Society's ChildS

Sheriff

Police chief calls for power of entry into homes of suspected lockdown breakers

Police, Leeds
© Danny Lawson/PAPolice on patrol in Leeds, UK
The government should toughen the lockdown by giving officers the right to force entry into homes of suspected law breakers, a policing leader has stated. David Jamieson, the police and crime commissioner for the West Midlands police, England's second biggest force, said:
"For the small minority of people who refuse entry to police officers and obstruct their work, the power of entry would seem to be a useful tool. I have raised this issue with the policing minister previously and clarity on the power of entry would help police officers enforce the new Covid regulations more easily."
As the third lockdown comes into force in England at midnight on Wednesday, the rising infection rate is also causing increasing absences from the ranks of officers needed to help enforce the lockdown.

The Guardian understands that ahead of the lockdown announcement, the government considered other tough measures including restricting how far people can travel for exercise and a night-time curfew from 10pm to early morning. The curtailment of movement ideas considered could have seen people limited to traveling only several miles from their main residence or to their own county.

Comment: Protocols have nothing to do with containing a common virus. They create leverage for increased power and control.


Stock Down

They did it again: Warnock 'wins' against Loeffler in fraud-riddled Georgia runoff election - Ossoff also predicted to 'win'

atlanta voters
© AFP / Virginie KippelenVoters at a polling station in Atlanta, Georgia, January 5, 2021.
Major media outlets are projecting victory for Democratic challenger Raphael Warnock over Republican incumbent Kelly Loeffler in one of two knife-edge run-off Senate elections in Georgia.

Warnock, a 51-year-old Atlanta pastor, was named as the winner by Associated Press, CBC News, CNN, Edison Research and other major election monitors.

Warnock has acknowledged his historic win โ€” the first for a Democratic senatorial candidate in Georgia in two decades โ€” in a livestream address to supporters.

"We were told that we couldn't win this election. But tonight, we proved that with hope, hard work and the people by our side, anything is possible," he said.


Comment: You didn't win Warnock. Plain and simple. Everything that went wrong on 11/3 also went wrong yesterday: anomalous vote flips, 'usb' errors, counting delays, the number of votes remaining to be counted inexplicably rising, no Republican observers. The list goes on.








Slimeball Sterling contradicted the above:





Then this started happening, just like 11/3:






Sterling is blaming Trump. Pathological projection.






Yoda

Pitchforks soon? Utah constituent confronts Mitt Romney at airport

romeny confronted airport
© Qtah/TwitterRomney confronted by Utah voter over election fraud
Senator Mitt Romney was confronted by Utah patriots en route to DC on Tuesday, ahead of the Stop the Steal protests.

As the Gateway Pundit previously reported, once he boarded the plane, the patriotic passengers chanted "traitor" and demanded to know his connections to Burisma and Joe Biden.

Prior to boarding, a woman walked up and confronted him while filming the encounter. Before she could even get a word out, the senator barked at her to put her mask on.

"Don't tell me what to do," the brave patriot responded.

Comment: As reported above Romney's reception upon boarding the flight was less than cordial:
As Romney got on the plane, a chant of "traitor" broke out after a woman yelled for the passengers to let him know what they think. As it dissipated, people began grilling him about why he is betraying his voters.

"We want to know your connection to Burisma and Joe Biden, Mitt Romney," a woman shouted. "You don't listen to your constituents!"

Romney has said that efforts to challenge the election results are an "egregious ploy to reject electors may enhance the political ambition of some," and said that it "dangerously threatens our Democratic Republic."

"The congressional power to reject electors is reserved for the most extreme and unusual circumstances. These are far from it," Romney claimed.

Is Mitt Romney a traitor?

Romney also said that the election being stolen is a "false rumor."
A RINO running true to form: Romney's been careful to bury his fanatical religious upbringing:


Bizarro Earth

C of E bishop warns of church closures due to lockdown losses

church uk
© WPA/GettyBishop of Manchester David Walker says uneconomic Victorian urban buildings most at risk
The pace of church closures could accelerate as a result of financial losses caused by the pandemic, a senior Church of England bishop has said, with Victorian urban buildings most at risk.

