


slipper
829 posts





🚨 TRAVELODGE CONTINUED. Continuing my Travelodge investigations I produce a housing benefit claim for £958.62 per week to a migrant in a Travelodge in Glasgow and a photo of items found in rooms. Female staff are suppled rape alarms but normal paying guests are unaware who they share a hotel with. More details in a new exclusive video launching tonight.



Why We Have Joined Restore Britain And Why We Support Rupert Lowe in His Purpose to Unify the British People and All Positive Participants to Prevent the Otherwise Inevitable Destruction of Our Culture. By John & Irina Mappin There comes a moment in the life of a nation when complaint must give way to construction. For years, many of us have watched the drift — the slow erosion of confidence, sovereignty, cultural coherence, and simple common sense. We have debated it at dinner tables, lamented it in drawing rooms, and dissected it online. Yet civilisation is not preserved by commentary alone. It is preserved by participation. That is why we have decided to join Restore Britain. Not as a protest. Not as an act of anger. But as an act of restoration. We have spent much of our lives building — businesses, creative ventures, cultural platforms. At Camelot Castle Hotel, we have sought to create not merely a hotel, but an epicentre of creativity — a place where art, philosophy, enterprise and friendship meet. Camelot is not nostalgia; it is a living myth. It reminds us that greatness begins with imagination. And Britain, too, is a living myth. This island produced Magna Carta, parliamentary democracy, Shakespeare, Newton, the Industrial Revolution, and the defeat of totalitarianism. It is not a trivial footnote in history. It is one of the great civilisational engines of the modern world. But engines, if neglected, rust. Restore is not about grievance politics. It is about competence, confidence and clarity. It is about borders that function, laws that mean something, energy policies grounded in realism, and a tax system that rewards work rather than punishes initiative. Most importantly, it is about cultural self-respect. Our decision was not purely philosophical. It became personal. At one point, we were formally approached regarding the possible use of our hotel to accommodate large numbers of asylum seekers. A very substantial financial sum was offered. For some, this would have been a straightforward commercial decision. For us, it was a moment of clarity. We think it is fair to say that people know where we stand on the subject of illegal immigration. Compassion must always exist — but compassion without control ceases to be compassion; it becomes chaos. We do not criticise individuals seeking refuge in difficult circumstances. But the fact that a historic cultural landmark in Tintagel could be so readily repurposed as emergency overflow accommodation brought home something far more serious: the scale of the dysfunction. It revealed, starkly, that the system was no longer operating within manageable bounds. When a government begins scrambling for buildings rather than managing borders, we are no longer discussing policy refinement — we are witnessing policy failure. That moment crystallised for us the true state of our country. Politics ultimately comes down to people. We have spoken this week with Rupert Lowe. We are proud to support Rupert's vision and proud to have donated to Restore's Cromwell Club. In an age where politics has become theatrical, transactional and often hollow, character matters more than ever. We have seen his character first-hand. Integrity is not measured in press releases. It is measured in private conduct. When we bought Camelot Castle — that beautiful mythological icon that it is — many friends congratulated us. Over the years, we have often been praised for the restoration that has followed. We are frequently asked: what is it like to own such a national treasure? And of course, it is an honour. But the truth is this: one never truly owns such an iconic asset. One is merely its guardian. We are taking care of it for the next generation and for the generations that will follow. And that principle applies equally to our country. Britain is not something we possess. It is something we are entrusted with. There is much work to do when it comes to creating the future of this beautiful land that we have all been entrusted with. Borders matter. Energy policy matters. Economic revival matters. Cultural confidence matters. But above all, stewardship matters. Culture and politics are reflections of one another. At Camelot Castle, we have often spoken of creativity as the rehabilitation of civilisation. When you restore an individual’s creative spark, you restore their sanity, their agency, their future. When you restore a nation’s confidence, you restore its trajectory. Restore, in that sense, is not merely a political movement. It is a cultural reset. It says: decline is not destiny. As lifelong champions of entrepreneurs, artists, thinkers and builders, we recognise something in Restore that is too often absent from modern politics — seriousness. Not performative outrage. Not managerial drift. But seriousness. Britain stands at a crossroads: The easy path is cynicism. The harder path is responsibility. We have chosen responsibility. Restore offers a platform for serious reform: controlled migration, energy independence, regulatory simplification, economic revival, and the reassertion of parliamentary sovereignty. It is not extreme to want your country to function. Politics, at its best, is not about power. It is about stewardship. It is about passing on something stronger than we inherited. We want our children — and yours — to inherit a Britain that believes in itself again. A Britain that rewards hard work. A Britain that protects its freedoms. A Britain that speaks with moral clarity in a confused world. That is why we have joined Restore. Because the restoration of sanity begins with a decision. And we have made ours. All our love, John and Irina Mappin @RupertLowe10 @RestoreBritain_ @elonmusk



