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No to Digital ID.

Thank You for an Incredible 2025 – Let’s Junk This Dystopian Nightmare in 2026!

As we close out 2025, the No to Digital ID campaign wants to extend our deepest thanks to every single one of you.

Launched right here on this blog just months ago, your contributions, retweets, shares, and invaluable insights have powered everything we’ve achieved this year. Without your unwavering support, we wouldn’t be where we are today – stronger, louder, and closer than ever to victory.

Our Key Achievements This Year

Thanks to you and thousands like you, we’ve hit remarkable milestones in our fight against Digital ID:

  • 40,000 followers on X (@NoToDigitalID)
  • 100,000 leaflets delivered across the country
  • Endorsements from leaders of UK parties (except Labour!) and several US Senators

We’ve interviewed Boris Johnson, Liz Truss, and Robert Jenrick. Jeremy Corbyn and Diane Abbott have publicly backed us. Even US Senators are now quoting our campaign in Congress.

We’ve put up billboards across London and Edinburgh and reached towns the Westminster bubble forgot.

We are the only truly non-partisan campaign in Britain right now — and with your help, we are winning.

The government may try one final push, but together we have the momentum to stop Digital ID once and for all in 2026.

Let’s Finish the Job in the New Year

We now have a genuine chance to kill this dystopian nightmare for good — your continued support makes all the difference.

We know it’s the holiday season and times are tough, but even a small contribution will help us hit the ground running in January.

100% of your donation goes to ads, billboards and leaflets.
No staff, no salaries — we’re all volunteers.


Independent writing. No permission asked.

I’ve spent the last 18 years writing frankly, freely and without apology — a practice that’s becoming rarer in Britain. As far back as 2016 more than 3,300 people were detained or questioned over online posts, and recent coverage shows thousands more arrests under the Communications Act and Malicious Communications Act. Thoughtcrime is no longer fiction; it’s becoming policy. Even very recently, Lucy Connolly was sentenced after a post calling for mass deportations — her case has become a flashpoint in the debate over where free speech ends and criminality begins. (Courts and Tribunals Judiciary, The Guardian)

If my work has helped you make sense of the madness, or offered straight talk in a culture of cowardice, please consider donating. £2, £10, £25,000 — whatever it’s worth to you — helps me keep doing what the censors and bureaucrats would rather I didn’t: think independently and write without asking permission.

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Isn’t this now such an excellent idea

Defence isn’t fundamentally about armaments. It’s about legitimacy.

If people do not believe a society is worth defending, then no quantity of weapons will save it. And neoliberalism, which is designed to reward the few, cannot now demand sacrifice from the many.

That is why I think the only credible defence policy now is a politics of care: a society that values everyone, delivers for everyone, and earns loyalty by legitimacy.

Spending more on the NHS will show PutHitler what’s what, what?

Hmm

The Green Party is being sued by a former member who was suspended for mocking “fairy” pronouns.
Emma Bateman, who was co-chair of Green Party Women, was found to have breached diversity rules by making “clearly antagonistic” comments about “fae/faer” pronouns, a type of “neopronoun” inspired by the mythical world.

So, if you can believe this, the Green Party just got even dimmer the day they threw this lady out.

Astonishing but true.

It’s going to be fun finding out about this

The Crown’s Silence, a book by the historian Brooke Newman, follows the Guardian’s 2023 Cost of the crown report, which explored the British monarchy’s hidden ties to transatlantic slavery.

The book reveals that by 1807, when Britain abolished the slave trade in its empire, the British crown had become the world’s largest buyer of enslaved people, buying 13,000 men for the army for £900,000.

Of course, we’ve the obvious difference between “The Crown” and “The Monarchy” to deal with here which an American doesn’t seem to get.

But there’s also this:

Prior to the abolition of the slave trade within the British Empire in 1807, there was much debate about the legal status of the West India Regiments’ soldiers, and whether they were subject to slave laws or not. But on discharge from the regiments the men were free and in some cases awarded pensions and other support.

In 1807, all serving black soldiers who had been recruited as slaves were freed under the Mutiny Act of that year. The act established that the black soldiers were freemen and should be treated like any other soldiers.

It’s probably more accurate to say they were “bought out of slavery” than that they were bought as slaves. Wonder if our American lassie has made that distinction…..

