Home Media Rumble Responds to UK Parliament Letter

Rumble Responds to UK Parliament Letter

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Introduction by DM

Above, Andrew Gold gives a clear analysis of the Dinenage Rumble saga.

Russell Brand’s daily expose’ of the corruption of the deep state, Pfizer, Ukraine blossomed over the last few years. He has now garnered 6.66 million subscribers for his daily show (was 6.65 when I last looked). He has redpilled so many people (including my extended family), but his past has caught up with him. And now the media have canceled him.

He has moved his to Rumble (1.65 million subscribers)

Soon after Brand was trashed in the media, Youtube demonetised him, and then Caroline Dinenage, the Conservative chair of the culture, media and sport committee,  wrote a letter to Rumble’s chief executive, Chris Pavlovski, to express concern that Brand “may be able to profit from his content on the platform”.

Below is Rumble’s reply.

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37 COMMENTS

  1. Russell Brand has, by his own admission, has had a ‘LITANY’ of sexual encounters and used it to advance his notoriety and following – and with a questionable wit and locuacity, made his living from it. As he admits he has been very transparent about it in the past but perhaps not quite as transparent as he might have been. I wonder if his ‘transparency’ was in fact carefully coreographed ‘cover’ for actions he apologised for at the time or subsequently regretted ? In common with all humans, time changes outlook and circumstances. Brand is probably not the man he was, and it is the old Brand that is now catching up with him, and which he obviously sees as both embarrassing and a threat. Lesser mortals may feel a certain empathy and say “there but for the grace of God – and absence of fame – go I.” http://veaterecosan.blogspot.com/

    • “Girls flutter to me like moths around a flame
      And if their wings burn, I am not to blame
      Falling in love again, never wanted to, what am I to do, I can’t help it”
      ( From an old song, probably Kevin Ayers )

      All those girls knew he was a slut, if they didn’t they should have worked it out in less than a minute and if they still couldn’t they must be mentally retarded. So these girls should have to demonstrate or prove their mental retardation.
      I once met a fat masseuse from Laos with limited English who was very forthright about wanting to “ping-pong” me but charges were not laid.
      Julian Assange’s accusers dropped the charges and now say the authorities pushed them into it. So whatever these girls do they are the victim, that’s fine if they can drop the “some people are more equal than others” stuff.

  2. Laws of slander and libel still apply. Defamation is actionable at law and can involve huge compensation, particularly when directed at newspapers and media companies, as recent cases have demonstrated. The only problem is that legally speaking, truth is a defence against them. It is why most libel lawyers advise against going to Court. Brand admits to being very ‘promiscuous’, which may make a jury, were one ever empaneled, more reluctant to believe in some of those instances he did so without consent. It is akin to the old problem of juries taking prostitues complaints seriously. Times and the law might have changed, but the harbinger of Oscar Wilde and Reading gaol still hang, as if from chains, from that distant gibbet. As usual the public and media attitude is hypocritical, winking at misbehaviour in a comedy setting, but taking a more puritanical moral position later on. There are certainly parallels with Saville and that alone bodes ill for his reputation and career henceforward. Whether it moves from just allegations and a civil dispute, to a criminal confrontation, remains to be seen, but there is no doubt, as Brand suggests, more than a whiff of conspiracy about it all, not least that the exposé involves at least three outlets (Times; Sunday Times; and Channel 4) not to mention all the others world-wide, that have run with the story. Whether covert government agencies have had a hand in it also remains to be seen (or not as the case may be) but it is clear overt government is taking an active interest, and it seems likely on two counts: the suppression of views that run counter to its prevailing narrative – some would say propaganda – and two, to accord and reinforce its current policy on control of internet platforms. Brand as an international celebrity with a huge internet following, could not be a better ‘goose’ to be served up on a plate to satisfy the insatiable public appetite for gossip and scandal. http://veaterecosan.blogspot.com/

