Monday 11 January 2021

Fight and Flight?

We simply have to talk about this. I don't know that much about Joe Biden, but enough to conclude he's clearly a 'good' guy and it's rapidly becoming very apparent he's going to need every ounce of skill and judgement over the coming months in order to deal with the extremely dangerous aftermath of Trump. Having spent hours glued to CNN over the weekend it's pretty clear Wednesday's assault on Congress with shouts of 'hang Mike Pence', a blood bath was in chilling prospect. 

We learn from the Maryland Governor that right at the outset and urgent appeal for assistance by the Capitol Police, he had mobilised 200 specially-trained and equipped riot teams, together with National Guard units ready for deployment. The trouble was authorisation from the Pentagon was inexplicably delayed for hours whilst Trump watched events unfold on TV. 

There is suspicion that Majority House Whip Jim Clyburn had his anonymous-looking office on the upper levels specifically identified to attackers, thus raising very dark suspicions of where at least some police officers' loyalties really lie. It also seems other public bodies such as the FDNY have already started sharing information with the FBI regarding some of their employees being present at the insurrection. 

All these disturbing revelations simply serve to confirm how deep-rooted racism and fascism has become within American society and hence provided the perfect recruiting ground for Trump. His take-over of the Republican Party, ably assisted by the now suddenly 'woken' big tech, has been a disgrace, but one considerably compounded by a staggering number of lawmakers who still voted against Joe Biden's confirmation, despite many being in a state of shock from the attack. All will now have to face possible House and Senate disciplinary action together with open repugnance from colleagues on both sides of the political divide. Some like Josh Hawley and Ted Cruz, possibly being held to account under the 14th Amendment Sect 3

Together with the problem of 75 million very disappointed Trump supporters, many of whom are armed to the teeth and have always regarded Washington and Federal Agencies as the enemy, Biden's wish to unite the country is now made significantly more difficult by the urgent and necessary imperative of holding Trump to account. It is said that Vice President Pence is holding the threat of the 25th Amendment in abeyance in order to restrain Trump, whilst Impeachment moves rapidly through the House and if necessary voted upon by Wednesday. 

We are led to believe that passage through the Senate to conviction is much more difficult, but GOP soon-to-be minority Leader Mitch McConell could do the decent thing and expedite the process before January 20th couldn't he? He's been conspicuously quiet since Wednesday though. If not, then the process could be postponed for trial, possibly until after the traditional 100 day milestone thus not hindering the Democrats and Biden from getting to work. Despite Trump having left office it's still necessary of course for many reasons including that of preventing Trump from ever standing for senior public office again. It could also affect his pension entitlement, title and most significantly his place in history as the first President to have been impeached twice and the first to conviction.

Of course now robbed of all access to his social media platforms we don't know for sure what his mood and state of mind actually is right now. It is said he went 'ballistic' when banned permanently by Twitter and that he bitterly regrets making the two 'hostage' videos following events on Wednesday, seemingly under threat of the 25th Amendment being invoked by Pence and a majority of his Cabinet. Apparently Pence and Trump haven't spoken since Wednesday. Decamping to Parlar is getting ever-more difficult and the money is drying up with corporations distancing themselves from Republican donations and payment platforms refusing to facilitate Trump donations. 

So, what will Trump do next? His behaviour so far should have come as no surprise at all because he's signalled it consistently for months and that's going to be very difficult for law enforcement agencies to explain in terms of leaving the Capitol exposed to attack. Trump was desperate to win the election and was never going to admit defeat. He knows his Presidential immunity runs out as soon as he is evicted from the White House and he faces numerous sexual assault allegations, law suits, tax evasion issues, loan repayment demands and now possible criminal investigation and charges for Incitement to Insurrection. The rap sheet is extensive and none of this can be avoided by the unprecedented self-granting of a Pardon, so effectively he's up the proverbial polluted creek with no paddle being obvious. 

The other day I was rash enough to suggest Trump would go to jail. Today I'm going to suggest something even more extraordinary - he's going to flee justice and go into exile. But we know the arms of US justice are long, where could he go both for maximum distance and scope for mischief? Why Russia of course, under Putin's protection and where he would be actively facilitated to continue his promulgation of baseless lies and falsehoods as a de facto President in Exile. Treason? Whatever, clearly an even more dangerous situation not only for domestic security but also world peace and stability involving as it does a disgraced former President in possession of highly classified intelligence. 

