Showing posts with label uk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label uk. Show all posts

Wednesday, 13 August 2025

Keir what happened?

Oh shit, do you  have to.


Chapter 1: The Empire Strikes Out

Once upon a time, in a land of lukewarm tea and passive-aggressive politeness, there stood an empire. Not the kind with elephants and jewels, mind you—this one had Greggs, Wetherspoons, and a deep suspicion of metric units. It was called Britain, and it was very proud of having invented trains, apologies, and the concept of queueing.

But something happened. Somewhere between the Queen’s corgis and Nigel Farage’s pub crawl through history, the empire began to unravel—not with a bang, but with a referendum.

The Brexit Chronicles

Brexit was the national equivalent of shouting “I’m leaving!” and then standing awkwardly in the doorway for eight years. It was a movement powered by nostalgia, misinformation, and a deep yearning for a time when maps were pink and foreigners were only in postcards.

The campaign was led by men who looked like they’d been rejected from a casting call for Downton Abbey. They promised sovereignty, control, and cheaper fish. What they delivered was a customs declaration form for every sandwich crossing the Channel.

The Intellectual Decline

Once, Britain gave the world Shakespeare, Newton, and the Magna Carta. Now, it gives the world Piers Morgan, Love Island, and a Prime Minister who once hid in a fridge to avoid questions. The intellectual elite have been replaced by the “I read a meme once” brigade.

Universities, once the bastions of thought, now host debates on whether facts are offensive. The arts are underfunded, the libraries are closing, and the national curriculum includes a module on “How to Spot Woke.”

Churchill’s Ghost at Pret

In this chapter’s most haunting image, the ghost of Winston Churchill floats through a Pret A Manger, muttering about sovereignty while eyeing the vegan wrap. He’s confused. He’s cold. He’s wondering why the country that once stood alone against fascism now can’t decide if it wants to be alone at all.

He tries to order tea. It comes in a compostable cup with oat milk. He weeps.

there’s still plenty of absurdity to ladle onto the plate.

Chapter 1 (Continued): The Empire Strikes Out

The Parliament of Peculiarity

Westminster, once the cradle of democracy, now resembles a reality show set. MPs enter stage left, armed with soundbites and suspicious expense claims. The Speaker of the House doubles as a referee in a shouting match between people who’ve never read the bill they’re debating.

The opposition benches are filled with former revolutionaries who now wear suits and say things like “fiscal responsibility” with a straight face. The government benches are occupied by people who believe the solution to every problem is either tax cuts or blaming the French.

The Return of the Horsehair Wig

In a desperate attempt to restore dignity, one MP proposes bringing back horsehair wigs. The motion passes unanimously, mostly because no one was paying attention. For a brief moment, Britain looks like a courtroom drama directed by Monty Python.

The wigs do nothing to improve policy, but they do make Question Time more visually compelling.

The Wizard of Woke

A new cabinet position is created: Minister for Cultural Bewilderment. Their job is to appear on morning television and explain why statues are angry, why pronouns are terrifying, and why the youth are dancing on TikTok instead of joining the Territorial Army.

The minister wears a cloak and carries a wand made of Daily Mail headlines. They cast spells like Confundus Inclusivity and Expelliarmus Empathy.

The Great Cod Crisis

Post-Brexit, Britain’s fishing industry becomes a national obsession. Cod is elevated to sacred status. A statue of a haddock is erected in Hull. The Prime Minister declares “Fish are our future” during a speech that was meant to be about climate change.

Meanwhile, the EU retaliates by renaming all British fish “Freedom Swimmers” and banning them from bouillabaisse.

Politics & Keir Starmer

  • Keir Starmer became UK Prime Minister on 5 July 2024. His background includes human rights law and serving as Director of Public Prosecutions.

  • Articles explore his leadership challenges, especially around Gaza, civil service reform, and UK–US relations.

  • There's commentary on how Labour under Starmer is reshaping Britain to be more European in its policies.

Global Affairs

  • Concerns about Donald Trump’s stance on Ukraine and how Europe might respond.

  • Discussions on Palestinian statehood, with Starmer urged to leverage goodwill with Trump.

Culture & Commentary

  • Pieces like “The revolution will be TikTokked” and “How Britain lost the status game” reflect on media strategy and national identity.

  • Tom Nicholas’s clip titled The Rise (and Fall?) of Keir Starmer hints at a critical look at Starmer’s trajectory, possibly expanding into a full video.

Community Reactions

  • Comments range from nostalgic mentions of Andy Burnham to sharp critiques of Starmer’s transformation over the years.

  • There's a mix of disillusionment and curiosity about Labour’s future direction.

    Chaper 8 The Great Biscuit Referendum

    A nationwide vote is held:

    • Option A: Keep the Empire Biscuit as-is.

    • Option B: Rename it “Global Britain Biscuit.”

