Anonymous ID: b4a9f5 July 5, 2022, 2:43 p.m. No.16605408   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5419

>>16605347

They always make up some kind of new reason to blame so they don't have to say Bidan and Admin did it all. Oh and they also won't blame the jab, when that is the real cause if anything

 

"Although we don't have rigorous data on the extent or scale of period poverty across the country"In other words, we made this whole fucking thing up

Anonymous ID: b4a9f5 July 5, 2022, 2:45 p.m. No.16605420   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5434

>>16605305

Wow democrats pushing back on Bidan, I'm sure there is more push back to come from the left. They know they are losing the midterms and don't want people to know they are complicit in everything.

Anonymous ID: b4a9f5 July 5, 2022, 3:13 p.m. No.16605571   🗄️.is 🔗kun

I bet the Health Secretary Sajid Javid is not resigning because of BoJo, I bet he’s resigning to cover his ass when all the lawsuits come in suing the government. Did he tell doctors to kill elderly patients?

 

Health Secretary Sajid Javidsays he is concerned by rising Covid hospital admissions, particularly in older age groups.

One in 15 people in the UK had Covid in the last week of 2021, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) estimates, with numbers rising in the over-70s.

He once again called on people to get vaccinated, adding that staff at the hospital estimated about 70% of Covid patients in the ICU critical care unit were unvaccinated. Getting boosted, he said, meant your chance of ending up in hospital was "almost 90% less than it was with Delta".

A further 178,250 new confirmed coronavirus infections have been recorded in the UK on Friday, according to the government's daily figures - a similar figure to a week ago.

https://www.bbc.com/news/health-59909813

 

England hospital units may close as staff revolt over jab mandate, says NHS leader

Vaccination rule comes into force in April but many staff are unwilling to participate, warns NHS Providers chief

The health secretary, Sajid Javid, and NHS England need to “be clear well in advance how we will resolve the hopefully small number of instances where service viability and safety could be at risk” because of frontline personnel leaving rather than getting immunised, said Hopson. The new rule applies to any staff who have face-to-face contact with patients but also non-clinical staff including hospital porters.

Javid told the Commons last Tuesday that “despite the incredible effort to boost uptake across the country, there are still approximately 94,000 NHS staff who are unvaccinated. It’s critical to patient safety that health and care staff get the jab.” However, the number of NHS workers who have had a first dose since the government first announced in September that it was adopting a policy of compulsory has risen since by 55,000, he added.

The Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) impact assessment of its policy found that as many as 126,000 unvaccinated staff could lose their job when the rule comes into force on 1 April.

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2021/dec/20/england-hospital-units-may-close-as-staff-revolt-over-jab-mandate-says-nhs-leader

 

Health Secretary urges older people to ‘top up’ their Covid vaccines

The NHS in England is inviting people to arrange the spring jab through the national booking service when it is their turn.

People should “top up” their Covid-19 jabswhen called by the NHS, the Health Secretary has said, as preparations continue for an autumn campaign that could include everyone aged 50 and over.

Sajid Javid urged those aged 75 and over and the vulnerable to accept invitations for the spring Covid booster, with people becoming eligible if they had their last vaccine six months ago.

The NHS in England is inviting people to arrange the spring jab through the national booking service when it is their turn. This can be accessed online at nhs.uk/covidvaccine or by calling 119.

https://www.standard.co.uk/news/uk/nhs-sajid-javid-health-secretary-people-england-b989447.html

>>16605268

>Boris Johnson names replacements for the Chancellor & Health Secretary

>

>Boris Johnson LIVE: PM's recovery plot begins as new Chancellor and Health Secretary named

>

>BORIS JOHNSON has named Sajid Javid's and Rishi Sunak's successors after the two senior Cabinet members quit their posts on Tuesday.

>

>Mr Javid said he could not continue in his post “in good conscience” after losing confidence in Boris Johnson’s leadership. This follows the revelation Mr Johnson admitted he was aware of a misconduct complaint against former deputy chief whip, Chris Pincher, who was suspended from the party following allegations of sexual misconduct last week.