Far fetched? No, in fact largely signalled and predicted. The following are extracts from a lengthy article 'Why Trump Can't Afford to Lose' in the New Yorker magazine last November:-  

No American President has ever been charged with a criminal offense. But, as Donald Trump fights to hold on to the White House, he and those around him surely know that if he loses—an outcome that nobody should count on—the presumption of immunity that attends the Presidency will vanish. Given that more than a dozen investigations and civil suits involving Trump are currently under way, he could be looking at an endgame even more perilous than the one confronted by Nixon. The Presidential historian Michael Beschloss said of Trump, “If he loses, you have a situation that’s not dissimilar to that of Nixon when he resigned. Nixon spoke of the cell door clanging shut.” Trump has famously survived one impeachment, two divorces, six bankruptcies, twenty-six accusations of sexual misconduct, and an estimated four thousand lawsuits. Few people have evaded consequences more cunningly. That run of good luck may well end, perhaps brutally, if he loses to Joe Biden. Even if Trump wins, grave legal and financial threats will loom over his second term. 

Barbara Res, whose new book, “Tower of Lies,” draws on the eighteen years that she spent, off and on, developing and managing construction projects for Trump, also thinks that the President is not just running for a second term—he is running from the law. “One of the reasons he’s so crazily intent on winning is all the speculation that prosecutors will go after him,” she said. “It would be a very scary spectre.” She calculated that, if Trump loses, “he’ll never, ever acknowledge it—he’ll leave the country.” Res noted that, at a recent rally, Trump mused to the crowd about fleeing, ad-libbing, “Could you imagine if I lose? I’m not going to feel so good. Maybe I’ll have to leave the country—I don’t know.” It’s questionable how realistic such talk is, but Res pointed out that Trump could go “live in one of his buildings in another country,” adding, “He can do business from anywhere.”

"Mary Trump, like Res, suspects that her uncle is considering leaving the U.S. if he loses the election (a result that she regards as far from assured). If Biden wins, she suggested, Trump will “describe himself as the best thing that ever happened to this country and say, ‘It doesn’t deserve me—I’m going to do something really important, like build the Trump Tower in Moscow.’ ”

The notion that a former American President would go into exile—like a disgraced king or a deposed despot—sounds almost absurd, even in this heightened moment, and many close observers of the President, including Tony Schwartz, the ghostwriter of Trump’s first best-seller, “The Art of the Deal,” dismiss the idea. “I’m sure he’s terrified,” Schwartz told me. “But I don’t think he’ll leave the country. Where the hell would he go?” However, Snyder, the Yale professor, whose specialty is antidemocratic regimes in Eastern Europe, believes that Trump might well abscond to a foreign country that has no extradition treaty with the U.S. “Unless you’re an idiot, you have that flight plan ready,” Snyder said. “Everyone’s telling me he’ll have a show on Fox News. I think he’ll have a show on RT”—the Russian state television network.

On Election Day, the margin of victory may be crucial in determining Trump’s future. If the winner’s advantage in the Electoral College is decisive, neither side will be able to easily dispute the result. But several of Trump’s former associates told me that if there is any doubt at all—no matter how questionable—the President will insist that he has won. Michael Cohen, Trump’s former attorney, told me, “He will not concede. Never, ever, ever.” He went on, “I believe he’s going to challenge the validity of the vote in each and every state he loses—claiming ballot fraud, seeking to undermine the process and invalidate it.” Cohen thinks that the recent rush to confirm Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court was motivated in part by Trump’s hope that a majority of Justices would take his side in a disputed election.

Lawrence Douglas, a professor of law at Amherst College and the author of a recent book on the President, “Will He Go?,” predicted that Trump—whether inside the White House or out—will “continue to be a source of chaos and division in the nation.” Douglas, who is co-editing a textbook on transitional justice, told me that he’s uncomfortable with the notion of an incoming Administration prosecuting an outgoing head of state. “That really looks like a tin-pot dictatorship,” he said. He also warned that such a move could be inflammatory because, “to tens of millions of Americans, Trump will continue to be a heroic figure.” Whatever the future holds, Douglas doubts whether Trump could ever fade away contentedly, as many other Presidents have done: “He craves the spotlight, both because it satisfies his narcissism and because he’s been very successful at merchandising it.” Peaceful pursuits might have worked for George W. Bush, but Douglas is certain of one thing about Trump’s future: “This guy is not going to take up painting his feet in the bathtub.”
  

