102

The Official UK Digital Identity Panopticon

Iain Davis

Chatting with former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair in December 2025, UK Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood said:

[M]y ultimate vision for that part of the criminal justice system was to achieve, by means of AI and technology, what Jeremy Bentham tried to do with his Panopticon. That is that the eyes of the state can be on you at all times. [. . .] we’ve already been rolling out live facial recognition technology, but I think there’s big space here for being able to harness the power of AI and tech to get ahead of the criminals, frankly, which is what we’re trying to do.

The UK Home Secretary has ministerial responsibility for the Home Office portfolio. The Home Office’s purported intention is to “to keep citizens safe and the country secure.” In truth, as revealed by Mahmood, the Home Office is currently part of a public-private state that is attacking us to protect itself.

Though the official UK digital identity Panopticon will supposedly only target criminals, in order to identify them, from among millions of British citizens, the state will spy on everybody all of the time.

To be clear: The UK government’s official position is to use AI as the “eyes of the state” and to set its gaze firmly “on you at all times.” This is the openly stated purpose of the official UK digital identity Panopticon.

Jeremy Bentham’s proposed Panopticon was a circular prison with a central observation post, or watchtower, that could potentially see into every cell. Unsure if they were being watched, the theoretical prisoner was compelled to behave as ordered at all times. The envisaged Panopticon oppression stemmed largely from self-regulation.

The official UK digital identity Panopticon goes much further than Bentham could have possibly imagined. As its prisoners, there will be no reason for us to harbour any doubts. We can be certain that we will be under constant surveillance. Unlike the 18th century model, the modern AI-based digital Panopticon will not rely on self-regulation, though that socially engineered condition will still persist.

Mahmood claims the state’s Panopticon objective is to identify criminal behaviour. Of course, what the state determines to be criminal behaviour is liable to change.

For example, the newly expanded state definition of extremism determines that intolerance—meaning to reject the idea—of the UK’s “system of liberal parliamentary democracy and democratic rights” is extremist.

Despite there being no evidence to support its view, the UK state further asserts:

Extremism can lead to the radicalisation of individuals [. . .] and can lead to acts of terrorism. [. . .] [T]he government committed “to challenge extremist ideology that leads to violence, but also that which leads to wider problems in society.”

Peaceful, law abiding citizens who question if Parliament is actually the “supreme legislative authority with the ability to make or unmake any law” are among the many who represent “wider problems in society.” As we’ve just highlighted, if, as it says, it has the authority to make or unmake any law, the state reserves the right to define any behaviour as criminal at any time.

Those of us who question the state are far from alone in having reasons for concern. Even the most loyal subjects are targeted.

When Mahmood announced that the government was trying to “harness the power of AI and tech to get ahead of the criminals,” she was alluding to law enforcement initiatives like Project Nectar. The police have piloted the use of commercial analytics software—Palantir Foundry—to supposedly predict when we might be “about to commit a crime.” This averred predictive capability is based on some AI assessment of our digital identity generated risk signal.

With legislation like the Terrorism Prevention and Investigation Measures Act and the Counter-Terrorism and Security Act already on the statute books, the government’s glare is staring us in the face. Say the wrong thing online, express the wrong opinion or pose the wrong question and, using our digital identities, any one of us could find ourselves subject to AI-dictated reprisals, including incarceration without trial.

As things stand, the biometric data—facial recognition images—of 45 million British passport holders and, overlapping that number, 55 million drivers, are set to form the biometric authentication tokens that will single out our individual digital identities within the envisaged digital identity data lakes.

AI can then use our identity token to isolate our individual behavioural patterns, detect anomalies, and predict whatever the state deems to be a risk associated with our behaviour. The real time speed of AI pattern recognition enables the constant monitoring of our activity. The state can then deploy AI to execute predetermined conditional smart contracts to instantly restrict or withhold our access to goods and services—or worse.

The state will have possession of the ultimate tool for socially engineering our individual behaviours and, consequently, the whole population. An Agentic State—a state ruled by the autonomous, automatic decisions of AI—can be formed and a full-blown Technocracy imposed.

* * *

* * *

According to the UK state:

An identity is a combination of ‘attributes’ (characteristics) that belong to a person. A single attribute is not usually enough to tell one person apart from another, but a combination of attributes might be.

The state has established the UK Digital Identity and Attributes Trust Framework (DIATF) to ensure those of us “who want or need a digital identity” are issued one. This is an illusory Hobson’s choice.

The only way to access any government services will be by using digital identity. Whether we “want” one or not, we will “need” a state approved digital identity to obtain a marriage certificate, file a tax return (a legal requirement where applicable), apply for a driving license, rent or buy a home, or register for health care, etc. The UK government calls this evident necessity “optional.”

The DIATF is overseen by Government Digital Services (GDS) which is part of the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT). Josh Simons MP is the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for DSIT. He is also a leading parliamentary spokesperson and lobbyist for Labour Growth Group PLC. As such, Simons’ objective is to tear down the barriers to economic growth by pushing bold and practical reforms on behalf of multinational corporations.

The Trilateralist Keir Starmer, a close associate of fellow Trilateralist Larry Fink—the BlackRock CEO and co-chair of the WEF—appointed Simons as the “minister for digital reform in charge of spearheading the government’s digital ID plans.”

On the 15th January, Simons told Parliament that the purpose of digital identity policy was to “transform the state,” by controlling our “access services across both the public and private sectors.” Simons assured parliament and the British people:

Digital IDs will be rolled out for free to everyone who wants one. If anyone does not want one, they do not have to have one. [. . .] [A]ccess to public services will not be conditional on having [digital ID]. The Prime Minister has been clear on that, and I can underscore that commitment.

As usual, there is a vast chasm between ministerial statements and their verbal commitments and the reality of the public-private state’s actions. For a start, the rollout of the UK’s official digital identity Panopticon is not “free.”

The cost to the UK taxpayer of the digital transformation of our health and social care sector alone is set to eclipse £21 billion. This represents a direct transfer of wealth from the people—the public sector—to global corporations—the private sector. Multinationals such as Palantir and Oracle profit from the digital infrastructure contracts to “transform the state.” Using government to enable corporate profiteering from the public purse is the primary objective of Labour Growth Group PLC.

If, as Simons claims, we will not need to use our allocated digital identities to access public services, then alternative non-digital pathways should be provided. None are currently planned or even proposed, so this element of Simons’ parliamentary statement wasn’t true either. It is hard to see why those of us who decide to reject digital identity should pay tax for government services we can’t use.

For example, UK company directors are being compelled to verify their identities online, using the UK government’s One-Login portal, to retain their registration as directors. There are two ways they can avail themselves of this government service.

