Rod Humphris

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Rod Humphris

Rod Humphris

@HumphrisRod

Publican. Novelist. Makes things. At peace with Neitzsche.

Bath, UK. Katılım Ocak 2021
632 Takip Edilen1K Takipçiler
Rod Humphris
Rod Humphris@HumphrisRod·
@martianwyrdlord Sorry about that. Yes, we’re still here, us British and English; we’re remembering who we are and change is coming. Thank God.
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John Carter
John Carter@martianwyrdlord·
A couple years ago Morgoth speculated that the Yookay might become Woke North Korea, as the rest of the world moved beyond the pieties of the twentieth century to belatedly address the catastrophes of mass immigration, multiculturalism, fertility collapse, gender theory, etc. In retrospect it looks like he was off-target. Reform and Restore are well on their way to forming the new left and right flanks of a shifted Overton window. Populist immigration restriction parties are gaining traction all over the European continent. Instead it is Canada that remains firmly in the grasp of totalitarian boomerism. The Liberal Party has never been more popular. The Conservative Party, which stands for nothing, gradually collapses. There is no sign of an organized populist right wing political party. This while living standards collapse. Canada has the most mind-raped boomers on the planet and it isn't even close.
The Food Professor@FoodProfessor

While U.K.'s PM Starmer is facing growing pressure to resign amid a sluggish U.K. economy, PM Carney’s popularity is at a record high — despite Canada arguably being in worse shape on several key metrics, including unemployment, productivity, private-sector growth, and food inflation. Wonder why...

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Rod Humphris
Rod Humphris@HumphrisRod·
@MarioNawfal A lot more than half of Britain would love to see the back of Starmer and all the other Epstein crew we have running the place.
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Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
RECAP: Iran said they have no idea what Trump is talking about regarding uranium. Trump said they agreed then took it back. So we have 2 separate versions of the same non-conversation, zero progress, oil still above $100. Trump's national security team met today to weigh next steps. Options include restarting Project Freedom, resuming airstrikes on the 25% of Iranian targets not yet hit, or a special forces mission to seize Iran's uranium stockpile. He flies to Beijing Wednesday. Officials say no military action before he returns Friday. Speaking of which: dozens of USAF refueling tankers are back at Ben Gurion airport. Last time that happened was February 23–27. The war started February 28. Israel's intelligence assessment dropped today: Mojtaba Khamenei personally will not compromise and is the main obstacle to any deal. That would explain a lot. Meanwhile Pakistan, the official Iran-U.S. mediator, was quietly letting Iranian military jets park on its airfields to hide them from U.S. airstrikes. We also learned the UAE was secretly striking Iran during the war, including a hit on an oil refinery on Lavan Island. Iran responded with hundreds of drones and missiles at Dubai and Kuwait. Nobody announced any of this. A war within the war. On the domestic front: Trump told Fox News he's "seriously considering making Venezuela the 51st state" because there's $40 trillion in oil there and "Venezuela loves Trump." US forces already removed Maduro in January. So. In the UK, Keir Starmer is refusing to resign despite 70+ of his own MPs publicly demanding he does. Trump said "this is not Winston Churchill we're dealing with." Half of Britain agrees.
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal

RECAP: As Trump prepares for a showdown with Xi in Beijing this week, tensions with Iran persist. The two countries are still deadlocked, as everyone waits on that "Art of the Deal" we've heard so much about... Tehran is demanding a lot of the U.S., up front, with the U.S. wanting the reverse (and perhaps fewer concessions). As Israel continues operations in southern Lebanon against an entrenched Hezbollah, another controversy bubbled to the surface today: Eurovision. Reportedly, Israel ran a coordinated, multi-year campaign to influence results for the popular European music contest. As if they needed any more PR hits. Maybe Netanyahu will kick a puppy next... Lastly, 17 Americans and 1 UK passenger from the MV Hondius, the ship with Hantavirus-infected passengers, arrived in Nebraska for quarantine. Hope that's over. We'll see how the Iran negotiations develop leading into Trump's visit to China this week. Stay tuned.

