Midweek 3rd December 2025

Just think – last week a corrupt budget – this week the legal system corrupted . What an achievement …and the BBC still supports the Starmer Regime .

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222 Responses to Midweek 3rd December 2025

  1. MarkyMark says:

    “Bridget Phillipson said she wanted ‘more young people to have children, if they choose to'”
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cwyv7211jljo

    ………. Islam has stepped up for Labour …..
    Muhammad overtakes Noah as most popular boy’s name
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cly4g2v0ej6o

    ………
    “Nanny training in China, where there was previously a one-child policy”
    ……..
    China promotes education drive to make boys more ‘manly’
    Published
    4 February 2021
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-china-55926248
    …………………
    Yes, China’s one-child policy has been widely linked to an increase in female infanticide and the neglect or abandonment of infant girls. This was an unintended but serious consequence of the policy, driven by a deep-rooted cultural preference for sons.

       3 likes

    • Up2snuff says:

      MM, that suited some friends of mine – the China One Child Policy – as they were unable to conceive naturally and were able to adopt two girls from China.

         2 likes

      • MarkyMark says:

        The West helping the East solve their misogyny genocide problem!
        I just hope the girls grow to love the West/UK for what it is and not taught to hate it and make China seem morally perfect.

           2 likes

  2. Guest Who says:

    Crewkerne is joined by another satirical site: The Lamented

    “Keir Starmer is assembling a popular team of CELEBRITY influencers to help Labour turn around their image and VANQUISH Nigel Farage and Reform once and for all.

    Sauces close to no10 say Lenny Henry, James Corden and Gary Lineker have already been signed up with more influential figures to follow.”

    ——

    Looks up ‘popular’.

       3 likes

    • Up2snuff says:

      Gravy news, from the Labour Party there, Guest – ‘Sauces’ – you are very wise to look up ‘popular’ as the names you list may not rate that highly here or elsewhere.

         2 likes

      • Guest Who says:

        Ways wiv Werdz abound U2S…

        The Economist’s Zany Dubble Barrel Ed has…

        Zanny Minton Beddoes
        Editor-in-chief
        On Wednesday I interviewed Sir Keir Starmer, Britain’s prime minister, inside Downing Street for The Insider, our weekly video show. (You can watch the full conversation.) Eighteen months after winning power with a hefty majority, Sir Keir in many ways seems a beleaguered figure. Britons are fed up, there is little evidence of bold policy change and his Labour Party is consistently slipping in the polls.

        ‘Slipping in the polls’

           2 likes

  3. MarkyMark says:

    “Government pledges (SPEND UK TAX PAYER MONEY) to end children living in B&Bs (LIVING OR TEMPORARY – KING CHARLES HAS ROOM)”
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c0l9nrkd4z6o

    In England alone, more than 172,000 children are living in temporary accommodation.

    DEMOGRAPHICS?

       2 likes

  4. Fedup2 says:

    Apparently the BBC is launching a ‘campaign ‘ to thank licence payers who still pay for it – which I assess will be another ‘nudge ‘ for people to stop paying …anyway here’s the piece from the Telegraph – a cut and paste nightmare …

    STARTS The BBC has launched a “desperate” campaign to remind viewers that their licence fees prop up the corporation.

    The broadcaster now displays a slate between programmes on live television that shows the logos of each service it offers, along with a “thank you” to licence fee payers.

    The message says: “Everything across the BBC is funded by you. Thank you”.

    A voice-over that begins after a programme is finished adds: “This and everything across the BBC is made possible because we’re funded by you. Thank you.”

    The campaign uses stylised logos of the six services the BBC offers: iPlayer, Sounds, News, Sport, Weather and Bitesize, its education platform.

    The corporation launched the campaign in September against a backdrop of diminishing licence fee income as viewers increasingly turn away from the BBC.

    Greg Smith, a Conservative shadow minister, said: “Under fire for lack of impartiality and poor content, instead of spending licence fee payers’ money on upping their game, the BBC are spending it on nonsensical adverts to hoodwink the public.

    He added: “As ever, though, the BBC forget the public can see right through it and this is only going to drive satisfaction with the state broadcaster down, down, down.”

       0 likes

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