There's been an interesting update in the Southport story...
Key reporter Charlie Astor-Bentley broke her two-month-long silence today.
Revelations and context.
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In a disturbing twist to the already grim story, journalist Charlie Astor-Bentley has spoken publicly for the first time in nearly two months—revealing her X account was hacked and her viral thread on Southport child-murderer Axel Rudakubana’s sentencing was deleted.
This was no ordinary thread.
Bentley had live-posted courtroom details as Rudakubana, the man responsible for one of the most horrifying massacres in modern British history, was sentenced to life in prison with a minimum term of 52 years.
Her reporting was sharp, unsparing, and damning—not just of Rudakubana, but of the UK institutions that repeatedly failed to stop him.
Then it vanished.
Pinned to the top of her profile and seen by 50 million people in three days, the thread was one of the clearest, most complete accounts of what had unfolded during the hearings and on that tragic summer day in Southport.
It detailed the truly grim nature of the murders, how Rudakubana had slipped through the cracks of the criminal justice system, and how officials scrambled to obscure their trail.
Bentley’s disappearance from the public eye sparked a wave of speculation. Some feared she had been physically targeted. Others believed she had been pressured into silence.
Such fears weren’t baseless.
When political blog Guido Fawkes dared to question why Rudakubana’s hearings had been delayed last October, our authorities reportedly stepped in—directly pressuring the outlet to pull the piece.
That wasn’t the only clampdown.
Labour's Speaker of the House of Commons, Sir Lindsay Hoyle, issued an extraordinary gag order banning MPs from mentioning the Southport massacre in Parliament, despite parliamentary privilege protecting such speech from legal interference.
This, of course, came before the arrest of commentator Bernie Spofforth—detained after she speculated online that the then-unnamed suspect was a first-generation immigrant who “came to the UK by boat and was on an MI6 watch list.” She prefaced the post with “If this is true”.
But this morning, Astor-Bentley returned online with a statement:
She reported being locked out of her account shortly after the post began to gain international attention. Not only was the thread deleted, but her pinned tweet was removed and her feed scrubbed of content related to the proceedings.
The most chilling part?
This all happened just as readers began to notice what legacy media had largely ignored: Rudakubana’s links to what some might call anti-white extremism—connections some now believe may have fuelled the child murders.
Police reportedly found disturbing material on Rudakubana’s laptops, including content on Nazi Germany, ethnic violence in Sri Lanka, Somali clan cleansing, the Rwandan genocide, torture victims, and beheadings—alongside cartoons glorifying violence.
Some of the material carried clear anti-Anglo tones, centred on the oppression of Black and “indigenous” people by white Europeans.
Bentley had also shared allegations she had been informed of regarding Rudakubana’s rhetoric in school...
He was known to speak of “Britain needing a genocide like Rwanda.” At 15, after a local football match, he also apparently declared the need for a “white genocide.”
And just as she began revealing all of these details on X, her access was abruptly cut off—not for days, not for weeks, but two whole months.
The loss of the thread meant the erasure of a key record—one that held public servants, police, and policy-makers to account—just as pressure on those institutions was reaching a peak.
Bentley has not named suspects. But she made clear that this wasn’t a technical glitch. Someone, somewhere, wanted her silenced.
In another twist, the viral thread suddenly reappeared this afternoon—untouched...
But note this is after national attention climaxed, international interest peaked, and the mainstream had moved on...
With the narrative seemingly locked in place.
Charlie has said she's going to reveal more on the matter very soon.
You can follow her here (highly recommended):
@astor_charlie
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The Online Safety Act came into full force on Monday.
It started as a child safety measure.
But what it’s become? Few saw coming.
The origins, the players involved, the powers buried within, and the alarming future ahead.
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The Online Safety Act has been in the works since 2017.
It all began, as so much invasive, wide-reaching legislation does, with tragedy.
In 2017, a 14-year-old girl by the name of Molly Russell started consuming dark content online. Themes of self-harm and suicide relentlessly bombarded her feed, pulling her further and further into despair.
Something went very wrong with Britain’s medical watchdog.
At the heart of it? One career civil servant.
Meet Charlie Massey, the man who transformed the General Medical Council beyond recognition.
How did he do it? And at what cost?
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Massey became chief executive and registrar of the GMC in 2016.
He is a career civil servant, having previously worked in HM Treasury, the Cabinet Office, Department for Work and Pensions, the Pensions Regulator and the Department of Social Security.
The GMC regulates doctors in the UK, ensuring they are properly trained, competent, and held accountable.
It is supposed to be independent, funded by doctors via fees and managed by an ethical head to safeguard patients.
Britain’s state-backed weather & climate service has been up to some astonishing things.
And at the center of it all? One woman most have probably never heard of.
Penelope Endersby, chief executive of the Met Office.
Her agency’s actions might leave you speechless.
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Endersby has led the Met Office since December 2018.
The agency operates as a trading fund under the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology, supplying climate data that shapes government policy.
It manages hundreds of temperature stations across Britain, frequently cited in policy announcements, and serves as the UK's primary weather forecaster.
There's been a lot of talk about British policing of late...
Some say they're politically captured, but opinions are divided.
So here's a comprehensive summary of past incidences of bias (speaking to policy) so you can judge for yourself...
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Misconduct Probe for Saying “Whiter Than White”
In Sept 2018, a senior Metropolitan Police officer faced possible dismissal after using the phrase "whiter than white" when addressing colleagues.
The detective, who worked in anti-corruption, was suspended from duties and investigated for gross misconduct.
Discrimination Against Straight White Recruits
In Feb 2019, an employment tribunal ruled that Cheshire Police unlawfully discriminated against an "exceptional" candidate under so-called "positive action" policies.
Matthew Furlong, 25, applied to join the force, following in the footsteps of his father, a serving detective inspector. But despite passing the interview process, he was ultimately denied the role.
He was told “it was refreshing to meet someone as well-prepared as yourself” and that he “could not have done any more.”
Yet, his application was rejected—not due to merit, due to being a straight white male.
Sir Keir Starmer—one of the most aggressive Covid vaccine advocates—is trying to speed up approvals for experimental medicines/treatments.
And he's using his new 'Regulatory Innovation Office' (RIO) to do it.
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In October last year, Starmer launched RIO to help new medical technologies enter the market quicker.
Its stated goal is to reduce regulatory barriers, stimulate economic growth, and position the UK as a global hub for innovation.
"If there is an innovation which can benefit the health of the nation, can contribute to economic growth, why do we just let it get mired down,” Labour science minister Peter Kyle said during the launch.