    • “Brand as an international celebrity with a huge internet following, could not be a better ‘goose’ to be served up on a plate to satisfy the insatiable public appetite for gossip and scandal.”… especially when he was EXPOSING the NWO plans…

  3. We have witnessed how the British Parliament has point blank refused to admit to the enormous damage done by its co v id policy and specifically the jab roll-out, from which millions have been disadvantaged, made ill and even killed, yet it has the audacity to attempt to silence those who have drawn attention to the scandal. Brand is only the latest in a long line of such interventions, using various laws to limit free speech where it criticises or goes counter to the preferred narrative. Even past Presidents are not immune to contrived prosecutions! “The Online Safety Bill” is probably yet another ‘wolf in lambs clothing’, professing a laudible aim of protecting children, whilst hiding its true purpose of greater government control over independent voices on social media platforms. Does anyone believe Channel 4 (of all people!), Murdoch’s Times, Savile’s BBC, or Sunak’s government are genuinely concerned about Brand’s past alleged misdeeds, or rather that he had built a platform of 6.5 million sceptical followers, that challenges their preferred view? http://veaterecosan.blogspot.com/

  4. Meanwhile in China, Sophia Huang Xueqin goes on trial for her ‘Me Too’ output. Compare and contrast. Constantly we see western democracies aping the behaviour of tyrannical dictatorships. Are we expected to go gentle into that dark night?

    • Yes, there is some power in social cohesion which makes us into stupid sheeple or cud-chewing cattle, we get predictively programmed with things like, “Oops, the new Marberg va666ine has possibly sterilised everyone so nobody can have babies again” will get the response “Oh well never mind, last one out turn off the lights”

  5. I wonder if commenter Veater could clear up a matter given his position as an indigenous person.
    We have this thing here called ABC-TV which is a relative of your BBC, perhaps that is a bit harsh on the ABC but anyway.
    Their very well paid presenter on the self-styled impoverished ABC-TV has had Theresa May on with her new book and claimed she did Brexit and asked if Britain could recover from the damage done by Boris Johnson, describing him twice as a hard-right populist as if the plebs should always be relied on to support the communist side. The question is, who did Brexit, Theresa May or Boris Johnson.
    My impression from here is that Theresa May failed all attempts and Boris somehow got the numbers.
    Clearly our ABC-TV is constantly lying about the climate, the virus, events such as Uvalde, Hawaii, Las Vegas, as well as Ukraina, WOMD, 9-11, all of our politics and so forth.
    I just wonder if there is some claimable truth that escaped me, in the claim that Theresa May did Brexit.

  6. Adults who are promiscuous with adults? It’s nobody’s business but their’s.

    Women on the casting couch in Hollywood later complaining? I won’t listen to them.

    But if Russell Brand was “promiscuous” with children, out you go, Russell. Cya.

    • It was put about at the time that Katy Perry was learning showmanship and weirdness from Russell Brand and she took it further ( satanism etc ) while he backed off at some point, as you can see she is now a major manufactured celeb and Russell is a presumably self-made Alt-media personality who is now being hung out to dry, “ye shall know them by their fruits”, rumours are, KP is the evil one and they split up about a year after their celeb wedding in India which I just checked out now was about 2010, longer than I thought. All these modern attention seekers don’t seem to create very much apart from an image

  7. Russell Brand is a giant distraction. he was always chasing the narrative and now I don’t even use public rest facilities because you know WHAM.

    The English do leave a particular scent, I can not finger it but …

    This is about pushing the online harm bill, I agree, but these lucifierian’s are always playing the 5d chess


    here is a mullet that plays the game

    Note: blokes like the narrative plays, really do exist but I will not finger them

  8. In this dystopian technocracy, the social credit system rates everyone based on slavery to the communist state (run by criminals and mass murderers) with habits observed by video cameras everywhere.

    CBDC is the tool of serpents, WHO want to manage us like cattle whose lives end in abattoirs. This system of enslavement is now global, its a web of control that is absolute enforced by the absolutely corrupted krown kabal slavemasons. The beast system is so powerful, loaded on bases, no one can make war with it.