    • Option C: Replace it with a protein bar and move on.

    Turnout is high. Confusion is higher. Scotland votes overwhelmingly for Option D: “Leave us out of this.”

    Biscuit Diplomacy

    Foreign leaders weigh in:

    • France calls it “culinary colonialism.”

    • The US offers to buy the recipe and rebrand it as “Freedom Cookie.”

    • Australia sends Tim Tams in solidarity.

    Keir Starmer, caught mid-bite during a press conference, declares, “We must respect the biscuit’s sovereignty.” His approval rating spikes briefly before plummeting when it’s revealed he prefers digestives.

    Cultural Fallout

    The Empire Biscuit becomes a symbol of resistance, nostalgia, and mild indigestion. Statues are erected. Schoolchildren are taught its history. A Netflix series is commissioned: Empire: Crumbs of Glory.

    Churchill’s ghost returns, this time in a Costa, whispering, “This is not what I meant by victory.”

    Absolutely glorious—The Queue Awakens is the perfect next chapter in your satirical epic. It’s quintessentially British, deeply symbolic, and ripe for absurdity. Let’s dive in:

    Chapter 10 The Queue Awakens

    In a land where time is measured in tea breaks and patience is a national sport, something stirs. It begins with a single pensioner outside a post office. Within hours, the queue stretches across counties, winding past Greggs, through B&Q, and into the annals of history.

    No one knows what they’re queuing for. But that’s not the point.

    The Sacred Art of Queueing

    Sociologists call it “collective waiting.” Politicians call it “grassroots engagement.” The Daily Mail calls it “proof Britain still has backbone.”

    The queue becomes a pilgrimage. People bring folding chairs, flasks, and copies of The Lady. A man in Crocs claims to have seen the end of the queue and describes it as “spiritual.”

    Queue Hierarchy & Etiquette

    A complex social order emerges:

    • Queue Elders: Those who’ve been waiting since Thatcher.

    • Queue Jumpers: Publicly shamed and sent to Coventry.

    • Queue Philosophers: Offer existential commentary like “Are we all just waiting for something?”

    The government issues Queue Passports. The opposition demands Queue Equality. A think tank proposes a Queue Tax to fund NHS tea trolleys.

    Political Exploitation

    Keir Starmer visits the queue, shaking hands and asking, “What are we waiting for?” No one knows, but his sincerity earns him a bump in the polls.

    Rishi Sunak tries to skip the queue, citing “executive privilege.” He’s booed and forced to do a public apology in a Hi-Vis vest.

    Nigel Farage sets up a pop-up pub halfway down the queue, selling warm lager and Brexit memorabilia.

    The Queue Goes Global

    Inspired by Britain’s queue, other nations follow suit:

    • Germany forms an “Efficiency Queue” with barcodes and time slots.

    • France refuses to queue, citing existential ennui.

    • The US tries to monetize the queue with VIP access and queue NFTs.

    The UN declares the British Queue a World Heritage Site.

    The Final Revelation

    After 73 days, the front of the queue is reached. It leads to a single door marked “Closed for Renovation.” The crowd sighs, nods, and begins forming a new queue outside a nearby Pret.

    Churchill’s ghost appears once more, salutes the queue, and vanishes into a compost bin.

    Would you like to follow this with Attack of the Spin Doctors, The Phantom Mandate, or maybe A New Hopelessness? Your satirical universe is building beautifully—let’s keep the absurdity flowing.

    Chapter 11: Revenge of the Referendum

    It began, as all great British disasters do, with a panel show. A celebrity chef, a retired footballer, and a man who once ran for office on a platform of “Bring Back Ceefax” all agreed: the people must vote again. On what? No one was sure. But the word “referendum” was uttered, and the nation shuddered.

    The Referendum Reawakens

    The government, desperate to appear decisive, announces a new referendum:

    • Question: “Should Britain continue to exist in its current form?”

    • Options: Yes / No / Maybe / Ask the French

    Polling stations are set up in Lidl car parks. Ballots are printed on recycled copies of The Sun. Voters are given a complimentary Empire Biscuit and a pamphlet titled Democracy: A User’s Guide (Now With Fewer Facts).

    Campaigns of Chaos

    Two sides emerge:

    • Team Nostalgia: Led by a coalition of retired colonels, Bake Off contestants, and Jacob Rees-Mogg’s monocle. Their slogan: “Make Britain Pink Again.”

    • Team Ambiguity: A loose alliance of TikTok influencers, climate activists, and Keir Starmer’s facial expressions. Their slogan: “It’s Complicated.”

    Debates are held in bingo halls and escape rooms. One televised debate ends with a contestant shouting, “I just wanted cheaper fish!”

