Cecil Gericke

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Cecil Gericke

Cecil Gericke

@Cecil_Gericke

You are the story the brain tells itself. Freedom=1A+2A

Katılım Kasım 2022
1.6K Takip Edilen2.1K Takipçiler
Cecil Gericke
Cecil Gericke@Cecil_Gericke·
Go listen to Bezmenov.
Giles Udy@GilesUdy

As a Soviet historian who has spent years writing about the extreme, repressive control Soviet Communism exercised over its unfortunate citizens, I find it really hard to bring a similar accusation against the Labour government and Keir Starmer. But I’m finding it increasingly difficult to avoid that conclusion. We have no Gulag or death penalty, admittedly, but what Labour and the old Soviet regime do have in common is the arrogant belief that they alone hold the moral high ground and that this entitles them to the total control over all those who do not share their worldview. And like the Soviets of old their tools of control are the same… - legislation and co-opted courts and civil service to apply it - the policing of dissent, by hate crime orders, arrests (@glinner), the long term seizure of electronic appliances (@CF_Farrow) to intimidate even those against whom no charges are finally brought. - controlling free speech (12,000 arrests annually for social media posts in 2025). George Orwell’s ‘thought crime’ persecution has become a reality under Labour. - framing dissent (the Unite the Kingdom participants) as racism and far right fascism (Stalin started that in the days when Labour was his captive party, the 1930s, and ‘fascist’ has remained their favoured mantra ever since) - attacking and weakening the family (because the family is so often a place where small ‘c’ conservative values are transmitted down the generations), including the promotion of trans ideology to confuse children in their understanding of the roles of men and women, mothers and fathers. In their eyes women can have penises and ‘heteronormativity’ must be ‘smashed’. - education, wrested as Marx decreed, from the middle class (private schools and VAT), and used as a vehicle for the state propagandising of children and youth at their most vulnerable age. … and much more. In short, I can reach no other conclusion. Under Labour, Britain is becoming a repressive state which is, incredibly, echoing the very characteristics of repression that any former resident of the Soviet Union or its satellite states would recognise today (and they do and tell us so) And with every opportunity Keir Starmer has to rein that in, he instead doubles down. Month by month things get worse. This is 2026. I can’t believe what I am seeing. Or what I’m saying. But, yes, it is going on. And only a majority government of either Tories or Reform (and I do have reservations about both) of a coalition of two can reverse this. … or we are sunk