>

>But Mr Javid’s replacement has been named as Steve Barclay, who was acting as the chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster and chief of staff for Downing Street.

>

>Mr Sunak's replacement has been named as Nadhim Zahawi, who had been noted for his silence as the resignations rolled in.

>

>Mr Zahawi previously served as Education Secretary, following his promotion from minister for vaccines.

>

>Announcing his resignation, Mr Sunak said the country expected “Government to be conducted properly, competently and seriously”.

>

>Michelle Donelan has also been named Education Secretary, stepping into Nadhim Zahawi's former role.

>

>Ms Donelan, the MP for Chippenham, previously occupied the post of Universities Minister.

>

>Love the way the press refer to the recovery after the sudden resignations as aplot

>

>Remarkably quick to announce replacements. Was Boris aware of what was to happen?

>

>https://www.express.co.uk/news/politics/1635952/boris-johnson-live-news-rishi-sunak-sajid-javid-chris-pincher-conservative-party

Anonymous ID: b4a9f5 July 5, 2022, 3:28 p.m. No.16605674   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5739

>>16604500, >>16604673, >>16604677, >>16604928, >>16605184 BoJo Government On Verge Of Collapse After Top Ministerial Resignations

I’m pretty sure with the very limited research I’ve done on these two Ministers, this not about BoJo and appearances, but what both of them did with BoJoas Health Minister and Finance Minister, related to Ukraine & Covid. Did the Health minister have anything to do with biolabs, and the Finance Minister is definitely funding Ukraine. Much bigger story then decorum.

So Rishi Sunak is the Finance Minister for BoJo, I wonder if he knows where the Ukraine money is coming from and going?

Rt Hon Rishi Sunak MP

Rishi Sunak was previously appointed Chancellor of the Exchequer from 13 February 2020 to 5 July 2022.

He was previously Chief Secretary to the Treasury from 24 July 2019 to 13 February 2020, and Parliamentary Under Secretary of State at the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government from 9 January 2018 to 24 July 2019.

Career before politics

Rishi spent his professional career before politics inbusiness and finance, working internationally. He co-founded an investment firm working with companies in multiple geographies. He then used that experience to help small and entrepreneurial British companies grow.

https://www.gov.uk/government/people/rishi-sunak

Sunak backs more funding for Ukraine power

Pedro Goncalves

·Finance Reporter, Yahoo Finance UK

May 19, 2022

The UK will guarantee a further $50m (£62m) in financing to help Ukraine's electricity provision, chancellor Rishi Sunak said at a G7 meeting.

The UK's commitment comes on top of the $950m in loan guarantees that the Treasury has already guaranteed to scale up World Bank lending to Ukraine to help meet urgent fiscal needs.

This guarantee will be used by the EBRD to provide further financing to the Ukrainian electricity grid operator, Ukrenergo to support continued provision of electricity to the Ukrainian people, subject to approval by parliament.

Ahead of the Group of Seven (G7) rich economies meetings in Bonn, Germany, Sunak said: “I remain steadfast with my G7 partners in standing with Ukraine. I am pleased to confirm up to $50m in UK guarantees for EBRD critical support in Ukraine. This will help Ukraine continue to provide electricity to its citizens as they fight for their freedom.

The UK’s combined economic, humanitarian and military package of support to Ukraine totals over $3bn.

Sunak is also set to discuss efforts to support Ukraine and the ways in which the war is adding to pressures on the global economy, including impacts on the cost of living in the UK.

https://news.yahoo.com/sunak-backs-more-funding-ukraine-power-152336170.html

Anonymous ID: b4a9f5 July 5, 2022, 3:38 p.m. No.16605739   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5757 >>5762 >>5776 >>5992

>>16605674

Christa Freeland Ugh, in the pic from G7

 

I'm sure you all know this but I missed it,did you know the G7 held their meeting at Hitler's old castle?

 

Hitler's Eagle's Nest

History of the Kehlsteinhaus

 

The creation of Hitler's Eagle's Nest was a remarkable engineering success, a battle against time, snow, and rugged terrain.