They can either register their biometric digital identity token directly with the state or “verify” themselves through a third party—an Authorised Corporate Service Provider (ACSP) or via the Post Office. But, whichever route directors use, their digital identity authentication token is created and they are cast into the official UK digital identity Panopticon. Their only realistic option is not to comply.

As part of the planned Panopticon, the UK government is moving swiftly towards forcing us to use our designated digital identities to access the internet. With regard to restricting our ability to share information online, state mouthpieces have been dispatched to convince us that banning under 16s from using social media has something to do with child safeguarding. Obviously, this is another paper-thin lie.

To verify our age on social media platforms, every one of us will need to use digital identity. The UK state has already legislated to extend this likely requirement beyond social media, soon to control our access to the entire internet.

The Data (Use and Access) Act 2025 (DUAA) establishes a national framework for the digital identity verification of individuals to use online public and private services. It contains some very reasonable online protections for children. This ensures that anyone who opposes the dictatorship lurking within it can be cast by state propagandists as a risk to children.

Despite the fact that the UK supposedly left the EU in 2016, the DUAA has incorporated the EU legal concept of an “information society service” (ISS) within its sledgehammer diktats. An ISS is the kind of amorphous legal construct that can easily be interpreted via secondary legislation—which is precisely what the DUAA proposes—to mean whatever the state wants it to mean.

Wrestling with this ambiguity, the UK Information Commissioners Office (ICO) has interpreted what an ISS implies in the context of the DUAA. It notes that an ISS “is not restricted to services specifically directed at children,” and further determines that an ISS is:

[A]ny service normally provided for remuneration, at a distance, by electronic means and at the individual request of a recipient of services.

The ICO adds:

Essentially this means that most online services are ISS, including apps, programs and many websites including search engines, social media platforms, online messaging or internet based voice telephony services, online marketplaces, content streaming services (eg video, music or gaming services), online games, news or educational websites, and any websites offering other goods or services to users over the internet.

It is blatantly transparent that the services we pay for from an Internet Service Provider (ISP)—the means by which we access the internet—is an “information society service” for the purposes of the DUAA. We will inevitably need “highly effective age verification”—digital identity—to use the internet in the UK.

The Digital Identity and Attributes Trust Framework (DIATF) establishes the “technical and operating standards for use [of digital identity] across the UK’s economy.” The goal is to achieve “international and domestic interoperability” of all digital identity based products and services—across both the public and the private sector.

The state claims this is essential because the “digital transformation of the global economy” is accelerating. Therefore, “a digital identity to prove your right to work in the UK” can also be used to “open a bank account.” This necessitates public-private partnership and the sharing of digital identity data “across the [entire] UK economy.”

Interoperability means our enforced digital identities will be “built and operated in a standardised way.”

Software such as Palantir Gotham—incorporating Palantir Foundry—can take data from any source, such as your state issued driving license, your privately issued bank card, or your police record, to “visualise and analyse information from multiple systems in real time [. . .] across the operating environment to achieve successful mission outcomes.”

The UK state has a strategic partnership with Palantir. It provides Palantir Gotham and Foundry to government departments and agencies—evidently including the police—through its current G-Cloud 14 procurement program. Gotham and Foundry are among the UK government’s “AI-driven analytics tools.”

Once we are forced to adopt our digital identities, they will be made interoperable across the whole of the UK economy. This means that the state will be able to “produce actionable intelligence based on the full ecosystem of available data.”

To establish the official UK digital identity Panopticon, the government and its partners do not require us to adopt any new forms of digital identity. Though it is trying to manipulate us into submitting our biometric authentication token to its GOV.UK digital identity wallet, for the public-private state this is just the most expedient method of imprisoning us in its Panopticon.

If we refuse be corralled via One Login into the GOV.UK prison wallet, the state merely has to ensure the digital identity system we already use, nearly every day, is interoperable to achieve the same ends. Once interoperability between so-called “vendor agnostic” digital products and services is established, the government and its propagandists simply need to convince us to keep using them.

As the network of live facial recognition technology expands across the UK, combined with our allocated interoperable digital identities, everything we buy, every service we use, everywhere we go, every person we meet, every aspect of our lives—our health, insurance, and financial data, etc.,—will be monitored, tracked and recorded in real time. Thereafter, using AI, restrictions can be placed on our permitted behaviour in real time.

This will be our shared reality if we continue to use the digital identity system that has already been built in the UK by successive governments and their partners.

The UK state currently utilises deception, coercion and force to rule us. Once it has established its Agentic State Technocracy it will have total behavioural control of its citizenry and won’t need to to rely so heavily on deceit and intimidation.

The official UK digital identity Panopticon is being constructed and it will be controlled by a UK public-private state dictatorship. The state has already passed legislation to control our access to information online, to censor our freedom of speech and expression, to remove our supposedly democratic right to protest, and has granted to itself and its agents immunity from prosecution for any crime.

Our right to annul legislation—to render it legally invalid—through trial by jury has been a seldom used but firm part of our constitutional landscape for hundreds of years. Not only is the UK state severely restricting our lawful right to trial by jury, its so-called judges now claim they have the unconstitutional power to punish juries if they annul.

The Court of Appeal ruling to that effect is, at best, erroneous and appears to be completely unlawful. Unfortunately, those of us who still cling to the notion that the UK functional oligarchy—the public-private state—and its Establishment henchmen and women have any interest in observing our constitutional rule of law are hopelessly deluded.

The only real choice any of us have is stark.

Irrespective of whether we submit to the government’s new digital infrastructure—One Login and the GOV.UK wallet—those of us who continue to use the digital products and services currently available to us will be, in all likelihood, imprisoned within the UK state’s official digital identity Panopticon. Our only chance, in the short term, is to refuse to comply with pretty much the whole digital system.

We must reject these extant systems, throw away our smart phones, refuse to use government online portals, decline private sector services that require our digital identity as a prerequisite, and actively pursue and adopt possible alternative networks.

We have no choice but to use every peaceable and lawful means at our disposal to defend ourselves against the UK state.

Iain Davis is an independent journalist a researcher from the UK. You can read more of Iain’s work at his blog IainDavis.com (Formerly InThisTogether) or follow him on Twitter or subscribe to his SubStack. His book Pseudopandemic, is now available, in both in kindle and paperback, from Amazon and other sellers. You can claim a free copy of his new book “The Manchester Attack” by subscribing to his newsletter.

SUPPORT OFFGUARDIAN

If you enjoy OffG's content, please help us make our monthly fund-raising goal and keep the site alive.

For other ways to donate, including direct-transfer bank details click HERE.

Categories: latest
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

102 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Freeflow
Freeflow
Jan 29, 2026 5:06 PM

Brilliant analysis of the final show, as usual, Iain.
Thinking about a comment, but Harry started singing…

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qN4ooNx77u0

Just stop your crying
It’s a sign of the times
Welcome to the final show
Hope you’re wearing your best clothes
You can’t bribe the door on your way to the sky
You look pretty good down here
But you ain’t really good
If we never learn, we been here before
Why are we always stuck and running from
The bullets?