Still, we know what’s going to happen here. “Crown” “Monarch” slavery, soldiers, so pay reparations REEEEEE!

Yes, you’re right

Research published last year found that the stretching of the polar vortex in this way is contributing to extreme weather in the US and that global heating, counterintuitively, could be playing a role in accelerating this process.

Vast winter snowstorms are evidence of global warming. You’re right, it’s not a science, is it, given that it is not refutable by any form of evidence…..

Oh, right

The killing was captured on a surveillance video which shows Zarutska, wearing the uniform of the pizza shop she worked at, staring at her phone when Brown appears to stab her from behind. The gruesome footage quickly went viral. Conservative circles took up Zarutska’s murder as an example of what they consider to be rampant violence in US cities. Leading Maga figures used nakedly racist, dehumanizing language to describe Brown.

It’s the dehumanising language which is the crime, obviously.

Abject tossers, eh?

He’s going to spunk the cash, isn’t he?

The UK business secretary, Peter Kyle, has said he is “betting big” and “picking winners” as the government takes direct stakes in growing businesses to boost economic growth.

Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, where he and the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, have been talking up Britain’s prospects, Kyle said ministers were taking an “activist” approach to industrial policy.

Yep, he is.

He highlighted the recent decision to allow the £26bn state-owned British Business Bank to buy equity stakes in companies, including the announcement last week of a £25m investment in the energy supplier Octopus’s software spin-off, Kraken.

“The most potential in our economy, in the short and medium term, is scale-up companies,” Kyle said. “I was at Octopus yesterday. They’re now employing 1,500 people in their head office in London alone.

“We can find other companies that are on that kind of trajectory and we can expedite their growth. Then it will create thousands of new jobs, and it will create enormous amounts of wealth, which will recycle through the economy in a really fast way.”

Spray it all right up the wall.

There’s a vast PE and VC indistry already scouring the economy for those things. What makes anyone think that government – moving slower, with weaker incentives – is going to find hidden gems?

Whoo, boy

Prof Michael Jennions, study co-author, added: “While the human penis functions primarily to transfer sperm,…..

A sexologist who says that has really missed a very large part of being human.

Face to face mating, the existence of tits, the female orgasm, pair bonding, convealed ovulation eetc. All point to hte idea that the penis has a distinct function in pleasuring the female – and the male, obvs – rather than just being a sperm transference tool.

Yes, Polly, yes

Look how tough the bill is: those within six months of dying can ask for help (only in writing) to speed their ending, from two doctors seven days apart. After another wait, a panel of a psychiatrist, social worker and senior lawyer must agree, and the patient must be able to take the drug themselves with a doctor present. Many safeguards were added, and clinicians are free not to participate. Evidence from the many countries with similar laws shows that relatively few people use it, but most approaching death are comforted to know if the agony becomes unbearable, they can choose to end it.

Abortion was supposed to be tought, two doctors and all that. Didn’t quite work out that way, did it? Nor is ity in Canada. 4% of all deaths is not, in fact, “rare”.

So, you know, bugger off.

Mehdi’s stretching here

Which way, western man?

That was the title of a racist tract published in 1978 by William Gayley Simpson, a former leftist Christian pastor turned one of the most influential neo-Nazi ideologues in American history. The book helped radicalize an entire generation of white supremacists in the US, with its vicious antisemitism, opposition to all forms of immigration and open praise for Hitler. The purpose of the book, wrote Simpson, was “to reveal organized Jewry as a world power entrenched in every country of the white man’s world, operating freely across every nation’s frontiers, and engaged in a ruthless war for the destruction of them all”.

In recent decades, Which way, western man? has become a popular meme – but only on the far-right fringes of the internet.

OK, so a phrase becomes a reference in the language. Even, embedded in it. That doesn;t mean that everyone who uses the phrase is even aware of, let alone agrees with, the origin or even original framing of the phrase.

Shocking? Yes. Coincidence? Nope. Earlier this month, the official White House Twitter account posted a cartoon of Greenlandic huskies with Danish flags on their sleds facing a choice between the White House on one side and China’s Great Wall and Russia’s Red Square on the other. The White House’s caption? “Which way, Greenland man?”

It should be one of the biggest stories in the United States, if not the world. Eighty years after the death of Hitler and the defeat of Nazi Germany, the US government, in the form of the Trump administration, has a Nazi problem.

