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Follow Ebuni on IG: Ebuni Visit Ebuni's website: UntypeYourHair Join Our Discord Commmunity: Discord Email Us: TheDayAfter@THENEWBLXCK.com WhatsAPP: 07564841073 Join us in our twitter community - Twitter Subscribe NOW to The Day After: shorturl.at/brKOX The Day After, (00:00) Intro: One Day review and review about 'Who The F Did I Marry' gate. (01:07:45) Headlines: David Cameron warns of consequences following Alexei Navalny's death, Trump ordered to pay $354m in New York fraud case, Twelve people arrested at pro-Palestine demonstration in London (01:11:24) Headlines: Starmer says fighting must stop now in Gaza ahead of ceasefire vote, Sacked Twitter staff in Ghana finally get pay-off, Nigeria's currency crisis is fueling a corporate exodus (01:15:29) Word on Road: Matthew Perry fans express disappointment over his exclusion from BAFTA tribute Kelly Rowland backs out of today show gig due to poor dressing room Love Island Nigeria? Elsa Majimbo calls out Naomi Campbell for blacklisting her (01:27:54) People's Journal: (01:40:07) Motivational Mondays (01:48:13) Interview: The One About 'Ebuni Ajiduah' (03:16:13) Headlines: Riots break out between rival Eritrean groups in the Netherlands, Woman who handed over British girl, 3, for FGM in Kenya given seven years, Serial rapist and former police officer David Carrick will be stripped of his pension (03:19:18) The Reaction: Premier League Results, Saka scores twice as Gunners keep up with Premier League leaders Liverpool, Rodri goal cancels out Raheem Sterling strike against Chelsea but champions lose ground in title race, Pacquiao's Paris Olympics hopes dashed as IOC refuse to waive rule for boxing legend, Amanda Serrano gave up undisputed status to make a stand for women's boxing, Viddal Riley to fight Mikael Lawal (03:25:24) Outro #News #CurrentAffairs #Sports --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thedayaftertnb/message
The BBC has revealed that the Prime Minister is considering a major shift on key climate action policies. These changes include pushing back a ban on sales of new petrol and diesel cars to 2035 and delaying the 2026 ban on off-grid oil boilers to 2035. The economist Kate Raworth joins Emma to discuss her reaction to this news. If you're on TikTok, “girl”-based trends are everywhere you look these days. From girl dinner to girl math, lazy girl job to hot girl walk, the list goes on. Girl math is the latest trend, with a hashtag with over 360 million views. Is it about reclaiming girlhood - or is it sexist and infantilizing? Behavioural scientist and author Professor Pragya Argawal and host of the “Adulting” podcast Oenone Forbat join Emma to discuss The Met Police have announced that they aim to change the demographic of the Parliamentary and Diplomatic Protection Unit – where both Wayne Couzens and David Carrick worked - to have 20% women in the next two years. But why should it fall to women to improve workplace behaviours? To discuss, Emma is joined by Police and Crime Commissioner Katy Bourne and workplace commentator Julia Hobsbawm. Artist and author Fleur Pierets embarked on a performance art project with her wife, Julian, in 2017, aiming to get married in all the countries where same sex marriage was legal at the time. But their dream was cut short when Julian was diagnosed with late stage brain cancer in early 2018 and died six weeks later. It's a story Fleur has put down on paper in her book “Julian”, which has just been translated into English and released in the UK. TikTok clips uses: samcity and VIDA GLOW Presenter: Emma Barnett Producer: Emma Pearce
Lucy Letby & the NHS management, Press & Government, mass murder cover-up The Black Spy Podcast Season 11, Episode 0002 This week's episode is about the shocking revelations concerning the Lucy Letby case and the lack of action taken by doctors not going to the police, NHS managers seemingly preventing anything negative about Letby murdering babies coming to the attention of police. More importantly, unlike with the Police and Fire Brigade, for frankly in comparison, minimal shortcomings; neither the press nor government demand any real accountability from the NHS's most senior management or even hospital trust management for literally 100's of MURDERS committed by NHS staff DURING the exercise of their duties! Why is this and what is the frequency of murders by on duty NHS staff and why do the British media treat these public bodies so differently? In an insightful, interesting and powerful discussion by the Black Spy, Carlton King and his regular journalist podcast partner, Firgas Esack, and Dr. Rachel Taylor put the events surrounding Lucy Letby's murder of 10 babies and the attempted murder a further 7 babies under the microscope. Below is an example of just some of the convicted NHS staff who have murdered their patients whilst on duty in hospitals etc, over the last two decades. • Nurse Beverley Allitt murdered 4 infants, at Grantham hospital, attempted to murder three others and caused grievous bodily harm to a further six infants no demonstrations were held and no great inquiry was sought into the NHS or its leadership! • Nurse Lucy Letby's alleged murders of 7 babies and a further attempted murder of 10 more happened at the same time as Sarah Everarad's murder by a police officer. This single murder by a police officer totally and utterly gains practically all of the press coverage. Letby's 7 murders and 10 attempted murders of babies, have resulted in no demonstrations why? • Nurse Colin Campbell Norris murdered 10 of his patients and attempted to murder at least one other. • Nurse Benjamin Geen murdered at least 2 patients in an Oxfordshire hospital where many other victims did not die, but sustained grave life threatening symptoms at his hands. • Nurse Victorino Chua of Stockport Stepping Hill hospital murdered 2 of his patients and 21 others potential murder victims suffered life threatening hypoglycemia attacks at his hands. • Dr Harold Shipman, from his Manchester surgery, murdered at least 250 of his patients. Yet it is though that over a decade he might well have murdered up to 500 patients. • Surgeon Simon Bramhall regularly signed his initials on patients livers as he operated on them. • Surgeon Ian Patterson was found guilty of operating on countless patients, mainly women, for seemingly no reason. He disfigured his patients by removing their breast etc., which was allegedly done for financial gain according to the relatively little press there was in comparison to the David Carrick police case. Presently the press and even government tell us that police and now Fire Fighters can not be trusted, however, no such suggestion regarding trust has ever been suggested against doctors and nurses despite the horrendous number of murders carried out by serial murdering medics. Indeed, medics are probably the profession who have highest number of serial killers in the UK! At no stage have NHS chiefs appeared on TV, radio or written in periodicals apologising for the the obvious ‘cover -up culture' of NHS Management even when it relates to staff murdering babies! Once again, we hope listeners will learn from today's podcast whilst also being entertained! Don't forget to subscribe to The Black Spy Podcast to never miss an episode. To contact the Black Spy or donate to The Black Spy Podcast utilise the following: Contact Firgas Esack/Daps via LinkedIn You can also contact and ask question of Dr. Rachel Taylor on her substack channel: Dr. Rachel Taylor Substack To donate - Patreon.com/TheBlackSpyPodcast Email Carlton underthe following: Email: carltonking2003@gmail.com Facebook: The Black Spy Podcast Facebook: Carlton King Author Twitter@Carlton_King Instagram@carltonkingauthor To read Carlton's Autobiography: “Black Ops – The incredible true story of a British secret agent” Click the link below: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/BO1MTV2GDF/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_awdb_WNZ5MT89T9C14CB53651 Carlton is available for speaking events. For this purpose use the contact details above
The Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley has been speaking to Today's Martha Kearney about efforts to transform the Met's culture, including the removal of more officers. It follows a review earlier this year by Baroness Louise Casey on the force's culture and standards after the abduction, rape and murder of Sarah Everard by serving police officer Wayne Couzens, in 2021. During the course of her review, another Met officer, David Carrick, was convicted of a series of rapes, sexual offences and torture of women. Baroness Casey found the force was institutionally racist, sexist and homophobic. The Met Commissioner also revealed the force is in talks regarding a pay-out to the family of murdered private detective Daniel Morgan. Mr Morgan was found with an axe in his head in the car park of a pub in Sydenham, south-east London, in 1987. No-one has been convicted over the father of two's killing, since which there have been five inquiries and an inquest, at an estimated cost of more than £40m.The Met has previously admitted corruption hampered the original murder investigation and apologised to Mr Morgan's family. A panel found in 2021 that the Met repeatedly covered up its failings. Photo Credit: Carl De Souza/Pool via REUTERS
The NHS Murders (Part1) - Lucy Letby & so many others The Black Spy Podcast Season 9, Episode 0002 This week's Black Spy Podcast discusses the unbelievable number of murders committed by on duty NHS medical staff in the UK. Furthermore, the Black Spy discusses the fact that even though these murders are frequent they receive very little overall press analysis and unlike the hounding received by the police for one (1) murder (performed by an off duty officer), the institution of the NHS is seldom challenged by established British mass media! So what is the frequency of murders by on duty NHS staff and why do the British media treat the two public bodies so differently? In an insightful, interesting and powerful discussion by the Black Spy, Carlton King and his regular journalist podcast partner, Firgas Esack, the present case of Lucy Letby accused of allegedly murdering 10 babies and attempting to murder a further 7, is put under the microscope. So, when I say NHS murders, the NHS murderers below are an example of this literally unbelievable phenomena of UK medics murdering their patients whilst on duty in hospitals etc, over the last two decades. Carlton asks Firgas, why no great hue and cry in media(TV, radio or printed press) or demonstrations from pressure groups about these NHS murders? • Nurse Beverley Allitt murdered 4 infants, at Grantham hospital, attempted to murder three others and caused grievous bodily harm to a further six infants no demonstrations were held and no great inquiry was sought into the NHS or its leadership! • Nurse Lucy Letby's alleged murders of 7 babies and a further attempted murder of 10 more happened at the same time as Sarah Everarad's murder by a police officer. This single murder by a police officer totally and utterly gains practically all of the press coverage. Letby's 7 murders and 10 attempted murders of babies, are seemingly all but overlooked by a police bating British press! In this case babies seem not to matter too much to the press and definitely the press seems totally unwilling to hold NHS leadership, even at the most junior level of hospital management, to account. • Nurse Colin Campbell Norris murdered 10 of his patients and attempted to murder at least one other. • Nurse Benjamin Geen murdered at least 2 patients in an Oxfordshire hospital where many other victims did not die, but sustained grave life threatening symptoms at his hands. • Nurse Victorino Chua of Stockport Stepping Hill hospital murdered 2 of his patients and 21 others potential murder victims suffered life threatening hypoglycemia attacks at his hands. • Dr Harold Shipman, from his Manchester surgery, murdered at least 250 of his patients. Yet it is though that over a decade he might well have murdered up to 500 patients. • Surgeon Simon Bramhall regularly signed his initials on patients livers as he operated on them. • Surgeon Ian Patterson was found guilty of operating on countless patients, mainly women, for seemingly no reason. He disfigured his patients by removing their breast etc., which was allegedly done for financial gain according to the relatively little press there was in comparison to the David Carrick police case. Note there is no suggestion that doctors and nurses can not be trusted despite the gravity of the offences and multiple serial murders undertaken by the above medics performing their daily duties. Also, at no stage have NHS chiefs appeared on TV, radio or written in periodicals apologising for the the ‘canteen culture' of their profession, that keeps allowing mass murder in hospitals and via doctors surgeries. Once again, we hope listeners will learn from today's podcast whilst also being entertained! Don't forget to subscribe to The Black Spy Podcast to never miss an episode. To contact the Black Spy or donate to The Black Spy Podcast utilise the following: To donate - Patreon.com/TheBlackSpyPodcast Email: carltonking2003@gmail.com Facebook: The Black Spy Podcast Facebook: Carlton King Author Twitter@Carlton_King Instagram@carltonkingauthor To read Carlton's Autobiography: “Black Ops – The incredible true story of a British secret agent” Click the link below: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/BO1MTV2GDF/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_awdb_WNZ5MT89T9C14CB53651 Carlton is available for speaking events. For this purpose use the contact details above