Just stop your crying
It’s a sign of the times
We gotta get away from here
We gotta get away from here
Just stop your crying
It’ll be alright
They told me that the end is near
We gotta get away from here

Just stop your crying
Have the time of your life
Breaking through the atmosphere
And things are pretty good from here
Remember everything will be alright
We can meet again somewhere
Somewhere far away from here

We don’t talk enough
We should open up
Before it’s all too much
Will we ever learn?
We’ve been here before
It’s just what we know

gerard
gerard
Jan 28, 2026 9:20 AM

Iain is very new to this , and the rest of the commentators are so far down the bored housewives’ MSM alt media woke TV that their limited brains have stopped functioning.

Let’s go back to basics.

Have any of the commentators worked in the real world?

In a majority of the toll bridges in the UK , payment (digital) had to be made in advance, and this has been going on for a decade. Where was UK colonoscopy and Off Wokian or Iain’s fake outrage then-screaming digital ID?

The Elections Act is a law that was introduced by the UK Conservative Government in 2022.

The UK Conservative Government said it wanted to “ensure that UK elections remain secure, fair, modern, inclusive, and transparent.” However, lots of individuals and organizations raised concerns about the Act before it was passed-particularly the plans to introduce voter ID.

If you check Iain’s Substack and Off Guardrail ‘s search bar, you will see not one article about this.
The question is, why has this digital ID been mainlined into the consciousness as if it’s a Labour thing ?

The new housing act that UK Conservative Michael Gove brought in 2022

meant all landlords (mainly those with one or two properties) had to provide a ridiculous amount of ID .
The tenants, mainly working class or poor, wanting to rent had to provide a ridiculous amount of digital ID , bank statements, utility bills, and the usual £500 in some cases for a background check.

Go to the search bar above and check out Iain ‘s Substack or Off Woke Guardrail and see how many articles it wrote back then about this.

NONE

Rolling Rock
Rolling Rock
Jan 28, 2026 11:08 AM
Reply to  gerard

The tenants, mainly working class or poor, wanting to rent had to provide a ridiculous amount of digital ID ,

What digital ID? Explain.

A bank statement or utility bill is NOT a digital ID, it is a piece of paper. A background check is to ensure the tenant is creditworthy.

No landlord wants to rent out a property to some unknown who can’t afford to or won’t pay the rent. It is common sense and has been like this for decades.

gerard
gerard
Jan 28, 2026 2:36 PM
Reply to  Rolling Rock

The tenants, mainly working class or poor, wanting to rent had to provide a ridiculous amount of digital ID ,

Digital id means digital id like passport / photographic id was now compulsory
even the housing trust would need this as apart the requirement.

Everyone had provide this within the new housing act including the landlord.

Rhys Jaggar
Rhys Jaggar
Jan 27, 2026 9:04 PM

The Home Secretary has no doubt been promised bungs by Peter Thiel – she acts solely in her own interests and in those of criminal zionist billionaires.

Rolling Rock
Rolling Rock
Jan 27, 2026 5:39 PM

They are making accessing services harder without the use of digital keys and such like. For example Companies House with its new identification verification process for directors and ‘Persons of Significant Control’. There are nearly half a million companies registered in England and Wales affected by this.

It seems that this will be a war of attrition.

Grinding the resistant segment of the public down by closing off access to services without digital identification or requiring reauthentication of existing public and private services with biometrics and other means.

Sacrificing convenience to avoid feeding the digital beast is a must but unless significant numbers of people do the same, how long can buying time continue before the other options are closed off?

gerard
gerard
Jan 28, 2026 9:30 AM
Reply to  Rolling Rock

I will raise your

half a million companies registered in England and Wales affected by this.

The new housing act that UK Conservative Michael Gove brought in 2022.

Approximately 9.3 million households in England and Wales were in rented accommodation (both private and social) according to the 2021
Office for National Statistics (2023) Across the entire UK, there are roughly 4.7 million households privately renting and 4 million in social renting, totaling around 8.79 million renting households.

half a million companies registered in England and Wales affected by this.

United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

48,208,507
Registered Voters (as of July 4, 2024) had to provide passport or driving licence ID to be able to vote.

62.57%
Average Turnout

I wont waste my time checking out your old posts that you bothered to mention this.

Rolling Rock
Rolling Rock
Jan 28, 2026 11:13 AM
Reply to  gerard

I am talking about DIGITAL identification, you are conflating that with physical IDs for voting.

The Companies House rules require PSCs to upload ID documents to verify themselves which is then linked to the Gov.uk ONE Login service which is an all-in-one digital ID for accessing gov services.

A voter, if they are asked for ID at the polling station, just needs to show their drivers licence, passport or even a utility bill. Since, they are also registered on the electoral register, it is a simple visual match of the name on the list to the document.

gerard
gerard
Jan 28, 2026 3:34 PM
Reply to  Rolling Rock

NO! I am talking about DIGITAL identification, You have forgotten.

PSCs to upload ID documents to verify themselves, which was brought in by Universal Credit in 2010 actually.
The marketing was the same as your Companies House .
No longer would you need to call six different services.
Universal Credit has all the departments logged into one.
They even used the same promotional slogan: ONE Login call service, which is an all-in-one digital service for accessing government and council services.
Universal Credit is a single monthly payment for people in or out of work.
It combines and replaces six specific benefits: Jobseeker’s Allowance, Housing Benefit, Working Tax Credit, Child Tax Credit, Employment and Support Allowance, and Income Support.
It is designed to support individuals and families who are on a low income or out of work with their living and housing costs.

A voter, if they are asked for ID at the polling station, just needs to show their driver’s licence, passport, or even a utility bill. Since they are also registered on the electoral register, it is a simple visual match of the name on the list to the document.

How did their photos get registered on the council electoral register? Before The Elections Act Then?

The answer is: On 3 February 2022, the Government announced that ALL households in Council Tax bands A to D in England would receive a £150 rebate on their Council Tax bills.
To claim the refund, you had to provide digital ID , like a passport or driving licence, uploaded online .
All people within the United Kingdom had to provide ID, either photographic or driving licence, online to receive the council tax rebate during COVID and to receive the £ 66 per month heating help.
Then they did the voting thing , as they then had the database after the track and trace and QR codes, and the council received your digital Ids.

The Elections Act came after.

You’ve forgotten covid and you have forgotten Universal Credit, more importantly If you check Iain’s Substack and Off Guardrail ‘s search bar, you will see not one article about this.