    The Referendum Fallout

    The vote is split:

    • 32% Yes

    • 31% No

    • 28% Maybe

    • 9% Accidentally voted for Strictly Come Dancing

    The result is declared “emotionally binding but legally confusing.” Parliament enters a stat

    Media Mayhem

    • The BBC introduces a new show: Spin or Sin, where politicians defend their latest U-turns to a panel of Bake Off judges.

    • GB News merges with QVC, selling commemorative mugs featuring Nigel Farage’s most controversial facial expressions.

    • The Guardian publishes a 12-part exposé titled Britain: A Nation of Shrugging.

    International Reactions

    • Canada sends therapists.

    • India offers to help rebrand the monarchy as “Royal Influencers.”

    • China livestreams British politics as a reality show called Tea & Turmoil.

    The Final Spin

    A national emergency is declared when the public realizes no one knows what the government actually stands for. A summit is held in Blackpool. The Spin Doctors unveil their final masterpiece: a 400-page document titled Britain: A Journey of Maybe.

    It’s printed entirely in Comic Sans.

    Churchill’s ghost, now wearing Beats headphones, mutters, “At least the queues made sense.”

  • Ending years of existential paralysis. The Speaker resigns to become a mindfulness coach. The Queen’s corgis issue a joint statement: “We’re tired.”

Tuesday, 22 July 2025

A Sonnet to Tea, the Elixir of the Isles



O modest leaf, thou bearer of delight, Drawn from the East, yet made a Briton’s crown. At break of day, or in the waning night, Thy amber draught doth calm the spirit down.

In china cup or stout ceramic urn, Thou steeps in grace, as tempests rage or rest. Though coffee bold may cause the hearts to churn, Thou holds it still, and bids the blood flow best.

A scone beside, or rain upon the pane, Thy steam doth rise with whispers old and wise. When sorrows weigh or joy doth feel too plain, Thy warmth restores the stars to darkened skies.

So brew thee now, thou leaf of legacy— And let thy solace steep eternally.

Wouldst thou care for one in praise of biscuits next? Or shall we delve into the politics of the kettle vs. the microwave—an epic worthy of Homer’s quill! ?

Sonnet to the biscuit

Thou takest dunking like a knight the plunge, Into the steaming depths of earl grey tides. And though thou break’st, we mourn not the expunge— For crumbs, like dreams, bring joy that still abides.

So let us eat, and in thy praises sing, O biscuit bold—thou art a tasty king.

William Shakespeare Health

 A Sonnet Upon the Curious Pull of Albion’s Physick  


When age doth creep with gentle step and sigh, And health, once hale, begins its slow decline, What curious force impels the soul to fly From sunlit lands to Albion's drear design?

Though France hath wine and vestments fine arrayed, Its hotels grand, its clime a lover’s dream, The heart, betwixt discomfort and dismay'd, Still turns to where stout flows in somber stream.

Lo! The National Health, by Queen decreed, Doth stand—a bulwark 'gainst decay and strife. Though taxed and strained by strangers’ urgent need, It guards the native's pulse and waning life.

Yet must we ask—shall foreign feet, untried, Reap what the Briton laboured to provide?

Thursday, 17 July 2025

Keir Starmer Responds to the Air Tax Controversy



In a hastily arranged press conference outside Number 10, Prime Minister Keir Starmer addressed growing public bewilderment over Chancellor Rachel Reeves’ proposed Air Tax initiative.

“Let me be absolutely clear,” Starmer began, inhaling deeply before continuing. “Breathing is a fundamental right—but rights come with responsibilities. And sometimes, those responsibilities come with a small, adjustable fee.”

Pressed on whether he supported taxing oxygen intake via personal AirMetres™, Starmer dodged specifics but emphasized fiscal discipline:

“We remain committed to our manifesto pledges. We will not raise income tax, national insurance, or VAT for working people. But we never said anything about atmospheric consumption.”

When asked about the crackdown on bad jokes, Starmer was more direct:

“I’ve heard the one about the chicken crossing the road. It’s time we moved on.”

He refused to comment on the rumored exemption for Erics, stating only that “personal grievances should never shape national policy, unless they’re really funny.”

📉 Political Fallout

  • Opposition MPs have demanded a full audit of the AirMetre procurement process.

  • The Green Party has expressed cautious optimism, noting that “less breathing might reduce carbon emissions.”

  • Meanwhile, Reform UK has launched a counter-campaign: “Let Britain Breathe.”

Would you like a mock editorial from The Daily Gasp or a parody interview with an outraged Eric? I’ve got plenty of satirical oxygen left in the tank. 

Rachel Reeves Declares: The Air Will No Longer Be Free

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE  


London, UK – 17 July 2025 – Amidst growing concerns over a £22 billion deficit in the UK economy, Chancellor Rachel Reeves has unveiled a bold and unconventional fiscal policy: taxing the very air we breathe.