    Don’t buy into the smart gadgets, get rid of them. They’re all addictive and dangerous for health. All this bs connects to their web of control. The less we participate, the less we contribute to the korporate krap made to ethnically cleanse, replacing most here with robots and the poorest mass migrants competing for $2 per hour, delivering pizzas sleeping ten to a room on the floor, heads facing walls with feet touching in middle.

    This is not progress, it’s the most cruel slavery forced on people in His story.
    In 1856 Australia first nation adopting the eight hour working day. Now in 2023 our devolution enforced by beasts, leading to hell. All done since PA and 911, many know none dare to speak, all mouths zipped watching the block.

    • When I was motorbike tripping up in the Northern Territory a month or so I went through two towns… Finke (that has an alcohol ban) and Atitjere.

      Kamahl says 40 Billion (I heard 33 Billion a year) … (correct)

      Regardless… Finke and Atitjere looked abandoned, or destitute (and these are important towns)

      I’d didn’t see a community centre; kids parks, footy fields, post office, swimming pool ETC, ETC… (maybe they are there somewhere)… BUT WHERE DOES THE MONEY GO if these towns look dollar depleted.

      Typical gov rort. Voice will be a further rort

      • FInke River goes all the way to Hermannsburg, maybe the money went down the river
        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hermannsburg,_Northern_Territory#20th_century
        It could be a nice walk with the appropriate footwear, assuming there is fresh water under the sand and not saline, look at the scenery, amazing
        https://www.google.com.au/maps/place/Hermannsburg+NT+0872/@-23.9817366,132.7301521,13185m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m6!3m5!1s0x2b3041b4c49cf775:0x40217a82a254030!8m2!3d-23.9415288!4d132.7797465!16zL20vMDR5eWRj?hl=en&entry=ttu

      • The Alice Springs News has covered many stories over the years that show the corrupt government policy and bureaucratic bungling and lack of accountability– but like everywhere- to little avail.
        I share a couple of articles on matters I am very familiar with. Relevant to the Yes No Voice.
        Firstly a current example of the lack of consultation and despite clear justified protests the original plan goes ahead by stealth https://alicespringsnews.com.au/2023/09/21/gallery-consultation-confusion/

        Secondly a couple of links and one article copied–my personal experience of the deliberate destruction of a community driven initiative and the devastating aftermath. The Papunya Two Way Model of Education encapsulated in the Papunya School Book of Country and History written out of history and now it seems copyright Penn University mmm.Big Story.

        https://www.alicespringsnews.com.au/1043.html
        EDUCATION DEPT. NEW ALLEGATIONS: LIVES SHATTERED, MONEY SQUANDERED. Report by KIERAN FINNANE.
        Also
        https://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/books/king-brown-country-the-betrayal-of-papunya-20110120-19xll.html
        King Brown Country: The Betrayal of Papunya
        A tale of governance failing Papunya is depressing but vital for debate.
        https://www.booktopia.com.au/king-brown-country-russell-skelton/book/9781741756227.html
        ‘Why don’t you check out Papunya? It’s the sniffing capital of Australia, it’s a Bermuda triangle for taxpayer funds. Nobody in the NT government gives a rats. The council just tossed out World Vision. People are frightened to talk.’

        “For award-winning journalist Russell Skelton a five year journey of inquiry that coincided with one of the biggest shifts in indigenous policy in Australian history began on the day he received this email. Set with the backdrop of Papunya, a Northern Territory Aboriginal community whose history showed so much promise but whose dysfunction is now more prominent that its famous artwork, this is a book that had to be written.
        Digging down into the core of indigenous issues today, Skelton exposes unmitigated misery, shocking levels of neglect and the devastating consequences of substance abuse. But above all, he reveals how systematic failure of indigenous policy betrayed a once secure community. He also introduces us to Alison Anderson, the woman whose presence has so dominated Papunya and the politics of the Northern Territory”
        King Brown Country is a powerful and shaming portrait of a community in crisis. Papunya remains an emblem for the failure of all Australians to come to terms with the continent’s oldest inhabitants.