Rolling Rock
Rolling Rock
Jan 28, 2026 5:11 PM
Reply to  gerard

To claim the refund, you had to provide digital ID , like a passport or driving licence, uploaded online .

That is bollocks. You are making it up as you go along.

The rebate was automatic paid to the bank account of the direct debit payer. If not received then the household needed to contact the council.

https://www.gov.uk/guidance/council-tax-rebate-factsheet

https://www.turn2us.org.uk/about-us/news-and-media/latest-news/england-council-tax-rebate-2022

Rolling Rock
Rolling Rock
Jan 28, 2026 5:28 PM
Reply to  gerard

How did their photos get registered on the council electoral register? Before The Elections Act Then?

Where are you getting this info from? It is wrong.

People’s photos are NOT registered on the Electoral Register, only their name, address and date of birth.

The ID document people are NOW (although not always) asked to show is to match the name on the list to the ID shown by the voter to staff at the polling station.

Captain Spock
Captain Spock
Jan 27, 2026 5:27 PM

Destroying the data centres will be the only game that will stop it.. Unless someone else has a better plan.

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Jan 27, 2026 6:01 PM
Reply to  Captain Spock

I hope Pol Pot will finally come to his senses. We should forgive Pol Pot and wait and see.

Kieran Telo
Kieran Telo
Jan 28, 2026 12:28 AM
Reply to  Captain Spock

What do you think Oreshnik is actually for?

Aloysius
Aloysius
Jan 27, 2026 7:34 PM

Why are they trying to dim the sun if global warming is a hoax and they know it?

Republicofscotland
Republicofscotland
Jan 27, 2026 7:44 PM
Reply to  Aloysius

I’m not sure why – Global Warming for me is the excuse to carry out these experiments, but for me again it can’t be good messing about with the weather.

“Last year, blindsided city officials in Alameda, California, ordered scientists from the University of Washington to halt an unannounced experiment using a device that would inject cloud-brightening particles into the atmosphere, citing fears of unintended consequences.

And now, according to extensive records obtained by Politico, it turns out the aborted experiment was meant to set the stage for a much larger-scale program that would have covered a 3,900-square-mile area — about the size of Puerto Rico — off the coast of North America, Chile, or south-central Africa.
“At such scales, meaningful changes in clouds will be readily detectable from space,” one 2023 report obtained by the publication reads.”

Scientists Secretly Working on Plan to Test Blocking Sun From Huge Area of Earth

Kieran Telo
Kieran Telo
Jan 28, 2026 12:25 AM
Reply to  Aloysius

Maybe because lack of vitamin D do you think maybe perhaps

Rhys Jaggar
Rhys Jaggar
Jan 27, 2026 9:06 PM

Biggest load of crap going. They are doing what US billionaires tell them to do.The time has come to ‘dim the eyes’ of all billionaire investors in ‘climate geoengineering’. They know what they are doing, they know how it will harm mankind and they couldn’t care one flying f**k.

Big Al
Big Al
Jan 27, 2026 4:34 PM

It’s all part of the overall fight for freedom and liberty from the rich, simple as that. Our own governments controlled by the rich, the media controlled by the rich, basically everything, including and especially our own freedom and liberty, controlled by the rich. Not all the rich of course, but we can’t try to parse any longer, it is what it is, and what it has always been. If we don’t win this fight, all this stuff will simply continue and accelerate.

Tamim
Tamim
Jan 27, 2026 2:10 PM

…the newly expanded state definition of extremism determines that intolerance—meaning to reject the idea—of the UK’s “system of liberal parliamentary democracy and democratic rights” is extremist.

May their village burn.

Johnny
Johnny
Jan 27, 2026 5:32 AM

Corruption and purging of high officials is.happening in China.

Mmm, just like the wicked West.

Moral of the story: ONLY RULES WITHOUT RULERS (Anarchy) works.

antonym
antonym
Jan 27, 2026 11:54 AM
Reply to  Johnny

Not on the Planet of (armed) Apes….

Republicofscotland
Republicofscotland
Jan 27, 2026 2:09 PM
Reply to  antonym

There’s more than one way to skin a cat – (The Great Reset).

https://nitter.poast.org/iluminatibot/status/2015967087202893947#m

Rhys Jaggar
Rhys Jaggar
Jan 27, 2026 9:06 PM
Reply to  Johnny

THere’s been corruption in China for decades. They call it ‘relationship management’….

jubal hershaw
jubal hershaw
Jan 27, 2026 5:29 AM

“Was Shakespeare a black woman ?” Now that’s a serious topic we should be investigating. instead of stuff like panopticons, dont you think ?

Rhys Jaggar
Rhys Jaggar
Jan 27, 2026 9:07 PM
Reply to  jubal hershaw

How many black women existed in Britain in Shakespeare’s times? Not very many, I would have thought. So on population demographics alone, the answer to the question is ‘Extremely unlikely’.

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Jan 27, 2026 4:14 AM

The youngsters, teenagers, and children have had enough of their parent’s mismanagement.
In China young people are pt rising up against the old totalitarian regime and their brutal commissioners.
In Chinese schools they already revolt and tell their teachers they want change, and they want it now, and they want it globally! https://youtu.be/3YC7TMi0l68 .

Note, the sun is rising from the East!

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Jan 27, 2026 4:27 AM
Reply to  Erik Nielsen.

Wrong link. My regrets for this error. Here the right one: https://youtu.be/WNPKRjNEZ5E .

Gezzah Potts
Gezzah Potts
Jan 27, 2026 3:59 AM

After the Australian Govt bought in age verification restrictions to access social media platforms and the internet under the guise of “protecting minors”… I had a couple of my woke liberal magazine customers (who have children under 16) and a few other customers express what a great idea it was, and that it would keep kids safe, including their own children. They had the opinion that ‘if youre not doing anything wrong, you have nothing to worry about’!! They don’t seem to mind having everything they do and buy being tracked and monitored. I also need to point out these same people fervently believed there was a “pandemic” 5.5 years ago, and did whatever the Government told them to do. Regards Iain’s article, if anyone thinks all this is about “catching criminals” and “keeping the community safe” then they would have to be really gullible and trusting in authority figures… despite everything that has happened since 2020. Among the very first targeted will those they deem “extremists”. But not extremists at all; rather: ordinary, brave people who shine a light on the lies and evil agenda of those who rule. We all saw what happened to dissidents and truth tellers during convid. I won’t comply either, and I will not upload digital identity or do AI facial scanning or scan QR code, and I refuse to enable this agenda. Incidentally, I’m currently reading David A Hughes book “Covid 19” Pyschological Operations and the War For Technocracy, and I also have Iain’s book at home, Pseudopandemic: New Normal Technocracy as well as books by Patrick Wood, Courtenay Turner, Derrick Broze, James Corbett, Elana Freeland and Neil Postman.

correspondencecommittee
correspondencecommittee
Jan 27, 2026 3:26 AM

The panopticon is about control of the many by the few, who are about control of the scientific-technological complex and industrial production to research and develop any and all means necessary to perfect their rule. 