The British National Health Service (NHS) Serial Murderers (Part1) - Lucy Letby & so many others The Black Spy Podcast Season 9, Episode 0001 This week's Black Spy Podcast discusses the unbelievable number of murders committed by on duty NHS medical staff in the UK. Furthermore, the Black Spy discusses the fact that even though these murders are frequent they receive very little overall press analysis and unlike the hounding received by the police for one (1) murder (performed by an off duty officer), the institution of the NHS is seldom challenged by established British mass media! So what is the frequency of murders by on duty NHS staff and why do the British media treat the two public bodies so differently? In an insightful, interesting and powerful discussion by the Black Spy, Carlton King and his regular journalist podcast partner, Firgas Esack, the present case of Lucy Letby accused of allegedly murdering 10 babies and attempting to murder a further 7, is put under the microscope. So, when I say NHS murders, the NHS murderers below are an example of this literally unbelievable phenomena of UK medics murdering their patients whilst on duty in hospitals etc, over the last two decades. Carlton asks Firgas, why no great hue and cry in media(TV, radio or printed press) or demonstrations from pressure groups about these NHS murders? • Nurse Beverley Allitt murdered 4 infants, at Grantham hospital, attempted to murder three others and caused grievous bodily harm to a further six infants no demonstrations were held and no great inquiry was sought into the NHS or its leadership! • Nurse Lucy Letby's alleged murders of 7 babies and a further attempted murder of 10 more happened at the same time as Sarah Everarad's murder by a police officer. This single murder by a police officer totally and utterly gains practically all of the press coverage. Letby's 7 murders and 10 attempted murders of babies, are seemingly all but overlooked by a police bating British press! In this case babies seem not to matter too much to the press and definitely the press seems totally unwilling to hold NHS leadership, even at the most junior level of hospital management, to account. • Nurse Colin Campbell Norris murdered 10 of his patients and attempted to murder at least one other. • Nurse Benjamin Geen murdered at least 2 patients in an Oxfordshire hospital where many other victims did not die, but sustained grave life threatening symptoms at his hands. • Nurse Victorino Chua of Stockport Stepping Hill hospital murdered 2 of his patients and 21 others potential murder victims suffered life threatening hypoglycemia attacks at his hands. • Dr Harold Shipman, from his Manchester surgery, murdered at least 250 of his patients. Yet it is though that over a decade he might well have murdered up to 500 patients. • Surgeon Simon Bramhall regularly signed his initials on patients livers as he operated on them. • Surgeon Ian Patterson was found guilty of operating on countless patients, mainly women, for seemingly no reason. He disfigured his patients by removing their breast etc., which was allegedly done for financial gain according to the relatively little press there was in comparison to the David Carrick police case. Note there is no suggestion that doctors and nurses can not be trusted despite the gravity of the offences and multiple serial murders undertaken by the above medics performing their daily duties. Also, at no stage have NHS chiefs appeared on TV, radio or written in periodicals apologising for the the ‘canteen culture' of their profession, that keeps allowing mass murder in hospitals and via doctors surgeries. Once again, we hope listeners will learn from today's podcast whilst also being entertained! Don't forget to subscribe to The Black Spy Podcast to never miss an episode. To contact the Black Spy or donate to The Black Spy Podcast utilise the following: To donate - Patreon.com/TheBlackSpyPodcast Email: carltonking2003@gmail.com Facebook: The Black Spy Podcast Facebook: Carlton King Author Twitter@Carlton_King Instagram@carltonkingauthor To read Carlton's Autobiography: “Black Ops – The incredible true story of a British secret agent” Click the link below: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/BO1MTV2GDF/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_awdb_WNZ5MT89T9C14CB53651 Carlton is available for speaking events. For this purpose use the contact details above
One of Britain's worst rapist may have carried out his first sex attack as a young teenagerPlus is Putin at risk from Russia's so-called “turbo-patriots”....and should Taylor Swift be compared to William Shakespeare, Emily Bronte, and William Wordsworth Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
After former police officer David Carrick was convicted for offences, including dozens of rapes, the Metropolitan Police began a review in January to root out unsuitable staff. It has found that hundreds of officer cases need further checking - the Met Police Commissioner, Sir Mark Rowley says the force can not succeed in its policing mission until changes are made. Today's Mishal Husain talks with Sir Mark regarding the investigation of officer criminal convictions. (Photo Credit: CARL DE SOUZA/Pool via REUTERS)
On a special phone in edition of Woman's Hour we look at trust in the police following the review by Baroness Casey into a toxic culture at the Met Police. She found the 'the force has lost the trust and confidence of the people it is supposed to keep safe' and gave shocking examples of sexism, racism and homophobia. The report was commissioned in the aftermath of the rape and murder of Sarah Everard by PC Wayne Couzens, who has been sentenced to life imprisonment. Since then, we've also had the sentencing of former police officer David Carrick, who pleaded guilty to 85 serious offences, including rapes, sexual assaults, false imprisonment, and coercive and controlling behaviour. He is now serving time in jail, for a minimum of 32 years. We want to hear your views - do you trust the police? Would you think twice about asking for help as a woman of colour or if you'd been sexually assaulted? Call Nuala McGovern to have your say on 03700 100 444. Lines open at 0830 Wednesday. Presenter: Nuala McGovern Producer: Lisa Jenkinson Studio Mangaer: Gayl Gordon
In this episode Laura talks with special guest Henry Riley, LBC journalist, about Sarah Everard's abduction, rape and murder by Wayne Couzens, a Metropolitan Police officer. What followed was a nationwide outpouring of grief, shock and anger. Women shared stories of male violence whilst the Metropolitan Police downplayed Couzen's as an unfortunate ‘bad apple' and declared he ‘was not a police officer.' Since Sarah we've heard nonstop about police officer's including David Carrick perpetrating abuse and violence towards women. More recently Wayne Couzen's extensive indecent exposure history was revealed, and the fact women reported him but the Metropolitan Police Service failed to act. Henry shares his investigation into PC Terry Melka, a police officer convicted of indecent exposure who is still a serving Metropolitan police officer. Laura details her experience of working in the Metropolitan Police and how police perpetrators were dealt with. This important interview was recorded on the day Baroness Louise Casey published her deeply disturbing 363-page report detailing institutional racism, sexism, misogyny and homophobia in the Metropolitan Police. Baroness Casey has called for urgent root and branch reform of the “Boys Club” that's the UK's largest police service. Trigger warning: Listener discretion is advised. Socials: Instagram @crimeanalyst @laurarichards999 Twitter @thecrimeanalyst @laurarichards999 TikTok @crimeanalystpod YouTube @crimeanalyst #SarahEverard #CaseyReview #CrimeAnalyst #Expert #Analysis #Behaviour #TrueCrime #Podcast #MaleViolence #IndecentExposure #Rape #Femicide #Misogyny #DomesticAbuse #WayneCouzens #DavidCarrick Clip https://www.standard.co.uk/news/london/baroness-louise-casey-metropolitan-police-investigation-report-review-b1068612.html Sources https://www.lbc.co.uk/news/met-police-officer-caught-masturbating-train/ https://www.lbc.co.uk/news/metropolitan-police-officer-image-corpse-jailed-portsmouth/ https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/jan/16/metropolitan-police-officer-david-carrick-revealed-as-serial-rapist https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-64827593 https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/nov/02/met-police-officers-plead-guilty-over-photos-taken-at-scene-of-sisters-deaths https://www.met.police.uk/SysSiteAssets/media/downloads/met/about-us/baroness-casey-review/update-march-2023/baroness-casey-review-march-2023.pdf Crime Analyst Merch https://crime-analyst.myshopify.com/ Leave a Review If you want to support my work and Crime Analyst and if you enjoyed this episode, please leave a 5-star review here: https://www.crime-analyst.com/reviews/new/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The Metropolitan Police is institutionally racist, sexist, and homophobic and may have more officers like killer Wayne Couzens and serial rapist David Carrick, a damning report has found.Boris Johnson's defence team is accusing the Partygate inquiry of suppressing evidence that could clear him.The DUP will vote against Rishi Sunak's Northern Ireland Brexit deal, warning the agreement struck with Brussels has fundamental problems. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The Nicola Bulley incident - Is it an example of how the British Press are out to trash the reputation of the Police (Part2) The Black Spy Podcast Season 8, Episode 0006 This week's Black Spy Podcast discusses a worrying trend of the seemingly incessant drip feeding of negative stories by all forms of the established media against the police. These stories are so biased that many capable individuals are put off from pursuing a career in the police. Consequently, recruitment is extremely difficult with the consequences for British society being grave. One should remember that the police alone in British society, are prohibited from striking due to## a 100 year old law put in place by Sir Winston Churchill. Two years ago an off duty police officer, Wayne Couzens, murdered young executive, Sarah Everard. This sent the press into a frenzy. Then, last year another off duty police officer, David Carrick, was arrested for raping several of life partners at various time over a period of years. Prior to joining the police, both officers had previously served in the British Army, so were seen by police recruiters of being of good conduct. Although both offenders committed their offences off duty, in both cases the press suggested that the most important factor was that these individuals were police officers. The press also extrapolated that female members of the public, in particular, were not safe around police officers in general, on duty or off duty. Articles and unending columns inches were devoted to these incidents and to the ‘so called police culture' they suggested spawned the incidents. The copious column inches however, neglected to say that at least a third of all police officers are women and over 42% of all new police recruits are women. Plus, more importantly, presently 40% of all British police Chief Constables are women. Strangely however, the press is nearly silent when it comes to the murderous behaviour of other professions, drawing little or no connection with their employment even when this is a major factor in their crimes. For example, in the last decade or so, nurses, on duty, have murdered tens of their patients in the UK - to practically no hue and cry in the press or media of any kind (TV, radio or printed). • Nurse Beverley Allitt murdered numerous babies at Grantham Hospital. • Nurse Lucy Letby, at the same time as Sarah Everarads death was being fully exposed in the press, was charged with murdering 7 babies and attempting to Murder 10 others! • Nurse Colin Campbell Norris murdered 10 of his patients and attempted to murder at least one other. • Nurse Benjamin Geen murdered at least 2 patients in an Oxfordshire hospital where others victims sustained grave life threatening symptoms at his hands. • Nurse Victorino Chua of Stockport Stepping Hill hospital murdered 2 of his patients and 21 others potential murder victims suffered life threatening hypoglycemia attacks at his hands. Frankly the list goes on. This is not to mention: • Dr Harold Shipman who two decades ago in Manchester, murdered at least 250 of his patients. It is though he could have murdered double this number of patients. • Surgeon Simon Bramhall who signed his initials on patients livers • Surgeon Ian Patterson who who was found guilty of operation on countless patients, mainly women, for seemingly no reason. He disfigured them by removing breast etc. This was allegedly done for financial gain according to the relatively little press there was in comparison to the David Carrick police case. However, unlike the hue and cry in two police cases, the press has not suggested at any stage that all doctors and nurses can not be trusted despite the gravity of the offences committed multiple serial murders by these very many more medic. Moreover, all these offences were committed whilst all these medical professionals were performing their duties. Its also worth noting that at no stage have NHS chiefs come on TV and radio or written in the press apologies for the the ‘culture' of their profession that keeps allowing these mass murders to continue. Seemingly it is only the police who are seen as dangerous, misogynistic and racist. Could it be that the press considers police as working class plebs, but nurses a positive contributors to society and doctors, as fellow upper middle class professionals. Or is it just an inexplicable oversight by the press? These and other issues are discussed in this week's Black Spy Podcast featuring long term national media journalist Firgas Esack. Once again, we hope listeners will learn from today's podcast whilst also being entertained! Don't forget to subscribe to The Black Spy Podcast to never miss an episode. To contact the Black Spy or donate to The Black Spy Podcast utilise the following: To donate - Patreon.com/TheBlackSpyPodcast Email: carltonking2003@gmail.com Facebook: The Black Spy Podcast Facebook: Carlton King Author Twitter@Carlton_King Instagram@carltonkingauthor To read Carlton's Autobiography: “Black Ops – The incredible true story of a British secret agent” Click the link below: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/BO1MTV2GDF/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_awdb_WNZ5MT89T9C14CB53651 Carlton is available for speaking events. For this purpose use the contact details above.
