Worrier of scones. Kerfuffle enthusiast. I like writing about current affairs, history n that.
https://t.co/ANVvmN7s1O
Sep 14, 2025 • 9 tweets • 12 min read
1. Now we are all aware of The Fabian Society, and in light of the death of Charlie Kirk, we need to understand how Europe, the UK, America, Canada, NZ, Australia, and the rest of the world, including countries like India, have all colluded to create a toxic globalist cabal, that have created a youth army of mentally unwell, idealistic thugs, who, if not pulling the trigger themselves, are dancing on the graves of those murdered.
THE LONDON SCHOOL OF ECANOMICS.
The London School of Economics was founded in 1895 by Sidney and Beatrice Webb with Fabian money, conceived deliberately as a “Fabian nursery” for future rulers.
Its purpose was not neutral scholarship but the training of civil servants, politicians, lawyers, journalists, economists and judges in the Fabian worldview.
Harold Laski, who became both a professor at the LSE and chairman of the Fabian Society, taught generations of leaders there, among them Clement Attlee, Jawaharlal Nehru, and others who carried Fabian policies into government.
George Soros is perhaps the most famous modern product. He studied philosophy at the LSE after the war, where he came under the influence of Karl Popper, author of The Open Society and Its Enemies.
Soros himself admitted that Popper’s teaching shaped his entire worldview and his later “Open Society Foundations.” In practice, what Soros built was the financial muscle to spread the Fabian-LSE vision on a global scale, using immense wealth to fund education, media, judicial activism and international institutions in exactly the way Sidney and Beatrice Webb had planned.
In this thread, I will expose key attendees from the Fabián created LSE. The names will speak for themselves.
If you want to know why so many thousands of young people hate their country, culture, Christianity, the west, traditional family units, have been convinced abortion is "healthcare", you can change your gender, and why they use "fascism", "Nazi" and the like to silence you, you will now realise that all of this stemmed from the Fabians, and the LSE, for over a 100 years had been the radicalisation hub for all of this.
Only when we understand the beast, can we fight it.
@Cernovich @POTUS @MattWalshBlog @TuckerCarlson @bennyjohnson @Timcast @DavidJHarrisJr @GrahamAllen_1
George Soros
His education at the London School of Economics in the late 1940s set him on a very deliberate path. There he studied under Karl Popper, whose Open Society and Its Enemies became Soros’s handbook. Soros has said himself that under Popper’s influence he divided the world into “open” and “closed” societies, and that he set out to reshape the world according to those categories.
He made his fortune by shorting currencies, most famously his billion-pound profit on Black Wednesday in 1992.
That single event ended Conservative credibility on the economy and helped to clear the way for the New Labour machine with radicalised and groomed Fabian, Tony Blair as PM. Blair pushed for a goal of 50% of youg people to go to university: the perfect grooming vehicle to radicalise the next and most dangerous wave of Fabian foot soldiers.
Soros repeated this financial trick across the globe, speculating against national currencies while presenting himself as a philanthropist.
With the winnings Soros built his empire: the Open Society Foundations.
Active in more than one hundred countries, OSF does not act like a traditional charity. It functions as a hub, dispersing funds into countless NGOs, media outlets, pressure groups, and campus networks.
Each one appears independent or claims to be a “grassroots” voice. Yet they share staff, funding, goals, and ideology.
It is the Fabian tactic of permeation, with unimaginable resources.
In Eastern Europe, Soros money has funded so-called independent media and constitutional “reformers.”
In America it bankrolls prosecutors, campaign groups, and racial justice networks.
In Britain his hand has been visible in immigration lobbying, identity politics, and activist campaigns that style themselves as popular movements. (see @CharlotteCGill for her extensive work in tracking all these coordinated networks)
The same script runs through them all: "open borders, open markets, open societies", but always controlled from above by the network he built out of LSE and Popper’s lecture hall.
Soros presents himself as a philanthropist, but his philanthropy works hand in glove with his market power.
While he funds activists to demand changes in law, finance, and regulation, he bets accordingly.
He deliberately destabilises currencies and institutions, then funds his own NGOs to stoke more fires.
It is Fabian strategy, honed over a century, carried into practice by one man who took his training from the LSE and turned it into a machine of global influence.
And he is part of a much bigger network.
Jul 20, 2025 • 6 tweets • 4 min read
Thread:
1. People need to understand the significance of what has just happened with Palestine Action and those that support them.
Whether you agree with them or not is irrelevant, this is not about Palestine. It is about what the government has quietly done in principle and how it lays the groundwork for powers that can and will be used against entirely unrelated people and causes in the future.
Like Insulate Britian, that targeted working class train routes and work routes in London, who came out of nowhere and caused just enough disruption to the working classes, that you demanded change, and Priti Patel was able to usher in, almost overnight, new laws about public protest.