Which is Medi’s conspirazoid of the week. That use of the phrase means you do think Jews are taking over the world.

Sigh.

It would also be a lot more convincing if Mehdi wasn’t on record as calling non-muslims kuffar and all that nor his views on Israel and Gaza. But, you know, consistency across columns is not a lefty influencer requirement these days now, is it?

‘Mazin’ the insight

I was persuaded then, and remain persuaded now, that the costs of economic growth are seen in the climate breakdown that challenges our very existence, not just our economy.

They gave that laddie the Nobel for exploring the externalities of the economy, right?

CND again

In my opinion, this is entirely unacceptable, and not just because it will have been agreed under coercion. I have always found it repugnant that US bases in the UK are considered, for all practical purposes, to be US sovereign territory.

In this context, I entirely agree with Zach Polanski that the time has arrived for us to reconsider the hosting of US bases in the UK, and, through base sharing, in places like Cyprus, from which support has been provided for the Israeli genocide in Gaza.

NATO should, at this moment, be reconsidering the whole reason why it permits forces from a hostile country like the USA to be located in its territory, with a necessary transition for their removal now being a requirement for peace in Europe.

He really does need to grasp that the Greens choose those who gain vermine by a vote of party members, not decisions of party leaders sucked up to.

I also very much love that reference to Cyprus. The US bases in the UK are not sovereign US territory in any manner. The UK bases in Cyprus are, in every manner, sovereign UK territory.

We know the answer here

Britain’s wind farm turbines wasted enough energy to power all of London’s homes last year, new figures show.

A record 10 terawatt hours (TWh) of wind power went to waste in 2025, according to a report from energy analyst Montel – costing billpayers a total of £1.4bn in “curtailment costs”.

This was up 22pc on the year before, as growing strain on the grid prevented wind power from being transported to the cities and towns that need it most.

Well, we know the answer that will be given – we must invest in hte grid to make use of that ‘leccie. And investment is good, right? Creates jobs!

But, jobs are a cost, investment is a cost. So, we’ve just increased the costs of wind power by calling for more jobs, more investment.

Now, it could be true that carrying those extra costs are worth it. The net result could be beneficial and therefore we do it. But to work that out we’ve got to be clear about all of the costs involved and all of the benefits. So, who thinks MiliEd will give us clarity on that?

Well, quite….

Oh. Right

So, something that works well enough must be changed:

Child sponsorship schemes that allow donors to handpick children to support in poor countries can carry racialised, paternalistic undertones and need to be transformed, the newly appointed co-chief executives of ActionAid UK said as they set out to “decolonise” the organisation’s work.

My word, eh? Paternalistic!

the goal of shifting narratives around aid from sympathy towards solidarity and partnership with global movements.

We must move from changing a life, one by one, to changing all of society in the Glorious Revolution! This also means no cash leakage out to actually aiding any individual at all. All casn be spent on the nomenklatura! Many meetings to be had!

ActionAid’s future is about solidarity, justice ……Better education, state welfare systems and healthcare should be the model – all responsibilities of a nation state.

Just think of the grift!

Sigh, oh so typical

So, viaticals. Blokes dying of AIDS sell their life insurance policies, get cash now to live out their last months or years. Then treatments change and they’re not dying and those who bought them are shafted. As with that French system of reverse mortgages, if they live then you’re stuffed. As happened to that lawyer who reverse mortgaged Jeanne Calment who went on to live to 120something. Har Har.

A documentary about it:

DeeDee Chamblee, a trailblazing advocate and activist reminds us that for Black trans women living with Aids – who often didn’t have jobs that provided life insurance policies – a viatical settlement was something they could only dream about.

One of the most harrowing moments of the documentary comes when Chamblee remembers suffering through her illness, with only three T-cells left, and how she would fantasize about getting a payout to live out her final days in peace. “I could go to the beach, and I could stay there until this thing is through,” she reminisces. “That was not a reality at all,” she adds, expecting to end up buried in a wooden box in a “potter’s field” with other unclaimed bodies.

Chamblee’s testimony is a jolting reminder that her experience living with Aids is a world away from the white, gay men who had policies to sell. In making Cashing Out, Nadel realized the most marginalized, particularly trans sex workers of color, aren’t “afforded a shred of basic dignity when their death is imminent”.