The Nicola Bulley incident - Is it an example of how the British Press are out to trash the reputation of the Police The Black Spy Podcast Season 8, Episode 0005 This week's Black Spy Podcast discusses a worrying trend of the seemingly incessant drip feeding of negative stories by all forms of the established media against the police. These stories are so biased that many capable individuals are put off from pursuing a career in the police. Consequently, recruitment is extremely difficult with the consequences for British society being grave. One should remember that the police alone in British society, are prohibited from striking due to## a 100 year old law put in place by Sir Winston Churchill. Two years ago an off duty police officer, Wayne Couzens, murdered young executive, Sarah Everard. This sent the press into a frenzy. Then, last year another off duty police officer, David Carrick, was arrested for raping several of life partners at various time over a period of years. Prior to joining the police, both officers had previously served in the British Army, so were seen by police recruiters of being of good conduct. Although both offenders committed their offences off duty, in both cases the press suggested that the most important factor was that these individuals were police officers. The press also extrapolated that female members of the public, in particular, were not safe around police officers in general, on duty or off duty. Articles and unending columns inches were devoted to these incidents and to the ‘so called police culture' they suggested spawned the incidents. The copious column inches however, neglected to say that at least a third of all police officers are women and over 42% of all new police recruits are women. Plus, more importantly, presently 40% of all British police Chief Constables are women. Strangely however, the press is nearly silent when it comes to the murderous behaviour of other professions, drawing little or no connection with their employment even when this is a major factor in their crimes. For example, in the last decade or so, nurses, on duty, have murdered tens of their patients in the UK - to practically no hue and cry in the press or media of any kind (TV, radio or printed). • Nurse Beverley Allitt murdered numerous babies at Grantham Hospital. • Nurse Lucy Letby, at the same time as Sarah Everarads death was being fully exposed in the press, was charged with murdering 7 babies and attempting to Murder 10 others! • Nurse Colin Campbell Norris murdered 10 of his patients and attempted to murder at least one other. • Nurse Benjamin Geen murdered at least 2 patients in an Oxfordshire hospital where others victims sustained grave life threatening symptoms at his hands. • Nurse Victorino Chua of Stockport Stepping Hill hospital murdered 2 of his patients and 21 others potential murder victims suffered life threatening hypoglycemia attacks at his hands. Frankly the list goes on. This is not to mention: • Dr Harold Shipman who two decades ago in Manchester, murdered at least 250 of his patients. It is though he could have murdered double this number of patients. • Surgeon Simon Bramhall who signed his initials on patients livers • Surgeon Ian Patterson who who was found guilty of operation on countless patients, mainly women, for seemingly no reason. He disfigured them by removing breast etc. This was allegedly done for financial gain according to the relatively little press there was in comparison to the David Carrick police case. However, unlike the hue and cry in two police cases, the press has not suggested at any stage that all doctors and nurses can not be trusted despite the gravity of the offences committed multiple serial murders by these very many more medic. Moreover, all these offences were committed whilst all these medical professionals were performing their duties. Its also worth noting that at no stage have NHS chiefs come on TV and radio or written in the press apologies for the the ‘culture' of their profession that keeps allowing these mass murders to continue. Seemingly it is only the police who are seen as dangerous, misogynistic and racist. Could it be that the press considers police as working class plebs, but nurses a positive contributors to society and doctors, as fellow upper middle class professionals. Or is it just an inexplicable oversight by the press? These and other issues are discussed in this week's Black Spy Podcast featuring long term national media journalist Firgas Esack. Once again, we hope listeners will learn from today's podcast whilst also being entertained! Don't forget to subscribe to The Black Spy Podcast to never miss an episode. To contact the Black Spy or donate to The Black Spy Podcast utilise the following: To donate - Patreon.com/TheBlackSpyPodcast Email: carltonking2003@gmail.com Facebook: The Black Spy Podcast Facebook: Carlton King Author Twitter@Carlton_King Instagram@carltonkingauthor To read Carlton's Autobiography: “Black Ops – The incredible true story of a British secret agent” Click the link below: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/BO1MTV2GDF/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_awdb_WNZ5MT89T9C14CB53651 Carlton is available for speaking events. For this purpose use the contact details above
Laura continues her interview with award winning investigative journalist, author and outdoors expert Kathryn Miles about her re-investigation into the double murder of Lollie Winans and Julie Williams, which is detailed in her book Trailed: One Woman's Quest to Solve the Shenandoah Murders. Laura and Kathryn discuss the investigation, including the delay processing the crime scene, key forensics that were destroyed and what remains as well as other potential cases that might be linked including Alicia Showalter Reynolds, Anne McDaniel, Sofia Silva, Kristin and Kati Lisk, Thelma Scroggins and the double murder of Cathy Thomas and Becky Dowski. Content warning: Laura and Kathryn discuss the crime scenes in graphic detail as it holds a mirror up to the killer. Listener discretion is advised. N.B. this series was recorded before serial rapist and former Metropolitan police officer David Carrick was given 36 life sentences. Carrick eventually pleaded guilty to 49 charges against 12 women - some of those covered multiple incidents and comprised 85 offences, including 48 rapes. #LollieWinans #JulieWilliams #Trailed #KathyrnMiles #Misogyny #WomenMatter #TheShenandoahMurders #Virginia #VictimBlaming #LanguageMatters #CrimeAnalyst #Expert #Analysis #TrueCrime #Podcast #Crime Clips https://www.wusa9.com/article/features/producers-picks/dna-in-fbi-evidence-locker-might-solve-shenandoah-national-park-murders-julie-williams-lollie-winans/65-d4ecdc98-ed85-4626-b242-c35f5d6d938e Kathryn's Book https://www.amazon.com/Trailed-Womans-Quest-Shenandoah-Murders/dp/1616209097 Information about the DASH, Coercive Control and Train the Trainer Masterclasses with Laura https://shoutout.wix.com/so/eeOI-OpnS?languageTag=en Subscribe to Crime Analyst You Tube Channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCksfRSwfwFqUCjcxKYju6_Q Crime Analyst Merch https://crime-analyst.myshopify.com/ Leave a Review Support Laura's work and Crime Analyst by leaving a 5-star review here: https://www.crime-analyst.com/reviews/new/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Jennifer Robinson, the Australian human rights and media freedom barrister who graces Doughty Street chambers, is probably best known for her work representing Julian Assange “I did not expect it was going to become so big,” says Robinson. “And I certainly never expected I'd spend so much time visiting him in the Ecuadorean embassy in London.” Her new book, co-written with Keina Yoshida, could not be timelier as we record this the day after the sentencing of an armed officer, David Carrick, for 48 rapes against a dozen woman, and a headteacher, and her seven-year-old daughter have died in what police are calling a murder suicide. It seemingly never ends. One every three days a woman is killed but many more are silenced and let down by the system, this is exactly where Jennifer's specialties lie.
Disclaimer: This episode contains discussion of sexual abuse, violence, and harassment as well as sexism and online harassment. In this episode of The Pulse, Cora, Connor, Jake, Daniel, and Kit discuss the current allegations of sexual abuse against Met Police Officers, including the sentencing of David Carrick.
In a week where: A Chinese Spy balloon drifts into the US. Netflix changes password sharing rules, get bullied into a u-turn. Liz Truss pipes up again via hilarious essay. Turkey & Syria suffer several earthquakes. Former Met Police officer David Carrick sentenced to more than 30 years in prison. In Police: (7:37) I talked about the police last episode, wondering what solutions are there to change The Met. And now I have found a potential solution: Breaking up The Metropolitan Police.In Politics: (21:13) For a while I have been lamenting how politicians can be the most incompetent people ever, but can still prosper. So picture my smile when I see a piece with the term I've been shouting into the ether: Failing up.Also in Politics: (34:13) The anniversary of "The Exit" happened a couple weeks ago and attitudes towards it have soured significantly. Cue my victory lap.Lastly, in Books: (47:50) In a development from last episode where I talked about people that don't read, I found a world I wasn't aware of: BookTok. And yes, it's terrible.Thank you for listening! If you want to contribute to the show, whether it be sending me questions or voicing your opinion in any way, peep the contact links below and I'll respond accordingly. Let me know "What's Good?"Rate & ReviewE-Mail: the5thelelmentpub@gmail.comTwitter: @The5thElementUKWebsite: https://medium.com/@the5thelementIntro Music - "Too Much" By VanillaInterlude - "Charismatic" By NappyHighChillHop MusicOther Podcasts Under The 5EPN:Diggin' In The Digits5EPN RadioBlack Women Watch...In Search of SauceThe Beauty Of Independence
In the wake of a devastating earthquake in Turkey and Syria, Andrew Mitchell, Minister of State in the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office, joins Nick to explain exactly what aid is needed and how we can get it out there. PLUS ahead of the sentencing of former met police officer and serial rapist David Carrick, Nick asks: what would it take to restore your faith in the met.
Former Met Officer David Carrick jailed for life, Cross Question & how do we fix the rail network? Joining Iain Dale on Cross Question this evening are Liberal Democrat MP Layla Moran, Conservative MP Ben Bradley, Chief Executive of the Northern Powerhouse Partnership Henri Murison and comedian Geoff Norcott.