        https://s3-ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com/dimo.allenunwin.com/assets/teaching_resource/9781865085258.pdf
        Teachers Notes
        by Diane de Vere & Nadia Wheatley

        Papunya School Book of

        Country and History

        This important book describes the history of the Anangu (people of the central desert region of Australia) and how they came to live at Papunya. This book’s intention is ‘two way learning: Anangu way, and Western way.’ Its stunning pictures and layout tell the story of how traditional life changed for the many people and languages of this region when Tjulkura (white people) came.

        Historian and multi-award-winning author Nadia Wheatley retells this history chronologically and with compassion, adopting the voices of the people who told it to her. The publisher has skilfully combined illustrations by Ken Searle with photographs, maps, and children’s art. This is a splendid picture book with many narratives – the colour coding of text boxes helps the reader to identify and differentiate the main story; timelines; and stories told by community members in their own voices. A beautiful fold out painted timeline and glossary end the book.

        The early 1970s are acknowledged by art historians as ‘a critical turning point when the ancient visual language of the Western Desert was rendered permanent on sheets of composition board and thereby transformed into a rich new art form: artefact became art.’ The narrative ends with the idea that Papunya School could lead others in telling their story and sharing their culture: their legacy can be seen in other books published since 2001.

        • EDUCATION DEPARTMENT SHAFTS ITS STAR PRINCIPAL. Report by KIERAN FINNANE.
          The principal who in 1991 helped save Papunya School from collapse and went on to achieve recognition for the school at Territory and national levels for innovation, resilience and educational reform, says she has been forced out of the NT education system and denied due process at every turn.
          In September Diane deVere reluctantly accepted a redundancy package after a long period of enforced study leave and leave without pay.
          The Education Department is stonewalling questions, but Ms deVere says she is the victim of a nation-wide political backlash against bilingual schooling and determination in the Territory to pursue a reform agenda leading to amalgamation of the schools in the region. She, the school council and staff were deeply concerned about this reform agenda.
          The circumstances of her removal throw up yet unanswered questions about the department’s support for its staff, its school councils and for innovation in remote schools, as well as questions about the influence that powerful figures in a community Ð as opposed to the school council and staff Ð can have over the running of a state school.
          At the start of Ms DeVere’s term at Papunya the community was largely boycotting the school.
          Working with community educators and leaders, in particular Alison Anderson, now an ATSIC commissioner, Ms deVere took the school from a state of collapse to undoubtedly one of the most exciting bush schools in the Territory, regarded as a model for curriculum and professional development.
          But by the end of her nine years in the community Ms deVere had fallen out with Ms Anderson and members of her family, who Ms deVere says were supporting the “English only” and amalgamation agendas; and the department had turned its back on its star bush principal and allowed an extraordinary level of external intervention in its school.
          And today Ð depending on whom you talk to Ð attendance is again in the doldrums.
          AFL star Shaun Hart spent two days in Papunya recently as one of several sports personalities visiting The Centre in a bid to boost school attendance (Alice News, Oct 22).
          Mr Hart told us that 40 children came to the school when he was there, about double the usual number, while the total enrolment is 80.
          But the department says there are “only about 60 students of primary school age in the community”, with 45 regularly going to school.
          I reported a visit to Papunya School in the Alice News of August 30, 2000. I had been struck by three things:
          ¥ a huge painted storyboard of the history of Papunya, worked on by the whole school, highly specific, comprehensive and locally relevant, put into a regional and national context (it left for dead anything of a similar nature that I had seen in primary schools in Alice Springs);
          ¥ the mock-up of what was to become the prize-winning book, “The Papunya School Book of Country and History”, published by Allen & Unwin, on which leading children’s author Nadia Wheatley and illustrator Ken Searle had collaborated with school staff and students as part of the literacy acquisition program;
          ¥ and, the presence of qualified Indigenous teaching staff.
          When Ms deVere had arrived at the school eight years earlier there had been no qualified Indigenous staff, despite some of them having worked in the school for many years, one for 20 years.
          The on-site teacher education model she negotiated and developed in partnership with the community and Batchelor Institute had begun to turn this around.
          It was based on models she had seen on a study tour to US and Canada, made possible by a scholarship awarded by the Australian National Schools Network.