The matter was further discussed in this article 'Is President Donald Trump a Flight Risk?' on the Politico website last October 28th and authored by a retired Brigadier General. These are extracts:- 

If Trump loses badly, it is conceivable he could plan a stealth departure sometime during the 11-week period before Inauguration Day, while he still has the protection of legal immunity as a sitting president. Leaving U.S. airspace before he resumes the status of private citizen at noon on January 20 would allow him to escape—or at least delay—dealing face-to-face with many creditors and lawsuits. Classic indicators of preparation for such a move would include fast sales of domestic properties and investments, and a quiet amassing of wealth offshore, out of reach of U.S. authorities. Trump’s family members and trusted corporate staff would likely be heavily involved in orchestrating the relocation.

A chilling alternative, however fanciful, could arise if Trump flees abroad after losing a close, viciously contested election. Hunkered down in a foreign country willing to provide sanctuary, he could conceivably style himself a “president in exile” and incite his die-hard American followers to resist the election results. A degree of domestic upheaval and dangerous division would linger for an extended period until the new administration is able to foster calm and unity.

How might this happen? What methods might a sitting U.S. president use to leave the country on a one-way journey? The choice could be as brazen as not reboarding Air Force One while out of the country at a conference or summit. Cases abound of athletes and artists escaping repressive regimes by refusing to reboard official aircraft and instead negotiating asylum. While on U.S. shores, Trump could find a creative way to slip his Secret Service detail and fly away in a friend’s private jet or foreign aircraft. Sailing away into international waters would also be a plausible option. In 2019, fugitive U.S. computer-security software magnate John McAfee used his yacht to elude the IRS and Securities and Exchange Commission for months until he was arrested in Spain on October 6, 2020. Steve Bannon made news last August when the Coast Guard arrested him while on a foreign yacht off Connecticut.

If all this sounds like a B-grade spy novel, it should. The flight of a U.S. president would be unprecedented, unsettling and profoundly disappointing. As a minimum, a presidential defection would temporarily absorb the resources and attention of a wide range of U.S. defense, intelligence and law enforcement agencies. In more than two centuries of peaceful transfers of presidential power, nothing remotely conceivable like it has ever happened.

I fervently hope we won’t face such a disturbing turn of events. But if there is anything to learn with this president, it is to expect the unexpected. As his unabashed admiration of authoritarian world leaders has shown us these past four chaotic years, Donald Trump values autocrats over democratic government, and places his self-interest well above the sacred trust he was elected to protect and uphold four years ago.

Alarming all this undoubtedly is, at least it should mean Impeachment will proceed to conviction in the Senate, thus affording errant Republican Senators time to repent, albeit at the eleventh hour. 

35 comments:

  1. I think a lot of what's posted is completely right, and he's already stated he won't be attending Bidens inauguration, but I doubt that he hasn't planned for something that will turn the focus back on him!
    There's a word that seems to be resisted in all this, probably because the West likes to reserve it for other regimes (it could never happen here???) and that's radicalisation.
    Trumps whole tenure has used the language of radicalisation, and he's been very successful at it. His support is blind allegiance, American patriots that will answer the call when asked to do so.
    It makes Trump a seriously dangerous individual whether he stays in the States or flees.
    Those with political powers in the US should be very worried indeed, he may be home grown, but he's no less dangerous or obnoxious the Sadam or Bin Laden.
    Personally I feel if the US don't act fast to take control and deal with Trump, they may regret it for many years to come.
    He's also got a friend in North Korea.

    'Getafix

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  2. Can't remember where I saw it (not helpful, sorry) but there was a reference two or three weeks ago by a journalist to the fact that a private charter jet "often used by Trump to fly to Scotland, sometimes in the name of Barron" [John Barron was an alias used by Trump] has been "placed in readiness".

    Wonder if he's fleeing to Scotland? That might test the mettle of Wee Nicola.

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    1. It has recently been reported in the Scottish press that he had intended to fly into Prestwick, but Covid regulations and Nicola Sturgeon have ruled that out.

