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Indie Free Radio Of Scotland The main goal is to protect free speech and freedom of expression. To speak up for Scotland and to protect and preserve our Scottish heritage

26/05/2021

Ok folks time to expose some stinky stuff. Just recently I was able to get information that during the time we were battling the issue of independence, Photographers around england and scotland were on a photo shoot session. Putting safety protocols into action, many Photographers are standing firmly

22/03/2021

Now the truth of Douglas Ross is being exposed the Intel that showed he has created a larger amounts of false accusations against the snp and to Sturgeon according to the amounts of tweets he has produced

Lets be clear about what this means pass this on to all true indie Scots
29/12/2020

Lets be clear about what this means pass this on to all true indie Scots

10/09/2020

HORRIFIED' medical experts have panned Boris Johnson’s “dangerous” plan to spend £100 billion on a mass testing programme named Operation Moonshot.
A leaked Whitehall memo reveals that the project to facilitate millions of daily tests across the UK is a “top priority” for the Prime Minister.
Leaked documents seen by the BMJ suggest that the scheme – devised as part of efforts to help the UK return to normality by Christmas – could have a price tag close to that of the £114bn budget given to NHS England in 2018/19.
Johnson believes it could help sport and entertainment venues reopen fully and allow people to socially mix in large groups again with on-the-day tests.
However, critics have warned the plan is “devoid of any contribution” from scientific and medical experts and seems to be “totally oblivious” to the potential pitfalls of a mass testing system.

Documents seen by the British Medical Journal show Operation Moonshot would rely heavily on the private sector to roll out testing in workplaces, entertainment venues, and football stadiums and at GP surgeries, pharmacies, schools, and other local sites.
People who test negative would be given digital immunity passports, allowing them to return to workplaces, travel, and participate in other activities.
Earlier this week, Scotland’s national clinical director dismissed the concept of a mass testing programme with “Covid passes” as being in the realms of “science fiction”.

UK Ministers have faced increasing pressure in recent days over availability of tests, with many people reporting being sent hundreds of miles from home to get checked for the illness.
And BMA council chairman Chaand Nagpaul said it was unclear how Moonshot would work given the "huge problems" currently seen with lab capacity.

Jon Deeks, professor of biostatistics at the University of Birmingham and leader of the Cochrane Collaboration’s Covid-19 test evaluation activities, raised the alarm over a lack of input from expers.
He told the BMJ: “I’m horrified that the plans are devoid of any contribution from scientists, clinicians, and public health and testing and screening experts. These are plans from the world of management consultants and show complete ignorance of many essential basic principles of testing, public health, and screening. The authors appear totally oblivious to the harms that universal screening can create – this is frankly dangerous.”

Deeks also warned the testing roll-out could produce masses of false positive results. “Even if you have a test which is 99% specific, so only 1% of uninfected people get a false positive result, if you then test 60 million people we will be classifying a group the size of the population of Sheffield as wrongly having covid,” he said. “In such a scenario, 600 000 people would be told to isolate, along with their close contacts, leading to “substantial economic harm and massive need for further testing.”
Devi Sridhar, professor and chair of global public health at the University of Edinburgh, added: “I haven’t seen these details before, and my first thought is that I’m glad the government is moving in the direction of mass testing, but the proof is in the pudding.
“The government needs to deliver this programme at scale, but I’m concerned about the reliance on the private sector to deliver this. The evidence so far is that involving local NHS capacity is more effective than outsourcing. There is a case for giving the extra billions to the NHS and asking it to deliver. I have concerns around the bidding process for these contracts. The procurement process isn’t clear, and it allows for a lot of people getting rich off this crisis. This is public money that we are going to have to pay back at some point.”

No h are LOSERS and liars in fact Dick Head on right will not be successful as a Tory leader
15/08/2020

No h are LOSERS and liars in fact Dick Head on right will not be successful as a Tory leader

12/08/2020

THE new YouGov poll is, in a sense, the final piece in the jigsaw. Three Panelbase polls in a row showing a clear pro-independence majority, and two in a row putting Yes at an unprecedentedly high level of support, had already left little room for doubt.