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SirFrankW75
SirFrankW75@SirFrankW75·
@JChimirie66677 @Ricardo94175176 He's not going anywhere. This has been obvious for months and I really don't understand why all the people who keep saying he's finished can't see it. He's PM until 2029, and will continue to wreak havoc come what may.
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Jim Chimirie 🇬🇧
Jim Chimirie 🇬🇧@JChimirie66677·
They Still Don't Get It. And They Never Will. The local election results are barely counted and the Labour messaging machine has already told you what to think. Chris Bryant says Labour must deliver the change the country desperately wants. Heidi Alexander says people voted for change in 2024 and want it delivered faster. David Lammy says the last thing Britain needs is Labour turning inward. They have misread the results so completely that the misreading itself is the story. Sunderland fell to Reform after fifty years. Gateshead fell. Blackburn fell. Tameside fell after forty seven years. Wales, governed by Labour since devolution began in 1999, now has a Plaid Cymru administration for the first time. These communities and this nation did not vote the way they did because Labour was delivering its agenda too slowly. They rejected that agenda entirely. The small boats still coming. The dispersal of unvetted men into communities that were never consulted. The energy bills driven up by net zero dogma. The two-tier policing that jailed people for expressing views on immigration while sectarian marches went unchallenged. The grooming gang inquiry that victims say has been managed to minimise accountability rather than deliver it. The taxation of working people and family farms while billions flow in foreign aid to Afghanistan, Somalia and Sudan, regimes that stone women, ban girls from education and sentence apostates to death. The country that funds gender apartheid abroad while failing to protect its own women and girls at home has now delivered its verdict at the ballot box. These are not policies the country wants faster. These are policies the country has rejected. The distinction is fundamental and Labour's entire leadership class has missed it. Starmer's response to the worst local election result in Labour's history is to bring back Gordon Brown and Harriet Harman. Gordon Brown was Chancellor when he sold 395 tonnes of Britain's gold reserves between 1999 and 2002 at near a twenty year low, a decision that cost the Treasury an estimated £7 billion at subsequent prices. He became Prime Minister and presided over the worst financial crisis since the 1930s before losing the 2010 general election. He is now being brought back as Special Envoy on Global Finance to advise a government that has just suffered its worst ever local election defeat. Nigel Farage's assessment was characteristically blunt. An unpopular Prime Minister who lost a general election is now seen by Starmer as the saviour. He meant Labour are doomed. Harriet Harman has been appointed adviser on violence against women and girls. Between 1978 and 1982 Harman served as legal officer of the National Council for Civil Liberties at a time when the Paedophile Information Exchange held affiliated status within the organisation. In 2014 Harman expressed regret after this connection was reported. She denied supporting PIE or campaigning to lower the age of consent below sixteen. Those denials are on the record. What is also on the record is that a Prime Minister whose government lost the local elections in part because of failures to protect vulnerable girls from organised sexual exploitation has chosen as his safeguarding adviser someone whose name has been permanently associated with that controversy. The optics alone represent a judgment so poor it defies explanation. This is the reset. Two figures from Labour's past, one associated with one of the most costly financial decisions in modern British history, one with one of the most toxic controversies in the party's recent record, brought back the morning after the worst local election result in the party's history. The ministers and the Prime Minister are operating in the same closed loop. Same assumptions. Same conclusions. More of the same, delivered faster, by older faces with worse records. The country was clear on Thursday. This government cannot hear it.
Jim Chimirie 🇬🇧 tweet mediaJim Chimirie 🇬🇧 tweet media
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Rod Humphris
Rod Humphris@HumphrisRod·
@robinmonotti David Bellamy every time. I miss him, and remembering him makes me realise again what a bunch of low-functioning morons our public life is now full of.
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Robin Monotti
Robin Monotti@robinmonotti·
THE CAMP DAVIDS OF THE ENVIRONMENT We environmentalists can be divided into two camps: the David Bellamy camp, and the David Attenborough camp. I am firmly in Camp David Bellamy, how about you?
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Rod Humphris
Rod Humphris@HumphrisRod·
@goddek @IsabellaMDeLuca And enjoy them and don’t worry about them too much; the world is full of people who will tell you that you have to do it this way, or that way, but the bees know what they’re doing, even if you don’t.
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Isabella Maria DeLuca
Isabella Maria DeLuca@IsabellaMDeLuca·
I’m thinking about starting beekeeping. Any tips? 🐝
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Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
IRAN JUST DENIED STRIKING UAE'S FUJAIRAH OIL FACILITIES Are they trying to deescalate? Was it an error?
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Rod Humphris
Rod Humphris@HumphrisRod·
@goddek That the underlying tenets of Christianity are self-evident facts. I didn’t know I held that view, or that most of the rest of the world doesn’t. I don’t mean that they are necessarily wrong, only that they aren’t a given.
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Dr. Simon
Dr. Simon@goddek·
What’s a belief you held strongly 5 years ago that you’d fight your past self over today?
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Rod Humphris
Rod Humphris@HumphrisRod·
@LozzaFox I think Rupert’s point is that everyone else in that constituency would suffer alongside the idiots, and that’s not fair or helpful.
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Laurence Fox
Laurence Fox@LozzaFox·
I disagree. People should have to live with the consequences of their ideologies. Otherwise how do they measure the consequences of their ideologies? Said as someone who is no fan of Farage or the political Ponzi scheme which he heads up.
Carl Benjamin 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿@Sargon_of_Akkad

Terrible, vindictive, ideological politics. Not a responsible steward of the land, but instead a partisan attack on political opponents because a percentage of the constitutency voted the wrong way. Atrocious.