The digital dungeon is bad enough, but numerous other means, routinely synergized by digital tech, are now deployed as weapons for final solutions amid worldwide class war on humanity (e.g., biotech serving eugenicist agenda through ‘health care’ (convid!), geoengineering, the real ‘climate change’, 6G wireless tech internalizing the externalized panopticon so we literally become its infrastructure, full spectrum dominance from space, including such ‘security’ apparatus as DEWs). 

Add this to the already potent potentials of conventional military and economic war (recalling Kissinger’s statement on control of food, energy, and money), all of which are likewise being accelerated in blitzkrieg style for the Great Reset. 

Comprehensive revolutionary as well as neo-luddite strategy to strike the root of class rule, by any and all means, is necessary if we are to have any chance of survival in the long if not short term. 

Rhys Jaggar
Rhys Jaggar
Jan 27, 2026 9:10 PM

I must say I have zero understanding of the human condition to seek to control all others. It seems a terribly sad state of being, to have as one’s life’s meaning the reduction to conformity of billions of potentially rich and diverse lives.

I know it exists, I have a sister like that.

But because I have zero intrinsic feelings of why she would be like that, I have very little ability to think the way she thinks. So I don’t find it easy to predict what she will do to make my life less pleasant, which she has done regularly at key moments in my life since our teenage years.

correspondencecommittee
correspondencecommittee
Jan 27, 2026 3:24 AM

Britain To Roll Out Facial Recognition in Police Overhaul

“Britain’s policing system, we are told, is broken. And on Monday, the home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, announced that the fix would arrive in the form of algorithms, facial recognition vans, and a large check made out to the future.”

mgeo
mgeo
Jan 27, 2026 3:55 AM

And robots from China?

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Jan 27, 2026 4:36 AM

I think it is more the ancient Royal system that is broken.
The world had enough of the eternal same divide and conquer bs from Buckingham Palace and City of London. This patchwork wont work either.

Rhys Jaggar
Rhys Jaggar
Jan 27, 2026 9:11 PM
Reply to  Erik Nielsen.

The divide and conquer comes primarily from the USA these days. Trump is doing it every single day.

Johnny
Johnny
Jan 27, 2026 12:22 AM

A Truth Teller passes:

https://consortiumnews.com/2026/01/25/michael-parenti-1933-2026-1918/

So far and few between.

Ann in Oregon
Ann in Oregon
Jan 27, 2026 3:54 AM
Reply to  Johnny

Johnny,
I had heard his name but never read him. Thanks so much for the introduction.

Johnny
Johnny
Jan 27, 2026 6:47 AM
Reply to  Ann in Oregon

You’re welcome Ann.

Ann in Oregon
Ann in Oregon
Jan 27, 2026 5:01 PM
Reply to  Johnny

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Jan 27, 2026 5:11 AM
Reply to  Johnny

A Muhammad Ali within his discipline. He is good.

Republicofscotland
Republicofscotland
Jan 27, 2026 2:16 PM
Reply to  Johnny

Sad, he was up there with the likes of John Pilger – he’ll be missed.

Aloysius
Aloysius
Jan 27, 2026 7:35 PM
Reply to  Johnny

He was a Communist and a Holomodor denier. Which are good things.

Johnny
Johnny
Jan 27, 2026 12:18 AM

Young Folks (under 40?) don’t seem to know, or value the meaning of privacy.
Forever flaunting and pouting on their devices.

They’ll live to regret it.

mgeo
mgeo
Jan 27, 2026 3:59 AM
Reply to  Johnny

Truth is stranger than fiction. In weddings of the younger set these days, it is not unusual, while the assembled guests are eating, to screen a video of mess-ups and embarrasments the groom (or bride?) have been it.

Rhys Jaggar
Rhys Jaggar
Jan 27, 2026 9:21 PM
Reply to  mgeo

Not so different to a best man’s speech traditionally where he might gently tease the groom for bachelor follies?

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Jan 27, 2026 4:06 AM
Reply to  Johnny

They want to please the government.

Ort
Ort
Jan 27, 2026 6:11 PM
Reply to  Johnny

I don’t remember the year, but when Facebook was the “in” social media venue my sister was appropriately distrustful and skeptical because she recognized that below its happy-socializing façade, it was a sinister surveillance and data-harvesting operation.

Her then 20something daughter, L., a graduate student, loved FB. L. was genuinely puzzled and annoyed at her mother’s dark suspicions. L. explained that it was wrongheaded and pointless to “think about” FB– it was simply a fun, recreational site to be enjoyed at face value. 

L. added that she didn’t see a problem with FB using site information for other purposes; if they wanted her data, they were welcome to it. If there was a down side, L. didn’t see it.

L. concluded that her mother’s attitude must be “some kind of leftover Cold War paranoia”. 🤨

Rhys Jaggar
Rhys Jaggar
Jan 27, 2026 9:20 PM
Reply to  Johnny

Maybe young folks in the 1960s didn’t seem to value the meaning of sobriety?

Every youth has a blind spot in one area of life where they rebel against the status quo.

Basically, what we’re seeing is the replacement of autocratic global religion with autocratic global surveillance.

The past 80 years or so were the gestation period which saw the death of the previous global mafia and the emergence of a new one.

Maybe the human species is designed to be controlled by mafias?

It’s certainly not shown any capability to promote long-term freedom rather than long-term coercion, has it?

les online
les online
Jan 26, 2026 11:02 PM

There’s reports of a rumour the Australian government might sneak
the President of The Only Democracy In The ME into the country on
7 February 2026… There’s no mention of him having been invited in
order to receive a medal for Doing A Good Job, or to be given a
standing ovation In Parliament House by Aussie politicians…
One thing seems certain, protests during The Visit are likely to be
massive, too massive for The Australian state’s repression forces, so
a nationwide lockdown for The Duration will be imposed… And any
protester (aka – Terrorist) who ignores lockdown will be shot on
sight…

Vagabard
Vagabard
Jan 26, 2026 11:27 PM
Reply to  les online

The price of being successfully brainwashed

les online
les online
Jan 26, 2026 11:32 PM
Reply to  Vagabard

There is no ‘price’, but there is the enjoyment of Certainty.

Vagabard
Vagabard
Jan 26, 2026 11:47 PM
Reply to  les online

Then the enjoyment of the martyr

Johnny
Johnny
Jan 27, 2026 12:24 AM
Reply to  les online

If he thinks he can hide from the heat at home, he’s in for a rude awakening.

Marfanoid
Marfanoid
Jan 26, 2026 10:58 PM

Sounds great.Sound.