Oh. Right. So it’s bad that those with life insurance policies etc etc because some don;t have life insurance policies? Apparently so, yes. Equalideee, see?

BTW, life insurance – unlike medical insurance – isn’t tied to a job in the US. Anyone can rock up, take out a policy, pay the premiums.

Snigger

And the conspiracy of silence about her defects is allowing Harris to quietly rebuild her support. Harris still places second or even first in the polling for who should be the Democrats’ 2028 nominee.

Make JD’s job easier, obviously.

But this far out such surveys are records of who people have heard of, not who they would support. It’s a record of the few who can pass the “Who the fuck is that?” test.

Terrible Twattishness

Just 32 fossil fuel companies were responsible for half the global carbon dioxide emissions driving the climate crisis in 2024, down from 36 a year earlier, a report has revealed.

The idiots are assuming that the people who drill for the oil are responsible for the emissions of people using the oil. When, obvs, it’s the people using the oil responsible. For if no one wanted to use the oil then no one would drill for it. Obviously.

Dear God they’re desperate here

Iran’s central bank using vast quantities of cryptocurrency championed by Farage, says report

What is this? FarageCoin is being used to beat sanctions?

Iran’s central bank appears to have been using vast quantities of a cryptocurrency championed by Nigel Farage, according to a new report.

Some close connection perhaps?

“I’m going to go tomorrow to say this,” Farage told LBC radio. “You know, Tether is a stablecoin. Stablecoins are the way which money goes from conventional currencies through into cryptocurrencies and back again. Tether is about to be valued as a $500bn company.”

Farage criticised Bailey for imposing restrictions on crypto and urged the UK to catch up with the US, where Donald Trump, who chose Howard Lutnick, Tether’s banker, as his commerce secretary, has reversed efforts to police digital currencies.

Farage added: “You know, stablecoins, crypto – this world is enormous, and I’ve been urging for years that London should embrace it. We should become a global trading centre for this stuff, under proper regulation.”

One of Tether’s major shareholders, the tech investor Christopher Harborne, is Reform’s biggest donor.

Stablecoins are an issue and one where there is a discussion to be had with central banks about regulation. Not this is entirely seprate from Bitcoin etc.

Elliptic, a crypto analytics company, said it had traced at least $507m (£377m) of cryptocurrency issued by Tether – a company touted by the Reform UK leader – passing through accounts that appear to be controlled by Iran’s central bank.

Elliptic’s report tracked what it says is the Iranian central bank’s “systematic accumulation” of Tether stablecoins, a type of crypto that is pegged to the dollar so it can easily be exchanged for hard currency.

There’s around $190 billion of Tether in issuance. Iran, apparently, has $500 millkon of it. So, some naughty boys have 0.25% of a currency in issue. This poses questdions – deeply troubling ones – about a politician who muses of regulation of this new and important thing.

The representative said Tether followed US sanctions guidelines. “We work closely with law enforcement globally to identify and promptly, upon request, freeze assets to prevent further movement whenever they are identified to be in connection to illegal activity or illicit actors.”

Ho, right. It’s just that they’re desperate, see? ‘Bout Farage, noT Iran, obvs.

Oh, very good economics this is

Don’t ignore UK unemployment: it’s the breeding ground for domestic fascism

Well, OK then. Therefore raising the minimum wage is a precursor to fascism then. Good to have that sorted.

The number of employed people in the UK has fallen again, particularly in shops, restaurants and hotels, reflecting weak hiring,

OK, so that’s what we would expect if it were the min wage causing unemployment. Low end jobs turn out to be no jobs at the higher pay rate.

Third, no wonder Labout has the poll ratings it has. This unemployment is the deliberate consequence of a combination of both fiscal and monetary policy that is intended to keep unemployment high so that inflation can, supposedly, be kept low, as if there is an obvious relationship between the two when, as a matter of fact, there is not.

Spudnomics manages to analyse low end unemployment – that precursor to fascism – without even mentioning the cause, the min wage.

But still, we have that news just in from Ely. A higher minimum wage causes fascism.

Erm, helloo?

Whichever way you cut it, there is no reasonable excuse for handing a Chinese steelmaker a multimillion-pound order when British Steel has said it is capable of providing the materials.

Business editor of Torygraph fails to ask “What’s the price?”

Ho Hum.