          Papunya School, as it was operating under Ms deVere’s leadership, was also discussed as a possible future model for remote Indigenous education by the Senate committee inquiry into education and training programs for Indigenous Australians, whose report was published in March, 2000.
          The committee was scathing about “the official neglect” of Papunya School and the Territory Department of Education’s “systematic lack of interest in Aboriginal Education”.
          To its credit, in the wake of that report and the NT Government commissioned Learning Lessons review by Bob Collins, the department began to implement change and for a while were interested in the lessons at Papunya.
          After a visit to the school in May 2001 by an “action curriculum team”, Papunya’s whole school professional development model was recommended for consideration as a “working model” for Indigenous schools throughout the NT.
          But at the same time (and less than one year after my visit) things were going pear-shaped at the school.
          All the work that had seemed so exciting and innovative, that had been acclaimed, that had achieved considerable improvement in school attendance and in literacy and numeracy levels and that had begun to open up possibilities of secondary education, began to be dismantled.
          Just a month after the action curriculum team’s visit, the community convened on June 1 what Ms deVere describes as a “kangaroo court”.
          She says: “It was orchestrated by many and played out by Alison Anderson and Rhonda Loades of ATSIC and Russell Totham and Sabina Smith of the department.”
          In a brief conversation I had with Ms Anderson in late October, she categorically denied that she had been involved in a “kangaroo court” and said that she had been invited to attend the meeting by the community. Ms Anderson told me she would grant me an interview on the subject on November 22.
          Ms deVere says when she and the non-Aboriginal staff of the school went to the June 1 meeting, they were told to go away and wait at the school.
          At the end of the day Ms Anderson announced in front of the entire staff that Ms deVere would have to go. Mr Totham was present and did not demur.
          Ms deVere says she was told to leave Papunya Ð her home for nine years Ð at end of semester, three weeks away, and if she didn’t agree, she would be evicted in 36 hours.
          She was later told that her permit to live and work in the community was to be revoked. She says this was with the full knowledge of the department, and ATSIC.
          She says the chairperson of the school council. Linda Allen Anderson, later requested a meeting with the departmental CEO and asked both ATSIC and the department for the minutes of the June 1 meeting. She was not successful on either count.
          Ms deVere also requested the minutes from her line manager, Mr Totham, but was denied them.
          The school council and some parents, 27 people all up, wrote a letter to department CEO Peter Plummer on September 4 that said in part:
          “Diane has been a good principal .. she respects us and our culture and with her help our vision for our children’s learning has happened. We want her to be able to keep working with us.”
          It was the start of a long struggle by Ms deVere for her employment rights and for a meaningful position within the department from which to make a contribution to Indigenous education.
          After a harrowing two years, she felt she finally had no choice but to accept a redundancy package.
          How could this have come about? Are we so endowed with highly qualified, experienced and committed school principals, willing to work in remote areas in this region, that we can turn our backs on one?
          In response to my query, which went to the Minister, it took a spokesperson for the Department of Employment, Education and Training (NTDEET) more than a week to come up with this response:
          “All principal positions in remote areas are filled and in fact there are only four vacancies for teachers throughout the Territory.”
          I then supplied a detailed list of questions to the department in an attempt to get more comprehensive information.
          Their reply second time around amounted to no more than 100 words, recounting the bare bones of the Ms deVere’s employment history. It did not answer any of the substance of my inquiries.
          I asked them if the achievements of “The Papunya School Book of Country and History”, which won the Eve Pownall Information Text Children’s Book of the Year Awards 2002, and NSW Premier Carr’s Junior History Award 2002 (worth $15,000), had ever been celebrated by the department? If not, why not? No answer.
          I asked if former Chief Minister Denis Burke had been given a briefing about Ms deVere without her knowledge when he visited the school in April, 2001, during which visit council chairman Sid Anderson had asked Mr Burke what he was going to do about the school not teaching properly.
          No answer.
          I asked why Ms deVere’s line manager Mr Totham had not kept her informed and responded to her requests for information.
          No answer.
          I asked what attempt had been made to mediate between dissatisfied community members and the school staff and council. And if no attempt was made (which is what Ms deVere asserts), why not?
          No answer.