After dismissing an early proposal to impose a windfall tax on individuals named Eric—a personal vendetta stemming from a particularly unpleasant encounter with a Royal Navy officer a decade ago—Reeves took inspiration from humanity’s most taken-for-granted resource: oxygen.

“People go around inhaling like they own the atmosphere,” Reeves reportedly said. “It’s a government excuse for taxes.

Wednesday, 16 July 2025

Temperatures set to hit 30C

 30oC nice        


Temperatures set to hit 30C in parts of UK this week

I must be spending too much time Africa and India. A 40C is regarded as quite warm. We first need a source of carbon 0 electricity. Will you fire up my old 30 x 1.5 cm Steam plasma. Practically confirmed to give off a constant one megawatt of carbon 0 heat.

1 H2O+PL → 2(E2+L+X-ray) We refer the high voltage electronic travel for the action light starter. Can I get this team from a boiling pan or paint stripper.

The first one that ferns irregular water into lots of heat with a little light on potentially low far X rays. We draw in air from the environment and fast it through a 65 kilowatts thermoelectric generator. We get a 65 kilowatts of carbon 03 phase means electricity. Now can we get on!

You pressurise the regular air from one to two atmospheres. And the air heats up to 300 degrees C. Light the valve in your bicycle pump Eats up as you pressurise the air.

So we get all that lovely hot air which we have three commercial source thermoelectric generator. That turns 13% of that heat into electricity. Same idea as in Paragraph 1.

And reduct that air to a large lake or the earthen sea. How in the air emerges from the sea it is at 10oC. And this is where the magic of first year undergraduate engineering comes in. As we vent the fresh air the air shoots down to minus 250oC, And yes there are some efficiency considerations to factor in - I have allowed 3oC for mechanical inefficiency.

Up an aluminium Helix. This is the 18th century science of the Carnot heat pump. Which is how your fridge and freezer in your kitchen produces cold from the warmth of the kitchen air .

So we have generated 65 kilowatts of electrical power. It'll cool the neighbourhood! But really 30 degrees C in the UK is bordering hot. Virtually in Manchester the temperature today is 19oC. 26oC In the Southeast. This is as hot as the English summit gets. 30oC Yes please .

6 months until we all the latest snowfall .


Saturday, 12 July 2025

Manchester only warm

warm but wet

I'm just 21st of July looks to be the hottest day of the summer. 25oC During the daytime. Which will also see thunderstorms! Pretty sure that falls through the definition of a heat wave. One warm day in the summer.

Friday, 11 July 2025

Labour screws the UK big time

 

Rachel Reeves the UK terminator

゚ヌᄃ Here's a snapshot of the UK's economic pulse for the week ending 6 July 2025:

Growth & GDP

  • Q1 GDP growth held steady at 0.7%, making the UK the fastest-growing G7 economy for that quarter.

  • However, forecasts suggest slower growth ahead, with the Bank of England expecting Q2 GDP to rise just 0.25%, slightly above previous estimates.

Labour Market & Spending

  • The labour market is showing signs of weakening, though wage growth is below Bank of England projections, and core services inflation is easing.

  • Consumer spending is up: debit card transactions rose across all age groups, with a 14% year-on-year increase.

  • Yet, 26% of adults say they couldn’t afford an unexpected £850 expense, the highest rate since September 2024.

Housing & Energy

  • Mortgage approvals increased in May, with remortgaging hitting its highest level since Feb 2024.

  • Energy prices fluctuated: gas prices fell 5%, while electricity prices surged 42% week-on-week.

Business & Investment

  • Business sentiment is cautiously optimistic, with some indicators pointing to improving conditions.

  • The government is expected to announce tax hikes in the Autumn Budget to address fiscal shortfalls, possibly extending freezes on personal tax thresholds.

If you’d like a deeper dive into any of these areas—housing, inflation, or what’s next for interest rates—I’m ready to unpack it with you. Data Microsoft Copilot - Or as we call him Bert IT

📉 Slower Growth Ahead

  • Q1 GDP growth at 0.7% was the best in the G7, but Q2 is forecasted to slow to 0.25%, suggesting momentum is fading.
  • That’s not catastrophic, but it does mean the government will need to work harder to sustain growth.

💼 Labour Market & Spending

  • Wage growth is lagging, and inflation in core services is easing—good for prices, but not great for paychecks.
  • Consumer spending is up, especially via debit cards, but 26% of adults can’t afford a surprise £850 expense, which signals financial fragility.

🏠 Housing & ⚡ Energy

  • Mortgage activity is rising, especially remortgaging, which could reflect people trying to lock in better rates.
  • Gas prices dropped 5%, but electricity prices spiked 42% in one week, which is a huge hit for households.

📊 Business & Investment

  • Sentiment is “cautiously optimistic,” but tax hikes and frozen thresholds are looming in the Autumn Budget.
  • That could dampen investment and consumer confidence if not handled carefully.

