tyb
o7
UPDATE ON RESEARCH - SNOW WHITE AND ALICE IN WONDERLAND
Note: this get hazy when researching so remember the below.
1) snow white is super computor related.
2) Alice is Hillary and the rabbit hole.
Both things can be intertwined with language to confuse and merge.
follow below in order
---
part 1 research - snow white and the seven dwarfs, deep dream V2
ARCHIVING - A DIG ON SNOW WHITE AND THE SEVEN DWARFS AND ALICE AND THE BLOODY WONDERLAND !!
Note: the two things are not related even though they are fairy tail titles, one refers to super computors by IBM and the other to Servers and Saudi Arabia.
==
https://8kun.top/qresearch/res/22636005.html#q22636469
ok so found the link on another browser.
now need to see if anyone archived the book so anons can study the quotes from the book and what has already been learnt.
>>22629715 pb snow white IBM.
https://www.networkworld.com/article/731914/lan-wan-snow-white-and-the-seven-dwarfs.html
…While it is common to associate mainframe computers with IBM, the reality is that several manufacturers produced mainframe computers from the late 1950s through the 1970s. The group of manufacturers was often referred to as "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs". In that context, Snow White was IBM and the seven dwarfs were Burroughs, UNIVAC, NCR, Control Data Corporation, Honeywell, General Electric and RCA.
>>22636080, >>22636150, >>22636212, >>22636390 (snow white and the bloody wonderland dig, bun
=
part 2 - Alice and wonderland by hillary clinton
ARCHIVING - FOUND THE ONLY COPY OF HILLARY IN WONDERLAND ON RUMBLE AS AUDIOBOOK.
Note: Will read and study to find out why Q thought this was important and look for comms. This book has been scrubbed from the internet on all archives and video platforms.
runtime 48 minutes. it is not the complete book as it has 241 pages and the content producer has not finished the book
looks like only the first 4 chapters.
the way to read it is
hillary has replaced alice
the story reads the same but with changes
so what anons have to do is read the original and hillarys version and pull out the differences.
this is going to take dedication, a eye for detail and patience before the digging can begin.
-—-
===
Hillary Clinton In Wonderland. Pt1.
https://rumble.com/embed/v502d8s/?pub=4
--
Qresearch thread containing #Qdrop 86 hiillary and wonderland.
https://archive.4plebs.org/pol/thread/148016618/#148022145
–
Good luck to the German patriots.
Go and vote.
do not go in doing a mid century German salute or goose step while you are doing it.
remember they want to protray the germans as nazis and racists.
this is not true, you have elements of the old guard who are retarded, sexually deviant and control freaks. and that has made the new generation feel guilty leading to being boring and repressed.
remember J.D Vance speech in Munich. much truth was spoken to power there.
o7
ANONS - DID YOU SEE A PLUS (+) FLASH NEXT TO TRUMP INTERMITTENDLY?
Note: Check time stamp and screenshot below for confirmation.
===
FULL SPEECH: President Trump speaks at CPAC | LiveNOW from FOX
https://youtu.be/oRfrPw5zQZk>>22638634
>>22638634 09:15:29
>>22638638 09:16:18
so it was not just Trump.
well spotted with the bannon video.
so not comms.
something else.
oh well. moving on.
pam bondi has the epstein list on her desk and the jfk and mlk files.
drop it pam
GIORGIA MELONI SPEECH IN ENGLISH, DO NOT RIGHT OF EUROPE YET
Note: Great speech by her, shame about the u.k and starmer. kash will make it habben and bring changes.
runtime 14 minutes
===
FULL SPEECH: Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni Delivers Remarks at CPAC 2025 - 2/22/25
https://youtu.be/sRXbXBagD1U
ARCHIVING - SIMON HART A CHEIF WHIP IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS DURING RISHI SUNAKS PREMIERSHIP HAS WRITTEN A BOOK AND A ARTICLE!!
note: full article behind paywall, archive link provided so anon can read it for free. continued in next comments.
dough below to full article - images saved on screenshots from article.
https://controlc.com/3557978a
===
FIRST PERSON
Sex scandals! Fights! Egos! Confessions of the chief whip
Simon Hart was chief whip during Rishi Sunak’s crisis-ridden premiership. In his hilarious diaries, he reveals what was going on behind the scenes (think Yes Minister on steroids)
https://www.thetimes.com/article/e25f175e-5e99-4a33-8f88-11d9e819792e
https://archive.ph/tpgQ2#selection-1443.0-1453.179
Simon Hart
Wednesday February 19 2025, 12.00am GMT, The Times
--—
I am in Central Lobby when I get a call. “Rishi Sunak”, it says on the screen. He sounds somewhere between overwhelmed, excited and grateful.