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    2. https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.politico.eu/article/where-will-trump-go-if-he-quits-the-us/amp/

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    3. trump has used john barron, john miller, david dennison; his father used mr green.


      trump-wannabe grant shapps used michael green (more distressingly, shapps is cousin to Mick Jones, onetime axeman for The Clash)

      Delete
  3. Personally I think the Democrats should drop the whole impeachment/25th amendment sideshow and let the Trump presidency just peter out over the next 9 days.

    You're right Jim, Biden is a good guy and his party owe him the opportunity to start his presidency in a positive and unifying way. The best rebuttal to Trump would be to deliver meaningful, bipartisan and long lasting reform over the next two years rather than Biden kicking off his presidency in the midst of a messy and divisive legal drama that will realistically lead nowhere.

    75m people voted for Trump including an overwhelming majority of the white working class that the Democratic Party have lost. Far better to reach out to them and to understand why they gravitated towards Trump than to engage in a pointless exercise designed only to fuel the ego of Pelosi and others in Congress.

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    1. Trump lost. His movement shamed and embarrassed. Its now basically a terrorist movement.

      Its also wrong to assume all republican voters are Trump loyalists. Its always been a tight consistant portion of Republicans but not all.

      Like all failed regimes, the losers need to take a step back and think about why they have been sounded rejected and listen to the disgust expressed at their flimsy understanding of the values of integrity, decency and honour.

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  4. He is a problem that will have to be dealt with either now or in the future.
    He won't just fade away.

    https://bylinetimes.com/2020/12/18/trump-derangement-fuelled-mass-radicalisation-of-america/

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  5. Meanwhile, Trump's apprentice decides to bash on & continues to take the piss:

    "Boris Johnson has been accused of hypocrisy by a Labour MP following reports the Prime Minister went cycling seven miles from his home after imposing sweeping Covid restrictions on others.

    Mr Johnson was seen at the Olympic Park in east London on Sunday afternoon cycling with members of his security detail, it was claimed.

    Health Secretary Matt Hancock sidestepped a question referencing the controversy at a Downing Street coronavirus press conference on Monday.

    Official regulations brought in by Mr Johnson say that exercise is limited to once a day and you should not leave your local area, in a bid to halt the surge in coronavirus cases.

    A Downing Street spokesman declined to comment on the matter when asked about it at a Westminster briefing"

    The Rules: "You should minimise time spent outside your home, but you can leave your home to exercise. This should be limited to once per day, and you should not travel outside your local area."

    Handjob at today's briefing: "it is OK, if you went for a long walk and ended up seven miles away from home, that is OK. But, you should stay local, you should not go from one side of a country to another, potentially taking the virus with you."

    Let's just look at that again.

    "if you went for a long walk and ended up seven miles away from home, that is OK." Is it? Is it really ok? Then what? Bus? Taxi? Chauffeur-driven limo? Is that what Boris did? Went for a ride & ended up 7 miles from home?

    Every. Single. Day.

    Something comes into their stupid fucking heads... their eyes twinkle, they open their smirking gobs, they start with "Thank you, pleb on the video, now THAT is an excellent question..." - & then they spout utter shite.

    FFS.

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  6. CNN website today:-

    Two US Capitol Police officers were suspended and at least 10 more are under investigation for their behavior during last week's assault on the Capitol, and federal agents will look at whether current and former law enforcement officers played a role in the riot.

    One of the Capitol police officers took a selfie with someone who was part of the mob that overtook the Capitol and the other wore a "Make America Great Again" hat and started directing people around the building, according to Rep. Tim Ryan, an Ohio Democrat. He didn't disclose how many other officers were under investigation but confirmed it was between 10 and 15, and didn't say what they were being scrutinized for except that it was their behavior during the riot.

    Ryan told reporters that one individual had been arrested, but a spokesperson for the congressman later said he was wrong and no members of law enforcement have been arrested.

    The spokesperson said at least 10 Capitol Police officers are being investigated for their roles in the riot. A House aide separately said there are as many as 17 officers under investigation as part of eight investigations into the insurrection at the Capitol.