🧠 So Did Labour “Screw the UK”?

That’s a strong claim—and one that’s being debated across the political spectrum. Some critics argue Labour’s benefit reforms and tax plans are hurting vulnerable groups. Others point to achievements like raising the minimum wage and stabilizing interest rates. It’s a mixed bag, and whether you see it as a “screw-up” or a tough balancing act depends on your lens.

If you want, I can help you explore:

  • How Labour’s welfare reforms are affecting different groups
  • What the Autumn Budget might mean for your finances
  • Whether the UK’s current trajectory is sustainable

Rachel Reeves bad chancellor

She has killed the UK

'Ticking tax timebomb' warning as UK economy shrinks 0.1% in May in fresh blow to Rachel Reeves

The Levo economic model fighted in continuous UK economic growth. Already the auto fudge it was going to have to inflict tax rises on the UK population. And now the UK economy last month shrank b y 1%.

This is going to leave a 4 figure budget deficit than the expected 22 billion. Tony Blair won 3 successive UK elections, You thought Jonathan Schiff and did he gotten around to those the next election inevitably .

Is it any surprise Rachel Reeves was in tears at the last UK PM question Question Time. Kia Sommer has declared his support for the troubled doomed Chancellor.

As he himself is dooned. And looking for an exit strategy like ambassador to the UN.

What is Labour’s biggest headache this week? You might think the answer is the world’s richest man taking digital potshots at Keir Starmer. But there’s an alternative contender: the bond markets.

Yesterday’s debt auction saw the government pay interest of 5.2 per cent on 30-year bonds – the highest level since May 1998. That reflects a number of factors: stubbornly high inflation (which has slowed interest rate cuts), weak UK economic growth, and anxieties over a second Donald Trump presidency.

The primary cause is less important than the effect: higher debt interest costs (which already stood at 3.9 per cent of GDP). The more Rachel Reeves spends on servicing government borrowing the less she has for everything else. That’s a serious problem when departments are already competing for scarce resources.

On 26 March, Reeves will deliver her Spring Statement to the House of Commons. The risk is that the accompanying forecast from the Office for Budget Responsibility will show that she is on the verge of breaking her fiscal rules (Capital Economics estimates that the Chancellor has already lost £8.9bn of her £9.9bn “headroom”).

Put this threat to the Treasury and they are clear that Reeves’ fiscal rules are “non-negotiable” and that she does not intend to repeat the tax rises seen in last year’s Budget. That leaves one alternative: new spending cuts (or “rooting out waste in public spending” as a Treasury spokesperson puts it).

Even before recent events, the fiscal climate was already nightmarish for Reeves. Remember that the Budget showed spending on unprotected departments – justice, transport, environment, local government and others – falling by 1.3 per cent in real terms from April 2026 onwards (a matter of deep anxiety among cabinet ministers).

The hope inside No 11 was that better-than-expected growth might ease the fiscal arithmetic but so far the reverse has proved the case. And even as spending capacity shrinks, spending demands are growing.

Wednesday, 9 July 2025

Cool the UK

Fix UK weather

First of all we need a sauce a carbon free electricity. Which is so not a problem! I have been looking at this science since 2020. I have got here my first response from the climate change idiots.

We have a steam plasma. My friend validated that 30x1.5cm Non presurized steam flosser Would raise a constant one megawatt of covers your heat. We utilise a Comanche sauce signify killed thermoelectric generator, To turn this into 65 kilowatts of through phase maze AC current.

So we drive a chain of funds along a river or the sea. And to double the pressure on the dry air. We don't thought this tale into a stainless steel Helix in the sea of river water.

The air heats Up according to the absolute temperature! It is Celsius plus 273. So 10 degrees C because 273 degrees Kelvin. The pressure multiplied by temperature gives us the gas constant.

So if we halve the pressure of the gas with little vacuum pump, The absolute temperature Sheets up to 556o . Back in the real world this gives us mad hot Air and 460oC. We've thought this out and allow the air to issue from a low air source in the garden.

This mixes with the ambient air temperature over the garden by 20oC. We wore the air over about 1 kilometre. And wherever we are generating 65kW of electricity. Sir the National Grid will half the affairs under 80,000 ecofounds every year.

In winter we've pressurised the gas before the water Helix, So suck in low temperature thermal energy into our gas. We are then warming the air by 20oC! There before the garden we heat our space heating system carbon free.

We burn no oil or gas! So release no carbon dioxide. No possible source of mermaid global warming. As the phosphorus burns regular water into just vast heat with a little light.

During the little warm periods we get in the UK, We can cool the air down for free. And so fastener will give us a natural source a free Kevin 03 phase maze electricity. Which actually gives us a millionaire's income!