After a few niceties he says, simply and slightly awkwardly, “Will you be my chief whip?” Slightly awkwardly, I agree. I feel pride, but a sense of terror too. There is no hiding place now, no one else to blame. It’s terrifying.
I am told to report to the Old Admiralty Building at the top of Whitehall in 15 minutes to “assemble a government”.
Once the sackings are complete, we move to No 10 for the hirings.
[But] before the ink is even dry, Suella Braverman is in trouble for leaking confidential info to a backbencher, Sir John Hayes.
It was put down to lazy misuse of the internal email system.
By unhappy coincidence for Suella, there is more than one person on the parliamentary email system of the same name as Sir John’s staffer, to whom she had intended to send the “protected” information.
The other happened to be a rather good friend of mine, startled to receive such sensitive material out of the blue and rightly minded to “do the right thing” by alerting the authorities. Understandably, the PM is loath to lose her this soon, so we gloss it over, at least for now. Let’s hope she remembers.
October 31
An urgent meeting request from Matt Hancock.
I suggest tomorrow, which to me met the definition of urgent. “I really need to see you now,” comes the response.
My heart sinking, in he comes, cheery and upbeat as ever. “I need to get permission for an extended period of absence,” Matt suggests.
Naively, I ask exactly what this means.
“A couple of months maybe.”
He then explains he has accepted a chunky fee [rumoured to be £400,000] to go on I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here!. I explain I would need to speak to No 10 and get back to him.
“When are you planning to leave?” I ask.
“Tonight at nine.”
“So, Matt, you aren’t so much asking me as telling me,” I suggest.
“Well, yes, I suppose that’s it really.”
• MPs vote on mobile app to make jungle life a misery for Matt Hancock
November 3
Breakfast for the new whips’ office with the PM in the cabinet room.
We have instantly been handed ongoing troubling cases of claims made against serving MPs.
The first is a longstanding case of multiple alleged rapes and coercive control by an MP against two women on the parliamentary estate.
In a separate case, it looks like the CPS is considering charging a separate former MP with child sex offences.
November 7
I am blessed with the use of a car to share with Commons leader Penny Mordaunt. On its first outing, the government car service sends a very pleasant driver who has clearly never been outside the M25 and is totally unfamiliar with the rural, unlit lanes of west Wales. We crawl along, following the verge in and out of every yard and gateway until we get to a road with white lines, where normality is restored.
November 24
The phone rings at 2.45am from a 2019’er, clearly pissed but just about coherent: “Hi, chief. Hope I haven’t woken you.” (It’s 2.45am, FFS.)
Me: “What’s up?”
Him: “I’m stuck in a brothel in Bayswater and I’ve run out of money.”
Me: “Go on…”
Him: “I met a woman as I left the Carlton Club who offered me a drink, but I now think she is a KGB agent. She wants £500 and has left me in a room with 12 naked women and a CCTV.”
Me: “Give me a few moments and I will call you back.”
Bloody hell, this is a mess. I ring Spad [special adviser] Emma. She offers to leave her house and go personally to Bayswater on an extraction mission.
I suggest not (she sounded rather disappointed).
Instead, we devise a plan to send a taxi, extract our man, return him to the safety of his own hotel. I go back to sleep.
4.10am. Phone rings again.
Me: “Are you back safely?”
Him: “Yes, but you will never guess what happened next.” (The truest thing he said all evening.)
Me: “Go on…”
continued
continued
Him: “I met a woman as I left the Carlton Club who offered me a drink, but I now think she is a KGB agent. She wants £500 and has left me in a room with 12 naked women and a CCTV.”
Me: “Give me a few moments and I will call you back.”
Bloody hell, this is a mess. I ring Spad [special adviser] Emma. She offers to leave her house and go personally to Bayswater on an extraction mission.
I suggest not (she sounded rather disappointed).
Instead, we devise a plan to send a taxi, extract our man, return him to the safety of his own hotel. I go back to sleep.
4.10am. Phone rings again.
Me: “Are you back safely?”
Him: “Yes, but you will never guess what happened next.” (The truest thing he said all evening.)
Me: “Go on…”
Him: “Well, I slipped out of the room and saw the taxi Emma ordered across the road, so I legged it over and jumped in. However, it turned out it was a different taxi being driven by an Afghan agent called Ahmed.”
Me: “So…”
Him: “Well, he demanded £3,000 for a blow job.”
Me: “And?”