The closure of uneconomic church buildings, early retirement for clergy, and a restructuring of the C of E's 42 dioceses could all be on the cards, said David Walker, the bishop of Manchester.

National figures for losses since last March were not available, but it had been a "big hit", said Walker, who is chairing a review of the C of E's priorities and organisational structures for the next 10 years.

Comment: 'Austerity measures' have been in force for well over a decade and have already been used to radically change society, for the worse, and this manufactured crisis is providing the establishment with yet another excuse to tighten the screws, and paves the way for the blatantly nefarious 'Great Reset' agenda: Also check out SOTT radio's:


Fire

WikiLeaks founder Assange denied bail in UK

assange supporters
© AP Photo/Matt DunhamJulian Assange supporters and members of the media queue up outside Westminster Magistrates Court to get a seat at his Bail hearing in London, Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2021. On Monday, Judge Vanessa Baraitser ruled that Julian Assange cannot be extradited to the US because of concerns about his mental health. Assange had been charged under the US's 1917 Espionage Act for "unlawfully obtaining and disclosing classified documents related to the national defence". Assange remains in custody, the US has 14 day to appeal against the ruling.
A British judge on Wednesday denied bail to WikiLeaks' founder Julian Assange, who has been jailed in Britain since 2019 as he fights extradition to the United States.

District Judge Vanessa Baraitser ordered Assange to remain in prison while the courts consider an appeal by U.S. authorities against a decision not to extradite him.

On Monday, the judge rejected an American request to send Assange to the U.S. to face espionage charges over WikiLeaks' publication of secret military documents a decade ago. She denied extradition on health grounds, saying the 49-year-old Australian was likely to kill himself if held under harsh U.S. prison conditions.

Comment: See also:


Attention

Pro-Trump Marine goes off on DC police after they mace Stop the Steal protesters, 'We had your f***ing back, but we ain't got your back no more!'

marine stop the steal
A pro-Trump Marine went off on the DC Police after officers maced Stop the Steal protesters the night before Wednesdayโ€™s big rally.
Police have been using a very heavy hand with Trump supporters to protect the Antifa and Black Lives Matter militants who are gathered in BLM Plaza.


Comment: More from Gateway Pundit:
DC Antifa and BLM Hide Behind Police as Trump Supporters Attempt to Get Into BLM Plaza
Cassandra Fairbanks January 5, 2021 at 10:05pm

Antifa and Black Lives Matter militants in DC hid behind police as Trump supporters attempted to gain access to BLM Plaza on Tuesday evening.

Trump supporters clashed with police as the anti-cop leftists hid safely behind them.


...





Propaganda

NHS director admits coronavirus data inaccurate as patients are in hospital for OTHER issues

McCay
© talkRADIOAN NHS DIRECTOR has confirmed some hospital patients with coronavirus were not admitted because of the disease but other health concerns.
NHS Confederation director Dr Layla McCay confirmed some people in hospitals with coronavirus were not admitted because of the disease. In England alone, some 27,000 people are in hospital with COVID-19, 40 percent more than during the first peak in April. Dr McCay also revealed there are 2,000 Brits needing ventilators across the UK.

Speaking on her talkRADIO show, Julia Hartley-Brewer asked: "When we say we've got X number of Covid patients in hospital, that simply means X number of people who have tested positive for Covid in hospital whether they are being treated for Covid, whether they have any symptoms of Covid.

"Is that correct or not?"

Comment: This is just the latest story to expose the lies about the government's manufactured crisis, that is sadly being supported by hystericized healthcare workers: BBC backtracks and admits children's wards are NOT seeing a surge in severe coronavirus admissions

Also check out SOTT radio's:


Gear

Assange 'free to return home' once legal challenges over, Australia PM says

scott morrison
© Kiyoshi Ota/Pool via REUTERSScott Morrison, Australia's prime minister, removes his protective face mask after arriving for a signing ceremony with Yoshihide Suga, Japan's prime minister at Suga's official residence in Tokyo, Japan November 17, 2020.
Julian Assange is "free to return home" to Australia once legal challenges against him are dealt with, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said on Tuesday, after a UK court denied a request to extradite the Wikileaks founder to the United States.