And we cool or warm the air for free. Now we get all that lovely tax free income. Which would have been very useful during my time in Florida, When they source a free air cooling would be so welcome.  

Monday, 7 July 2025

Just UK summer


 They say the sun makes headlines now—three warm days and we call it a crisis. But the summer of 1976? That was a reckoning. Today’s climate metrics feel bureaucratic, boxed in by thresholds and graphs, while the true story of heat lies in memory, discomfort, and change.

In this post, I explore the murky boundaries between heatwaves and seasonal warmth, and venture into the realm of energy imagination—a steam plasma dream, a thermoelectric flame, and the possibility of carbon-zero systems forged from molecules and memory. It’s a kind of engineering poetry: fusing past teachings with future possibilities, questioning what we've accepted and suggesting what could be.

This isn’t just theory—it’s a cry for innovation. One that speaks to those with tools and minds to listen. University of Kent, are you hearing me?

No UK heatwave

summer is too short!

In the UK, a heatwave is officially defined as at least three consecutive days where a location experiences daily maximum temperatures meeting or exceeding a specific threshold, which varies by region. This threshold is typically higher in the south and east of England compa periods.

In 1976. was a heat wave 3 months of blistering hot sunshine. 3. days is just summer happens every year. And it is remarkably easy to sort out warm periods.

I first want a saucer carver 0 electricity. luckily exclaimed to me 2001 professor Z If we have a steam plasma They asked steam molecules in turbulent flow - which does nuclear fusion. Arthur explained in the 1795. acrylic paper Columbia University published Before the world really understood nuclear fusion/

verticals of smashes also molecules and you just hate light leg rays/ a plasma burn.

1 H2O+PL → 2(E2+L+X-ray)

Verify that a 30x1.5cm Same 1000 Fujitsu Constant carbon zero 1MW of heat. A thermoelectric generator. basically authorion thoughts linked to somw power electronics 1. 3. 6. Constant 605. kilowatts Of 3. phase AC electricity. electricity. that would join a monthly feared from the national grid of 15,000 UK pounds.

So you get a source of 65kW of 3. phase means electricity. Carbon zero electricity is really that simple to produce!

For years at electricity to drive little pumps. and double the fresher on regular air - 3rd through anaerobic salt crystals to remove the water wafer. which complicates matters. From Chemical Engineering taught to me in 1980 2. at Sheffield University.

They dump that heat to rivers or the sea. The water temperature is raised by lesson 0.002o|C degree C .We transfer that eh now 10oC 2. above the Kent countryside.

When the air issues to the free air it cools 273oC. The pressure temperature It's given by the gas constant. You double the pressure, and drop the temperature in degrees Kelvin by 273.When we dropped the pressure back to 1. atmosphere the temperature in degrees Celsius drops by 2703. degrees Celsius.

the ultimate cold blast. which mixes with the ambiant air temperature by 20° C. Of a pleasant 21oC. The engineers at Kent University should be all over this.

The major university in Kent is the University of Kent, with its main campus located in Canterbury. It was founded in 1965 and is a public research university known for its diverse academic offerings and vibrant student life.

As it describes how we can have a Calvin Zero file system that faces a small fortune! I will call the temperature around Kent by 20oC . 

In the winter we can invert the system to suck heat from the cold sea waters, and wore the air in the north of England from a freezing -5oC to a very pleasant 21oC.So forth in flight growth throughout the year !

turning carbon dioxide into font virus throughout the year. and the system phase at 15,000 UK pounds every month. Which I can't act in the fire industry are not happy about! Cover zero electricity that fares an absolute fortune continuously.

Sunday, 6 July 2025

A Cry From the Freezing Margins

 

Just feel the Labour warmth

They say politics is a game. But it’s not a game for us. It’s not a headline, a soundbite, or a clever pivot on breakfast TV. For millions of us, it's the difference between survival and suffering.

This winter, I face the cold without certainty. My winter fuel payment—once a lifeline—was nearly taken away by a government that seems to believe warmth is optional. For many of us with disabilities, every penny is precious. Yet we watched the Labour Party float cruel reforms that would have pulled the rug from beneath our feet.

It’s not just about fuel. It’s about dignity. It's about respect. And it's about time politicians remembered who they're meant to serve—not the boardrooms, but the bedrooms where shivering pensioners pray for sunshine.

Sir Keir Starmer’s estimated wealth—up to £10 million, spanning property and legal earnings—sets him apart from those he seeks to govern. That wealth doesn’t disqualify him from leadership. But when policies he backs threaten those struggling just to stay fed, housed, and warm, the gap becomes a chasm. Especially when lavish spending on military hardware seems to rank higher than care for citizens who can’t even heat their homes.

I’ve taken up writing—not as a career move, but as a last resort. Words may not pay the bills, but they speak when policy silences us. They protest, they plead, and they ignite.