Him: “I legged it back to the hotel and locked the door.”
December 13
Late night “catch-up” pizza with Downing Street aides upstairs in No 10. Joined by the PM, who wanted above all to make sure we tidied the room afterwards. He also wanted to know my most interesting whipping experience so far, so I told him the brothel story. Poor Rishi — he doesn’t believe such things happen.
He is refreshingly straight-laced and tends to see the good in most people. He should work in the whips’ office for a day and that would soon change.
December 20
A suitably straight-faced and standard ministerial security brief reminds us that on no account should we engage in a chat with any unusually beautiful Chinese women (or men, I guess), to which [Scottish secretary] Alister Jack added, “If you think you are punching above your weight, ask yourself why.”
My phone would be a fascinating mine of information.
January 11, 2023
Just before PMQs we get a call to say one of our MPs, Andrew Bridgen, has made a Twitter connection between the vaccine rollout and the Holocaust. No 10 is initially inclined to “demand an apology” but due to Bridgen being an utter knob, we agree the more decisive and meaningful course of action is to suspend the whip with “immediate effect”. The antivaxers go spare; to them our move confirms the Deep State is at work. The reality is he is a malevolent creep whom nobody likes, and we really don’t need him in our party. A massive cheer goes up in the whips’ office when I tell them.
• Andrew Bridgen expelled by Tories for Covid vaccine Holocaust comments
January 19
There is a gathering army of MPs agitated about asylum seeker accommodation being set up in their local towns. They all blame [immigration minister Robert] Jenrick, who looks and sounds increasingly beleaguered. Jenrick thinks the Home Office (HO) doesn’t give a shit whether the scheme works or if our people are offended. In fact, it looks like the HO has deliberately chosen hotels in Tory-leaning areas.
January 30
I get a call from Simon Case, the cabinet secretary. He is concerned certain MPs are being overtly rude about civil servants (at least our people are doing it on the record) and asks, “Could you find a way of getting people to dial back a bit?”
He asserts if there’s “open season” — in which MPs and ministers blame all our problems on the civil service — then we could trigger a go-slow on areas of controversial legislation. In other words, if you are rude to the waiters, don’t be surprised if they eventually spit in your food.
There is also an irony in his comments given the propensity of civil servants to leak shitty stories to the media. We are in a vicious circle, but there are more of them than us.
February 1
Dinner at the Hurlingham Club. Learnt a senior married MP got a bit fruity with a journalist, suggesting her “lovely dress would look better discarded on my bedroom floor”. Groan…
February 6
[Reshuffle day] One lucky cabinet appointee is less grateful than her promotion deserves and more entitled than professionals should be when selected by the PM for high office. “Let’s all agree about one thing,” says the PM. “She is f***ing useless but we can’t get rid of her.”
continued
continued
February 8
The government car service is now becoming a fixation of mine. This time it is the issue of the latest driver’s endless yawning after we had been on the road a few hours, which culminated in the car going so slowly I thought we had actually broken down. I am told not to worry as it was probably the “same guy who couldn’t find the duty-free on the Woolwich ferry”.
And that’s not all. I also hear of a driver whose car was booked by a traffic warden outside a church, fully “ribboned up”, as he was moonlighting as a wedding driver with one of the government Jags.
March 30
As the misconduct stories worsen, I go to see the Speaker about access to the estate by MPs under investigation. There isn’t much he can do. We are powerless to do any more than withdraw the whip.
One of our new, younger whips arrives at the office with a broken rib, apparently the result of an energetic night with his new girlfriend. Oh, to be young again! He is mercilessly teased, but then he shouldn’t have been so honest as to the cause of his discomfort.
April 5
Blackpool MP Scott Benton is “stung” by The Times, offering to ask questions and provide information for money. Unlike some of our cases, this one doesn’t seem to have an innocent explanation, unless rank stupidity is included.
April 26
I really need to see the PM to explain why Suella is not his friend. The problem we have is that the whips’ office is seeing the real Suella but No 10 sees the more house-trained version. We see the leaks, the tearoom briefings and the general lack of solidarity. Troublesome MPs think we don’t know, but fail to understand that almost everyone is talkative. They all tell a friend, who tells a friend who tells a journalist, or even a whip.
May 22
A reception in Westminster Hall for the King and Queen. MPs and peers arranged in small manageable groups for a quick handshake and a few moments of instantly forgettable banter — or at least, that was the plan.
Instead, it became a scrum with some MPs manoeuvring themselves so they could have a second or even third attempt at a selfie or, in examples of very poor form, monopolising the King, which included, in one notable instance, producing an envelope of poetry to read.