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Alice VL
Alice VL@RiseAgainstEvil·
In September 2020, pensioner Jacoba "Jakkie" Grobler (80) at Koraal (Die Koraal) retirement village in Polokwane, Limpopo, South Africa, was murdered. The 80-year-old woman, who lived alone, was brutally beaten to death in her home within the retirement village. Her body was discovered with open wounds (reportedly beaten with a knobkerrie/club in some accounts). A 32-year-old Black man named Legonya (or similar spelling) was arrested in November 2020 and appeared in court. The case continued into 2022.
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Blueverse
Blueverse@Blueverse01·
Jason Aldean walked off the set of Late Night with Stephen Colbert before playing a single note after the “comedian” tried to humiliate him in front of the audience. “Colbert was introducing him,” said Aldean's manager, Ben Jarroo. “Then he made a crass, unnecessary statement about ‘forgiving him’ for supporting President Trump. Jason wasn’t having it.” When Colbert said his name and motioned for the curtain, there was nobody there. Aldean and his band had walked off—and they won’t be coming back. h/t: Marcia G Jones Is this the right way to respond to such behavior, or should it have been handled differently? Yes or No?
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Alice VL
Alice VL@RiseAgainstEvil·
Apartheid ended because WE, the White minority, voted to end it. On 17 March 1992, White South African voters turned out in overwhelming numbers (over 85% turnout) for a Whites-only referendum. They were asked if they supported President F.W. de Klerk's continued negotiations to dismantle apartheid and create a new constitutional order. Nearly 69% voted "Yes," 1.92 million White votes in favor versus about 876,000 against. This democratic choice by the White electorate, not battlefield victory or external coercion, opened the door to the negotiated transition that led to the 1994 elections. The ANC did not conquer South Africa. There was no military defeat of the White government or its security forces. Negotiations occurred amid political pressure, internal unrest, and economic challenges, ANC acts of terrorism, but the armed struggle never toppled the state. The transition was a negotiated handover, driven in significant part by the willingness of White leadership and voters to move beyond the old system. Sanctions affected little in the grand scheme. While international boycotts, divestment, and restrictions from the 1980's created pressures, including capital flight and some slowdown in growth, they did not cripple the country. South Africa remained resilient, self-sufficient in many sectors, and resource-rich. The economy adapted through import substitution, domestic innovation, and trade with non-sanctioning nations. Claims that sanctions alone brought the system to its knees overlook how South Africa was still thriving economically in key areas right up to the transition; advanced infrastructure, world-leading mining and agriculture, reliable power, and a first-world standard of living for much of the population (and growing opportunities for others). What have we received in return? Decades later, the fruits of that goodwill and democratic concession have soured for many White South Africans, and for the country as a whole. Promises of reconciliation, rainbow nation unity, and shared prosperity under ANC governance have given way to entrenched issues: - Skyrocketing crime and violence: South Africa now has one of the highest murder rates in the world. Farm attacks remain a brutal reality for White farming communities; entire families tortured, raped, and murdered on their land in ways that often go beyond simple robbery. Thousands of White farmers and family members have been killed since 1994, with rural safety a persistent crisis despite farmers' efforts to secure themselves. - Economic decline and stagnation: Early post-1994 growth gave way to stagnation, corruption (notably under Zuma), cadre deployment, BEE policies that prioritized race over competence, and mismanagement. Load-shedding, crumbling infrastructure, failing municipalities, and policy uncertainty have eroded the thriving economy Whites helped build and voted to share. Per capita GDP growth has flatlined or reversed for years, leaving South Africa lagging behind many peers. - Demographic and cultural displacement: Affirmative action, expropriation threats, and anti-White rhetoric in politics and media have created a sense of marginalization for the White minority (now around 7% of the population). Skills emigration ("White flight") continues as talented professionals leave for safer, more merit-based societies. The very institutions and farms Whites sustained are under strain. White South Africans extended an olive branch through that 1992 vote, believing in a future of mutual benefit and peace. In return, far too many have faced vilification, vulnerability, and the slow erosion of the prosperous society they helped create. The country that once stood as Africa's economic powerhouse now grapples with dysfunction that hurts everyone, but hits hardest those who built it and trusted the promise of the new order. True reconciliation requires acknowledging these realities, not perpetuating narratives that erase White agency and sacrifice.
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Marty 🇺🇸🇿🇦
Marty 🇺🇸🇿🇦@Darth_Martys·
A high-profile extortion and money laundering case gets struck off the roll… …because the prosecutor didn’t arrive in court. This is exactly why so many South Africans are losing faith in the justice system. Ordinary citizens miss a payment? Penalty. Miss a traffic fine? Penalty. Miss a licence renewal? Penalty. But somehow, major criminal cases involving serious allegations can collapse because somebody simply didn’t pitch up. And then we wonder why people feel like there are different rules for different people. The public is tired of incompetence, delays, collapsed cases, and endless headlines that make accountability feel optional. South Africans deserve a justice system people can actually trust. Source: ewn.co.za/2026/05/18/npa…
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A Man Of Memes
A Man Of Memes@RickyDoggin·
ln 1992 Al Gore predicted that within two decades, Florida would lose 60% of its population due to climate change. Today, 34 years later, Florida’s population is 425% higher than it was in 1992.
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Realign For Palestine
Realign For Palestine@rfpalestine·