We get the latest from our London Correspondent John Kilraine
Something is very wrong with my country. Something big and something bad. We can all feel it, though we might not agree on what is actually wrong. The great institutions of state are falling apart. Mighty institutions that I grew up trusting for their integrity, respected around the world, seem to be crumbling amidst incompetence, incoherence, corruption and more.The government, essentially unelected, is unpopular and ineffectual. Not that a properly elected government would make much difference. Sir Humphrey and the Blob still seem to run everything. The system seems set up to look after the system, rather than its people. The opportunities for change and reform that were first, Brexit, then Boris Johnson's sweeping 2019 election win, have been squandered. The government is unable to carry out even its most basic function, which is to defend the borders. The Bank of England has for many years been destroying the value of money. Inflation, which apparently was unforeseeable, is now at 9%. And that's just official inflation – we all know actual inflation is higher. The Bank's monetary policies, together with planning laws, have given us an intergenerational wealth divide which means anyone born after about 1985 can't afford anywhere to live. They delay starting families as a result, and they have smaller families, with the long-term consequence that the local population is eroded away. This then gives rise to the argument that, as locals aren't reproducing, we “need” immigration. I can't remember trust in the police, who seem more concerned with online wrong-think than violent crime, ever having been so low. I wrote that sentence before the David Carrick scandal. The courts are overwhelmed and the court system is both expensive and antiquated. The legal system is manipulated and exploited, only affordable to the very rich or very poor. The penal system is inadequate. Google “NHS and news”, if you want to see what state healthcare is in. Radical progressive ideology has enveloped education. Even the armed forces have been afflicted by it. Universities are overpriced and increasingly irrelevant to the modern work environment. The BBC, the national broadcaster, is loathed for its bias, and its output is, for the most part, crap. Luxury green ideology has left us with sky-high energy prices. Royal Mail only occasionally delivers - I'm still getting Christmas cards now. The trains are useless and expensive. Who knows how well the civil service is doing? It's opaque. The electoral process has become meaningless. You get the same blob whoever you vote for. Representative democracy is neither representative nor democratic.I could go on. You get the point. Everywhere that is not functioning involves (or has involved in its recent history) the heavy hand of the state. You could look at, say, shops, tech, restaurants or media – areas where the state is less involved – and user dissatisfaction levels are not comparable. Airports actually ran better when the border force went on strike. It's as though the state is inherently incompetent. Why there aren't more libertarians, I'll never understand. Meanwhile, all of these institutions are costing a fortune. Spending on most is at all-time highs. By the time you factor in inflation (which is a stealth tax - even the Chancellor recently admitted as much), taxation levels are comfortably in excess of 50%. That is to say: more than half of everything you earn is taken from you by the state to pay for stuff that doesn't work. That's before we get to the tax on the future which is debt and deficit spending.And then there's the waste. Here is just one example:Imagine how much better off we'd all be, if citizens, rather than the government, could choose where to allocate the money they earn. You spend your money better than they do.Culture wars and mass migrationIt's not just crumbling institutions and state overreach. They call it the Culture Wars, but we are in the midst of a religious war, an ideological struggle. What Elon Musk calls “the woke mind virus” – an aggressive, radically progressive ideology born out of an obsession with identity politics – has taken over, especially within institutions and education, and is wreaking havoc. From male rapists being put into women's prisons to expensive green initiatives that actually damage the environment to a pandemic of cancel culture. Again, I could go on. I don't need to spell it out here. You know what I'm talking about. Small government and libertarianism solves this too, by the way. The virus would not be able to survive and spread without the oxygen of public money.Meanwhile, the demography of the country has changed, and as a result, so has its identity (though few have yet realised that). Last year, 1.1 million people migrated to this country – that's just the ones who were granted visas. There are plenty more that weren't. In effect, roughly one in every 65 people you meet in this country only came here last year. The London of the 1970s that I grew up in has vanished. The archetypical Londoner used to be the Cockney – the white working-class man or woman born within the sound of Bow Bells. Today the Cockney, once such an instantly recognisable English type and one that has had an incredible influence on Britain, barely exists. They've all gone. Almost every other UK city is on a similar journey to indigenous British white minority.As the song goes, “you don't know what you've got till it's gone”. Whatever we had has gone and we will never get it back. It's not just the UK. It's the whole of Western Europe, and probably much of North America too. My German friend jokes that Buenos Aires will be the last European city. On which note, it was incredible to watch the World Cup Final between Argentina and France. By the time the game ended and the substitutions had been made, it was, essentially, a match between Africans from Europe and Europeans from South America. I am not “anti-migration”, by the way. If anything, I am pro it. In my National Anthem of Libertaria I argue for free movement. The mass movement of people is an inevitable tide in the affairs of men. People have always moved, and always will. But I also view conserving our culture, identity and communities as paramount, and the state is failing to do that. If such things were not state responsibility, but locals', and people were empowered by lower taxes and the greater responsibility that comes with a smaller state, the outcome would be different. Mass migration is inevitable. People think it's going to decrease. It's not. It's going to increase. There are more people in the world than ever before and – whether it's those displaced by war, by lack of water, by poverty, hunger or (probably the primary factor) lack of opportunity – more and more of them are on the move. Because of modern communications, more of them are aware of better lives to be had elsewhere. Because of modern travel, more of them are able to travel further and faster than ever before. As a result, we are in a migration of people of historically unprecedented proportions. It's only going to increase.Terrified of being labelled racist, Western governments have no coherent philosophy, let alone an actionable strategy, to deal with it all. Especially as both the public and the media have lost sight of the difference between what is legal immigration, what is illegal and what is asylum. Moreover, it has become impossible for all the shouting “racist” to have a grown up conversation about how much immigration we actually want - 100,000 a year? 500,000? Net zero? How pertinent is the Douglas Murray title: The Strange Death of Europe.The world is changing fast. For good or for bad, the Britain we once knew has left Middle Earth. I don't think anyone voted for it. I don't see many leaders trying to stop it. Locals who have paid taxes all their life and now receive inadequate services, or see that tax money being spent on these new Britons, while they go overlooked, not unreasonably feel betrayed, angry, frightened and more. Accountable local government with local borders might be better able to act on the wishes of its people, and defend against this sudden influx that is disrupting so many communities – if so desired. But that is not possible with Britain's remote, centralised, unaccountable state. Given its record elsewhere, when the state is in charge of borders, why should it be any surprise they don't function properly?A genuinely free market-driven economy might be happy with open borders and quickly able to adapt – more people to sell products to, a greater choice of people to employ – what's not to like? But the state systems – schools, hospitals, transport infrastructure – cannot cope. As Milton Friedman observed, you cannot have open borders and an expansive and benevolent welfare state. You can have one or the other, but not both. Yet currently, both is what we have (or are attempting to have). That's why everything is falling apart. In effect, we are paying for ourselves to be colonised.Maybe it's multi-culturalism and expansive state welfare that are incompatible: the latter may only properly function in more mono-cultural societies, such as Japan. (Similar arguments can be made about crime levels. They tend to be lower in mostly mono-cultural cities, especially in Asia, to those in the the more multi-cultural west).Whether it's Hull, Skegness, Mansfield or any other provincial town, when boatloads of young men from different cultures, with no instinctive loyalty to the UK or its ways (and sometimes a contempt for it), are dumped in a community and the community is given no say in the matter, and locals have no power to resist, any anger felt is pretty understandable. There are incidents when the young men are put up in four or five-star hotels, while there are locals, homeless, in tents outside. It is not what people want, nor what they voted for. As I say, representative democracy is neither representative, nor democratic. The model is broken.Brave New World, digital nomad-ery, robot takeover — or something worse?Finally, there are incredible developments in technology: the new worlds being designed for us by nameless, and, in many cases, slightly autistic coders in far away places, the extraordinary expansion of surveillance and the erosion of privacy. Those who have monitored ChatGPT will know that before long as much as half of the content on the internet will be generated by bots. But they are not neutral - they are politically biased. What are the implications of that and the extraordinary influence these nameless coders will have to shape the global narrative?Never mind whose fault this all is, or the rights and wrongs of it all. We all have our ideas. Plenty of them. What I want to know is: where is this all going? I've been thinking about it a lot.Many draw parallels with the Fall of Rome and the invading barbarians at the gates. Others say we are headed into totalitarianism akin to George Orwell's 1984. Many of my Eastern European friends think we are making the same mistakes they once made and headed into some kind of 21st century Marxism. My Venezuelan friends think the same. Some see a new rise of fascism akin to the 1930s.Some look to Isaac Asimov and the rise of intelligent machines (see my piece on ChatGPT, if you want to know just how advanced machine learning is now). My genius bitcoin billionaire mate, who has long since disappeared somewhere remote in New Zealand, thinks we are going into a world where everybody is housed in Butlins/CentreParks/Club Med (depending on your socio-economic status)-type holiday resorts, with virtual reality headsets on all day, while robots do all the work. That vision tallies somewhat with Aldous Huxley's Brave New World.Another compelling scenario comes in James Dale Davidson and Lord William Rees-Mogg's, in which they describe a two-tiered society. On one tier, thanks to advances in technology and communication, there will be a class of largely untaxed digital nomads, travelling from place to place, operating independently of nation states and government structures. Meanwhile, there will be a much larger class of people trapped in their nations, working in the physical economy (rather than the stateless digital one), heavily taxed and indebted. Hard-money advocates argue that some kind of hyperinflation and the destruction of fiat money is inevitable, or that, with the emergence of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, the US dollar is soon to lose its reserve currency status, with major implications for the international balance of power. In that case Western Europe is probably going the way of once-wealthy Argentina. “Great Reset” theory, in the wake of Covid and the vaccine furore - that powerful, yet secret actors and organisations, especially the WEF, are planning all of this - looks rather more credible than it once did.There is also a persuasive argument that the expansion of NATO, Vladimir Putin's ambitions and the conflict in Ukraine is going to take us eventually to nuclear war. There is a lot to worry about. These really are incredible times.So back to the underlying question: where is this all going? The South Africanisation of everythingI was in the pub with my friend, the director Alex McCarron, the other night, when this subject came up. He had a simple but compelling answer: South Africa. The South Africanisation of Everything.There are many parallels: crumbling institutions, widespread corruption, mass migration; failing rule of law, rising crime rates – especially violent crime; inadequate policing and reliance on private