Made In Fareham

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Made In Fareham

Made In Fareham

@MadeInFareham

Proud Englishman and American Christian. aka Kibrok. Proud of the Union. Wide Awake! Member of @RestoreBritain_ & @RupertLowe10 for PM🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 🇬🇧🇺🇸

Sumali Şubat 2024
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Lydia 🇬🇧
Lydia 🇬🇧@LibertyLydia·
👑 Perfectly placed at the BASE of ‘Kings Head Hill.’ Seeing this this morning reminded me that real change doesn’t come from the top…it starts with all of us, taking those first steps to climb, rebuild, and Restore Britain together, from the ground up. Let’s get to work! 🫡🇬🇧
Restore Britain@RestoreBritain_

Chingford.

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Jake 🇬🇧
Jake 🇬🇧@ekajcw·
The Union flag should fly from every town hall and Government building in the United Kingdom.
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The Husky
The Husky@Mr_Husky1·
We are called "the elderly." But that quiet label hides something most people rarely stop to consider. We are the last living witnesses of a world that no longer exists. Look at us and you might see gray hair, slower steps, and the patience that time teaches. But listen to our story — really listen — and you'll realize something extraordinary. We are the only generation in human history to have lived a fully analog childhood and a fully digital adulthood. That's not a small thing. That's one of the most breathtaking journeys a human being has ever been asked to make. We were born in the 1940s, 50s, and early 60s, into a world still rebuilding from the rubble of World War II. Our toys were marbles and hopscotch and card games at kitchen tables. When the streetlights flickered on, that was it — childhood adventures were over, and it was time to go home. No smartphones. No streaming. No endless scroll. We built our memories in the real world. With scraped knees and laughter echoing down streets and friendships formed face to face. In 1969, we sat in living rooms staring at black-and-white televisions as Neil Armstrong took humanity's first steps on the Moon. Hundreds of thousands of us stood in muddy fields at Woodstock believing — really believing — that music and community could reshape the future. We fell in love to vinyl records spinning on turntables. We waited days, sometimes weeks, for handwritten letters to arrive. We learned patience because information didn't come instantly. Mistakes were fixed with erasers — not a delete button. Then the world transformed. Machines that once filled entire rooms shrank to devices lighter than a paperback. We went from rotary phones and party lines to seeing the face of someone we love on the other side of the ocean — instantly, on something that fits in a pocket. We watched the birth of the personal computer. The arrival of the internet. The smartphone. Artificial intelligence. And through every single shift — we adapted. Not because it was easy. Because that's what our generation does. We also carry the weight of history in our bodies. We grew up afraid of polio and tuberculosis. We watched science defeat them. We witnessed the discovery of the structure of DNA, the decoding of the human genome, the transformation of medicine itself. We survived pandemics across decades — and kept going. Few generations have been asked to absorb so much change in a single lifetime. And through all of it, certain things never changed. We still know the joy of a cold glass of lemonade on a hot afternoon. The taste of vegetables picked straight from a garden. The value of a long conversation that unfolds slowly, without a screen interrupting it. We have celebrated births and mourned losses. Carried the stories of friends who are gone. Watched the world become something our younger selves couldn't have imagined — and found ways to belong in it anyway. We are not relics. We are living bridges between two entirely different worlds. Our memory carries something the modern world needs — proof that progress doesn't have to erase wisdom. That speed doesn't have to replace patience, kindness, or reflection. So when someone calls us elderly, we can smile. Because behind that word is something remarkable. We crossed two centuries. Witnessed eight decades of transformation. Walked from handwritten letters to artificial intelligence — and never lost our sense of what actually matters.
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Kenny Carmody
Kenny Carmody@KennyCarmody·
Let me tell you something personal about light and why I talk about it so often. Before my vaccine injury I lived in California many years and thrived in it completely. Family is from Florida. I was the person lying in the midday sun when the temperature pushed past 100 degrees, comfortable, energised, at home in the heat the way someone is when their body is genuinely healthy and their thermoregulation is working exactly as it should. The sun was my natural environment. I never gave it a second thought. I was also doing what most people would now call biohacking , cold plunge followed immediately by full sun exposure. Not because someone told me to. Because my body craved it and responded to it powerfully. What I was doing, without the clinical language at the time, was training my vascular system through deliberate thermal contrast, forcing the blood vessels through rapid vasoconstriction in the cold and then vasodilation in the heat, stimulating the endothelial release of nitric oxide and building the kind of vascular resilience that conventional medicine has no pill for. Nitric oxide is everything in this context. It is the primary signalling molecule for endothelial function, the gasotransmitter produced in the lining of blood vessels in direct response to sunlight, particularly UVA wavelengths hitting the skin. It drives vasodilation. It governs blood pressure. It regulates circulation, immune function, and mitochondrial respiration. And it is produced abundantly and naturally by a body that is receiving the light it was designed to receive. Within weeks of the Moderna injection that changed everything, that was gone. Suddenly anything above 80 degrees became intolerable. My body could no longer regulate what it had handled effortlessly my entire life. And on the other side of that narrow window, anything below 60 degrees hits me like a wall of cold that healthy people around me barely notice. That is not a small thing. That is a fundamental collapse of the autonomic and endothelial systems that govern thermal regulation. The endothelialitis. The vascular dysfunction. The loss of the nitric oxide signalling that healthy endothelium produces in response to light and thermal challenge. The spike protein and the lipid nanoparticles that delivered it directly targeted and damaged the endothelial lining, the very tissue responsible for every vascular response I had spent years training and strengthening. I had very low body fat levels and quite skinny for my height. Yet the vaccine dismantled the machinery that connected me to the natural world. And that is precisely why I share everything I share about light. Because here is what I now understand at a level that goes far beyond the surface. Light is not simply energy. It is biological information. I appreciate this insight from @DrJackKruse Cytochrome c oxidase the terminal enzyme of the mitochondrial electron transport chain is directly photosensitive. Red and near-infrared wavelengths of natural sunlight are absorbed by cytochrome c oxidase and drive the production of ATP, the release of nitric oxide from the mitochondria themselves, and the reduction of oxidative stress within the cell. This is photobiomodulation, not metaphor, not wellness language, but documented quantum-level biology. The mitochondria are light-driven quantum devices and sunlight is their primary fuel source alongside food. But food is fifth on the list.
Kenny Carmody@KennyCarmody