    In a statement Monday night, Capitol Police acting Chief Yogananda Pittman said several officers were suspended.
    She said the department "has been actively reviewing video and other open source materials of some USCP officers and officials that appear to be in violation of Department regulations and policies. Our Office of Professional Responsibility will investigate these behaviors for disciplinary action, up to, and including, termination.
    Several USCP officers have already been suspended pending the outcome of their investigations." The federal investigative interest is a priority and a part of the broader investigation into the mob at the Capitol, sources said. The investigation into insurrectionist ties to law enforcement is a priority because the skills that officers are trained to use during their duties could be useful to an extremist mob, authorities say. This includes clearing rooms, taking custody of people, securing areas and handling firearms.

    Democratic members of the House have also raised questions about potential sympathies for the attackers among the ranks of US Capitol Police. That agency hasn't responded to CNN's request for comment. House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn, a South Carolina Democrat, is among those who have others questions about whether some Capitol Police officers aided the protesters and were complicit in Wednesday's insurrection. Clyburn, for instance, said it was fishy that the rioters knew the location of lawmakers' offices.

    Early videos -- one showing a Trump supporter taking a selfie with a police officer near an entrance to the Capitol and another appearing to show police letting protesters into the building -- went viral on social media.

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    1. At least seven officers in five other departments across the country have come under internal investigations as their presence in Washington during the assault comes to light through social media or other means. One officer in New York, one in Philadelphia, two in Seattle, two in Virginia and one in Texas are under investigation by their departments for potential rules violations. Additionally, some departments have been contacted by the FBI as part of their criminal investigation into the overrunning of the Capitol.

      The number may grow as investigators and the public sift through social media and lodge allegations that officers may have been involved in the siege. Police departments have said their investigation will hinge on what type of involvement officers are found to had with last week's assault.

      "There's a big difference between walking down Pennsylvania Avenue and expressing yourself and going into a building where rioters pushed police and hit police and pushed them out of the way to get in," said Chuck Wexler, executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum. "That will be the question. They just came and they marched, versus did they go inside the building and become part of a (riot)."

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    2. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-55623752

      A news account with many threads relating to the insurrection event, including:

      - The heroic actions of one Capitol Hill officer

      - The deeply sad news that numerous Capitol Hill officers have been self-harming in the aftermath, and one has successfully taken his own life

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    3. A US Capitol police officer is being called a hero for singlehandedly steering a mob away from the Senate chambers during the deadly riots.

      Footage of the officer, identified as Eugene Goodman, shows him just steps ahead of rioters as they chase him up a flight of stairs. Mr Goodman is then seen glancing towards the Senate entrance before luring the men in the opposite direction.

      Five people, including a police officer, died as a result of the riots.

      Another officer who was on duty during the siege died by suicide this weekend, his family said. The show of bravery from Mr Goodman, reportedly an Army veteran who spent time in Iraq, comes amid criticism of Capitol Police for apparent security failures during the storming of the Capitol.

      On Monday night, the department said two of its officers had been suspended and more than a dozen others were under investigation for suspected inappropriate involvement with the rioters.

      New York Law School criminal law professor and 20-year veteran of the New York City Police Department Kirk Burkhalter called Mr Goodman's response to rioters "tremendous". "I don't think there was any type of training that would prepare you for that situation," Mr Burkhalter said.

      In the video shot by Huffington Post reporter Igor Bobic, Mr Goodman, who is black, is antagonised by the group of Trump supporters - who are all white men.

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    4. Is Trump due to make a public appearance today?

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    5. Yep. Just before boarding the presidential helicopter (no masks allowed) to fly to The Alamo and then to the unfinished Wall. He said he has done nothing wrong, everyone has analysed his speech and his words and they all agree he's said nothing wrong - what *was* wrong was what happened earlier in the year with those rioters and looters, but he's done nothing wrong. However, big tech and the Democrats are endangering America and making everyone angry, there's a lot of anger, and that's not good.

      So, despite many Republicans' claims that Trump will wind his neck in, the dumb racist terrorist leader has no regrets & no remorse.

      Fifty (50) states and the District of Columbia are preparing for armed assaults on their state capitals; lunatic fringe trumpers are discussing who to 'take out', senators & governors who have pissed off trump & his trumpers are being targeted for kidnap or worse - many serving military & vets are amongst the trumper militia & some will have tactical knowledge. The FBI have spoken of message groups discussing storming key federal sites if Biden is inaugurated.

      Batshit crazy - "if Biden is inaugurated" - why wouldn't he be? I suppose if he's been assassinated it would be difficult.

      The US is pretty fucked up for some time to come.