You're being set up, and you're too tribal or stupid to see it.
2. As you know, Palestine Action has now been proscribed as a terrorist organisation. This group has caused damage, broken into military-linked sites, and even injured people, but every one of these acts was already covered under existing criminal law.
Criminal damage, trespass, unlawful obstruction, and assault are all prosecutable offences.
There was no need for new powers.
The decision to elevate them to terrorist status is not about the scale of the crime, it is about the type of protest, and more importantly, about setting a precedent for how protest itself can now be redefined.
Jun 28, 2025 • 9 tweets • 12 min read
Over the last two weeks, all I've heard from the Labour Party is about the tribulations and trials of The Windrush and the hardships they endured and that, were it not for them "rebuilding Britain" after the war, we wouldnt be who we are today.
I talk about The Road to Wigan Pier a lot because it's harrowing. Orwell wrote it in 1936 after immersing himself into the every day lives of people in Wigan, Sheffield, and Barnsley for several months.
Its books like this, of the many hundreds Ive read of British people throughout our history, that sickens and angers me, when people come a long and try and tell me that nothing these people went through, or lived through mattered, was of value, and that their grandchildren today, likely as poor as they were, are now expected to feel guilty for the behaviour of around 0.4% of wealthy British businessmen, 200 years ago, and that they, now, today, will have to go with even less to pay reparations to people thousands of miles away, that have benefitted immeasurably from the country they created.
From the Road to Wigan Peir:
Orwell going down to the mines -
"You get into the cage, which is a steel box about as wide as a telephone box and two or three times as long. It holds ten men, but they pack it like pilchards in a tin, and a tall man cannot stand upright in it. The steel door shuts upon you, and somebody working the winding gear above drops you into the void. You have the usual momentary qualm in your belly and a bursting sensation in the cars, but not much sensation of movement till you get near the bottom, when the cage slows down so abruptly that you could swear it is going upwards again. In the middle of the run the cage probably touches sixty miles an hour; in some of the deeper mines it touches even more. When you crawl out at the bottom you are perhaps four hundred yards underground. That is to say you have a tolerable-sized mountain on top of you . . . But because of the speed at which the cage has brought you down, and the complete blackness through which you have travelled, you hardly feel yourself deeper down than you would at the bottom of the Piccadilly tube.
What is surprising, on the other hand, is the immense horizontal distances that have to be travelled underground. . . . You see mysterious machines . . . at the start to walk stooping is rather a joke, but it is a joke that soon wears off. I am handicapped by being exceptionally tall, but when the roof falls to four feet or less it is a tough job . . . You have gone a mile and taken the best part of an hour; a miner would do it in not much more than twenty minutes. Having got there, you have to sprawl in the coal dust and get your strength back for several minutes before you can even watch the work in progress with any kind of intelligence
2/
You crawl through passages as low as this one, with the roof so close that you can’t even kneel. Often it is impossible even to sit upright. You have to work in a lying or crouching position, dragging your tools and body through black slime, breathing stinking air full of coal dust, sweating so heavily you feel soaked to the skin within minutes. All this while pushing tubs or swinging a pick, hour after hour, with the noise of machinery and cracking timber above your head and the constant threat of roof‑fall or gas. Your muscles are aching, your hands raw, your knees bruised. The miner spends half his time lying on his side or kneeling in an awkward cramped space where he cannot lift his head. Even when he is not actually at the coal face, he is usually in some stifling, crawling passageway, shoving tubs with his head or dragging them with a rope. A man’s whole life is lived crawling like a beetle at the bottom of a pit. And then he creeps out at the end of his shift, soaked with sweat, grime in his eyes and nostrils, to spend another hour climbing the endless shaft back to daylight, only to get up the next day and do it all over again.”
Feb 3, 2025 • 4 tweets • 3 min read
🚨 ANNOUNCEMENT: LONDON MILLION WOMEN MARCH FOR CHILDREN POSTPONED 🚨
A Thread: 👇
It is with enormous regret that we must announce the postponement of the main Million Women March for Children in London on 17th February 2025.
Since my appearance on GB News at the beginning of January to discuss this march, I have been subjected to a targeted hate campaign by people known to me personally. I can't share too many details for legal reasons as it is in the hands of the police, however this has been an ongoing campaign of abuse for years now.
My appearance on GB News triggered an escalation in this behaviour.
When it became apparent that this person was contacting organisers of the march as part of their campaign against me, copies of all communications were provided to the police.
We also decided that I would step back from the London march and be less visible in its promotion in the hope that this person would stop targeting the march, it's organisers and anyone associated with it.
Sadly this has not been the case...
