Hancock
© ReutersMatt Hancock said his attitudes towards assisted suicide had been affected by speaking to Sir Paul Cosford, the medical director of Public Health England, who suffered from cancer and died aged 57
The UK Health Secretary confirmed this week that a new 'UK Health Security Agency' was being set up on April 1, thus marking the next stage in Britain's transformation into a repressive bio-security state.

Back in 1957, the BBC's flagship current affairs programme Panorama (well, it was then) showed a short three-minute film of a family in Switzerland harvesting spaghetti from a family 'spaghetti tree.' People rang up the BBC switchboard afterwards for advice on growing their own spaghetti. They should have paid closer attention to the date of the broadcast. The first of April. Yes, it was an 'April Fool.' One of the best in history.

The first of April is also the date that the UK's new 'Health Security Agency' is being established but this time it really is no laughing matter. If only Matt Hancock was joking when he said he was setting up a "dedicated, mission-driven national institution for health security." But, unlike his namesake, the great comedian Tony Hancock, Matt isn't remotely funny. The establishment of the UKHSA should give us all sleepless nights. It's actually more terrifying than the scariest Hammer horror movie. Well, Hancock's video announcing the news was, at any rate.


The new agency - which Britain needs right now as much as a hole in the head - brings together the work of Public Health England, NHS Test and Trace and the Joint BioSecurity Centre.


Comment: The Test and Trace program that has, thus far, provided no benefit at the cost of ยฃ37 BILLION. However, perhaps its intended purpose just has yet to be fully realised?


Hancock says the body will be mission driven, but what will be the mission?

"I want everybody at UKHSA, at all levels, to wake up every day with a zeal to plan for the next pandemic."

Yes, that's right. We're at the tail end of Covid - but it's time to plan for the next Covid to come along. Has a government agenda ever been so transparent? Of course, Hancock is only echoing Bill Gates when he talks about the 'next pandemic'. Back in January the software multi-billionaire, who has been able to gain so much influence with his foundation's funding of academics, scientists and public health organisations, outlined his strategy for dealing with the 'next pandemic,' which, he warns, could be "ten times more serious" than Covid. And, guess what, his strategy calls for "mega-diagnostic platforms," mass vaccinations and governments spending lots of taxpayers' money.

Compare Gates' proposals with what Hancock says and the new "Securing Our Health" webpage introducing the UKHSA and you can see quite clearly where the 'inspiration' for all this is coming from. Hancock, as he's done throughout 2020 and 2021, is following a global script.

As I highlighted in a recent OpEd, the 'War on Covid' is the new 'War on Terror.' Civil liberties were stripped away, post 9-11, in the 'War on Terror' and now we have the latest phase of the project. Like the War on Terror, the War on Covid/War on Viruses is never meant to end. In fact we don't really need new viruses to come along. Covid variants will work quite nicely, if Gates' 'ten times more serious' virus is delayed in traffic.

In a piece for Bloomberg this week entitled 'We Must Start Planning for a Permanent Pandemic,' Andreas Kluth spelt it out very clearly for those who still don't get it: "For the past year, an assumption - sometimes explicit, often tacit - has informed almost all our thinking about the pandemic: At some point, it will be over, and then we'll go "back to normal. This premise is almost certainly wrong. SARS-CoV-2, protean and elusive as it is, may become our permanent enemy, like the flu but worse."

The establishment of the UKHSA at a time when deaths with Covid have dropped to low numbers is a clear sign that the UK government plans no 'back to normal.' Perhaps the scariest sentence in the UKHSA policy paper is "We need to consider how best to engage with citizens and drive behaviour change in the 21st century."

What 'behaviour change' can that be, I wonder? Requiring people to wear face masks and maintain 'social distance' from one another permanently? Don't forget Home Secretary Priti Patel declared last May that social distancing was 'here to stay.'

Many thought she misspoke, but ten months later and 'social distancing' is still here.

Then there's the list of the new agency's five core functions. Number One, again with echoes of the 'War on Terror,' is "Prevent." This means "Anticipating and taking action to mitigate infectious diseases and other hazards to health before they materialise, for example through vaccination and influencing behaviour."

Yes, you read that right. "BEFORE they materialise." We will need to be vaccinated against viruses and hazards to health that haven't yet materialised! What a bonanza for Big Pharma that would be!

Hancock's announcement comes in the same week as Boris Johnson - the dishevelled charlatan who promoted himself as a 'libertarian' to get elected but who's turned out to be the most dictatorial prime minister in our history - saying that pubs could require Vaccine Passports, once everyone had been offered a vaccine.

With us still in lockdown, and the Coronavirus Act extended for a further six months, the architecture for permanent digital slavery is being constructed - and it's all being done under the guise of 'protecting' us. But who will protect us from our protectors? That really is the question we should all be asking.
Neil Clark is a journalist, writer, broadcaster and blogger. His award winning blog can be found at www.neilclark66.blogspot.com. He tweets on politics and world affairs @NeilClark66