security; identity politics, siloed, ghetto-ised communities within a so-called multi-cultural country; race-based crime, justified because of history; many cultures, each with their grievances, thrust together and by no means living harmoniously. It's a credible scenario and one I can envisage. One small example: private security vehicles are ubiquitous in Johannesburg. You never used to see them in the UK. My friend sent me this image, spotted this in Notting Hill the other evening. I think such sights are going to get more and more become commonplace. It's another symptom of a failing state.My view is that we are going to see all of those above scenarios. Nevertheless … things are better than we realiseIn all of this negativity, in many ways, things are much better than we may think and the world is in a better state than it has ever been. We are living longer than ever. There are fewer people living below the poverty line than ever. The number of people dying from natural disasters is lower than it has ever been. Information technology means we have greater access to information than ever. 6.8 billion people now have a smart phone - think of all the possibilities that open up as a result. More than 80% of the global population now has access to electricity. With modern transport we are able to go further than ever, quicker than ever. The world is, as a result, more accessible than ever. We might not enjoy her status, but most of us live with luxuries Marie Antoinette could never have dreamed of. Life is so much easier for us than it was for our ancestors and we should be grateful to them for the benefits we enjoy, as a result of what they went through. Wonderful things are possible. There is much to be positive and excited about. There has never been a better time to be alive.But something is missing. Something is wrong. We can all feel it.Our belief systems are awry. I am sure it's to do with the absence of religion. Naive worship of incompetent state institutions has replaced it.Am I right about this? Please post your thoughts in the comments below. And how do you navigate it all, as an investor, and protect/grow your wealth? Gold and bitcoin are the obvious “anti-state” choices.Please share this article on Twitter, Facebook etc (if you liked it).Meanwhile, if you want to listen to Alex and I discuss the South Africanisation of everything – that podcast is here.Interested in protecting your wealth in these extraordinary times? Then be sure to own some gold bullion. My current recommended bullion dealer is The Pure Gold Company, whether you are taking delivery or storing online. Premiums are low, quality of service is high. You can deal with a human being. I have an affiliation deals with them.My guide to buying bitcoin is here.Make your Number One resolution for 2023 to listen to Kisses on a Postcard.The Flying Frisby is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.theflyingfrisby.com/subscribe
Something is very wrong with my country. Something big and something bad. We can all feel it, though we might not agree on what is actually wrong. The great institutions of state are falling apart. Mighty institutions that I grew up trusting for their integrity, respected around the world, seem to be crumbling amidst incompetence, incoherence, corruption and more.The government, essentially unelected, is unpopular and ineffectual. Not that a properly elected government would make much difference. Sir Humphrey and the Blob still seem to run everything. The system seems set up to look after the system, rather than its people. The opportunities for change and reform that were first, Brexit, then Boris Johnson's sweeping 2019 election win, have been squandered. The government is unable to carry out even its most basic function, which is to defend the borders. The Bank of England has for many years been destroying the value of money. Inflation, which apparently was unforeseeable, is now at 9%. And that's just official inflation – we all know actual inflation is higher. The Bank's monetary policies, together with planning laws, have given us an intergenerational wealth divide which means anyone born after about 1985 can't afford anywhere to live. They delay starting families as a result, and they have smaller families, with the long-term consequence that the local population is eroded away. This then gives rise to the argument that, as locals aren't reproducing, we “need” immigration. I can't remember trust in the police, who seem more concerned with online wrong-think than violent crime, ever having been so low. I wrote that sentence before the David Carrick scandal. The courts are overwhelmed and the court system is both expensive and antiquated. The legal system is manipulated and exploited, only affordable to the very rich or very poor. The penal system is inadequate. Google “NHS and news”, if you want to see what state healthcare is in. Radical progressive ideology has enveloped education. Even the armed forces have been afflicted by it. Universities are overpriced and increasingly irrelevant to the modern work environment. The BBC, the national broadcaster, is loathed for its bias, and its output is, for the most part, crap. Luxury green ideology has left us with sky-high energy prices. Royal Mail only occasionally delivers - I'm still getting Christmas cards now. The trains are useless and expensive. Who knows how well the civil service is doing? It's opaque. The electoral process has become meaningless. You get the same blob whoever you vote for. Representative democracy is neither representative nor democratic.I could go on. You get the point. Everywhere that is not functioning involves (or has involved in its recent history) the heavy hand of the state. You could look at, say, shops, tech, restaurants or media – areas where the state is less involved – and user dissatisfaction levels are not comparable. Airports actually ran better when the border force went on strike. It's as though the state is inherently incompetent. Why there aren't more libertarians, I'll never understand. Meanwhile, all of these institutions are costing a fortune. Spending on most is at all-time highs. By the time you factor in inflation (which is a stealth tax - even the Chancellor recently admitted as much), taxation levels are comfortably in excess of 50%. That is to say: more than half of everything you earn is taken from you by the state to pay for stuff that doesn't work. That's before we get to the tax on the future which is debt and deficit spending.And then there's the waste. Here is just one example:Imagine how much better off we'd all be, if citizens, rather than the government, could choose where to allocate the money they earn. You spend your money better than they do.Culture wars and mass migrationIt's not just crumbling institutions and state overreach. They call it the Culture Wars, but we are in the midst of a religious war, an ideological struggle. What Elon Musk calls “the woke mind virus” – an aggressive, radically progressive ideology born out of an obsession with identity politics – has taken over, especially within institutions and education, and is wreaking havoc. From male rapists being put into women's prisons to expensive green initiatives that actually damage the environment to a pandemic of cancel culture. Again, I could go on. I don't need to spell it out here. You know what I'm talking about. Small government and libertarianism solves this too, by the way. The virus would not be able to survive and spread without the oxygen of public money.Meanwhile, the demography of the country has changed, and as a result, so has its identity (though few have yet realised that). Last year, 1.1 million people migrated to this country – that's just the ones who were granted visas. There are plenty more that weren't. In effect, roughly one in every 65 people you meet in this country only came here last year. The London of the 1970s that I grew up in has vanished. The archetypical Londoner used to be the Cockney – the white working-class man or woman born within the sound of Bow Bells. Today the Cockney, once such an instantly recognisable English type and one that has had an incredible influence on Britain, barely exists. They've all gone. Almost every other UK city is on a similar journey to indigenous British white minority.As the song goes, “you don't know what you've got till it's gone”. Whatever we had has gone and we will never get it back. It's not just the UK. It's the whole of Western Europe, and probably much of North America too. My German friend jokes that Buenos Aires will be the last European city. On which note, it was incredible to watch the World Cup Final between Argentina and France. By the time the game ended and the substitutions had been made, it was, essentially, a match between Africans from Europe and Europeans from South America. I am not “anti-migration”, by the way. If anything, I am pro it. In my National Anthem of Libertaria I argue for free movement. The mass movement of people is an inevitable tide in the affairs of men. People have always moved, and always will. But I also view conserving our culture, identity and communities as paramount, and the state is failing to do that. If such things were not state responsibility, but locals', and people were empowered by lower taxes and the greater responsibility that comes with a smaller state, the outcome would be different. Mass migration is inevitable. People think it's going to decrease. It's not. It's going to increase. There are more people in the world than ever before and – whether it's those displaced by war, by lack of water, by poverty, hunger or (probably the primary factor) lack of opportunity – more and more of them are on the move. Because of modern communications, more of them are aware of better lives to be had elsewhere. Because of modern travel, more of them are able to travel further and faster than ever before. As a result, we are in a migration of people of historically unprecedented proportions. It's only going to increase.Terrified of being labelled racist, Western governments have no coherent philosophy, let alone an actionable strategy, to deal with it all. Especially as both the public and the media have lost sight of the difference between what is legal immigration, what is illegal and what is asylum. Moreover, it has become impossible for all the shouting “racist” to have a grown up conversation about how much immigration we actually want - 100,000 a year? 500,000? Net zero? How pertinent is the Douglas Murray title: The Strange Death of Europe.The world is changing fast. For good or for bad, the Britain we once knew has left Middle Earth. I don't think anyone voted for it. I don't see many leaders trying to stop it. Locals who have paid taxes all their life and now receive inadequate services, or see that tax money being spent on these new Britons, while they go overlooked, not unreasonably feel betrayed, angry, frightened and more. Accountable local government with local borders might be better able to act on the wishes of its people, and defend against this sudden influx that is disrupting so many communities – if so desired. But that is not possible with Britain's remote, centralised, unaccountable state. Given its record elsewhere, when the state is in charge of borders, why should it be any surprise they don't function properly?A genuinely free market-driven economy might be happy with open borders and quickly able to adapt – more people to sell products to, a greater choice of people to employ – what's not to like? But the state systems – schools, hospitals, transport infrastructure – cannot cope. As Milton Friedman observed, you cannot have open borders and an expansive and benevolent welfare state. You can have one or the other, but not both. Yet currently, both is what we have (or are attempting to have). That's why everything is falling apart. In effect, we are paying for ourselves to be colonised.Maybe it's multi-culturalism and expansive state welfare that are incompatible: the latter may only properly function in more mono-cultural societies, such as Japan. (Similar arguments can be made about crime levels. They tend to be lower in mostly mono-cultural cities, especially in Asia, to those in the the more multi-cultural west).Whether it's Hull, Skegness, Mansfield or any other provincial town, when boatloads of young men from different cultures, with no instinctive loyalty to the UK or its ways (and sometimes a contempt for it), are dumped in a community and the community is given no say in the matter, and locals have no power to resist, any anger felt is pretty understandable. There are incidents when the young men are put up in four or five-star hotels, while there are locals, homeless, in tents outside. It is not what people want, nor what they voted for. As I say, representative democracy is neither representative, nor democratic. The model is broken.Brave New World, digital nomad-ery, robot takeover — or something worse?Finally, there are incredible developments in technology: the new worlds being designed for us by nameless, and, in many cases, slightly autistic coders in far away places, the extraordinary expansion of surveillance and the erosion of privacy. Those who have monitored ChatGPT will know that before long as much as half of the content on the internet will be generated by bots. But they are not neutral - they are politically biased. What are the implications of that and the extraordinary influence these nameless coders will have to shape the global narrative?Never mind whose fault this all is, or the rights and wrongs of it all. We all have our ideas. Plenty