But until those findings were corroborated by another polling firm, there was always just a small chance that there was some sort of "house effect" at play. YouGov putting Yes at 53% amply provides that corroboration, and it's now possible to say with an exceptionally high degree of confidence that a record-breaking percentage of the Scottish population has got behind independence over recent weeks and months.

As far as the Holyrood constituency numbers are concerned, YouGov actually estimate an even higher level of SNP support than the recent Panelbase polls reported. It remains to be seen whether this apparent additional surge, taking the party to the dreamland territory of 57%, is a house effect of YouGov's own. But given that support for both independence and the SNP increased in the early summer due to focus on the Scottish Government's assured handling of the pandemic, it's at least plausible that there has been a further increase as that focus has persisted.

There's a good reason for the Unionist parties' panic-stricken pleas for the televised government briefings to be ended.

Perhaps the poll's most significant finding of all is the desire for a second independence referendum to be held. For reasons that aren't entirely clear, YouGov have in recent years consistently reported lower support for a second referendum than other firms such as Panelbase. But their long-used question wording about whether there should be a referendum in the next five years has now produced a majority in favour (after Don't Knows are excluded) for a second poll in a row, and indeed that majority has widened.

A separate question shows a plurality in favour of holding a referendum as early as next year if the SNP win a majority of Holyrood seats in May.

Unionists will perhaps cling to a question that shows narrow opposition to a referendum if a Section 30 order is not granted. But the reality is that the wording of that question is shockingly poor - it misleadingly implies that the Scottish Parliament definitely doesn't have the powers necessary to hold a referendum at the moment. Effectively asking whether a parliament should exceed its legal powers was only ever likely to produce one result - although the fact that the result was so close (44% to 38%) confirms that the appetite for an indyref is exceptionally strong in some quarters.

To get a more meaningful sense of whether the public would want the Scottish Government to push ahead with a consultative referendum in the absence of a Section 30 order, the question needs to make clear that legal opinions differ on whether Holyrood has the power to do that. A Panelbase poll commissioned by my blog at the start of the year posed the question in that way, and got a strikingly different result.

The "Starmer paradox" we've seen in recent Britain-wide polls is even more pronounced in Scotland, if YouGov are to be believed. The new Labour leader is reasonably well regarded north of the Border, with 39% of respondents thinking he has done well, and only 25% thinking he has done badly. But that hasn't helped his party recover to even the lowly level of support secured by Jeremy Corbyn at the General Election. It may be that Labour have simply become an irrelevance for many voters, and are no longer even being considered as a serious option.

Prince Andrew just gave himself away
08/07/2020

Prince Andrew just gave himself away

Here's the evidence of the facts that Trump was in connection with Epstien and the Clintons.
08/07/2020

Here's the evidence of the facts that Trump was in connection with Epstien and the Clintons.

02/06/2020

PROTESTS which erupted across the US after the death of George Floyd while in police custody will spread to Scotland this weekend.
Black Lives Matter events have been planned for Glasgow and Edinburgh for Sunday, June 7, with an earlier Stand up to Racism event planned for the capital tomorrow.
Protestors in Edinburgh will take to the Mound off Princes Street at 6pm in a “solidarity action”.
The Glasgow event’s page states: “We have all seen the horrific crimes within the last few weeks, especially, committed by the hands of oppressive forces in America.
“It is essential we recognise that the UK also has built itself on crimes just as severe, past and present. The time to show solidarity is now.”
However, there are worries around the spread of Covid-19 and Scotland still has a ban on mass gatherings.
Caroline Gray, the organiser of the Edinburgh event, said: “We are taking safety precautions very seriously for social distancing.

