‘Totalitarian government, like all tyrannies, certainly could not exist without destroying the public realm of life, that is, without destroying, by isolating men, their political capacities. But totalitarian domination as a form of government is new, in that it is not content with this isolation and destroys private life as well.’ — Hannah Arendt, The … Continue reading The UK ‘Vaccination’ Programme. Part 3: Resistance
Author: Simon Elmer
The UK ‘Vaccination’ Programme. Part 2: Virtue and Terror
Table of Contents Part 2. Virtue and Terror Censorship and Consent How to ‘Vaccinate’ UK Children Virtue and Terror Crime and Punishment in the UK Biosecurity State 1. Censorship and Consent On 9 February, 2021, Luke Garrett, a 20-year-old Scottish man with muscular dystrophy and autism but otherwise fit and well, died less than 12 … Continue reading The UK ‘Vaccination’ Programme. Part 2: Virtue and Terror
The UK ‘Vaccination’ Programme. Part 1: Adverse Drug Reactions and Deaths
Table of Contents Part 1. Adverse Drug Reactions and Deaths What is a COVID-19 ‘Vaccine’? Adverse Drug Reactions to COVID-19 ‘Vaccines’ Deaths Following Injection with a COVID-19 ‘Vaccine’ Overall Mortality in the UK Biosecurity State It’s been nine months now since, in my article Lies, Damned Lies and Statistics: Manufacturing the Crisis, I analysed the … Continue reading The UK ‘Vaccination’ Programme. Part 1: Adverse Drug Reactions and Deaths
ASH Press Release: St Raphael’s Estate Saved from Demolition
ASH is happy to announce that, a month after we published and delivered to Brent Council our report on the design alternative to the demolition of St. Raphael’s estate — which demonstrated among other things the financial unviability of demolishing and redeveloping the 760 homes — Brent Council has agreed with us and called off … Continue reading ASH Press Release: St Raphael’s Estate Saved from Demolition
Freedom Day
Nor did I deem your decrees so strong That you, a mortal man, could overturn The gods’ unwritten and unfailing laws. — Sophocles, Antigone, c. 441 B.C. Back again, but for how long In this brief respite from incarceration? Air and sea now banned to us By an Iron Curtain of regulations, Locked in a … Continue reading Freedom Day
The Alternative to Demolition: Design Proposals for St. Raphael’s Estate
Architects for Social Housing is pleased to announce the publication of our report on the design alternative to the demolition of St. Raphael’s estate in Neasden, in the London Borough of Brent. The result of two years’ work with residents, the report includes ASH’s proposals for the refurbishment of the estate’s 760 existing homes, the improvement … Continue reading The Alternative to Demolition: Design Proposals for St. Raphael’s Estate
The Unlawful Killing of Ian Tomlinson
Dedicated to the memory of Ian Tomlinson (7 February, 1962—1 April, 2009) and the 1,772 people who have died after contact with the police in England and Wales between 1990 and 2020, for not one of whose deaths has a police officer been convicted. After Bob Dylan’s The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll (1964). 1 … Continue reading The Unlawful Killing of Ian Tomlinson
The Impact of Lockdown on UK Housing
This text was originally published by the Academy of Ideas at University of Buckingham in the People’s Lockdown Inquirer, a book-length report documenting the impact of lockdown restrictions on UK government, media, health, care homes, social work, education, schools, universities, children, the economy, work, industries, housing, prisons, transport, culture, arts, sport, society, rights and freedoms. The … Continue reading The Impact of Lockdown on UK Housing
Parking in Fletching
1 ‘Would you mind not parking on our land?’ She said, as we walked back to the car — The land in question being the grassy verge Of a lane marked ‘private’ and leading to A country pile called ‘Wilmshurst Cottage’. In an estate agents’ evaluation (I researched online later that evening) Now the most … Continue reading Parking in Fletching
In Our Defence: Freedom of Speech in the UK Biosecurity State
‘The struggle of man against power is the struggle of memory against forgetting.’ — Milan Kundera In January of this year, ASH received a letter from the Architects Registration Board (ARB), a body created by The Architects Act 1997 to be the regulator of UK architects. It’s job is to enforce The Architects Code: Standards of … Continue reading In Our Defence: Freedom of Speech in the UK Biosecurity State