of them. What I want to know is: where is this all going? I've been thinking about it a lot.Many draw parallels with the Fall of Rome and the invading barbarians at the gates. Others say we are headed into totalitarianism akin to George Orwell's 1984. Many of my Eastern European friends think we are making the same mistakes they once made and headed into some kind of 21st century Marxism. My Venezuelan friends think the same. Some see a new rise of fascism akin to the 1930s.Some look to Isaac Asimov and the rise of intelligent machines (see my piece on ChatGPT, if you want to know just how advanced machine learning is now). My genius bitcoin billionaire mate, who has long since disappeared somewhere remote in New Zealand, thinks we are going into a world where everybody is housed in Butlins/CentreParks/Club Med (depending on your socio-economic status)-type holiday resorts, with virtual reality headsets on all day, while robots do all the work. That vision tallies somewhat with Aldous Huxley's Brave New World.Another compelling scenario comes in James Dale Davidson and Lord William Rees-Mogg's, in which they describe a two-tiered society. On one tier, thanks to advances in technology and communication, there will be a class of largely untaxed digital nomads, travelling from place to place, operating independently of nation states and government structures. Meanwhile, there will be a much larger class of people trapped in their nations, working in the physical economy (rather than the stateless digital one), heavily taxed and indebted. Hard-money advocates argue that some kind of hyperinflation and the destruction of fiat money is inevitable, or that, with the emergence of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, the US dollar is soon to lose its reserve currency status, with major implications for the international balance of power. In that case Western Europe is probably going the way of once-wealthy Argentina. “Great Reset” theory, in the wake of Covid and the vaccine furore - that powerful, yet secret actors and organisations, especially the WEF, are planning all of this - looks rather more credible than it once did.There is also a persuasive argument that the expansion of NATO, Vladimir Putin's ambitions and the conflict in Ukraine is going to take us eventually to nuclear war. There is a lot to worry about. These really are incredible times.So back to the underlying question: where is this all going? The South Africanisation of everythingI was in the pub with my friend, the director Alex McCarron, the other night, when this subject came up. He had a simple but compelling answer: South Africa. The South Africanisation of Everything.There are many parallels: crumbling institutions, widespread corruption, mass migration; failing rule of law, rising crime rates – especially violent crime; inadequate policing and reliance on private security; identity politics, siloed, ghetto-ised communities within a so-called multi-cultural country; race-based crime, justified because of history; many cultures, each with their grievances, thrust together and by no means living harmoniously. It's a credible scenario and one I can envisage. One small example: private security vehicles are ubiquitous in Johannesburg. You never used to see them in the UK. My friend sent me this image, spotted this in Notting Hill the other evening. I think such sights are going to get more and more become commonplace. It's another symptom of a failing state.My view is that we are going to see all of those above scenarios. Nevertheless … things are better than we realiseIn all of this negativity, in many ways, things are much better than we may think and the world is in a better state than it has ever been. We are living longer than ever. There are fewer people living below the poverty line than ever. The number of people dying from natural disasters is lower than it has ever been. Information technology means we have greater access to information than ever. 6.8 billion people now have a smart phone - think of all the possibilities that open up as a result. More than 80% of the global population now has access to electricity. With modern transport we are able to go further than ever, quicker than ever. The world is, as a result, more accessible than ever. We might not enjoy her status, but most of us live with luxuries Marie Antoinette could never have dreamed of. Life is so much easier for us than it was for our ancestors and we should be grateful to them for the benefits we enjoy, as a result of what they went through. Wonderful things are possible. There is much to be positive and excited about. There has never been a better time to be alive.But something is missing. Something is wrong. We can all feel it.Our belief systems are awry. I am sure it's to do with the absence of religion. Naive worship of incompetent state institutions has replaced it.Am I right about this? Please post your thoughts in the comments below. And how do you navigate it all, as an investor, and protect/grow your wealth? Gold and bitcoin are the obvious “anti-state” choices.Please share this article on Twitter, Facebook etc (if you liked it).Meanwhile, if you want to listen to Alex and I discuss the South Africanisation of everything – that podcast is here.Interested in protecting your wealth in these extraordinary times? Then be sure to own some gold bullion. My current recommended bullion dealer is The Pure Gold Company, whether you are taking delivery or storing online. Premiums are low, quality of service is high. You can deal with a human being. I have an affiliation deals with them.My guide to buying bitcoin is here.Make your Number One resolution for 2023 to listen to Kisses on a Postcard.The Flying Frisby is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.theflyingfrisby.com/subscribe
Csodás lett az újraálmodott százéves vályogház 24.hu 2023-02-04 06:15:45 Életmód Románia Baranya Marosvásárhely Pro Urbe díjas keramikusa egy kicsinyke baranyai faluban talált új otthonra. Semmihez sem hasonlítható az a megaláztatás, amelynek a brit rendőr kitette áldozatait Telex 2023-02-03 23:58:16 Külföld Rendőrség David Carrick legalább tizenkét nővel szemben, tizenhét éven át elkövetett sorozatos nemi erőszak és szexuális bűncselekmények ügyében vallotta bűnösnek magát. Arra használta fel pozícióját, hogy előbb megnyugtassa, majd megfélemlítse a kegyetlenkedéseknek kitett áldozatait. Beismerő vallomásával rég nem látott mélységbe került a súlyos botrányokka Bűnbak vagy nemzeti hős volt a mohácsi csata magyar hadvezére? Index 2023-02-04 06:06:00 Belföld Baranya Mohács A csatatér kutatásának legújabb eredményei alapján Tomori Pál haditerve racionális alapokon álló, jó elképzelés volt. 10 kiváló élelmiszer a vérnyomás csökkentésére Magyar Mezőgazdaság 2023-02-04 06:11:00 Mezőgazdaság Gazdaság Élelmiszer Vérnyomás Agyvérzés Stroke A vérnyomás normális esetben a nap folyamán fokozatosan emelkedik és csökken, a krónikusan magas vérnyomás - más néven magas vérnyomás - növeli a szívbetegségek, a stroke és a vesebetegségek kockázatát. Annak érdekében, hogy csökkenstük ezeknek a kockázatát az alábbi élelmiszerek a segítségünkre lehetnek. Feloldanak egy súlyos tilalmat a Balatonnál Infostart 2023-02-04 06:00:00 Belföld Balaton Veszprém Vadászat Még egy vadászat lesz, utána mindenhol feloldják az ezzel összefüggő erdőlátogatási korlátozást Veszprém megyében. Nigéria nem elégszik meg a Mastercarddal és a Visa-val Fintech 2023-02-04 04:24:00 Modern Gazdaság Cégvilág Nigéria VISA Nigéria saját belföldi kártyarendszert indított. A programtól azt remélik, hogy valódi alternatívaként szolgálhat. Semmi nem lesz már olyan, mint volt – Viszlát nyugati autók, Magyarországon is beköszönt a kínai márkák kora vg.hu 2023-02-04 05:58:00 Belföld Kína Még az idén bejelenthetik az első ezer kilométer feletti hatótávval rendelkező elektromos személyautó tömeggyártását. A folyóparti város – folyó nélkül: rizst is termelnek és rajonganak a denevérekért. Ez Valencia Forbes 2023-02-04 06:06:09 Életmód Spanyolország Valencia CF Az erkélyek között kosarakat húznak át egymásnak az emberek, ha kell valami. Valencia nemcsak Calatrava miatt ér meg egy utazást. Már 300 ezer magyar tartja magát munkanélkülinek Portfolio 2023-02-04 06:10:00 Gazdaság KSH Munkanélküliség A tavalyi év utolsó negyedévében átlagosan 284 ezer volt az "önbesorolásos munkanélküliek" száma - válaszolta a KSH a Portfolio megkeresésére. Ha csak az év utolsó hónapját nézzük, akkor számításaink szerint több mint 300 ezren voltak azok, akik munkanélkülinek vallották magukat. Az elmúlt hónapokban a mélyponthoz képest emelkedni kezdett a hivatal Amikor egy álom megvalósul: elutaztam az Antarktiszra! Startlap Utazás 2023-02-04 05:57:45 Utazás Életmód Antarktisz Két évtizede őrizgette álmát, mire sok munka és kitartó küzdelem után eljutott a rajongott királypingvinekhez Kisgyörgy Éva. Az Antarktiszon és a környező szigeteken tett látogatást semmi máshoz nem fogható, katartikus élményként írja le. Vendégszerzőnk, Travellina úti beszámolója a háromhetes expedícióról és a világról, amit szigorúan csak fényes Neuer úgy érezte, mintha kitépték volna a szívét Rangadó 2023-02-04 03:59:59 Foci Nem érti, miért kellett kirúgni a kapusedző Toni Tapalovicot. Négy pontot gyűjtött idén a Fulham a Chelsea ellen Sportal 2023-02-03 23:00:00 Foci London Chelsea Premier League Fulham A Premier League 22. fordulójának nyitómérkőzése londoni derbivel indult a Stamford Bridge-en, ahol a Chelsea fogadta a Fulham gárdáját. A tél eddigi leghidegebb időszaka következik Kiderül 2023-02-04 05:05:49 Időjárás A következő napokban a sarkvidék térségéből hideg levegő áramlik fölénk. Erős éjszakai fagyokra és napközben is mindössze fagypont körüli hőmérsékletre számíthatunk.
Csodás lett az újraálmodott százéves vályogház 24.hu 2023-02-04 06:15:45 Életmód Románia Baranya Marosvásárhely Pro Urbe díjas keramikusa egy kicsinyke baranyai faluban talált új otthonra. Semmihez sem hasonlítható az a megaláztatás, amelynek a brit rendőr kitette áldozatait Telex 2023-02-03 23:58:16 Külföld Rendőrség David Carrick legalább tizenkét nővel szemben, tizenhét éven át elkövetett sorozatos nemi erőszak és szexuális bűncselekmények ügyében vallotta bűnösnek magát. Arra használta fel pozícióját, hogy előbb megnyugtassa, majd megfélemlítse a kegyetlenkedéseknek kitett áldozatait. Beismerő vallomásával rég nem látott mélységbe került a súlyos botrányokka Bűnbak vagy nemzeti hős volt a mohácsi csata magyar hadvezére? Index 2023-02-04 06:06:00 Belföld Baranya Mohács A csatatér kutatásának legújabb eredményei alapján Tomori Pál haditerve racionális alapokon álló, jó elképzelés volt. 10 kiváló élelmiszer a vérnyomás csökkentésére Magyar Mezőgazdaság 2023-02-04 06:11:00 Mezőgazdaság Gazdaság Élelmiszer Vérnyomás Agyvérzés Stroke A vérnyomás normális esetben a nap folyamán fokozatosan emelkedik és csökken, a krónikusan magas vérnyomás - más néven magas vérnyomás - növeli a szívbetegségek, a stroke és a vesebetegségek kockázatát. Annak érdekében, hogy csökkenstük ezeknek a kockázatát az alábbi élelmiszerek a segítségünkre lehetnek. Feloldanak egy súlyos tilalmat a Balatonnál Infostart 2023-02-04 06:00:00 Belföld Balaton Veszprém Vadászat Még egy vadászat lesz, utána mindenhol feloldják az ezzel összefüggő erdőlátogatási korlátozást Veszprém megyében. Nigéria nem elégszik meg a Mastercarddal és a Visa-val Fintech 2023-02-04 04:24:00 Modern Gazdaság Cégvilág Nigéria VISA Nigéria saját belföldi kártyarendszert indított. A programtól azt remélik, hogy valódi alternatívaként szolgálhat. Semmi nem lesz már olyan, mint volt – Viszlát nyugati autók, Magyarországon is beköszönt a kínai márkák kora vg.hu 2023-02-04 05:58:00 Belföld Kína Még az idén bejelenthetik az első ezer kilométer feletti hatótávval rendelkező elektromos személyautó tömeggyártását. A folyóparti város – folyó nélkül: rizst is termelnek és rajonganak a denevérekért. Ez Valencia Forbes 2023-02-04 06:06:09 Életmód Spanyolország Valencia CF Az erkélyek között kosarakat húznak át egymásnak az emberek, ha kell valami. Valencia nemcsak Calatrava miatt ér meg egy utazást. Már 300 ezer magyar tartja magát munkanélkülinek Portfolio 2023-02-04 06:10:00 Gazdaság KSH Munkanélküliség A tavalyi év utolsó negyedévében átlagosan 284 ezer volt az "önbesorolásos munkanélküliek" száma - válaszolta a KSH a Portfolio megkeresésére. Ha csak az év utolsó hónapját nézzük, akkor számításaink szerint több mint 300 ezren voltak azok, akik munkanélkülinek vallották magukat. Az elmúlt hónapokban a mélyponthoz képest emelkedni kezdett a hivatal Amikor egy álom megvalósul: elutaztam az Antarktiszra! Startlap Utazás 2023-02-04 05:57:45 Utazás Életmód Antarktisz Két évtizede őrizgette álmát, mire sok munka és kitartó küzdelem után eljutott a rajongott királypingvinekhez Kisgyörgy Éva. Az Antarktiszon és a környező szigeteken tett látogatást semmi máshoz nem fogható, katartikus élményként írja le. Vendégszerzőnk, Travellina úti beszámolója a háromhetes expedícióról és a világról, amit szigorúan csak fényes Neuer úgy érezte, mintha kitépték volna a szívét Rangadó 2023-02-04 03:59:59 Foci Nem érti, miért kellett kirúgni a kapusedző Toni Tapalovicot. Négy pontot gyűjtött idén a Fulham a Chelsea ellen Sportal 2023-02-03 23:00:00 Foci London Chelsea Premier League Fulham A Premier League 22. fordulójának nyitómérkőzése londoni derbivel indult a Stamford Bridge-en, ahol a Chelsea fogadta a Fulham gárdáját. A tél eddigi leghidegebb időszaka következik Kiderül 2023-02-04 05:05:49 Időjárás A következő napokban a sarkvidék térségéből hideg levegő áramlik fölénk. Erős éjszakai fagyokra és napközben is mindössze fagypont körüli hőmérsékletre számíthatunk.