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    6. I watched him talk. He can't resist stirring the pot.
      He's heard there are convoys now coming to the boarder in anticipation of him leaving office and the Democrats allowing them in!
      "Them" I suspect are Mexicans, and it's suggests to his largely racist following that they will now be at risk of being over run by mass and illegal immigration.
      He really is a vile individual.

      'Getafix

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    7. Trump and the Republican Party is an obscenity and collectively they have stoked the perfect conditions for a period of full-blown domestic terrorism aimed at the Federal Government and Congress. The genie escaped the bottle on January 6th and sadly I fear America is in for a long and bloody struggle and much long overdue soul-searching. It's very bad news indeed for all democracies and highlights both the inadequacies of the Constitution and folly of becoming complacent.

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    8. trump has, as many have said, unlocked pandora's box. Here's Lukashenko, the Belarusian sweety who trump clearly wants to emulate:

      "Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko defended his country's ability to host this year's hockey world championships by ridiculing the United States following the violent attack at the Capitol.

      The authoritarian leader met with International Ice Hockey Federation president Rene Fasel for talks amid calls to move the world championships following mass protests against Mr Lukashenko's rule.

      He told Mr Fasel that the protests would not make it unsafe for Belarus to host the tournament, and compared his country with the United States, where supporters of President Donald Trump rioted at the Capitol last week.

      "In our country, protesters and other dissatisfied people don't storm government agencies and capitols," Mr Lukashenko said. "We have a completely normal situation from the perspective of the development of democratic processes."

      Lukashenko was elected president of Belarus in 1994. In 1996 he persuaded voters to approve a new constitution that gave him sweeping additional powers, including the right to prolong his term in office, to rule by decree, and to appoint one-third of the upper house of parliament. An authoritarian and unpredictable leader, he resisted economic and political reforms, suppressed dissent in the media and among the people, and led Belarus into isolation from its European neighbours and the international community. Although Lukashenko’s term of office had been scheduled to expire in 1999, he continued in office under the new terms he had negotiated. Reelected in 2001, he oversaw the passage in 2004 of a controversial amendment that allowed him to seek a third term. Lukashenko won the 2006 election amid allegations of tampering. Lukashenko easily won another term as president in elections held in late 2010, and again in 2015 - and although many think he lost the 2020 election (mismanaging covid-19 & jailing political opponents ahead of the election) he's still in power.

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  7. BBC website - "15% rise on five-year average death figures

    We reported a few minutes ago on newly-released figures for excess deaths in the UK during 2020.

    Last year saw an increase above the five-year average number of deaths of about 15% - nearly 91,000 registered deaths.

    But what does "excess deaths" mean?

    It means the number of deaths above what we might expect to see in normal circumstances.

    To work it out, you take the number of people who have died from any cause in a given period of time - a week or a month, say. You can then compare that with the average number of deaths that occurred in the same period usually over the previous five years.

    It is one of the best measures of judging the death toll from coronavirus."

    registered deaths above the five-year average = 91,000

    deaths "within 28 days of a positve test" = 81,960

    deaths "with covid-19 on death certificate" = 82,624 @ 18 Dec (but that was three & a half weeks ago).

    Will the UK reach 100,000 covid-19 deaths by the time we reach the anniversary of the first widely-accepted covid-19 death in the UK, i.e. 2 March? Its looking entirely given we're currently running at about 10,000 deaths/month.

    These are the true measures of Johnson's hesitancy, cowardice & general all-round incompetency of his ministers.

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    1. £30 a parcel.
      Image in content.

      https://www.google.com/amp/s/news.sky.com/story/amp/i-could-do-more-with-30-angry-mum-criticises-free-school-meals-hamper-12185627

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    2. Thanks for that bloody hell it reminds me of a school project for a bumper crop of a Saxon village eats. Cheese on toast beans on toast baked potato cheese again beans again Carrots WTF . A bit of fruit is ok . TORY rich this divide is growing too many haves and NO LEVELING up. Bonson the nasty piece of tory right wing. He got brave about Trump the other day condeming capitol riot but only as he knew he was toast. On toast I hope we see Jonson there soon add some cheese and slide him off to the dustbin. Bring back public services so we can get on and protect society What happened to labour too many soft soaps in there now seemingly forgot how to attack while the tories are wide open. Sorry to moan.