This man calling in from Gaza, anonymous for his own safety, details a harrowing account of life in Gaza under the iron fist of Hamas’s brutal authoritarianism: “If you express any point of view that contradicts with their thinking, the easiest thing that they can do is beat you hard to break your legs.” The caller himself was kidnapped and tortured simply for stumbling across a rare anti-Hamas protest while talking to a friend on the phone. Hamas security forces thought he was filming. But the abuse and humiliation doesn’t stop there. After having to flee his home to seek safety in the south, Hamas fighters occupied his empty house without permission - resulting in its complete destruction from Israeli bombardment. “The problem is that Hamas nowadays still have AK-47s,” explains the caller. “What do you need more than an AK-47 to crack down on people, scare me and scare many other people, and to coerce people into listening to Hamas?” This is the reality of living in a terrorist-police state.
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Maxi
Maxi@AllForProgress_·
You might have heard of Maggie Oliver. She's a former Greater Manchester detective who, in 2012, was ordered to abandon her investigation into the systematic rape of children in Rochdale, and decided she would rather resign her warrant card rather than do so. Maggie, as that would imply, is one of the good ones. I constantly ask how our police can consider themselves worthy of the badge if they are not willing to return the badge rather than commit injustice in its name. Maggie did just that; she was asked to cover for criminals, so she told the shirts to stuff themselves and handed back her commission. She won a small but consequential victory in the High Court on Friday. Mr Justice Kimblin granted her foundation a full judicial review of whether the British state has actually done anything about the recommendations it accepted, in 2022, at the end of a seven-year inquiry into the institutional cover-up of decades of child sexual abuse. Maggie Oliver is one woman. She has no political party behind her and no standing in Whitehall. She has no peerage, no chambers, no billionaire foundation footing her bills. She was ordered, by senior officers, to drop her investigation into a network of men who were raping children in industrial quantities in her city, because of the demographics to which those men belong made the whole thing a bit awkward. Fourteen years on, she has done what nobody else in this country has been able to. She has hauled the British state into open court to answer for the choice it made, over four years and under two governments, to hold a seven-year, £200 million inquiry into the institutional cover-up of child abuse and implement, deliberately, none of that inquiry's recommendations. The Home Office accepted those recommendations in 2022. So did the Department for Education, the police inspectorates and the Crown Prosecution Service. And then nothing happened. The recommendations sat. The departments restructured. Ministers rotated. The girls and women who had given evidence aged. More such operations continued around the country, while the men who had run the previous set of them either walked free, left the country, or drew their own pensions. The state, in the manner of every institution Tony Blair ever built, had decided that the writing of the report was the action, and the doing of the report could be handed off to history. That is what Maggie Oliver has now forced into court. And the political class knows what that means. The Home Secretary has not commented. The Prime Minister has not commented. The candidates jockeying through the post-Starmer Labour succession have, at the time of writing, failed even to speak her name, as though they know that, if they do, lightning will flash in the sky and they'll be turned into a pillar of Tesco's-own-brand dishwasher salt. They are silent because they recognise, accurately, that the answers a judicial review will produce - to the question of why their inquiry's findings were treated as ornamental - will, should, must end the careers of every official who was supposed to act on them and did not. That councillors and councils, mayors, indeed entire political parties, will be caught under ultraviolet light and shown for their guilt. It's time a government did what the British state has spent twenty years declining to do. Take on institutional failure. Name the institutions that failed, in public, on the record. Name the officers and officials who covered it up, and the officers and officials who pressed for the cover-up too. Prosecute them under the standards that any other employee of a public organisation defrauding the public would expect to face. The recommendations the inquiry produced must be implemented in full, alongside whatever further measures a second look at the evidence then demands. There will not be another inquiry into the inquiries. There will be the verdicts. Maggie Oliver is one of the bravest people in Britain. She has earned, by her own resignation and by fourteen years and a foundation and a court case carried on her back, the right to expect from a future British government the simple thing that ought to have happened in 2014, in 2016, in 2018, in 2022 and in every other year of this national disgrace. She has not yet been given it; we have not yet been given it. But it will be given, and soon.
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Alix
Alix@AlixG_2·
Want more affordable housing? Deport 20 million illegals. Want safer streets & lower taxes? Deport 20 million illegals. Want cheaper rent? Deport 20 million illegals. Want fair elections? Deport 20 million illegals.
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Toni
Toni@ToniLL22·
James Woods, we can say that again! 🎯🎯🎯🔥🎯🎯🎯
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Nick Sortor
Nick Sortor@nicksortor·
🚨 JUST IN: San Diego Police are FLAT OUT REFUSING to name yesterday's mosque shooters Why, you ask? BECAUSE IT WAS A TRANS COUPLE. California leftists are ACTIVELY COVERING UP trans vioIence.
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James Woods
James Woods@RealJamesWoods·
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Koketso
Koketso@koketsomashilee·
The love of money is the root of all evil 🕊️🕊️🕊️Five individuals met an untimely end in Kruger National Park after being shot by rangers while engaged in an unsanctioned rhino horn Poaching. The gentlemen had already successfully shot down two rhinos and were in the process of harvesting the horn from one when they themselves were abruptly "harvested" by the park's anti-poaching unit.
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Cecil Gericke
Cecil Gericke@Cecil_Gericke·
@BowesChay @Rob_Ruadh2 The forest allowed the axe into their midst. Its handle was made of wood. They thought it was one of them.
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Chay Bowes
Chay Bowes@BowesChay·
What's most disturbing about this video isn't the old mentally ill man in a dress pretending to be a "Woman" Its the actual Women standing beside him pretending he's one of them.
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Benedykt
Benedykt@benedykt57·
Ciężarówki dostarczają broń palną do ośrodków dla imigrantów, które w rzeczywistości są koszarami-służbami. Dzieje się tak w całej Irlandii Właściciel hotelu odkrył zapieczętowany kontener wypełniony bronią palną. Reszty można się domyślić... 🤬
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