomers or younger Gen X and Millennials.
A lot of us also reject the caricature people now associate with “Boomers.” We were not buying houses for the cost of a sandwich in 1965. The interest rate on my first house was over 14% and that was after buying down a point. Many of us got hit by recessions, outsourcing, pension collapses and economic instability just like younger generations did. We watched promises evaporate in real time.
We understand older generations because we were raised by them. We understand younger generations because we had to evolve alongside them.
That’s why the Jones generation often feels culturally homeless. We are rarely discussed, rarely defined and usually lumped into categories that don’t actually fit us.
But we exist.
We are the human transition point between the industrial age and the digital age.
And frankly, there will probably never be another generation quite like us again.
Shameful that our act at Eurovision was abandoned by the BBC and his team as the scores came in!
And how lovely of the Denmark team to invite him to sit with them, so he wasn’t alone.
Well done BBC, you chose him and then you abandoned him. Vile.