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    3. The power of social media and Marcus Rashford - BBC Website:-

      The company at the heart of an outcry over the size of food parcels going to the poorest pupils while schools are in lockdown in England has apologised.

      Marcus Rashford sought a meeting with the firm, Chartwells, after seeing a photo of the measly parcel on Twitter.

      The post, by someone calling herself Roadside Mum, was picked up by news outlets which then quizzed Downing Street officials about it.

      Some hours later the firm agreed the parcel had fallen short on quantity.

      The mother, who posted the photo of two carrots, two potatoes and a tin of baked beans and a small range of food items, said she calculated the cost to be only about £5.

      It was retweeted 15,000 times on Twitter and received 36,000 likes

      The mother, who does not want to be identified, had thought it was supposed to last 10 school days and should have been worth £30.

      But Chartwells said it was actually only intended to last one school week, but acknowledged it was insufficient.

      It said in a statement: "For clarity this shows five days of free school lunches (not 10 days) and the charge for food, packing and distribution was actually £10.50 and not £30 as suggested.

      "However, in our efforts to provide thousands of food parcels a week, at extremely short notice, we are very sorry the quantity has fallen short in this instance."

      It added that its "10-day hampers" typically included a wide variety of nutritious food items to support the provision of lunches for children.

      Marcus Rashford had shared images of what appeared to be food parcels, saying they were "not good enough", that children should not go hungry and that "we must do better" - and he asked for a meeting with Chartwells.

      This prompted Downing Street to say it was "completely unacceptable", and that the parcels should be healthy and sufficient for the task.

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    4. Chartwells (Compass Group) are a multinational with a history of global dodgy dealing and corruption.
      They, like many other multinationals, should be banned from bidding for government contracts.

      https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compass_Group

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  8. I'm no fan of Boris Johnson but I applaud him for his comments about China's use of animals in medicine. It has been reported that Biden and the Democrats really intend to step up the fight against China and they are right to do so. The world can't standby and let China carry on its appaling human rights abuses especially in Hong Kong and against the Uyghurs.

    Meanwhile Angela Merkel fresh of signing a trade deal between the EU and China in which the EU have agreed to overlook those abuses in return for increased access to Chinese markets has apparently today started referring to COVID as 'British Virus'. Unbelievable!!

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    1. Because Merkel was referring to the virulent UK-variation of the virus which is ripping through Germany. It was a very crude translation of her German. The headline in Bild was "Die britische Corona-Mutation bereitet Bundeskanzlerin Angela Merkel (66, CDU) große Sorge!"

      "Chancellor Angela Merkel (66, CDU) is very concerned about the British Corona mutation!"

      Our own UK scientists - along with most of the world's scientific community - refer to the UK-variant or the South African-variant

      The origin of the covid-19 virus is yet to be confirmed, although it is widely believed to be from the wet markets of Wuhan. The Chinese say they believe it came to China via frozen foodstuffs. No-one is certain as yet, but the Chinese are not helping their case by delaying the international scientists travelling to make further investigations.

      And then there's this:

      https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/55633632

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    2. I am not to happy with the Chinese involvement with the planned Bradwell two Nuclear Power Station - about 5 miles from my home (notwithstanding the longstanding unresolved issue about Bradwell one - which still has not a plan to remove the spent nuclear waste from the site)

      that the Government committed to depend on finance and technological know how from the Chinese from about six years ago - despite the ongoing issue about Chinese dreadful human rights record on top of political and practical considerations- which seems to be worsening - appals me - but I am a mere subject of the UK Monarchy & so do not have a fair say in the matter.

      https://www.banng.info/news/chinese-nuclear-power-at-bradwell-an-economic-liability-environmental-disaster-and-political-catastrophe/

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    3. https://foreignpolicy.com/2020/08/03/boris-johnson-sinophile-china-hawk/

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    4. Thanks for that Anon 12 January at 19.22.

      I wonder if the UK Government's change of emphasis regarding China was mostly driven by Trump's USA and the need to get Trade Deals with them post Brexit?

      It still effectively leaves the UK as almost a client state of China in part - dependent on the Chinese for our Nuclear power future & as owners of the UK's largest commercial port at Felixstowe, dependent on Russia for our Gas supplies and almost everywhere for our food imports.