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Rod Humphris
Rod Humphris@HumphrisRod·
Bloody hell, some sanity in the world, at last.
Restore Britain@RestoreBritain_

Restore Britain's Energy Philosophy. Restore Britain’s forthcoming energy paper sets out the steps for ensuring cheap and abundant energy at home. This project is three months in the making and consistent with our track record of producing well-researched, in-depth papers for the good British public to scrutinise. As for our imminent energy policy document, we present a short teaser below... At Restore Britain, we believe that energy is the lifeblood of any developed first-world economy. First and foremost, then, it should be cheap, reliable, and scalable. If that means investment in fossil fuels, as right now it does, then so be it. Affordable energy makes nations rich and rich nations are better equipped than poor nations to tackle any environmental challenges. Overall, energy should be valued as strategic national infrastructure, not treated as an environmental compliance problem. We also believe that it must serve our security needs. In the modern world, national sovereignty means nothing if it is not backed by energy independence. The future we envision is one of self-confident nuclear expansion, full exploitation of our offshore oil and gas reserves, onshore shale development where feasible, and some limited role for renewables – albeit without subsidies, competing on their own merits – as part of a balanced grid mix. These should meet our energy demands at a rate affordable to British households and British businesses. On its own, though, this is not enough to make energy cheap, plentiful, and thus restore Britain to prosperity. We will also need to embark upon a mass removal of our binding Net Zero commitments, the vast majority of which are smothering our economy to no worthwhile end. Even if we were to opt for a ‘full steam ahead’ strategy on oil, gas, and nuclear right away, energy prices would not come down unless we first took aim at the structural issues caused by the Net Zero cult. We would repeal the lot. The debate now raging about energy bills shows that the British people are struggling. Ultimately, though, what we need is more a long-term vision for national flourishing than eye-catching measures aimed at temporary relief. The ability to build is also vital. A nation may possess a capable population, plentiful resources, and cutting-edge technological know-how, but if it cannot turn these inputs into power plants, transmission lines, factories, housing, ports, railways, and data centres, then that nation’s economic potential remains unrealised. Our practical approach proceeds from two major principles. First, strategic infrastructure must be treated as a matter of national capability rather than ordinary planning disputes. We would work to ensure that approval timelines are measured in months, not years. Second, regulatory frameworks must be cut back and simplified. An alarming number of delays arise not from environmental or health and safety protection itself, but from overlapping layers of approval, consultation, and litigation that cause projects to stall for indefinite periods on end. OIL & GAS Unless we reverse course, Britain will soon be the only country in Europe with a windfall tax on oil and gas profits still in force, scaring off investment and undermining our energy needs. Instead, we would impose no more than the standard 25% corporation tax, not the effective 78% grabbed by the Treasury at present. Right now, the incentives around even the small amount of drilling that is permitted are extremely forbidding. In the year ending July 2024, the average rate of return for offshore operators stood at a pitiful net -1%. Our aim, by contrast, is to foster a predictable environment that rewards risk-taking investors, creates proper jobs, and deepens valuable skill-pools. We intend to preserve Aberdeen in particular as a crucial node in the oil and gas sector. On current trends, the local economy of North East Scotland and the national economy of Britain as a whole is threatened by Ed Miliband’s lunatic, ideologically driven pursuit of Net Zero at all costs. But we would also level with the British public. There are no overnight solutions to the way in which we have been so woefully misgoverned in recent decades, including on matters related to energy. We would not hesitate to build new coal-fired power plants as part of an interim strategy to transition to more reliable long-term sources. The major advantage of such plants is that, as well as being dispatchable, they can be up and running within a shorter timeframe (roughly three to four years) than new gas turbines. As both China and Germany have shown, modern techniques also make coal far less of a pollutant than it used to be. Last of all, there is plenty of it – particularly the cleanest and densest anthracite and bituminous varieties – across the British Isles. NUCLEAR We would turn our efforts, too, towards a nationwide nuclear renaissance, in particular building an extensive fleet of Small Modular Reactors (SMRs). Cutting-edge SMR designs boast a range of virtues. They are powerful enough to meet the needs of a small- to medium-sized town, but nimble enough to do so without much notice. The Rolls-Royce SMRs, for instance, require an overall site footprint of fewer than 10 acres. Contrary to larger projects like Sizewell C and Hinkley Point C, they are also easier to finance privately and with minimal, if any, state funds. The major problem for all nuclear power projects, however, remains burdensome overregulation. We shall therefore expand on the work of the regulatory taskforce already commissioned by the Labour government. The brief of our taskforce would be to eliminate all forms of duplication across every level of our existing regulatory framework, from environmental impact assessments to planning hurdles. As part of an interim strategy between where we find ourselves today and the ultimate goal of simplifying our regulatory system along the lines of foreign success stories like France and South Korea, we would not hesitate to overrule the regulator by automatic repeal of any laws or regulations that it cites to block standardised designs safely in operation elsewhere in the developed world. OFFSHORE WIND Offshore wind turbines are remote enough to be non-despoiling to natural beauty, to require no land competition, and though intermittent by nature, can work hand in glove with natural gas as a more reliable substitute whenever the wind fails to blow. Our ultimate aim is to be energy independent, but since that cannot occur instantly and we are already committed to buy whatever our windfarms generate, we may as well make the most of it. Between now and where we aspire to take Britain, we are bound to find ourselves in a position where, while longer term forms of dispatchable power are built, we shall need some wind. FRACKING In the same way that lifting the ban on North Sea oil and gas exploration would be a priority under a Restore Britain government, so too would re-examining the opportunities presented by shale gas. The obstacles in our case are state-imposed constraints on new well developments, a moratorium on fracking reimposed by Rishi Sunak in October 2022, and onerous taxes on oil and gas companies. The irony is that fracking, though demonised for causing tremors, is far less seismically disruptive than the geothermal wells in Cornwall so often lauded by the very activists who despise shale exploration. Once the ban is lifted, the regulations would be rewritten to establish a level playing field between the fracking sector and the geothermal sector, which for arbitrary, unjust, and counter-productive reasons is less burdened. CAUSE FOR HOPE We note with excitement the fact that Britain possesses substantial domestic energy resources and the technical capacity to develop them. What has been lacking is the political will to prioritise cheap, abundant, and reliable energy over costly, ideologically driven climate targets. Removing the self-destructive Net Zero system, reforming planning and regulation to enable timely construction, and restoring a pragmatic balance between oil and gas, nuclear, hydrocarbons, and unsubsidised renewables would allow markets and private investment to deliver the abundance required for affordable energy and national restoration. Victorian Britain relied on cheap power and clean water to drive the Industrial Revolution. Nothing fundamental has changed. We have an abundance of both. A self-confident drive for increased energy production at home would boost government revenue from corporation and employment taxes, while reducing our exposure to global shocks and our reliance on foreign imports. Restoring Britain’s energy security will not be without transitional challenges, but the alternative is continued adherence to policies that have produced some of Europe’s highest energy prices. A patriotic energy policy must place the interests of the British people first. Our full paper will be published very soon indeed.