Veri Tas
Veri Tas
Jan 26, 2026 10:33 PM

The only consolation is that in a fully agentic state, ruled by a machine (AI), those who are now involved in implementing this horror show, and their children, will be caught up in it as well. Something to think about, you psychos.

Vagabard
Vagabard
Jan 26, 2026 10:53 PM
Reply to  Veri Tas

Dunno. I’m guessing that ‘they’ (whoever they are) still know how to navigate it better. The digital haves and the digital have-nots and all that jazz. Still a divide it would seem

Rhys Jaggar
Rhys Jaggar
Jan 27, 2026 9:23 PM
Reply to  Veri Tas

The rich no longer use the internet, they do all their business in private. They hire drones to gather information from the internet if necessary, but they simply don’t do what AI tells them to because they make sure they are never exposed to it.

correspondencecommittee
correspondencecommittee
Jan 26, 2026 8:30 PM

From Activist Post:
Britain’s new “mind-reading” and behavior-predicting surveillance system turns every citizen into a suspect

Excerpt:

The ultimate cost is measured in human freedom. Historically, people living under authoritarian regimes learn to mask their feelings, to regulate their every gesture and word to avoid attracting the state’s gaze. This inferential surveillance seeks to automate that gaze, creating a society where people self-censor not just speech, but their innate emotional responses. It chills the freedom to be human in public—to grieve, to be anxious, to feel anger at injustice. It creates a population of trackable, traceable individuals who must constantly consider how their natural behavior might be misinterpreted by an algorithm serving the state.

The government’s consultation on a legal framework is a veneer of process over a predetermined march toward control. The real motivations have little to do with public safety and everything to do with public compliance. It is a short step from an algorithm guessing your emotional state to one predicting your “potential” for criminality or dissent, from identifying a suspect to identifying a thinker of wrong thoughts. Britain is not just upgrading its cameras; it is installing a government gatekeeper in the mind of the public square, teaching its citizens that to be fully human is to be suspect.

mgeo
mgeo
Jan 27, 2026 4:09 AM

One line of development is “detecting imminent crime from behaviour such as running, waving arms or sweating – though common sense suggests that a serious criminal would not act that way. -Sander Venema 2014

Never mind. The goal is to divert the torrent of public wealth to the “right people” rather than to “useless eaters”. If some of the latter are locked up, that too is business, a form of recycling trash.

Rhys Jaggar
Rhys Jaggar
Jan 27, 2026 9:25 PM

A better approach is to ‘Call a Cocksucker a Cocksucker and Call a C**t a C**t’.

Be merciless in how you describe the actions of state prostitutes. Don’t hold back. Embarrass them in public. Make sure that everyone knows that they can appease and self-regulate all they want, but all it achieves is a state of permanent servitude.

I don’t look up to politicians at all. I don’t look up to billionaires at all.

I know they how to get elected, to make corrupt deals, to control and extract risk-free profits.

That doesn’t mean they know how to behave with ethical concern, does it?

Clutching at straws
Clutching at straws
Jan 26, 2026 7:57 PM

Oz iis the canary here.

What’s going on Johnny Gezza et al ?

Johnny
Johnny
Jan 26, 2026 10:21 PM

Protests against ‘Climate Change’, protests against the Chosen Genocide, protests against aUStralia Day, but sweet fuck all against the insidious digital stranglehold of our privacy.

Marfanoid
Marfanoid
Jan 26, 2026 10:56 PM

Most of them are looking in the mirror.

Johnny
Johnny
Jan 27, 2026 12:00 AM
Reply to  Marfanoid

They don’t need mirrors.
It’s a selfie world now, or haven’t you noticed?

Vagabard
Vagabard
Jan 27, 2026 12:14 AM
Reply to  Johnny

Photos still help. If only as a reflection of what we all once were

(and i’m at least 20/30 years younger than most of you oldies)

Gezzah Potts
Gezzah Potts
Jan 27, 2026 2:50 AM

As Johnny said… numerous protests here including from right wing nationalist types protesting against “mass immigration” to Australia. Read brown and black skinned people. Many of these protesters seem to have a real beef with Muslims and they think Sharia Law is going to be imposed here next week. To put it bluntly, they have a very similar mindset to the MAGA crowd in the United States. Illuminating to note that none of the main organisers of these protests barely even mention about the digital panopticonic gulag… digital identity, CBDC’s, Smart Cities, geofencing, etc. Their sole focus seems to be on “mass immigration” and I’m completely convinced some of these “organisers” are actually plants and controlled opposition to distract people from the rollout of the digital gulag. Ongoing climate change protests here as well as regular large protests opposing the genocide in Gaza and in support of Palestine.

mgeo
mgeo
Jan 27, 2026 4:16 AM
Reply to  Gezzah Potts

After further US visits by the exalted son-in-law to the sole ME democracy, the last “hostage” corpse has been found. The real estate development, theft of gas and canal construction can go on. City Of London Corp., are you salivating?

Gezzah Potts
Gezzah Potts
Jan 27, 2026 7:14 AM
Reply to  mgeo

I saw Kushner’s presentation at the WEF at Davos amongst all the other parasites and leeches who will be salivating at the “investment opportunities” in the New Gaza. Absolutely grotesque and pure evil. Built over the bodies of hundreds of thousands of men, women, and children. You cannot get more morally bankrupt and evil as this. I don’t know what else to say…

Rhys Jaggar
Rhys Jaggar
Jan 28, 2026 10:58 AM
Reply to  Gezzah Potts

I guess you can say that such people put monetary gains before all human concerns. They made their choices and when they are judged by others, they may enjoy the consequences of that rather less…..

Johnny
Johnny
Jan 27, 2026 4:47 AM
Reply to  Gezzah Potts

Exactly, divide and rule has more aspects to it than we could count.

Gezzah Potts
Gezzah Potts
Jan 27, 2026 7:21 AM
Reply to  Johnny

And the State has done a great job at that here in Australia my friend, as you see for yourself. They plant their people in these groups to lead people in circles down a dead end street, and keep them distracted from whats really going on. Look over here at these really bad things while the digital gulag is getting rolled out over there…

Jenner
Jenner
Jan 27, 2026 9:04 AM
Reply to  Gezzah Potts

Note how Potts, like his doubtless worshipful Australian Broadcasting Commission, puts mass immigration in quotation marks as if it didn’t exist. Newsflash for you Potts, the UN website still hosts the original document explaining the need for replacement immigration 25 years on. Never viewed any graphic of inward migration to Oz over the last 30 years? Never heard your Liberal Opposition leader in NSW saying a couple of weeks ago that immigration is needed to provide taxpayers? This of course is rubbish, government spending does not equal tax revenue, else why issue Treasury paper? Instead, GDP has to keep growing by immigration, with the white fellows on long-standing birth strike, so the bond creditors can keep on receiving their interest payments. Which is why it is easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism.