 

https://www.uncommon-travel-germany.com/hitlers-eagles-nest.html

 

The wild history of the Bavarian castle hosting this week’s G-7 summit

By Kate Brady

June 26, 2022 at 8:00 a.m.

 

BERLIN — Framed by the snow-capped peaks of Germany’s Bavarian alps, the castle set to host this year’s Group of Seven summit starting Sunday has a history almost as dramatic as its backdrop.

Built at the onset of World War I by philosopher and theologian Johannes Müller as a communal retreat for his followers, Schloss Elmau has served as aNazi military vacation camp, a field hospital, a sanctuary for Holocaust survivors and the site of Germany’s last G-7 meeting.

The castle’s backstory tracks closely with Germany’s tumultuous 20th-century history. Now a luxury hotel, it is still owned by Müller’s family, despite falling out of the family’s hands temporarily during the denazification process following World War IIbecause of the philosopher’s adulation of Adolf Hitler.

While intended as a mountain sanctuary, it has not always been so for all those associated with it. Dietmar Müller-Elmau, Müller’s grandson and the hotel’s current proprietor, was born in the hotel but said he had been “at war with it” for decades.

When the Third Reich began, Müller had what the Germany government described in 2014 as an “ambivalent attitude to the Nazi regime.”

While the philosopher had lauded Hitler as “the receiving organ for God’s government” and a “leader of a national revolution of the common good over self-interest,” he thought Hitler’s anti-Jewish policies were “a disgrace for Germany.”

“He marveled at the Jews,” said Müller-Elmau, pointing to his grandfather’s close network of Jewish academic friends. “He thought they were the ‘better Germans.’ ”

 

EDThttps://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2022/06/26/schloss-elmau-castle-g7-germany/

Anonymous ID: b4a9f5 July 5, 2022, 3:59 p.m. No.16605890   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5993

>>16605757

Some pretty evil things occurred there but WAPO likes to make it sounds Great! I'm going to do more research on this place, you're right something very weird there

 

Müller-Elmau said his grandfather justified his paradoxical stance with the argument that Hitler’s unexpected assumption of power could be interpreted only as a fate willed by God “and that one could recognize a God-sent leader precisely by the fact that he would not correspond to rational and wishful thinking.”

There was one particular Nazi slogan that struck a chord with Müller: “Du bist nichts; dein Volk ist alles.” (“You are nothing; your people are everything.”) Müller drew similarities between the Nazis’ collective nationalist ideology and his own emphasis on rebuffing self-interest.

His opposition to antisemitism and his ban on the Nazi salute at Schloss Elmau would have landed most people in a concentration camp — but Müller’s unwavering support for Hitler left Nazi officials with a dilemma. Ultimately, his connections and following protected him.

End of carousel

Still, he was constantly interrogated by the Gestapo, Nazi Germany’s secret police, and eventually his works were banned — although that didn’t shake Müller’s faith in Hitler.

In 1942, in a bid to prevent confiscation of the castle by the SS, the Nazi paramilitary group, Müller rented the castle out to the Wehrmacht, Nazi Germany’s army, as a vacation resort for soldiers coming back from the front.

But two years later, Müller was placed under house arrest and Schloss Elmau was turned into a military hospital for German soldiers. The following year, as the Nazis surrendered, the U.S. Army took control of Elmau, and it briefly became a prison camp for the soldiers who were being treated there, then a military training school.

The war might have been over, but in its aftermath, Müller’s contradictory stance toward the Third Reich remained problematic.

In 1946, Philipp Auerbach, the Bavarian state commissioner for persecuted people and a Holocaust survivor, sued for a denazification trial to be brought against Müller on the grounds of his “glorification” of Hitler.

“My grandfather chose not to defend himself,” Müller-Elmau said. “He confessed to his political error, but not to the theological error on which it was based.” Given that Müller was neither a member of the Nazi party nor involved in acts of war, his conviction was controversial.

 

Schloss Elmau founder Johannes Müller and his wife, Irene Sattler. Followers of Müller’s work — which criticized individualism, materialism and capitalism, as well as the established church — flocked to the castle, where they were immersed in dance and music. (Courtesy of Schloss Elmau)

Auerbach, frustrated that legal appropriation of the castle was taking too long, took possession of it without legal title. Between 1947 and 1951, the castle served as a sanatorium for Holocaust survivors and displaced people.