2. Continued
As anyone who has ever been on the receiving end of any kind of obsessive or abusive behaviour will be aware, ultimately it is about power, control and trying to cause as much harm to their target as possible. And as part of this, they view anyone associated with their target as fair game and collateral damage. Stepping back from the march and keeping a lower profile did not stop this behaviour, and increasingly they have been contacting campaign groups and survivors of abuse linked in with the Boudica's Daughters account, which has resulted in survivors being triggered and dragged into something they did not ask for.
In addition, my harasser has contacted an X account of a person who has been openly hostile to me since my appearance on GB news (he/she claimed that I had stolen his/her idea for a march). Since this time, he/she has openly alluded to false allegations made by my abuser, and he/she has now gone as far as calling the organisers of the London march paedophiles. This goes way beyond the limits of online hate - this places the organisers and their families at risk from anyone who chooses to believe this.
Nov 20, 2024 • 4 tweets • 3 min read
Dear @RachelReevesMP, I'm not an economist, but I've plugged your black hole. Here's £23.2 billion.
There is absolutely ZERO need, to freeze and starve the elderly and bankrupt our British farmers. Tough decisions have to be made, and these are some tough, but fair, decisions.
Compilation of UK Costs PER YEAR
FGM per year: £100 million
The annual cost to the UK due to disabilities resulting from consanguineous marriages (inbreeding).
£2 billion
Cost of housing asylum seekers
£3.03 billion
Translation services in the NHS
65.96 million
Translation services in UK courts
£15 million
The annual cost of translation and interpreting services for UK police forces.
£19 million
Cost of tax credits to foreign-born individuals
15% of the annual cost of tax credits in the UK allocated to foreign-born claimants.
£4.2 billion
Cost of Universal Credit to foreign-born claimants
15% of the annual cost of Universal Credit allocated to foreign-born claimants.
£6.3 billion
Cost per prisoner
The annual cost to house a single prisoner in the UK. Cost: £51,724
Cost of foreign national prisoners
£533 million
Cost of DEI in the NHS
The estimated annual cost of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) initiatives in the NHS.
£5 million
Cost of Lords in the House of Lords
The total annual expenditure of the House of Lords, including members' allowances and administrative support. Cost: £104.67 million
Cost of HCAIs to the NHS (including imported diseases)
The annual cost of healthcare-associated infections, including imported diseases, to the NHS in England. £2.1 billion
Cost of asylum support
The annual cost of asylum support, including accommodation and financial assistance for asylum seekers.
£4.7 billion
The total annual cost for all the items listed is approximately £23.2 billion.
The United Kingdom allocates Official Development Assistance (ODA) to various countries, focusing on poverty reduction and sustainable development.
Afghanistan: £353 million; primarily for humanitarian aid and development programs.
Bangladesh: £200 million; supports education, health, and climate resilience initiatives.
Burundi: £50 million; focuses on governance, education, and health sectors.
Cameroon: £60 million; aids in governance, education, and health.
Democratic Republic of the Congo: £100 million; targets humanitarian assistance and development programs.
Ethiopia: £200 million; supports health, education, and economic development.
Ghana: £150 million; focuses on education, health, and economic development.
Honduras: £40 million; aids in education, health, and governance.
India: £300 million; supports health, education, and economic development.
Iraq: £100 million; focuses on humanitarian aid and stabilization efforts.
Kenya: £150 million; supports health, education, and economic development.
Lebanon: £50 million; aids in humanitarian assistance and development programs.
Malawi: £100 million; focuses on health, education, and economic development.
Mozambique: £100 million; supports health, education, and economic development.
Myanmar: £50 million; aids in humanitarian assistance and development programs.
Nepal: £100 million; focuses on health, education, and economic development.
Nigeria: £110 million; supports health, education, and economic development.
Pakistan: £200 million; aids in health, education, and economic development.
Rwanda: £100 million; focuses on health, education, and economic development.
Sierra Leone: £50 million; supports health, education, and economic development.
Somalia: £100 million; aids in humanitarian assistance and development programs.
South Sudan: £50 million; focuses on humanitarian aid and development programs.
Sudan: £50 million; supports humanitarian assistance and development programs.
Syria: £100 million; aids in humanitarian assistance and stabilization efforts.
Tanzania: £150 million; focuses on health, education, and economic development.
Uganda: £100 million; supports health, education, and economic development.
Yemen: £100 million; aids in humanitarian assistance and stabilization efforts.
approximately £3.21 billion. - per year.
Apr 30, 2023 • 8 tweets • 4 min read
1/ I was young when it happened, but I remember the assassination of Nicolae Ceaușescu and his wife. Leader of thr Commuist Party, whilst he started out OK, rejecting the Warsaw part and the Soviet block, as all communist leaders, eventually his arrogance destroyed him. He… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…2/ When the miners - the working class - went on strike, they all started dying suddenly and mysteriously. It later transpired they'd been subject led to huge amounts of Xray, and forcibly given cancer.