7/ Next one
When covid was killing a similar number of people there was clamouring for restrictions, cutting covid transmission would of course help cut these wait times, but the Telegraph opposes those measures
Article doesn't offer any solutions
8/ Next expert Carl Heneghan, demanding an investigation
9/ Heneghan calls for an investigation of death certificates
His CEBM is now affiliated to Pandata which is claiming vaccines are cause of excess deaths
10/ Pandata, Herd immunity lobbyists, Trump administration advisers, Republican governor candidate and a collection of prominent antivaxxers and conspiracy theorists
11/ Heneghan knows exactly how his comments would be interpreted by some, actually it's quite odd Knapton doesn't find time to say there's no evidence vax is responsible, almost like they want people to make that interpretation
12/ We do get one voice quoted suggesting covid as a cause but considering the rest of the article readers are led to believe this is a fringe view
13/ Then we have Jefferson, also at CEBM...
14/ Remember many of the harms of lockdown crowd in 2020 predicted we would already have 250,000 to 500,000 lockdown deaths by now,
15/ #HARTleaks show Knapton who wrote this piece is seen as a good route to getting antivax disinformation into the mainstream
16/ And what a more nuanced view on excess deaths looks like
🧵Anne Longfield the children's commissioner at the start of the pandemic has put in a joint application with UsForThem to be core participants in the UKs covid inquiry
Are we going to have people that write for an organisation which published a hit list of 101 "Pro lockdowners" alongside pictures of guillotines and nooses leading to people on the list receiving death threats?
So the school workforce survey is out for the last school year, thought I would look at number of deceased teachers, previous years have been somewhere between 130-150
🤔 …e-education-statistics.service.gov.uk/find-statistic…
That is total deaths, but by May 2020 many more than 12 were dead, and total deaths from all causes had reached over 200 according to ONS figures
🧵And here it is, Schools as infrastructure bill, one of the first things they proposed in June 2020, as I said at the time, it's always been about breaking unions, removing the right to strike for any reason
As proposed by RW think tanks pre pandemic
2/ Weaponise children's mental health to not just undermine workers rights to a safe working environment, but also ability to strike for wages that meet cost of living
Unions aren't even responsible for proposals for a shorter school week, it's school leaders with broken budgets
3/ Worth noting that pre pandemic some primary schools were doing half days on Fridays due to funding pressure, the media didn't say anything then because they couldn't shift blame away from a gov that was actively defending education
The covid recovery all party parliamentary group recently had Nick Hudson of disinformation group Pandata as an "expert speaker" his business is financial risk management...
They called in Truss and Sunak to legislate to ban future pandemic control measures 1/2
Pandata are cited as one of the main causes of vax hesitancy in South Africa, members include conspiracy theorists calling for healthcare workers and vaccinators to be put on trial for crimes against humanity, and they are platformed by MPs!
🧵The cost of living crisis has been going on for more than a decade, its just that its rolling up income groups and drawing more people into difficulty
It's inevitable in the public sector as we keep receiving pay rises below inflation
2/ If they are feeling generous we might occasionally be allowed to have a rise that meets inflation, but they will never allow us to have a rise above inflation
The same on real terms spending on public services, since 2010 we've been sentenced to a slow death by inflation
3/Gradual erosion of living standards is hard wired into conservative policy
Recent events have merely accelerated the process, and as public sector workers are reduced to subsistence living we now longer have the disposable income to spend in the private sector beyond essentials