“I have been in contact with the police and the council and both have given me very positive feedback about this protest and our precautions, announcements will be posted on the Facebook event once everything is confirmed.”
Gray has also asked all attendees to wear a mask and remember it is a peaceful protest.
A Scottish Government spokesperson said: “We absolutely understand why so many people feel so strongly about the death of Mr Floyd – but it continues to be the case that, in the interest of public health and preventing the spread of Covid-19, mass gatherings are not allowed.”
Both weekend protests are scheduled for June 7, the Edinburgh event will start on the east side of Princes Street Gardens at 1pm, while the Glasgow one will aim to begin at 2pm at Glasgow Green.
Meanwhile, in the USA protests have raged on for the sixth day.

Though Derek Chauvin, who knelt on George Floyd’s neck while he passed away, has been arrested and charged with murder, pressure has grown for the other three officers who were present to also faces charges.
Medaria Arradondo, chief of police in Minneapolis where the protests started, said he believed all four officers were “complicit”.
Arradondo said: “There are absolute truths in life. We need air to breathe. The killing of Mr Floyd was an absolute truth, that it was wrong, and so I did not need days or weeks or months or processes or bureaucracies to tell me that what occurred out here last Monday was wrong.
“This was a violation of humanity. This was a violation of the oath that the majority of the men and women that put this uniform on [take] – this goes absolutely against it. This is contrary to what we believe in. What occurred to me, it was an absolute truth that it was wrong, period.
He added: “Being silent or not intervening, to me, you’re complicit. So I don’t see a level of distinction that’s any different.
“Obviously the charging and those decisions have to come through our county attorney’s office, certainly the FBI is investigating that, but I want you to know my decision to fire all four officers was not based on some sort of hierarchy.”
President Donald Trump has not been quiet during the affair, despite turning off the White House lights and reportedly taking shelter in a bunker.
In a group call yesterday morning, Trump said: “If you don’t dominate your city and your state, they’re going to walk away with you. In Washington we’re going to do something people haven’t seen before.”
The president went on to call Minnesota an “experiment” in how to handle protests, saying: “You had the first part which was weak and pathetic, and you had the second part which was domination.” He repeatedly blamed the “radical left” for the unrest as well as slamming states with democratic governors such as New York and Los Angeles.
Elsewhere, Barack Obama has weighed in on the protests, sharing online an article he wrote.
In the article, titled How to Make this Moment the Turning Point for Real Change, Obama writes: “The overwhelming majority of participants have been peaceful, courageous, responsible, and inspiring. They deserve our respect and support, not condemnation — something that police in cities like Camden and Flint have commendably understood.
“I saw an elderly black woman being interviewed today in tears because the only grocery store in her neighbourhood had been trashed. If history is any guide, that store may take years to come back.
“So let’s not excuse violence, or rationalise it, or participate in it. If we want our criminal justice system, and American society at large, to operate on a higher ethical code, then we have to model that code ourselves.”
The former president called on protesters to use both activism and their right to vote to force real change.
He highlighted how, despite the media circus around presidential elections, the majority of the decisions that affect people’s day-to-day lives are made at a local level.
He concluded: “If we can channel our justifiable anger into peaceful, sustained, and effective action, then this moment can be a real turning point in our nation’s long journey to live up to our highest ideals.
“Let’s get to work.”

Numerous of reports of Matt Hancock and Micheal Gove were caught in a major scale cover up operation in regards to the C...
11/05/2020

Numerous of reports of Matt Hancock and Micheal Gove were caught in a major scale cover up operation in regards to the Corona virus 19

17/03/2020

The updated details of the statements Boris Johnson has made now has been spooning out the acts of threats of him saying that he cares more about the economy than the people itself. According to what it was said that if he has his way he'll be as powerful as China. His bragging about this has brought a national concern of how he's dealing with the Corona virus. As it was discovered that he claimed the virus is like the flu in which was not true. In 2004 we faced the SARS in which has similar symptoms as the Corona virus. Both are considered as a respiratory virus infection. The UK gov has failed to take action on this and more deaths was confirmed.

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