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Rod Humphris
Rod Humphris@HumphrisRod·
@RollingHedge This is really good. Quite right about the middle going into stress; I'm seeing this daily. And the pipeline into the middle it is collapsing. If university education was a stock, which it kind of is, it's dropping through the floor.
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Rod Humphris retweetledi
Anglo Futurism Capital LP 🇬🇧🐿️
The Bank of England just sold a 2061 gilt at £23.41. It bought it at £100. A 67% loss, indemnified by you. This is the receipt arriving in the post. From the automation revolution, Britain’s demand-side collapse has already begun, the cognitive middle is the collateral, and the £9.18 trillion of housing wealth on household balance sheets is about to discover what it actually is. The BoE knows. The Treasury knows. No party will say it out loud. The coming recession is merely foreplay. Read the full diagnosis 👇 open.substack.com/pub/anglofutur…
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Carlos That Notices Things
Carlos That Notices Things@QuetzalPhoenix·
Older than the Incas Older than the Aztecs Older than the Maori in NZ Older than the Zulu in SA Older than the Lakota Older than Islam in India But the English are not officially considered "native" to England.
Jeremy Wayne Tate@JeremyTate41

This door in Westminster Abbey is older than most modern nation-states. Made in the 1050s from an English oak, it's the only surviving Anglo-Saxon door in Britain.