Having a real beef beats having a real pork ,careful, anti-Semitism alert! But I digress: the same mere handful of what you would doubtless call right wing nationalist federal politicians such as Roberts, Antic, Broadbent etc are both noticeably on the side of the anti-vaccination freedom movement since 2020 and also highly Islam-sceptical. They also have a Zionist bent. Highly unfortunate, but Robin Monotti in the UK, not to mention CJ Hopkins, have long since written about the split in our movement between vaxx haters and Pallie lovers.

Read advertising on Telegram of March for Australia: it has the digital prison as a talking point, contrary to your allegation. The national jab-hostile movement called My Place is also highly aware of it

This website is rich in smears of “controlled opposition” and if you are completely convinced, I want to see evidence

Gezzah Potts
Gezzah Potts
Jan 27, 2026 8:30 PM
Reply to  Jenner

Whatever Kylie… and if you actually believe there’s no controlled opposition planted in these groups, you must be really fucken gullible. Aye. For your information, I haven’t watched TV since March 2020 and I don’t listen to anything the media says, especially ABC. I also don’t follow any politicians regardless of their names and I don’t put anyone on a pedestal. Have a good day😄

Vagabard
Vagabard
Jan 26, 2026 7:41 PM

The Panopticon seems to be already here, at least in terms of the nudge factor. Taking the form of the ‘Gov.uk ID Check’ app:

https://www.gov.uk/guidance/using-the-govuk-id-check-app

A pleasant alternative to laboriously entering your passport, driving licence or answering credit history multiple choice questions, you can instead simply submit to the minor inconvenience of a live ‘scan’ of your face and your passport’s biometric chip using the app. What could be simpler. Am I allowed to turn it off now?

Minority report AI based ‘prevent’ policing is notoriously flawed. If your mobile is in the vicinity of someone on the ‘list’ then you get put on it too.

So the Panopticon is technically feasible but currently too many teething issues imho.

mgeo
mgeo
Jan 27, 2026 4:23 AM
Reply to  Vagabard

A popular app from China, called Are you Dead helped to monitor the many living alone. Along those lines, it may become inconsiderate initially, and illegal later, to turn the phone off, not to recharge it or to turn off geolocation.

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Jan 27, 2026 4:40 AM
Reply to  mgeo

The star of victory shines upon us! https://youtu.be/FYldOFCZD5o .

Johnny
Johnny
Jan 27, 2026 4:45 AM
Reply to  mgeo

Geolocation off?
I wonder: Is it really off?

Republicofscotland
Republicofscotland
Jan 26, 2026 7:21 PM

You can add into that the reformation of the police forces in England and Wales I think there’s currently 43 or there abouts police chief constables in England overseeing 43 individual county police forces, the plan is amalgamate them into smaller groups which of course will be easier to control, less police chief’s less dissent to new authoritarian polices, this is to be done under the guise of creating British FBI – of which the official narrative is to track terrorists and criminals with the goal of arresting them.

In truth its about using these forces that we pay for against us to further control us the English colony Scotland already has the one police force and it head answers to the colonial admin the person of whom I won’t name sits in – in cabinet meeting as does Scotland’s top law officer.

Its all just another step to clamping down on dissent – calling it terrorism.

sandy
sandy
Jan 26, 2026 7:10 PM

Agreed. They are trying to replace reality with a virtual reality-reality, where our proxies, all the data they have and are continuously collecting on us, supersede our physical existence in linear time. This new virtual reality-reality becomes nearly identical to that depicted in The Matrix film, except there is NO WAY OUT like the movie. You almost don’t even exist in this new reality because all of your data is everywhere all-at-once and almost certainly contains errors and conflicts that place your entire life in danger of arbitrary data-driven decisions. What was once a linear-time life will become a non-linear, atomized, shadow-self, projected into the fabric 0f this Matrix.

How can there be any verification of your data accuracy when there are no physical recordation nor references outside decentralized potentially erroneous digital data located any-everywhere? The ONLY thing they will be able to “verify” is YOUR BODY as a proxy at some point in time and space. We will become the recipient of potential, simultaneous, endless error. Your physical body is your freedom existing in physical time and space. The acquisition of your proxy reality, submitting to their Matrix, will literally terminate your freedom and safety from bureaucratic error of the kind never before imaginable. The LOCKDOWN and now ICE’s Gestapo reign of terror is a first taste internally of what has been executed selectively, externally, on US/West “adversaries”, in a variety of ways, since the Spanish American War. The hi-tech versions are now in progress.

Does anyone know where there is a simple non-technical description of the above linked Qortal “platform” and it’s scope of functionality? Does it run through browser? Through existing broadband internet? Is it a separate parallel internet porting out somehow on the existing infrastructure?

Vagabard
Vagabard
Jan 26, 2026 11:04 PM
Reply to  sandy

No idea (about Qortal, first I’ve heard of it), though maybe “The Matrix” was just a 1999 foresighted version of the 2020s?

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Jan 27, 2026 3:00 AM
Reply to  sandy

Wiki is actually not a bad place to start: https://qortal.dev/wiki.

Some small corrections. I see it opposite. The Internet of today is a rigid linear static place build on statistics which is notorious lies.

All life is like the weather, a coupled non-linear chaotic system impossible to predict other than short term as everything constantly change? You age my friend yes? We change!

The solution is actually here/there. The same as in the movie MATRIX: Its a CHOICE. https://youtu.be/8A6Wzqzf8HU .

Niggardly Jones
Niggardly Jones
Jan 26, 2026 6:27 PM

We is de massas cattle, oh lordy. What massa do when 6 billion folks is unneeded eeters?

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Jan 26, 2026 6:26 PM

 Individual is nothing, collective is everything – Joseph Stalin
The individual must bow to the collectice – Mao Zedong
Everything in the State, nothing outside, nothing against the State. – Benito Mussolini.

Only the innocent working labor masses matters in the fight against the rich capitalists colonialists empirialists zionists fascists swines. We the working class will win this war!
https://youtu.be/oDQbadYeucM Internationale.

Vagabard
Vagabard
Jan 26, 2026 8:58 PM
Reply to  Erik Nielsen.

Arguably the greatest lesson from all those half-revolutions is the virtue of foresight. Long distance thinking.Yes if your only goal is to topple the TPTB then fine. You may succeed

At least occasionally in history (with the suitable ‘Lenin’ shipped in from abroad). And then what? A Robespierre Reign of Terror? A Stalinist/Maoist purge of the unloyal??

If only someone had thought beyond the toppling to a better future beyond… then things might really have been different.

Rolling Rock
Rolling Rock
Jan 26, 2026 9:39 PM
Reply to  Vagabard

People never seem to learn as a collective, it is the groupthink or hive mind that takes over.