This is one of the most important things I can share with you. And it costs nothing. Your body runs on light. Not metaphorically. Biologically. Every cell in your body contains a clock, a circadian oscillator that times your hormones, your metabolism, your immune function, your mood, your sleep, your capacity to heal and that clock is set, reset, and calibrated every single day by one primary signal. Light. Get this right and almost everything downstream improves. Get it wrong as the modern world is almost perfectly engineered to ensure you do and the consequences ripple through every system in the body. In the morning and throughout the day, you need bright, high lux, full spectrum natural light. The kind that only the sun provides. Not through glass. Not through a screen. Direct, outdoor light on the eyes and skin ideally beginning within the first thirty minutes of waking, before anything else. This morning light does several things that nothing else can replicate. It sets the master clock in the suprachiasmatic nucleus. It triggers the cortisol awakening response the healthy, natural morning cortisol pulse that gives you genuine energy, focus, and metabolic activation. It begins the melatonin countdown timer, ensuring that the correct amount of melatonin is released at the correct time fourteen to sixteen hours later. It activates serotonin synthesis. It drives dopamine signalling. It charges the mitochondria through photobiomodulation of cytochrome c oxidase. Bright light in the morning is not optional if you want to function as a human being was designed to function. And then equally important, and almost universally ignored in the evening you need the opposite. Dim, warm, low lux light after sunset. Candlelight. Incandescent red or amber bulbs. Firelight if you have it. The kind of light that signals to every cell in your body that the day is ending, that the ancient rhythm of rest and repair is beginning, and that melatonin should now be released in full. Instead, most people spend their evenings under bright LED overhead lighting and staring at screens emitting blue light at intensities that tell the brain it is midday suppressing melatonin by up to ninety percent, delaying sleep onset, fragmenting sleep architecture, and disrupting every repair process that was supposed to run overnight. This is not a minor inconvenience. Chronic circadian disruption is directly linked to metabolic dysfunction, immune suppression, cardiovascular disease, neurological deterioration, hormonal imbalance, accelerated ageing, and cancer. The light environment you live in is either medicine or poison. Bright light when the sun is up. Dim, warm light when it is not. That is the foundation. Everything else builds from there. Let there be Light.

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Paul Golding
Paul Golding@PaulGolding·
GOD’S GRACE IS ENOUGH
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Andrew Bridgen
Andrew Bridgen@ABridgen·
RFK junior responds to a question - “How do we stop stratospheric aerosol injection of Barium , Strontium, Aluminium oxide over us daily?” His answer - “it’s in the jet fuel” watch and share please - especially with the people who never look up and think !
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Made In Fareham
Made In Fareham@MadeInFareham·
@ABridgen You are an amazing warrior. Thank you for being in the right side of history
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Andrew Bridgen
Andrew Bridgen@ABridgen·
Scarcity is being deliberately created to control you. Say No to energy lockdowns. Stand up for your freedoms or they will become a distant memory for both you and future generations.
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
Find a photograph of a British high street from 1955. Look at the people. They are not thin because they were athletes. They are not thin because they had remarkable genetic gifts. They are thin because the food supply had not yet achieved the caloric and inflammatory combination that seed oil-saturated processed food produces. They ate more bread than we do. They ate more sugar per capita than we do. They smoked more. They exercised less formally, though they walked more by necessity. They also ate butter. Lard. Dripping. The food processing industry existed but had not yet fully replaced traditional fat sources with industrial alternatives. Seed oil consumption in 1955 was a fraction of what it is today. Now find a photograph of a British high street from 2026. This is not a complicated comparison. Nobody changed the humans. Someone changed the food.
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ConceptDairy™
ConceptDairy™@ConceptDairy·
We went looking for palm oil-free hot cross buns… in @sainsburys... Think it’s palm oil free? Think again. Supermarkets don’t always call it “palm oil.” Sometimes it’s hidden as palm fat. Like, comment, share if care about supporting dairy farmers 👍
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Paul
Paul@paul09429553886·
Badge of honour #RestoreBritain 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧
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