      "1991 In August, 75% of the port was acquired by the Hutchison Whampoa Group, Hong Kong. The separately- operated container-handling facility, Walton Container Terminal (owned by Orient Overseas Holdings Limited), amalgamated with Trinity Terminal (75% of Port of Felixstowe owned by Hutchison Whampoa Limited, 25% by Orient Overseas Holdings Limited)."

      http://www.felixstowedocker.com/2020/05/history-of-port-of-felixstowe.html?m=0

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    5. Perhaps its just the Brits, rather than a British Virus?

      https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-55645396

      A British tourist has been blamed for a spike in coronavirus cases that led officials to cancel Switzerland's famous Lauberhorn ski race. At least 27 cases are connected to that British tourist, contact tracers say. The tourist stayed in a hotel in Wengen over the holiday period.

      It was only last month that the vanishing Brits of Verbier reportedly fled Switzerland rather than accept the government mandated quarantine

      The Lauberhorn event was first moved to the Austrian ski resort of Kitzbühel, but an outbreak of coronavirus there has prompted another move.
      The cluster of cases in Jochberg near Kitzbühel broke out among a group of mainly British trainee ski instructors.


      Brexit means Brexit.

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  9. Referencing the post @11:22 above, data has now been updated (presumably the ONS data) so including all registrations up to 1 Jan 2021:

    deaths "with covid-19 on death certificate" = 89,243

    We've already had 6,598 deaths in jan 2021 (within 28 days of a positive test), so that's at least 95,841 to date - we'll cruise to the landmark of 100,000 deaths by then end of this month.

    Well done Boris-on-a-bike, Handjob Wancock, Thick-as-a-brick Williamson.

    This last year we've had toadying scientists in the thrall of politicians, refusing to call them out and force their hand into making clear-cut decisions in managing this pandemic.

    And we've also had to endure the same kind of 'excellent leadership' which meant Jenrick wasn't sacked, Barnard castle-boy wasn't sacked, Bozo didn't criticise his dearest papa, the wealthy and the stupid have broken lockdown,

    It really is a very bizarre form of british mimicry, 3echoing the trump situation with lunatic executive decisions, fawning lickspittles and no sanctions for transgressors.

    But that's the bullies' blueprint - we do what we want, you do what I want and I'll reward you if you help me.

    getafix was dead right with his choice of descriptor: "vile".

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  10. This is worth a read:

    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jan/12/jacob-chansley-organic-food-jail-capitol-mob-attack

    "Since the attack on Capitol Hill on Wednesday night, we can safely assume two things: in the US, white supremacy is treated with nowhere near the same force as peaceful protest. And as a result, white supremacists behave with complete entitlement.

    The insurrectionist Jacob Chansley, also known as Jake Angeli, was photographed sporting furs and a horned headdress during the attack & turned himself in after storming the Capitol, completely unafraid. “Wasn’t Jesus arrested?” he asked

    Now Chansley’s demands for an all-organic diet inside prison are being looked into at the request of a judge,“... He gets very sick if he doesn’t eat organic food – literally will get physically sick,” said his mother, Martha Chansley."

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  11. In case you didn't think it could get any more bizarre:

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-55631498

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  12. If you're an angry, elderly white man in a position of power, what better way to express your anger than to kill someone; preferably someone who represents all that you hate & despise.

    "Montgomery was the first of the final three federal inmates scheduled to die before next week’s inauguration of president-elect Joe Biden"

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jan/13/us-carries-out-first-federal-execution-of-a-woman-in-nearly-seven-decades

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  13. many a true word spoke in jest:

    "becoming an infuriated snitch is the endgame of the British dream: you finish school, you buy a car, you get married, you get a mortgage, and then you spend the remaining 40 or so years stood near the curtains with the TV turned up loud, phoning the police immediately if a boy in a cap bounces a football too close to your ’19-plate Renault, then you vote firmly and fairly for the party of law and order at the polls to make sure he never walks free again. This is as British as fry-ups and tepid little cups of tea."

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/jan/13/lockdowns-uk-true-character-nation-snitches-useless-leaders

    Helps explain ten years of Tories & Brexit. :)

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    Replies
    1. "We’re not in another lockdown because people occasionally walk near each other while drinking coffee – we’re in another lockdown because of a massive public health failure that has gone on for months led by a governing party that has outsourced, underfunded and privatised the country into oblivion."

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