If this is socialism, it wears unfamiliar boots. Real progress listens first, then acts boldly to lift people up—not lock them out.

Keir is not nice

 

fishing for voters

Laura Kuenssberg skewers stuttering Labour MP after 'shambles' of a week

Laura Kuenssberg didn't give Labour MP Bridget Phillipson a chance to come up for air as she tackled her about the Labour Party's "shambles" of a week at the top of her show before the credits even rolled.

So Keir Starmer Went after my winter fuel paymants. wishing to see me shiver to death in the cold this winter! for me persuaded that was the most homicidal government party of all time, he backtracked on the stupid idea.

He then went after my disability parents: I have got so desperate for money that I've had to take up book writing. Not really to make money, but to save your life.

Ultrasound—Cancer Cure: Cheap Home Cure to All Cancers
Ultrasound—Cancer Cure: Cheap Home Cure to All Cancers
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there are millions of dissolved people who are desperate for their benefits. Meanwhile the lever fee and survives on 10. million! in excess of the 8. million a working man earns in a lifetime.

Sir Keir Starmer net worth - How wealthy is the Labour ...

Politics.co.uk

https://www.politics.co.uk › Reference Item

The Mail on Sunday reported in May 2020, upon Sir Keir's election as Labour leader, that he owns seven acres of land in Surrey worth up to £10m. The newspaper …

How good I am to spend his time trying to impoverish the disabled. We can't all stack up the non executive directorships that he does.

though they've MPS are horrified! he's flashes out money on American armaments. and gets the forest in society to pay for it. nothing else to heat and feed themselves! There is much talk that the Labour PM is not really socialist.

The question facts is his membership of the human race up to date ?

31 May 2025  Nearly 200 Labour MPs are said to oppose them ahead of a crunch vote expected in June. Critics on the left of the Labour party have become ...


Thursday, 5 June 2025

Reform imploads




Zia Yusuf quits as Reform UK chair after row over new MP's ...

The Guardian

https://www.theguardian.com › politics › jun › zia-yusu...

2 hours ago — Zia Yusuf has resigned as the chair of Reform UK after suggesting it was “dumb” of the

Nigel Farage has a record of forming parties that has spectacularly short runs of popularity! The Brexit Party Was very popular in the runner to the European elections. then ceased to exist! you unlikely to be familiar with Zia Yusuf - Right unmanned during the local elections Where a reform has such a massive success. Even having spectacular success in parliamentary by elections.

Now in the cold light of reality, It is all disintegrating spectacularly. Reform activists no longer even like each other! They have covered together some policies that look like vote winners From America.

where Elon Musk has resigned from the Trump presidency. the assignment local election audits aren't actually such a great idea! Or even feasible. What verses want is long term stability.

Reform can't even hold it all together for a month! If you voted for them, just thank God that they never were remotely near the leavers of power.

The shadow of a doubt before and the greatest threat to UK democracy in history. And so Nigel Farage. he will disengage with reform and form a new political party. it is what he does!

They were given got elected on a vuzzle cry of 'Reform or Die!'. tragically the uk that just has found that 'reform is to die” Change usually results in a lot of their revolutionaries meeting the guillotine!

Be careful what you vote for. it is likely to be far far worse than life today. Which has been winner at from the grain of history. What we are left with is the rest that life can be. Not that life that could be in your diluted imagination, the best life really can be.

We have elected the Labour government for 4 years. Ouch!



Wednesday, 4 June 2025

Lightening in the UK

 Predict the impossible    


Lightning is very very hard to predict! It is a consequence of heavy rain or snow. in Manchester this Saturday the 7th of June, they are predicting lightning in Manchester UK. the faithful who struggle to predict rain in a very Wet city.

We shall see!

Thursday, 22 May 2025

Labour bankrupts the UK

Labour robbed the UK

Ava makes much of the 20 billion black hole from the Conservatives.The Rachel Reeves now for us more than that every month to balance the books. .

Overall the UK debt is eye watering! The UK now owes 28 trillion. That is 28 million, million. A global economy is only worth 138 trillion.

Keir Starmer has presided over the biggest debt you can imagine! There are only sixty-eight million people in the UK.

In way they're roughly Inflation rate hit 3.5 percent. They inherited AUK inflation rate of 2%. They declared EU average. EU countries are not allowed to accumulate debt And remain within the euro.

The French have been racking up the debt . They now owe 3,577,576 million dollars


In 2024 France public debt was 3,577,576 million dollars, has increased 223,162 million since 2023. This amount means that the debt in 2024 reached 113% of France GDP, a 3.2 percentage point rise from 2023, when it was 109.8% of GDP. If we check the tables we can see the evolution of France debt.

Journey is the ultimate debt payer. They are less unhappy about the accumulated debt of France Italy and Spain. The uk pays its own debts! How do you feel about the Labour government racking up 400 little debt for you alone. 