A British judge on Monday blocked the extradition request by the United States, where Assange was set to face criminal charges including breaking a spying law, saying his mental health problems meant he would be at risk of suicide.

U.S. justice department said it would continue to seek Assange's extradition with prosecutors set to appeal the ruling to London's High Court.

Comment: More from Sputnik:
Australian Opposition Presses Government to Make US Drop Assange's Extradition Request
11:19 GMT 05.01.2021 Tim Korso
...

Members of the Australian opposition are urging the government to convince the US to not pursue the extradition of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange after a UK judge rejected the first attempt to do so. Coalition backbencher George Christensen from the Liberal National Party of Queensland and independent Senator Rex Patrick suggested that a presidential pardon might be the best way for the US to end its longstanding feud with the whistleblower, who accuses Washington of suppression of the press and free speech.

A parliamentary group called "Bring Julian Assange Home" praised the 4 January decision by UK District Judge Vanessa Baraitser to reject Assange's extradition request from the US. The group's co-chairs, Christensen and independent lawmaker Andrew Wilkie, urged both the outgoing and incoming US presidents to let Assange's case go.
...

Australia's shadow attorney general, Mark Dreyfus of the Labour Party, argued in the wake of the British judge's ruling that it was high time for Assange's persecution "to be brought to an end". The US Department of Justice, however, indicated that it intends to appeal the UK judge's decision.
See also:


Eye 1

Singapore promised not to use contact tracing data for anything but COVID, but now that everyone is being tracked they changed their minds a little

singapore police
It's almost as if governments don't always keep their promises when it concerns your personal privacy.

Singapore has confirmed that law enforcement is able to access the country's COVID-19 contact tracing data in criminal probes, even though they had previously said that wouldn't be the case.

That (now broken) promise was no doubt part of the reason Singapore was able to achieve an insane 78% adoption rate of residents using the contact tracking app TraceTogether or a wearable token.

In fact, they literally said that data would "never be accessed unless the user tests positive." By the way, if you follow that link you'll see that statement I quoted is no longer there. It was removed yesterday in what we like to call a classic #DoubleOrwell.

Comment: See also: Singapore to tag visitors with electronic monitoring devices to ensure Covid-19 quarantine compliance


Handcuffs

New York's new law setting up detention centers to lock up suspected Covid-19 cases heralds a Kafkaesque nightmare

lockdown protest
© Reuters / Bryan Smith
The New York legislature is weighing a bill that would let the authorities take anyone suspected of having or being exposed to a contagious disease and hold them indefinitely - even forcibly medicating them.

Under the new law, New Yorkers may be dragged out of their homes and locked up on mere suspicion of having been 'exposed' to the novel coronavirus โ€” no positive test or even symptoms necessary. Once imprisoned in one of the state's purpose-built facilities, individuals may be forced to submit to a "prescribed course of treatment" including drugs and vaccines โ€” and even then, freedom is not guaranteed.

The state's nightmarish Assembly Bill A416 would see targets locked away for as long as 60 days without a hearing. And while the prisoner has a right to legal counsel, New York health authorities will have the ultimate say in deciding when - and if - they're no longer contagious. Assuming they ever were in the first place, that is.

Given how unreliable the PCR tests used to screen for the coronavirus are, producing up to 90 percent false positives by some estimates, Governor Andrew Cuomo's facilities will almost certainly be flooded with the contacts of healthy people erroneously deemed 'cases.' But like the governor's decision to send Covid-19 patients into nursing homes, killing tens of thousands of elderly people, confining the healthy with the sick only guarantees that more of the healthy will fall ill with each passing day. The state thus gets a bump in case numbers, justifying further repression of its citizens under the guise of yet another virus 'surge.'

Comment: See also: Covid camps on the way? Proposed New York law suggests putting disease 'carriers' in DETENTION CENTERS