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Flick 🇬🇧
Flick@spinster-xyz.mostr.pub
npub1uxmm...ujtm
🐕, 🦆, 🌱 New Spinsters: I’m not going to follow back until you post a bit. Wider Fedi: I’m not going to follow back if you post too much. Nostr: 2c60241a778e47057c7b457e8e31750216a924877c8c21637b719ba573568161
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Flick 🇬🇧 9 months ago
I was once a member of the Labour Party – but not any more. I left in 2021, the day that David Lammy dismissed women’s rights campaigners like me as ‘dinosaurs... hoarding their rights’. For good measure, he claimed that men can grow a cervix. I could see then that, on the issue of trans rights, my party had lost the plot. It had veered so wildly from what I felt was right – and frankly what the vast majority of the public feels is right – that I could no longer support it. The Supreme Court ruling should have been a wake-up call for Labour but the party has shown itself to be hopelessly out of touch once again. The silence from the PM on such a socially transformative ruling is tin-eared enough. But now the likes of Home Office Minister Dame Angela Eagle are plotting to thwart the judgment in a cowardly WhatsApp group of Labour MPs.
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Flick 🇬🇧 9 months ago
The trans takeover of Labour speaks to how susceptible the technocrats are to mania. These supposedly smart people have trained themselves out of common sense. They belong to an overeducated caste that defers blindly to expertise. That is naturally suspicious of what ordinary people believe to be true. That thinks the counterintuitive idea, the one that is hard to understand and even harder to explain, must be superior. They will happily believe that 2 + 2 = 5, men can become women, and insanely expensive windmills will bring down energy costs, if someone with letters after their name says so. It also speaks to how visionless our rulers have become. Bizarre ideas have so deranged governments across the West precisely because they stand for so little. They have no ideology, no vision for society, and so they latch on to transgenderism or critical race theory or climate alarmism to lend some meaning, some semblance of purpose, to what is otherwise power for its own sake.
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Flick 🇬🇧 10 months ago
This trip into space is anything but a boost for feminism or whatever these pampered celebrities choose to focus on. Yes, women can go into space with no limitations – as long as they are rich, famous or happen to be on close terms with a billionaire in this particular case. A Soviet cosmonaut, Valentina Tereshkova, became the first woman in orbit in 1963 – these self-declared explorers are no Tereshkova. Space travel is supposedly about furthering scientific knowledge and bringing benefits to humanity. This shameless and tawdry publicity stunt does not qualify on either count. https://archive.ph/Qc98T Plus, I very much doubt that they were making a meaningful contribution to the flight or science, so they are not astronauts. Did they even have a pilot of board, or was it controlled from the ground?
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Flick 🇬🇧 10 months ago
After seeing so many people bemoaning the decline in quality on nine star broccoli seed since its heyday, I wasn’t really expecting much so I’m really very impressed. The heads are small (which is fine, I’m treating them like sprouting broccoli or kale flowers), but there are far more than nine of them even after I’ve taken two harvests! image
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Flick 🇬🇧 10 months ago
If Elon Musk gets his way, and Mars becomes our newest New World, I had always assumed that the people who emigrated there would be rather like the Pilgrim Fathers – ascetic, homogenous, insular and highly religious. The sort of group that has historically had the psychosocial qualities necessary for withstanding a long voyage to a dangerous frontier. My money is still on the Pilgrim-types to lead the way, at least in the early waves. But I did wonder, while sitting in its airport last week, if interplanetary human civilisation might one day end up looking something like Dubai. Dubai operates rather like a space colony. It depends on desalinated sea water and imports almost all of its food. Temperatures can approach 50˚C in the summer, with no rain to speak of, and construction workers frequently die of heat exhaustion. This is an environment exquisitely hostile to human life, hence the air-conditioned sand on Dubai’s most luxurious beaches. For the wealthy, life is lived indoors for many months, under artificial lighting. Nevertheless, out of the desert has sprung a prosperous, hi-tech, cosmopolitan society that bright young chancers want to be a part of. British chancers, above all. The population of Dubai has grown from 20,000 to more than three million in just 75 years, and British citizens represent the largest western community by some distance. There are estimated to be as many as a quarter of a million Brits living in Dubai, plus a similar number in neighbouring Abu Dhabi, and their numbers will keep growing. Tens of thousands of British people are moving to the Gulf every year, and there has been a 50 per cent year-on-year rise in UK searches for ‘move to Dubai’ and ‘jobs in Dubai’. https://archive.ph/C02Ph
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Flick 🇬🇧 10 months ago
Labourites’ refusal to look this issue in the eye is not just about raw political calculation. No doubt, they would rather Labour councils were not held to account for their complicity and negligence. No doubt, they are gripped by the genuinely racist conviction that tackling the rape gangs too aggressively might ‘alienate’ voters in inner-city, predominantly Muslim areas – as if Pakistani Brits aren’t also appalled by what has been going on in the shadows of their communities. But it goes much deeper than that. Labour is lost to an ideology that is obsessed with looking good and thus incapable of doing good. That thinks protecting the image of multiculturalism is more important than protecting children from rape. That cannot compute victims when they do not conform to their prefab hierarchy of victimhood. That thinks the truth is a dangerous thing, because the plebs can’t handle it. That thinks the working classes are a race-riot-in-waiting. That has jettisoned class politics for identity politics.