Laura interviews Dr Emma Katz about her new book ‘Coercive Control in Children's and Mother's Lives.' Emma is an Associate Professor at Durham University and is the leading academic expert on how coercive control impacts on children and young people. Laura and Emma deconstruct and analyze numerous cases using a coercive control framework including Tausha Haight, her five children and mother Gail Earl who were brutally murdered by Michael Haight in Utah on January 4 2023, the murders of Claire and Charlotte Hart by Lance Hart in Lincolnshire 2016 and David Carrick, a Metropolitan Police officer who just pled guilty to 80 sexual assaults of women. Laura and Emma discuss what coercive control is, the link with femicide and familicide, why a coercive controller is not a good parent, what signs to look out for, the impact that a coercive controller has on a child's psychosocial and emotional development, the family court, why we must focus on perpetrators and hold them to account as well as the cost of not doing so. You will not want to miss this. #CoerciveControl #Children #DomesticAbuse #Misogyny #WomenMatter #UtahMurders #TaushaHaight #GailEarl #MacieHaight #BrileyHaight #SiennaHaight #AmmonHaight #GavinHaight #ClaireHart #CharlotteHart #VictimBlaming #LanguageMatters #DavidCarrick #PreventMurderInSlowMotionÔ #CrimeAnalyst #Expert #Analysis #TrueCrime #Podcast #Crime #MurderInSlowMotionÔ #CoerciveControl Clip https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qreA6ue0hk8 Emma's Book https://www.amazon.com/Coercive-Control-Childrens-INTERPERSONAL-VIOLENCE/dp/0190922214 Links to Emma's work https://dremmakatz.substack.com/archive https://www.amazon.com/Coercive-Control-Childrens-INTERPERSONAL-VIOLENCE/dp/0190922214 https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/car.2611 https://doi.org/10.1332/239868021X16285243258834 https://linktr.ee/dremmakatz Information about the DASH, Coercive Control and Train the Trainer Masterclasses with Laura https://shoutout.wix.com/so/eeOI-OpnS?languageTag=en Crime Analyst You Tube Channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCksfRSwfwFqUCjcxKYju6_Q Crime Analyst Merch https://crime-analyst.myshopify.com/ Leave a Review If you want to support my work and Crime Analyst and if you enjoyed this episode, please leave a 5-star review here: https://www.crime-analyst.com/reviews/new/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
One of the country's worst sex offenders plead guilty to 48 rapes of 12 women committed over almost 20 years while he was a police officer for the Metropolitan Police. Meanwhile, the force's commissioner revealed that two or three Metropolitan Police officers are facing criminal court appearances every week, warning that lifting the lid on abusive predators would be “necessary and painful”. So how did David Carrick go unpunished for so long and can the Met restore its reputation?This podcast was brought to you thanks to the support of readers of The Times and The Sunday Times. Subscribe today: thetimes.co.uk/storiesofourtimes.Guest: Fiona Hamilton, Crime and Security Editor, The Times.Host: Manveen Rana.Clips: Channel 4 News, Sky News, ITV News, CBS News, PA. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In a week where: New Zealand PM Jacinda Ardern announces her resignation. The BBC will keep black local radio stations, after u-turning on consultation proposals to axe the programmes from on-air schedules. Sajid Javid calls for patients to pay for GP and A&E visits. Happy Lunar New Year. The Doomsday Clock is moved to 90 seconds to midnight. In Society: (9:03) The police - specifically the Metropolitan Police - is back in the limelight after last week's David Carrick news. But of course, this isn't "One Bad Apple" as one ex-Met officer dishes.In Media: (22:57) British media is garbage, plain and simple. Reform is desperately needed. But will it ever happen? If so, what's the roadmap towards a better media?In Music: (42:02) The music industry is horrible in so many ways - but as with most industries - they eventually evolve. So what can the music industry do this year to evolve?Lastly, in TV: (55:02) Now and again, I'm discovering about shows from the past that would be great if made now. And now I'm discovering a show in the 70s called "Open Door" where regular people hosted it to voice their issues. Thank you for listening! If you want to contribute to the show, whether it be sending me questions or voicing your opinion in any way, peep the contact links below and I'll respond accordingly. Let me know "What's Good?"Rate & ReviewE-Mail: the5thelelmentpub@gmail.comTwitter: @The5thElementUKWebsite: https://medium.com/@the5thelementIntro Music - "Too Much" By VanillaInterlude - "Charismatic" By NappyHighChillHop MusicOther Podcasts Under The 5EPN:Diggin' In The Digits5EPN RadioBlack Women Watch...In Search of SauceThe Beauty Of Independence
On Monday 16 January, David Carrick, a Met police officer pled guilty to 49 counts of serious sexual offenses (and has been accused of 21 more). This week, we discuss him and his crimes that have made him one of the worst sexual offenders in modern history. Follow us on Instagram @conversationstodiefor
The C.O.W.S. (Context of White Supremacy) Radio Program welcomes the return of Nairobi Thompson live from the United Kingdom. A writer, poet and learning and development specialist, Ms. Thompson is a versatile communicator and facilitator with a rare ability to challenge and entertain professional and artistic audiences. She's been gracious enough to visit with us twice the last 2 months to discuss the re-release of her memoir, Almost British: Re-Visited, which gives detailed account of years of deliberate White Supremacist abuse from mostly White Women in British Prison service. Since our last exchange, the Metropolitan Police Department acknowledged that former officer David Carrick brandished a badge while being a serial rapist for years. The MET is reportedly investigating approximately 1,000 officers for possible sexual misconduct. We'll ask Ms. Thompson to relate this revelation to her experience in the prison service - where she was nicknamed Madam "Kinky Boots" by her White male co-workers. We also explore Ms. Thompson's candid admissions about how the torrent of Racist abuse compromised her mental health. Panic attacks, dizzy spells, nightmares... and thinking that she was just being paranoid trying to blame everything on Racism. We also analyze the 1993 White Supremacist killing of 17-year-old Stephen Lawrence as well as the 2000 prison death of Zahid Mubarek, a non-white (Pakistani) male who was killed by a White Supremacist cell mate. The Race Soldier planned his attack and compared himself to US serial killer Charles Manson. #StephenLawrence #TheCOWS13 INVEST in The COWS – http://paypal.me/TheCOWS Cash App: https://cash.app/$TheCOWS CALL IN NUMBER: 605.313.5164 CODE 564943#
Un jour d'été 2021 à Londres, une femme pousse la porte d'un commissariat pour porter plainte. Elle dit avoir subi un viol. Elle leur explique alors que son agresseur n'est autre qu'un de leur collègue, un policier du nom de David Carrick. Pour contraindre les femmes, David Carrick à un mode opératoire bien rodé. Il leur montre sa plaque et leur parle de ses relations soi-disant haut placés. Il les alcoolise puis les drogues.Il aura fallu octobre 2021 pour qu'une accusation de viol apparaisse. Sa hiérarchie continue pourtant à le faire travailler de manière restreinte. Mais Carrick craque : le 16 janvier, le violeur récidiviste a fini par reconnaitre face aux enquêteurs 24 viols et autres sévices.Estelle Ndjandjo vous en dit plus dans le Ailleurs dans le monde du jour… Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
This week Dylan along with Emma, Sam, Jared and Emma talk about the ongoing strike action that is impacting the UK with more and more sectors going out on strike, Westminster using section 35 to block the Scottish gender recognition act sparking another constitutional crisis, The met police officer David Carrick pleading guilty to 49 separate cases of sexual assault and the met police saying they are looking into over 1600 accusations and finally Suella Braverman refusing to apologies to a survivor of the the Holocaust for the language she has used. Please note all views expressed are the debaters own and do not reflect the views of East Norfolk as an institution. Edited by Dylan
Co-hosts Charlotte Henry and Emma Burnell discuss the various implications of the UK Government invoking Section 35 in response to Scotland's Gender Recognition Reform Bill. Then they return to London to look at yet more scandals in the Metropolitan Police and why politicians need to step and implement widespread reform of the force. Gender Recognition Reform (Scotland) Bill Elite Metropolitan police officer David Carrick revealed as serial rapist - Guardian Met Police officers investigated after strip-search of girl, 15 - BBC News Charlotte Henry on Twitter Charlotte Henry's newsletter, The Addition Emma Burnell on Twitter Emma Burnell's newsletter, Hard Thinking on the Soft Left House of Comments is a C.A.H Multimedia production in association with Political Human.
DBQs is our answer to Prime Minister Questions (PMQs) and we will be exploring the top news stories of the week every Friday.On this weeks episode of DBQ's, Dane and Howard discuss all the awful crimes of David Carrick within the Metropolitan police and Dane tells an awful story of what happened when he was questioned by the police. You can now support us on Patreon for ad free and video content at https://www.patreon.com/dbqepodcastPlease rate and review us on Apple Podcasts and beyond. #QuestionEverything @DBQEPodcastDane Baptiste Questions Everything, this has been an Insanity Podcasts production.Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/danebaptistequestionseverything. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
"I'm sick of top cops, Chief Superintendents, commissions standing up and saying they're sorry for 'this one'!" David Carrick has been sacked from the Met Police for gross misconduct after he admitted 49 charges, including 24 counts of rape against 12 women over an 18-year period. Kevin O'Sullivan fumes at the Metropolitan Police for acting like apologising is "a hobby" to them. #talktv --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/talktv/support
Journalist and broadcaster Adam Boulton is the guest host of this week's News Meeting. He's joined by Tortoise editors Liz Moseley, Alexi Mostrous and Dave Taylor.Tortoise is a newsroom devoted to slow journalism.For early access and ad-free listening subscribe to Tortoise+ on Apple Podcasts or join Tortoise for £60 a year.As a member you'll also get our newsletters and tickets to live events. Just go to tortoisemedia.com/slowdown.If you'd like to further support slow journalism and help us build a different kind of newsroom, do consider donating to Tortoise at tortoisemedia.com/support-us. Your contributions allow us to investigate, campaign and explore, and to build a newsroom that is responsible and sustainable. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The conviction this week of one of Britain's worst sex offenders in recent history was accompanied by a staggering revelation: he was a serving police officer. Emine Sinmaz and Vikram Dodd report. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/infocus
Den britiske betjent David Carrick begik, gennem mere end to årtier, vold og voldtægter mod talrige kvinder. Han udnyttede sine ofre og tvang dem til at adlyde ordrer. Carricks sag er bemærkelsesværdig, men står ikke alene, og derfor vil Londons politi nu undersøge flere end 800 af sine ansatte.Medvirkende: Mette Dahlgaard, 24syvs korrespondent i Storbritannien. Vært: David Trads.
On this Wednesday episode of THE POLITICRAT daily podcast: Omar Moore on a UK system that allows serial rapists to violate women while those rapists are police officers. ADVISORY: Contains graphic, offensive content that will be triggering for some. January 18, 2023. The new newsletter is here! Subscribe for free: https://politicrat.substack.com. Social media: Mastodon - https://mas.to/@popcornreel Post: https://post.news/popcornreel Twitter: https://twitter.com/popcornreel Black Voters Matter: https://blackvotersmatterfund.org. Vote 411: https://vote411.org. The AUTONOMY t-shirt series—buy yours here: https://bit.ly/3yD89AL Planned Parenthood: https://plannedparenthood.org Register to vote NOW: https://vote.org The ENOUGH/END GUN VIOLENCE t-shirts on sale here: https://bit.ly/3zsVDFU Donate to the Man Up Organization: https://manupinc.org FREE: SUBSCRIBE NOW TO THE BRAND NEW POLITICRAT DAILY PODCAST NEWSLETTER!! Extra content, audio, analysis, exclusive essays for subscribers only, plus special offers and discounts on merchandise at The Politicrat Daily Podcast online store. Something new and informative EVERY DAY!! Subscribe FREE at https://politicrat.substack.com Buy podcast merchandise (all designed by Omar Moore) and lots more at The Politicrat Daily Podcast Store: https://the-politicrat.myshopify.com The Politicrat YouTube page: bit.ly/3bfWk6V The Politicrat Facebook page: bit.ly/3bU1O7c The Politicrat blog: https://politicrat.politics.blog Join Omar on Fanbase NOW! Download the Fanbase social media app today. PLEASE SUBSCRIBE to this to this podcast! Follow/tweet Omar at: https://twitter.com/thepopcornreel.