Sunday, 23 March 2025

UK economy contracting

We is sinking faster and faster

The Labour government and elected to the UK promising no tax rises, enough for ever expanding economy which should avoid the need for service cuts.

Rachel Reeves is in their horrendous situation.  Where the UK economy is shrinking.  She is just had the V use tax raising budget in history!  And he is now busy planning service Throughout the UK.

The shrinking economy and would necessitate tax rises.  Which is what we have seen!  Sir Tony Blair must be horrified.  And he promised no tax rises there were no tax rises!

Rachel Reeves is faced with the inevitable contraction of government expenditure.  Aes a tax income has fallen.  Which will be increased by the recent massive tax rises.

Meaning that companis companies will sack workers!  As the worst decreased seeing the rays which to take Ian the new employees.

All Labour election was based on an expanding economy.  Which the economic four days like the IMF, so it was never going to happen.  They forecast tax rises and service cuts.

That Labour had invested in a book shipment of rose tinted glasses.  Was he got all the prospective MP's to wear.  Also have any hand the year protectors to a void the labour people hearing a commentary messages.

So the be used tax rise invalid it in history.  Followed within six months by its arranging government.  In exactly the opposite fashion to what Labour promised.

I was just watching Rachel Reeves on Sunday TV and she was squirming like a naughty school people called in to see the headmaster.  The Labour manifesto was four positive economic growth.

What labour promised was positive UK economic growth.  What they have delivered use negative UK economic performance.  Allied to tax rises and service cuts.

Rachel Reeves had the government defence readit 'we got it wrong!'.  Time for Sir Keir Starmer to resign and for another general election.

Thursday, 13 March 2025

It's all about the economy stupid

So not Labour

Smouldering Kemi Badenoch torches Keir Starmer over spluttering economy

Keir Starmer won a massive landslide victory in the UK.  By promising not to raise taxes.  It was pointed out there are no labour government in history have failed to raise taxes.

Rachel Reeves, the UK chancellor of exchequer has just had their biggest tax raising budget in UK history.  Torching the UK taxpayer to fund favour extravagance.

And the next budget, will be a 10 billion tax rays and the UK taxpayer.  Surely this is the worst tax raising government in history.

Leaving the EU was always going to be an economically challenging time.  We get the EU financial donations back.

Since when the German taxpayer has been learnt on to make up the deficit.  The issue are a great German anger at the EU.  We can expect a suddenly financially generous offer from the EU to rejoin.

Which will inevitably not include a EU financial contributions.  Meanwhile Labour has witnessed the UK economy stuttering.  And in war: there are Keir Starmer's brain does he imagine the increasing the UK tax burden will help matters.

Rachel Reeves has been instructed to continue raising UK taxes, as he UK population does not do revolutions!  Yet.  They are Ukrainian sanctions are destroying the Russian economy - which Labour always gazed at in admiration.



UK elections are won and lost according to the UK economy.  I do not really think it is worth Labour standing for reelection.

They use local council elections, will display the voter hatred of the present government,



Friday, 10 January 2025

Inflation killing Putin's Russia


Russian inflation 8.9%

The annual inflation rate in Russia rose to 8.9% in November 2024, up from a five-month low of 8.5% in the prior month and surpassing market forecasts of 8.7%.

The European desired inflation rate is just 2 %.  Labour has allowed inflation to creep upwards.

2.60%

UK Inflation Rate (I:UKIR)

UK Inflation Rate is at 2.60%, compared to 2.30% last month and 3.90% last year. This is lower than the long term average of 2.82%.

Fitting can only dream of such inflation rates.  The Ruble he is being hammered. 1 pound is worth 339749002.37072796 Ruble.  These are hyper inflation the values of the German currency in the great currency crash of the 1930s.  Three million Rubles to the pound.

And an inflation rate over three times as great.  It will be at four times, if labour got a handle over UK inflation.

Those sort of currency depreciations brought down the Mark, and heralded the creation the deutschmark.  Today even German inflation is above the EU declared aim.

As of January 6, 2025, Germany's inflation rate was 2.60%. This is higher than the long-term average of 2.01%. 

Despite Brexit UK inflation is near that of Germany.  And now the EU is not paying that 20 billion into the EU. 

Full EU accounts will be published as scheduled on 31 October 2019. In 2018 the UK's gross contribution to the EU amounted to £20.0 billion; however, this amount of money was never actually transferred to the EU. It is best thought of as a theoretical liability.30 Sept 2019

That high inflation rate within Russia is troubling.  It means that the Russian currency will continue its depreciation.  If I was Putin I would move or my own financial saving is over to Switzerland.  That is part of the EU single currency area.

With the EU inflation rate at 2.6 per cent.  The oligarchs in Russia will already have removed the savings across.  Hence the Russian economy is shrinking by the second.