June 7/8
Harriet Harman calls by to tell me her privileges committee will publish the report into Boris [Johnson] on June 29 and hand it to him on Friday at noon. It will recommend a 20-day suspension, which will almost certainly result in a recall motion and by-election. Brace for impact.
I speak to BoJo, who is questioning whether there is any procedural route by which we can kill off the report or at least vote it down.
In any normal circumstances, a former PM asking for special treatment would be a big deal but this being Boris, it doesn’t surprise me at all.
Worryingly, it doesn’t even annoy me that much either.
So I remind him, as nicely as I can, that it was he who set up this process, he who approved its terms of reference and he who accepted Harriet Harman as its chair.
“But I was in India and I wasn’t concentrating,” comes the reply. “I left it all to the whips.” Not sure that will wash, even if it were true.
• Boris Johnson fights for his future at privileges committee hearing
June 14
Embarrassment over in No 10 as the prime minister goes on a “dawn raid” with the Border Force with a view to getting some “man of action” photos of the PM arresting illegal immigrants. Everyone lines up as planned and hammers down the doors only to find the bleary-eyed occupants had all the correct permissions and paperwork. Whoever in the Home Office signed that off needs a quiet word. They never miss a chance to f*** up.
July 6
The standards committee publishes its report on Chris Pincher (accused of groping a young man), concluding with an eight-week suspension. He is finished. On the face of it, the sentence seems unbelievably harsh given he has lost his job, all his money and most of his friends. On the other hand, maybe we are all discovering that “squeezing people’s arses” is not acceptable, however fleetingly or however drunken the circumstances.
continued
continued
July 19
It’s about 9pm and we are mid-meeting in the PM’s office when his phone rings. We sit in silence as he has a rather oblique conversation with someone in which he tells them to “take the package to the black gates halfway up Whitehall and someone will meet you”. Faintly alarmed, Rupert [Yorke, deputy chief of staff] asks him to explain and it turns out to be his Nando’s order as he hadn’t eaten all day. Rupert reminds him that as PM he can ask other people to do that kind of thing, but he seemed rather hurt by the suggestion.
October 22
Veteran MP Peter Bone [Wellingborough] rings to say he is about to be suspended for six weeks (triggering yet another recall petition) for bullying a young lad in his employment over the past ten years or so. He says it’s all a bit of a misunderstanding, but the allegations include the suggestion they shared a hotel room together ten years ago while on a trip to Madrid. Peter was 60 and the lad was not yet 25, so the claims he exposed himself and had a habit of making the lad sit with his hands between Peter’s legs as punishment for wrongdoing will eliminate much chance of any public sympathy. He is very calm and utterly convinced of his own innocence. Anyway, as per usual, whip suspended.
October 25
An urgent summons to the Speaker’s office, which is never a good sign especially when head of commons security Alison Giles is there too.
The news is that Crispin Blunt [Reigate] has been arrested on suspicion of rape, incitement to rape and possession of class A drugs. Will this ever stop? Crispin is a former army officer. The whips’ office cannot think of a more unlikely perpetrator of this kind of crime, thus already revealing a degree of unconscious bias.
October 31
Among today’s HR joys is the report that a departmental Spad went to an orgy over the weekend and ended up taking a crap on another person’s head.
To make matters worse, in a separate incident a House employee went to a party dressed as Jimmy Savile and ended up having sex with a blow-up doll, for which he has been subsequently dismissed. Just another day at the office, I guess.
November 13
RS rings Suella [to sack her in the reshuffle]. After some token pleasantries all hell breaks loose. He puts her on speakerphone and everybody is listening in around the table, laden with discarded notes, open packets of No 10 biscuits and half-drunk cups of coffee.
• Why was Suella Braverman sacked? Nine key moments
Once RS has made clear his intentions, there comes this ghastly ten-minute diatribe of vindictive and personal bile.
It’s hard to know how to react at moments like this, or where to look. Part of me feels that this is a private call and that we are all eavesdropping, but the other part realises that for the protection of the PM and the government there needs to be a note taken and a record saved. So, we sit in astonished silence, doing our best not to grimace, smile or give any indication of what we feel.
November 27
Dr Caroline Johnson [Sleaford and North Hykeham] comes to berate me. Her purpose: to raise the two key questions of “felching” and solar panels, topics that rarely feature in the same sentence. Apparently, she explains, the rather unusual practice of felching is being taught to kids who are too young to be subjected to that kind of thing.
The good doctor has a point and is on the warpath, so I promise to raise felching (and solar farms) at the highest level.