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Rod Humphris
Rod Humphris@HumphrisRod·
This is good.
Rupert Lowe MP@RupertLowe10

Rape Gang Inquiry update. Our team is currently going through our draft report to ensure that all is legally sound for publication. The plan is straightforward. I intend to use parliamentary privilege in the chamber to name a number of the worst perpetrators/officials who we believe have escaped justice. We will then use private prosecutions to pursue those individuals through the courts, and eventually put them in prison. These are incredibly dangerous scumbags. It is an national network of organised crime - it is not simply disparate gangs. This is a comprehensive criminal network that is capable of the most evil acts. I will be informing the police, parliamentary security and the Home Office beforehand of who I intend to name and why - I also now have private security for the first time in my life. But do not underestimate the danger of these networks. It is organised crime of the very worst kind. We started this inquiry not to just talk, but to act. The report will be published after the elections as I want this to be a cross-party effort, and party politics should not interfere with any of our activity. Numerous Conservative MPs have been supportive, as have the Northern Irish and even a Labour MP attending the hearings. I want this to go beyond petty party politics. We still have a significant amount of money from the crowdfunder, and that is ready to privately prosecute. This is where we are. This is the plan. Thank you to everybody for your support.

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Rod Humphris retweetledi
Rupert Lowe MP
Rupert Lowe MP@RupertLowe10·
Rape Gang Inquiry update. Our team is currently going through our draft report to ensure that all is legally sound for publication. The plan is straightforward. I intend to use parliamentary privilege in the chamber to name a number of the worst perpetrators/officials who we believe have escaped justice. We will then use private prosecutions to pursue those individuals through the courts, and eventually put them in prison. These are incredibly dangerous scumbags. It is an national network of organised crime - it is not simply disparate gangs. This is a comprehensive criminal network that is capable of the most evil acts. I will be informing the police, parliamentary security and the Home Office beforehand of who I intend to name and why - I also now have private security for the first time in my life. But do not underestimate the danger of these networks. It is organised crime of the very worst kind. We started this inquiry not to just talk, but to act. The report will be published after the elections as I want this to be a cross-party effort, and party politics should not interfere with any of our activity. Numerous Conservative MPs have been supportive, as have the Northern Irish and even a Labour MP attending the hearings. I want this to go beyond petty party politics. We still have a significant amount of money from the crowdfunder, and that is ready to privately prosecute. This is where we are. This is the plan. Thank you to everybody for your support.
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Rod Humphris retweetledi
EM Burlingame - 蒲 奕 言
EM Burlingame - 蒲 奕 言@EMBurlingame·
Downward Slope | by: E.M. Burlingame I’ve been so busy with life I’ve not lived— chasing the next ridge, the next fight, the next goddamn rung, while the real hours bled out behind me like spent casings in the dirt. The sun came up, the sun went down; I called it winning. So busy feeling I’ve felt nothing— heart locked tight in the wire of calendars and calls, numb to the raw salt sting of loss, the slow burn of a real laugh, the sudden ache that says you’re still human beneath the armor. So busy building I’ve not been— stacking walls, empires, legacies of concrete and code, while the man who was supposed to live inside them stood outside in the rain, watching his own shadow thin. So busy connecting I’ve lost touch— fingers flying across glass and distance, yet the weight of my child's hand in mine, the hushed tones of a woman's voice across the table, the simple press of forehead to forehead— all of it dissolved into static. So busy thinking I’ve forgotten— mind a storm of strategies and what-ifs and endless replays, lost the taste of dirt after rain, the names of things meant something, the quiet knowing that needs no words, the primal pulse that says you're here, right now, alive. So busy doing I’ve not enjoyed— hands moving, feet marching, bank account offering its hollow approval, a life chock filled with experiences and things, but the marrow-deep yes of a moment fully claimed? Swallowed whole by the engine I built to keep me moving. Now I stand on the steepening down slope of a life. Gray threading the temples. Knees remembering every mile. The long shadow behind me longer than the path still ahead, and the wind up here cuts colder, cleaner. The question claws up from the ribs like an old wound reopening: Is it too late? And what about you— out there in your own frantic weave, chasing the same ghosts down the same narrowing trail? Because I know you’re the very same. We’ve all been architects of our own absence Hustling, chasing money instead of love. But listen. There's still blood hot in the veins. Lungs still draw the night air, thick with pine and possibility. The down slope has its own brutal grace— faster now, steeper, no time left for the pretty lies. A daughter’s strained laugh cuts sharper against the gathering dark. The bite of good whiskey. The stubborn decision to stay in it. The sudden, fierce knowing that even this late, the heart can still crack open and bleed something real. It’s never too late to begin living what little light remains. Not perfectly. Not prettily. Just raw. Just deep. Just alive.
EM Burlingame - 蒲 奕 言 tweet media
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Rod Humphris
Rod Humphris@HumphrisRod·
@WorldByWolf I’ll believe that when I see it. Human beings have a long history of finding reasons why they shouldn’t give up power just yet.
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