          I asked how the disgruntlement of a section of a community can bring about the eviction of a principal (I was sure it couldn’t happen in an urban situation).
          No answer.
          I asked if the department condoned this way of treating senior employees.
          No answer.I asked how staff teaching in bush schools should view the precedent set by Ms deVere’s case.
          No answer.
          I asked what was the purpose of the June 1 meeting, the one described by Ms deVere as a “kangaroo court”.
          No answer.
          All the department had to say was this: “The position of principal at Papunya was upgraded and advertised in October 2001.
          “It was filled shortly afterwards following normal Public Sector processes.”
          I asked a number of questions concerning another teacher who was removed from Papunya at the same time and has been on unpaid leave ever since.
          No answer.
          I also asked community council chairman, Sid Anderson, why he had been worried about the school not teaching properly.
          He was reluctant to return to the issues of 2001.
          He said he was “trying to go forward, not backwards”.
          I asked was he going forward, in relation to the school?
          He said, “not really”, he was “stuck in the middle É with his kids”.
          I asked if he was happy with the way his kids are being schooled now?
          He said, “not really”.
          Ms deVere lodged a grievance claim with the Commissioner for Public Employment in September 2001. It was disallowed one year later.
          She says the investigation was “a total farce”: “There was no visit to the community and only two staff members got a phone call.”
          I asked the department why her grievance would not have been investigated more thoroughly.
          No answer.
          Ms deVere says her final two years with the department were marked by phone calls and emails not returned, unsolicited offers of redundancy, meetings asked for but declined, denial of even interviews for positions in the Alice Springs region for which she was qualified, and, again, negotiations behind her back.
          Her attempts to get answers, information, justice went all the way to the top: to departmental CEO Peter Plummer and deputy CEO Katherine Henderson, to Chief Minister Clare Martin and Education Minister Syd Stirling.
          In August she made an impassioned plea to Mr Stirling for his intervention, writing to him:
          “I am in the usual cone of silence, which is so reminiscent of June 1 [2001] it is sickeningÉ
          “I know about the reform agendas, I know about codes of conduct, rights and responsibilities, mutual obligation and accountability. I believe I have followed correct processes and protocols at all times and yet am being punished and treated outrageously.
          “The silence and exclusion has taken its toll and I have lost all faith in the system.”She says only after she had finally accepted her redundancy did Mr Stirling respond, saying that the matter was now closed.
          Earlier this year Ms deVere had asked the Australian Education Union NT for help. (The union had in fact been involved since 2001 but, like Ms deVere, had trouble even getting replies to its correspondence.)Organizer Robert Laird told her that he had been approached by the department to see if she was interested in a redundancy, “not a common event”.
          Mr Laird became the go-between in the negotiations that led to Ms deVere’s redundancy package. At one stage it was rejected by the Commissioner for Public Employment and Ms deVere was told to report to the general manager of schools in Darwin. She says when she asked if she would be offered a position in her field on interest she was told “probably not”.
          Under the clear impression that she was being pressured to resign, and “after two and a half years of being marginalised and treated with contempt,” she ultimately accepted redundancy.
          Mr Laird says because of her case, and another “political” removal of a principal, this time in an urban school, the union has negotiated new procedures with the department.
          When a community is seeking action about a departmental employee, there should first be a meeting of that employee and representatives of all the parties Ð the department, the union and the community Ð to discuss the relevant issues.
          Mr Laird said such a meeting would be essential “under the principles of natural justice”.
          He said he was disappointed rather than surprised by what had happened to Ms deVere.He said it reflected a lack of commitment by the department to communicate with its employees and with local communities, and a lack of commitment to “due process” that he found “deeply concerning”.
          However, he also said that he was even more concerned by the way the department’s actions reflected a lack of commitment to Indigenous education.
          “Ms deVere felt she had a lot to contribute to Indigenous education.
          “She had a strong record at Papunya, which was acknowledged in the Territory and across Australia.
          “The model has been used in other places, academics have been glowing about the achievements at Papunya in terms of Ôappropriate schooling’ for Indigenous students, as have other authorities, including the Commonwealth Department of Education.”He said the Territory Government has made numerous statements about its commitment to the implementation of the “Learning Lessons” recommendations, but the union sees “no activity” in the bush.