February 1, 2024
Off we go to the honours committee again. It’s a much feistier meeting than last time. One prominent Labour MP seeking an upgrade to his knighthood gets defeated — rightly. One of our chaps’ CBE campaign gets similar short shrift by the lay members. I really don’t know what he’s done, but something he shouldn’t have on a foreign trip by all accounts, so that’s him done for.
February 20
Kemi pops in for a chat about trans stuff — I try, but I cannot find a mutually useable wavelength. She is another one who lives in a permanent state of outrage. It must be so tiring.
February 26
A Times journo is sniffing round a story in which one of our MPs (Mark Menzies, Fylde) has allegedly managed to acquire thousands of pounds from a campaign account to pay two dodgy blackmailers who were holding him hostage in the middle of the night (not another one).
The elderly lady who had control of the association’s campaign account thinks it was a loan and the MP in question believes it to be a donation. Either way, it smells fishy. CCHQ starts an investigation. The story involved a lot of money, and I am quite certain the intention of donors and members was not for the cash to be used like this.
continued
continued
April 16
RS and I have a late night one-to-one. He confesses to being fed up on occasions but still determined. He is not certain how or even whether he would contest a confidence vote, for reasons of pride, I guess. We talk about what we might have done differently, whom we wished we had sacked earlier, but neither of us are sure anything would have made much difference in the end. We are nearly 15 years in and on our fifth PM. We have lived through a pandemic and a war in mainland Europe. It’s a miracle we are still standing at all.
April 30
Met one of our 2019 colleagues who resides in a safe seat. They want to trade the seat for the House of Lords. “Give me a peerage and I will give up my safe seat,” they say.
Me: “Sorry, that’s not really on the table.”
Them: “Well, you are all bastards and this is unfair.”
I explain the Lords is not a right, especially for people who have made a rather modest impression over their four-and-a-half-year stint. Another example of the sense of entitlement that has crept into our world and for which we are now paying a heavy price.
May 22
General election announcement day. We have made it, just about. We are wounded, but still alive. Journos descend on No 10. The rest of us stand nervously in the cabinet room huddled around the big screen. The speech itself is decent and respectful but the rain hammers down, turning RS’s suit into a shiny sodden mess. (I’m not sure what happened to the wet-weather plan we discussed only yesterday.)
May 30
CCHQ is in candidate overdrive. We have roughly 160 seats to fill by June 7. Off to the research department for a propriety check. We do 30 a day at least. Some good, some awful and inevitably a fair few fail the vetting process.
Dick pictures mainly, but also inappropriate comments on X and a few dodgy financials.
In one assessment, aides are required to judge whether a candidate’s defence that a photo of his penis had been sent in error to a contact, rather than his doctor as intended, is enough to allow him to apply for seats. It isn’t.
July 4/5 (election day)
I sit out the final moments of my Commons career in my friend John Kilcoyne’s Range Rover [in the car park of Llanelli leisure centre while Hart’s count is taking place], watching the news reports of a Labour landslide as each return is declared. It is brutal, but we all know how this goes.
With formalities concluded [Hart loses his seat in Carmarthen West and South Pembrokeshire] and as the early morning light starts to show, John and I head for London, for there is one important task still to complete.
At around 9am, we congregate in the hall of No 10 to “clap out” Rishi and Akshata. And with that we are instructed to place our passes in the cardboard box and leave the building.
Ungovernable by Simon Hart (Macmillan, £25) is published on February 27. To order a copy, go to http://timesbookshop.co.uk or call 020 3176 2935. Free UK standard P&P on online orders over £25. Special discount available for Times+ members
end
—
UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak's full General Election announcement | BBC News
https://youtu.be/hY6Z36ejPmU
—-
22 May 2024 #BBCNews #UKElection
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has announced the date of the UK General Election.
In a speech outside 10 Downing Street in London, he revealed that the election date will take place on Thursday, 4 July.
He had widely been expected to announce an autumn election, but Wednesday's news comes after mounting speculation.
end
>>22638866, >>22638869, >>22638874, >>22638878, >>22638881 Sex scandals! Fights! Egos! Confessions of the chief whip Simon Hart was chief whip during Rishi Sunak’s crisis-ridden premiership - times article written by simon hart chief whip.
thought the anons would get some insight to how fucked the u.k was and still is.
labour are worse.
btw, it took anon ages to get the full article and format and archive it with images and dough for anons so they can make some memes.
it is shocking but also kek worthy.
seems like rishi had no idea how bad westminster really is and who inhabits is corridors.
so much worse than d.c
anon believes.