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Flick 🇬🇧 11 months ago
So if the Koran burning was a public order offense which could incite a reaction then what was the desecration of our national flags in a political protest? Why wasn’t that a Public Order offense? It offended millions and it creates a very real risk of violent reaction or reaction in kind. This is the heart of the problem. You either have Freedom of Speech or you don’t. You either have Blasphemy Laws or you don’t. What’s happening here is that senior plod at GMP are subjectively deciding, off their own back, what is acceptable and what is not. […] There’s clearly double standards in the application of public order offenses here and this matters because Labour are using the public order offense to deny that they have brought in a blasphemy law by the back door. By denying that the Koran burnings are enforcement of blasphemy laws Reynolds etc. have just once again highlighted the two tier justice system in the application of public order offenses.
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Flick 🇬🇧 11 months ago
https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-news/breaking-70-missing-people-found-34682991 At least 70 bodies have been found beheaded in a church with most having been held hostage. The horrific discovery was made in an abandoned village in the DR Congo this Friday. The victims, reported to be hostages of the ADF rebels, were found in a Protestant church in Kasanga, where people had left after repeated attacks. […] The ADF - Allied Defence Forces - are affiliated to ISIS and they are seen as the most deadly armed group in the region. […] The dead in the church massacre are understood to be among the dozens of people who have been reported missing since last Wednesday in the village. Horrific details from local media have revealed that they were decapitated using machetes.
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Flick 🇬🇧 11 months ago
You can make candles from beeswax, which is expensive, or tallow, which is made of cows and thus bad for the environment, but I’m going to make a wild guess and say that your bog standard cheap candle is ultimately made out of some kind of hydrocarbon. So, in our glorious net zero future, when the power grid has a little oopsie we’ll be huddled around a little blob of oil for light and heat….
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Flick 🇬🇧 11 months ago
Try to take this in. In England, in 2025, police are pandering to the religious whims of an aspiring Islamic State soldier. Like a sad tribute act to Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, they replaced a ‘sinful’ image of a female terrorist with a halal one in which her features were hidden beneath black cloth in the fashion of hardcore Islam. We all know Britain’s cops have lost the plot, but doing the pious bidding of an extremist who dreamed of joining the mass murderers of ISIS? That’s a new low.
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Flick 🇬🇧 11 months ago
Oh, I do like making stew! Another pie and four helping of venison and mushroom stew in the freezer.
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Flick 🇬🇧 11 months ago
Since it started importing huge quantities of pellets in 2012, Drax has relied on America's South for most of them, not only because it has vast tracts of forest close to coastal ports for easy export but also because these conservative states impose few of the regulations that protect woodland in the UK and the rest of Europe. Logging companies traditionally cut down only the biggest trees as they are most suitable for the building and furniture industries, leaving the smaller ones to keep growing. They also left the ecologically-precious 'wetland hardwood' varieties such as cypress because they were too gnarled to become planks or tables. Now, there's so much demand for wood that will simply be pulped for pellets, everything is worth cutting down. Environmentalists acknowledge that any really high-quality hardwood may still be sent to a sawmill but the rest becomes biomass. Sometimes, they say, an entire clearcut is turned into pellets. […] Everyone I spoke to in North Carolina admitted they were slightly shocked that 'tree-loving' and climate change-aware Britain, of all countries, had facilitated the biomass industry –adopting renewable energy accounting rules that didn't account either for the forests being lost in the US or the carbon emissions from burning the wood. Derb Carter, a senior lawyer at the Southern Environmental Law Centre, told me he had repeatedly visited the UK to explain the situation to government officials. ‘There was this assumption that surely the US regulates how forests are managed to protect the public interest,' he said. The Brits were 'surprised', he said, when he explained that in southern states like North Carolina, there was nothing of the sort.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2025/02/11/court-gives-gazans-right-settle-uk-palestine-ukraine/ A family of six seeking to flee Gaza have been allowed to join their brother in Britain after an immigration judge ruled that the Home Office’s rejection of their application breached their human rights. The family had made their application through the Ukraine Family Scheme and the decision to accept their case came despite warnings by lawyers for the Home Office that it could open the floodgates to “the admission of all those in conflict zones with family in the UK”. https://archive.ph/fFfi1
The man with the can of spray paint has been to visit. Looks like he got bored after a couple of miles.
Bored of this, now. Is there a word for “drizzle, but it’s frozen”? image