          • Diane,
            You do good and it shines, thank you. We did what we could, with what we had at hand, with honest integrity. Some wrongly call it being naive, thank the Lord everyday for nativity.

            All I’ve experienced in 57 years since moving to Oz, that it’s not what you know but who the connections are, as in “who’s your daddy, what skool did you go to?”
            Deceivers became winners, the thinkers losers (not in all cases). It’s not about the money or the relation but the relationship.

            In trade, elders passed on to respect the fine point of a 2H pencil (even 3H) and leave fine line visible even after cutting, chiseled or router work. All for a better tighter and stronger fit. That means jack these days, on the contrary they teach the opposite, fill it with no more gaps and paint it. And make sure the bench top is in line with doors below (as opposite to traditional three quarter inch overhang protecting doors below from spills) so the painted manufactured mdf swells and perishes within a decade. To be replaced with imported flat packs that don’t work.

            Cheers good sister, every day a blessing in miracles of wonder granted by the Almighty.

          • thanks Tony and others feels good to feel camaraderie and part of gumshoe family sharing their personal experiences and knowledge and speaking out against the tyranny and evil to the best of our ability
            In gratitude

  9. It’s a game, with a few dissidents placed in positions to make it appear legit, when it’s not. Repeating, system is broken beyond repair, they’re offering the solution with CCP globalism and krown kabal at the gates collecting. Don’t swallow the hook with sinker, we’re all sinners some more some less.

  10. Leading causes of death
    https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/health/causes-death/causes-death-australia/latest-release#australia-s-leading-causes-of-death
    Luckily the page is indexed so to save scrolling through here is the juiciest bit

    Shows dementia up, deaths from “accidental falls” up ( used to be a hip replacement, now results in death ), reported as covid ( typically age 90 ) up, cardiac arrhythmia up, basically another bunch of bullshit, dementia often ascribed to injections, can’t believe anything these days, grandma too expensive, need to terminate

  11. The UK parliament is a classroom administered by SERCO BSWL4 labs global, with Oxford Rhodes scholars charging like wounded bulls. Ditto for Oz.

  12. Unfortunately, many are brainwashed not to think for themselves and believe all the bs screened by media and intelligentsia controlled by krown kabal on all bases loaded. It’s astounding that so many trust mass murderers WHO call themselves philanthropists, in this the biggest criminal conspiracy of all times, where lies are spun 24/7 it’s truly impossible to keep up with the bs these days.

    There is a core group that has the power, that has planned all wars depressions revolutions and events that have sparked suffering and mass murder globally since 1913. Jesus calls them the “Synagogue of Satan”, those who call themselves Jews but are not. They are cursed by the Almighty and programmed to do evil, realise they are the enemy within, turning the world into a 5G communist slave colony. The Voice their final nail in the coffin, to seize all native lands globally, not just Oz but in all nations simultaneously.

    • Votes count for nothing with pencils as we’re ushered by ccp plain clothed, in most suburban councils, to the ballot boxes destined for recycling before opening.

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