They get duped by some self-appointed leader or group and get manipulated, drawn into the heat of the moment to overthrow one system of governance, with no clear idea what the next one will bring. Pseudo-revolution is ripe for Pied Pipers to steer.

Outsourcing personal responsibility to others never ends well as a rule.

Vagabard
Vagabard
Jan 26, 2026 10:09 PM
Reply to  Rolling Rock

Agreed. To lay it out plainly and simply for such uneducated masses who regrettably only learned their times-table aged 11,

I would suppose such pseudo-revolutionaries have no idea how to actually rule. Not part of their basic educational remit. No dice as per the actual future of Government per se.

Never taught to be either the best or the worst and nothing in-between. Such lessons only reserved for potential elites perhaps

Rolling Rock
Rolling Rock
Jan 27, 2026 6:53 AM
Reply to  Vagabard

Revolutionaries even if they start out organically are in danger of being co-opted and/or infiltratred. Thus, disempowering them or else they start out as manufactured psuedo-revolutionary groups from the outset in order to control dissent to a pre-ordained destiny.

Only non-hierarchical groups with no clear leadership structure can possibly succeed since they are difficult to co-opt. Yet, that they would mean they possibly lack organisation and focus.

It is a conundrum.

The biggest act of peaceful revolution would be where lots of people disengage from the current system and all its distractions. Learning to live life on their own two feet with small communities of other good people.

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Jan 27, 2026 2:27 AM
Reply to  Rolling Rock

Its because their basic main principle is wrong.
Christus said precisely the opposite:The individual is everything, the State is there to serve. – (love your neighbour as yourself).

Thats why it is difficult to discuss this issue with people.
Because if Christus really is the only and final solution to everything bad, then the individual has to raise his flag, and very few are prepared to do that.

Christus parables lead us to this universal dilemma. The rich who shall give all his riches to the poor and follow Jesus, ….and walked away in sadness.

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Jan 27, 2026 2:41 AM
Reply to  Vagabard

…if your only goal is to topple the TPTB then fine..
But Vagabard, this was precisely what Chairman Mao and his follower’s had as their only goal. To topple TPTB and the Kulaks.
When the Communist Party discovered how big a disaster their central planning ‘The Long March’ was, they were terrified.

After discussing the issue, they however agreed to finish the work of erasing the rich (the Kulaks) from the society before they stopped the terror.

The problem was only that the Communist party definition of ‘the rich’ was small people who had a shop, a family farm, a hair dresser business, m.m. who was wise enough to set aside some corn (equity) to future meager years.

The Kulaks as they were called, were ‘the rich’, it was those who carried the heavy load in the society by working 60hrs/week for something everybody needed.
60 mio ‘Kulaks’ were killed, die of hunger, prisoned, only because of wrong interpretation of ideology.

rickypop
rickypop
Jan 26, 2026 5:47 PM

Can you feel the burn? The rubber is burning. Derivatives and bonds are crashing on the rocks along with the Dollar and Yen. AI is taking the place of the British Police. Russia and Israhell still bombing the fk out of Ukraine and Gaza. Snowstorms in the Southern US. Pirates are gathering up oil tankers. Minerals are being stolen by the powerful. Juries defunct.
Innocents shot to death.
Freedom and rights are gone.

What the hell are you lot going to do about it, or are you concerned about a sore finger?
Its about time to fk your computer in the bin and do something worthwhile.

Shipinthenight
Shipinthenight
Jan 26, 2026 6:19 PM
Reply to  rickypop

You could start by joining the End the Geenoside protest at Russell Square London on Saturday…

“This ain’t rock and roll, this is xxxxxxxx”

Vagabard
Vagabard
Jan 26, 2026 9:38 PM
Reply to  rickypop

Start with real-world paradigms and then we’re all in

rickypop
rickypop
Jan 26, 2026 10:05 PM
Reply to  Vagabard

Protesting does fk all. Did millions on the streets stop Blair bombing the fk out of Iraq.
Every day we bow to authority, pay taxes, and fines and try to do the right thing. WTF.
It going to take more than marching to bring it all tumbling down.

Vagabard
Vagabard
Jan 26, 2026 10:25 PM
Reply to  rickypop

Well you nailed it. The sense that’s something was really wrong. That’s how it starts.

So what was that inevitable media march to war with Iraq about anyway? Why invoke Augustine’s concept of “Holy War” as a pseudo-Catholic justification for something already decided upon by politics?

Something was clearly wrong.And I suppose we proceed from that premise, with history as our marching guide.

Johnny
Johnny
Jan 27, 2026 7:07 AM
Reply to  rickypop

Dunno bout that.

There were regular marches and sit ins against the atrocities in Vietnam.
Eventually, the Empire of War Greed and Hypocrisy pulled out, along with its vassal states.

The major difference between that war and the war in Iraq was the hyper management of the ’embedded media’.

The WWW, through alternative media, has made embedding redundant.
Just look at the stories emerging from the Chosen’s genocide.

Now there’s an urgency to shut down the voices of dissent.

Are the Turds at the top getting toey?

rickypop
rickypop
Jan 27, 2026 12:38 PM
Reply to  Johnny

They just moved their war somewhere else. and then somewhere else.
Anyway, back then, American students had a few brain cells and a backbone, not like these facebook clones nowadays. In a few years its tits up as the young take control.

TRT
TRT
Jan 27, 2026 2:19 PM
Reply to  rickypop

They were being conscripted for Vietnam. That was the major difference.

Lizzyh7
Lizzyh7
Jan 27, 2026 4:08 PM
Reply to  TRT

Yup. Our owners learned from that. A “volunteer” military works much better to keep people not only divided, but for many to be able to completely ignore most of the wars. Also, far too easy for many to think that if no one joined the military the wars would stop, not realizing that if a volunteer military doesn’t get enough traction, there are always private mercenary forces to be hired. And naturally, those forces come with a much bigger price than those who volunteer for the regular military, many due to mostly economic forces that are also provided by our owners as an “incentive.”

It also should not be discounted that the anti-war movement was obviously co-opted by the intelligence services. Our owners were concerned about that movement, perhaps a lot more than we realize, and so it was necessary to provide some means to discredit that movement using sex and drugs and rock and roll. Interesting reading from Dave McGowan on that.

red lester
red lester
Jan 26, 2026 5:20 PM

Stop the bus, I want to get off.

Erik Nielsen.
Erik Nielsen.
Jan 27, 2026 4:47 AM
Reply to  red lester

Have a little patience and you will get what you demand. https://youtu.be/bJjje4iZPXg

judith
judith
Jan 27, 2026 12:20 PM
Reply to  red lester

I couldn’t get on. Didn’t have my digital passport.