Ernst Landauer, a Jewish journalist who survived several Nazi concentration camps including Auschwitz, wrote about marking the Jewish holiday of Purim in Elmau in a text published in 1946. Silence prevailed during the religious readings, “at times interrupted by sobbing,” he wrote.

 

Auerbach’s control of Elmau was short-lived. His vigorous pursuit of former Nazis irked parts of the political establishment, and he was arrested on allegations of corruption. In 1952, he was convicted of fraud and embezzlement. Days after the verdict, he took his own life.

The reason for his conviction was the antisemitism that was pervasive at the time, German historian and author Michael Brenner said. “Three judges of the court were former Nazi party members,” he said. In 1954, two years after Auerbach’s death, an inquiry cleared his name.

 

Müller-Elmau became proprietor in 1997 and set out to reestablish Schloss Elmau as a “cultural hideaway,” although he shunned his grandfather’s philosophy. Cutting up the communal dining tables, he said, was as symbolic as it was practical to the hotel’s new mantra: the freedom to choose.

“Previously, it had been a forced community,” he said, adding, “For me, it’s all about individualism.”

The opportunity to make the biggest changes came in 2005, when a fire ripped through the building. Most of the hotel had to be demolished and reconstructed.

“Watching the hotel in flames — well, was a great relief,” Müller-Elmau said. “It was the best thing that could ever happen to me because before I was putting new wine into old bottles. And now I could make a new bottle for a new wine. I could design Elmau as a place for cosmopolitans and for individualists.”

 

https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2022/06/26/schloss-elmau-castle-g7-germany/

 

Picture

A fire at Schloss Elmau in 2005. Most of the hotel had to be demolished and reconstructed. (Courtesy of Schloss Elmau)

Anonymous ID: b4a9f5 July 5, 2022, 4:13 p.m. No.16605976   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16605757

I think I found out what made you uncomfortable, they were into young girls (and who knows what else):

The dark history of the G7’s luxurious spa resortSchloss Elmau,

 

With the property no longer in his control, after the war Dr Philip Auerbach took possession of Schloss Elmau, and until 1951 it served as a sanctuary for displaced holocaust survivors until the hotel came under the the control of Bernhard Müller-Elmau, and his sister, Sieglinde Mesirca in 1951. Schloss Elmau reopened with a chamber music festival, and from this point the hotel emerged as an institution celebrating unity and high culture, becoming a sleepover spot for the rich and wealthy of Europe.

 

And indeed, other types of sleepover, too.

Into the 1960s the hotel became renowned as a place forresidents to fraternise with young, aristocratic daughterswho “helped” at the hotel for a pittance and were free to socialise with the powerful guests who came to stay, the majority of whom booked single rooms. A 1963 article in Der Spiegel said:

 

Women of all agestravelling alone feel significantly more free here than in a normal holiday hotel, and much less exposed to the slanderous suspicion of looking for adventure.”

 

One of these former helpers reportedly responded to the article, pointing out that Müller “preferred conspicuously blonde, blue-eyed girls” and encouraged his staffers to attend nightly dances and “be like fairytale children”.

 

In a letter to Der Spiegel one visitor, Ilse Sauer von Langsdorff, said: “I would not send my daughters there.”

 

During the 1980s Elmau fell out of vogue, but since 1997, under the new management of Müller’s grandson and tech entrepreneur Dietmar Mueller-Elmau, it has become a place where “high art could flourish”, and for 25 years has been the meeting point of scholars and professors, with particular focus on Jewish history, political theology and liberty. When our culture and consumer expert, Nick Trend, visited in 2019 and interviewed the man in charge, he wrote: “Although he has invested heavily in the traditional spa facilities here, you can tell from the way he talks that Müller-Elmau is more interested in the mind than the body.

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/travel/news/the-dark-history-of-the-g7-e2-80-99s-luxurious-spa-resort/ar-AAYXsUm