On Monday, Metropolitan police officer David Carrick pleaded guilty to 49 offences including rape and sexual assault. Over 20 years, the Met had nine opportunities to stop him. Why didn't they?Tortoise is a news start-up devoted to slow journalism. We take our time to tell stories that really matter. If you want more slow and considered journalism, you can become a member of Tortoise to get access to more of our stories, contribute to our journalism and join exclusive events.Just go to tortoisemedia.com/friend and use the code Tomini50 to get a year's digital membership for £50. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
On another exciting edition of The Express Truth Show, The dynamic duo breakdown the recent news of former metropolitan police officer David Carrick who has been arrested after admitting to have committed 49 sexual offences over the last decade. Then the team touches on the recent Wakey Wines controversy, surrounding the reselling of viral sports drink Prime. To round off the greatest show on earth Mark and Steven discuss the hype surrounding love island and the backlash over certain preferences on the show. Visit our website and sign up to our mailing list so that you never miss an Express Truth upload. https://www.expresstruthshow.com
In a week where: Dozens of people killed after a plane with 72 people on board crashes near an airport in central Nepal. Distant cousin of Boris Johnson acted as credit guarantor while in No 10. Voters in May's local elections will be required to show photo ID before casting their ballot. UK Police are to be given the power to shut down protests before any disruption begins. Met Police sack David Carrick after admitting to dozens of rape & sexual offences across two decades. In History: (8:52) Did you know that Britain executed or planned 42 coups since World War 2? Well, you do now.In the first of two Film segments: (24:10) The USC Annenberg Inclusion Institute are back again with a fresh report on race/ethnicity & gender diversity amongst directors and... It's not too great.In the 2nd Film segment: (37:57) We have seen AI threaten Graphic Designers and artists, but with the advent of ChatGPT, can AI threaten storytellers?Lastly, in Life: (54:25) We all participate in consumerism, but something we can't grasp as a collective is the dip in quality of even small things like underwear. Is there any ability to call it out?Thank you for listening! If you want to contribute to the show, whether it be sending me questions or voicing your opinion in any way, peep the contact links below and I'll respond accordingly. Let me know "What's Good?"Rate & ReviewE-Mail: the5thelelmentpub@gmail.comTwitter: @The5thElementUKWebsite: https://medium.com/@the5thelementIntro Music - "Too Much" By VanillaInterlude - "Charismatic" By NappyHighChillHop MusicOther Podcasts Under The 5EPN:Diggin' In The Digits5EPN RadioBlack Women Watch...In Search of SauceThe Beauty Of Independence
(Photo Amy Ní Fhearraigh by Kip Carroll) Rosemary Kennedy has often been referred to as the "missing Kennedy". She was the sister of former US President John F. Kennedy and despite been part of one of the most famous families in American politics, very little was known about Rosemary. Until recently. Her story has been brought to life by the Irish National Opera in Least Like the Other – Searching for Rosemary Kennedy at the Royal Opera House. Director Netia Jones and soprano Amy Ní Fhearraigh join Jessica Creighton to discuss the production and its themes. The First Lady of Ukraine, Olena Zelenska, told CNN news that it is the women in Ukraine who are bearing the brunt of the war, caring for their children and older relatives, and keeping things going. Someone who knows this only too well is Wendy Warrington, an NHS nurse and midwife who has been going out to give medical help and support to women and children in Ukraine since March last year. She joins Jessica to talk about the situations that she sees every day, and how women really are at the heart of it all. The Queen of Reinvention, Madonna, has announced her first ever greatest hits tour to mark 40 years since her breakout single, Holiday. She'll be playing 35 dates around the world. Performing hits from her 1983 self-titled debut album to 2019's Madame X. Jess dicusses her influence with Fiona Sturges, Arts writer for The Guardian and the Financial Times. Yesterday serial rapist David Carrick was formally dismissed by the Metropolitan Police. He pleaded guilty to 24 rapes and multiple sexual offences. Sir Mark Rowley, the Met Commissioner, has apologised to his victims for the force's failings. The force is currently investigating 1,000 sexual and domestic abuse claims involving about 800 of its officers. For survivors hearing about these cases in the news can be very difficult. Jess speaks to Nicola Brookes who was groomed by a police officer. The independent office of Police conduct said he “knowingly targeted and exploited” her. During the Covid 19 lockdown, the writer Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett decided - like many of us - to get a pet. She acquired Mackerel, a kitten, whose antics over one year helped her examine her desire and fears about becoming a mother and inspired her to write her latest book ‘The Year of the Cat'. Jessica Creighton asks Rhiannon about cat ladies and the extraordinary cat characters of her childhood, and the deeper themes of her book - anxiety and recovery from trauma, family love and why she used to say, “I'm not sure I want children.” Presented by Jessica Creighton Producer: Louise Corley Editor: Beverley Purcell
Over an 18-year period, former Metropolitan Police firearms officer David Carrick sexually assaulted and raped at least 12 women. The force has apologised to victims after it emerged Carrick had come to the attention of police on nine separate occasions, but no action had been taken. On the Sky News Daily, Niall Paterson gets more on the Met's response from Sky's crime correspondent Martin Brunt. Former Met officer Graham Wettone explains how complains against officers are dealt with, and Harriet Wistrich, director of the Centre for Women's Justice, explains why she believes those investigating police culture need to be given more power to uncover the truth. Podcast producer: Rosie Gillott Interviews producer: Tamara Bungaroo Valdes Podcast promotions producer: David Chipakupaku Editor: Philly Beaumont
Today on The Day After, (01:59) Headlines: Rishi Sunak blocks Scotland's gender recognition legislation, Schools told to use volunteers and remote working to combat teacher strikes (05:49) What You Saying? The UK is the most desegregated it has ever been - Is this a good thing? (40:40) Headlines: Met Police officer David Carrick admits to being a serial rapist, Worshippers killed as bomb detonates in Church in DRC (01:02:48) Word on Road: Love Island beef, Summer STILL talking about Indiyah's boyfriend, Viewers contact Ofcom over Ekin Su's sexy dancing on ice (01:10:55) Headlines: Italy's most wanted man Mafia Boss Matteo Messina Denaro arrested, Harry and Meghan reject Jeremy Clarkson's apology (01:15:53) The Reaction: Klopp says he has no desire to leave Liverpool unless told to, Arsenal express desire to sign Declan Rice in the summer, Borussia Dortmund to begin talks with Jude Bellingham, Eubank Jr says Benn has lost his credibility (01:24:53) Done Out 'Ere: (01:29:46) Outro --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thedayaftertnb/message
Writer and commentator Candice Holdsworth kicks off todays show to discuss teachers' vote to strike for seven days in February and March and how that will affect parents and students across the country, and why Rishi Sunak has blocked Nicola Sturgeon's gender reforms. Former Met Police Superintendent Nusrit Mehtab joins shortly after to discuss the multiple chances the Met Police missed to stop rapist David Carrick in his tracks and how the nation is losing faith in the police force. Executive head at St Thomas the Apostle college and consultative head at Sacred heart school Serge Cefai returns to the Independent Republic to further discuss his dismay at the recent teachers strike announcement. Secretary of State for Work and Pensions Mel Stride MP joins Mike to discuss the latest ONS labour market statistics as UK pay surges 6.4 percent but real wages have dropped to 2.6 percent. Author Laura Dodsworth returns to the Independent Republic for her weekly lowdown and takedown of wokery and London Assembly Member for Bexley and Bromley and the deputy leader of the GLA Conservatives Peter Fortune closes the show to discuss how Sadiq Khan has made ‘false and dishonest' statements to the London Assembly and manipulated ULEZ results. All that and so much more, so tune in! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Elizabeth McGovern was Oscar nominated for her portrayal of Evelyn Nesbit in Ragtime and, by the age of 21, had played leading roles in Once Upon A Time In America followed by The Handmaid's Tale and The Wings of the Dove. She is probably best known though for playing Cora Crawley, Countess of Grantham in Downton Abbey. She is now on stage starring in Edward Albee's Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? The actress and musician joins Jessica to discuss her varied career so far and what drew her to the role of Martha. A misconduct hearing today will formally dismiss David Carrick from the Metropolitan Police, after he admitted twenty-four counts of rape and multiple sexual assaults. Carrick was finally stopped when one woman reported him in October 2021. Sir Mark Rowley, the Met Commissioner, has apologised to Carrick's victims, and says the force is currently also investigating 1,000 sexual and domestic abuse claims involving about 800 of its officers. Jessica is joined to discuss by Shabnam Chaudhri, who served as an officer in the Met for 30 years. Tomorrow will see the start of a second round of strikes by the Royal College of Nursing. The RCN says that this will be the biggest walkout so far, affecting 55 trusts in England - that's 11 more than last month. They are calling for a pay rise of 5% above inflation, with inflation currently sitting at 14%. The government says the demands are unaffordable and pay rises were decided by independent pay review bodies. NHS staff in England and Wales - including nurses - have already received an average increase of 4.75%. The union says that there will be a further two strikes in February in England and Wales, unless there is movement on pay by the end of this month. Pat Cullen is the General Secretary and Chief Executive of the Royal College of Nursing, and joins Jessica. Today marks the 250th anniversary of the UK in the Antarctic following the first voyage of James Cook in 1773. In contrast to Cook's all-male crew in the 18th century, the UK's current polar leadership includes several women. What is it like to be a female leader in this field? Jessica Creighton is joined by Jane Rumble, the Head of Polar Regions Department at the UK Foreign Office, Professor Dame Jane Francis, the Director of the British Antarctic Survey and Captain Milly Ingham, the Captain of HMS Protector, The Royal Navy's ice patrol ship to find out. One of literary history's favourite characters – Alison the Wife of Bath – from Chaucer's Canterbury Tales is re-examined in a new book by Professor Marion Turner from Oxford University. Marion tells Jessica how the lusty life story of the medieval Alison who married five times has inspired other writers from Shakespeare to Zadie Smith.
London's Met Police is investigating 1,000 sexual and domestic abuse claims involving about 800 of its officers. This comes after Met officer David Carrick pleaded guilty to 49 charges, including dozens of rape and sexual offences. Patsy Stevenson, a women's rights activist based in the UK, is appalled with how often police officers are abusing their power. She spoke to Charlotte Cook.
Metropolitan Police officer, David Carrick, is facing life in prison after admitting a horrific campaign of rape and abuse against women across a period of around 18 years. The Evening Standard's court correspondent Tristan Kirk discusses the case, its impact and whether or not trust can be built back by police.If you're affected by any issues raised in this podcast you can contact Rape Crisis on 0808 500 2222 or via their website: https://rapecrisis.org.uk/get-help/want-to-talk/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
David Carrick, who served as an armed officer, has admitted dozens of rape and sexual offences against 12 women.