Amazon Drone Delivery

Amazon has delivered its first parcel by drone in the UK – dropping a small item into a customer’s front garden less than two hours after they ordered it. 

The tech giant is trialling the new ultra-fast delivery service called Prime Air in Darlington, County Durham.

Packages must weigh less than 5lb or 2.2kg and fit into the size of a shoebox to be eligible for drone delivery.

Customers must also have a garden or yard for the parcel to be dropped off in and live within a 7.5-mile radius of Amazon’s fulfilment centre.

While drone delivery is presently only available in Darlington, Amazon hopes to gradually expand the service to other parts of the UK.

The tech giant is using its most modern drone, the MK30, to deliver customers’ parcels.

The aircraft are fitted with sensors that recognise and avoid any obstructions in its path, such as trampolines, washing lines and other drones.

As the drone approaches each drop-off point, it knows precisely where to release the package using GPS.

The parcels, which must contain everyday items such as beauty products or batteries, are dropped from a height of 12 feet into the customers’ garden or yard.

In the UK, Amazon can deliver parcels by drone in under two hours.

However, in the US, where the system is already used across five states, the average time is just 36 minutes. 

The tech giant can carry out up to ten drone flights every hour or as many as one hundred deliveries a day from Monday to Friday. 

David Carbon from Prime Air said: ‘Starting flights in Darlington marks an important milestone in bringing drone delivery to the UK. 

‘Safety is our top priority, and we have worked closely with Darlington Council and the Civil Aviation Authority.

‘Our MK30 drones are designed to operate quietly and efficiently.

‘We look forward to demonstrating how this innovative technology can serve the people of Darlington while maintaining the highest safety standards.’

Rob Shield allowed Amazon to test the drones for the first time on his property using an Airbnb.

He told the BBC: ‘Initially it was a novelty, so we were ordering everything under the sun. Pens, paper, chocolates – anything to make it keep coming.

‘Since then, you obviously start realising “I actually need something today” like tape measures and stuff like that, you’re always losing – we just order it, and it comes.’

The NHS is already trialling the use of drones to deliver blood supplies in London.

Meanwhile, the Royal Mail has begun using the aircraft to dispatch packages to remote communities in Orkney.

I mean, what could possibly go wrong? People are already unemployed, and now there will be more jobless people because, of course, AI is so much better than human contact, and the incessant buzzing of drones will destroy any peace that is left – this will change the landscape permanently. Small children and animals were not injured during this delivery, not this time anyhow!

I’m sure they will be useful for condoms if they deliver at night – what will it be next, robot nail trimming and hair cutting!

The UK’s Broken” Asylum System

Shabana Mahmood has publicly said that she wants the UK to increase the number of refugees arriving through safe and legal routes, but only after Labour has overhauled what she calls the “broken” asylum system.

Across numerous interviews — including Matt Forde’s Political Party podcast — Mahmood explained that her goal is to expand controlled, capped legal pathways for refugees once the government has restored order to the existing system. She framed this as part of a plan to break the business model of people-smuggling gangs, reduce dangerous Channel crossings, restore public confidence in the immigration system and shift from irregular to managed, legal entry routes.

She underlined that her true goal was to expand significantly by safe and legal means.

Mahmood has presented three capped programs, all of which require obtaining refugee status before travel.

Student route – for refugee and displaced students to study at UK universities from 2027

Skilled refugee route – allowing refugees with professional skills to work in the UK

Community sponsorship route – modelled on Homes for Ukraine, enabling civil society groups to sponsor arrivals

The government would regulate the number of routes, and each route would have an annual quota. She has also claimed that tightening rules on irregular migration, including more stringent enforcement and measures to prevent small-boat crossings, is essential before expanding legal routes. Her position is that generosity requires control, and that once the system is functioning, the UK can be ‘much more generous’ through structured pathways.

This framing is also a response to internal tensions within Labour. Some Labour figures, including Angela Rayner, have criticised aspects of Mahmood’s approach as too restrictive, while others claim the system requires firmer management before expansion.

Record Channel crossings and pressure on accommodation have heightened debate. Labour faces criticism from both left and right. The Left are concerned about tougher rules, longer settlement times, and limits on family reunion. The Right claims Labour has ‘lost control’ of borders. Mahmood’s plan is positioned as a middle path, which is strict on illegal routes, expanding legal routes once control is established.

Mahmood’s message is consistent:

  • Fix the asylum system first (enforcement, backlog, small boats).
  • Then expand safe, capped, legal refugee routes (students, skilled workers, community sponsorship).
  • Goal: replace dangerous, irregular migration with controlled humanitarian pathways.

It’s refreshing to see a politician acknowledging that there is clearly an issue that needs addressing because we just can’t carry on the way we are, and something has to change.

So, how is our government going to stop small boats from crossing the Channel? Well, it seems that because we are no longer in the EU, we will have to pay France to intercept boats before they launch at a cost of £660 million over three years.

This is the most aggressive ‘stop them before they launch’ strategy the UK has ever funded. Whether it works depends on French enforcement power, smuggler adaptation, weather and seasonal patterns, and UK asylum processing reforms.

Of course, they’ll do nothing substantial because it’s like an adult telling a child, ‘You’ll get a sweetie tomorrow. Now go to bed.’   

Rat Virus Death Cruise Left To Roam The Oceans

The leader of Spain’s Canary Islands has expressed his opposition to allowing a luxury cruise ship stricken by a deadly Hantavirus outbreak to dock on the archipelago. 

The outbreak of the rare, rat-borne illness that has a 40 per cent mortality rate has left three people dead and several others extremely ill. 

Meanwhile, the company that operates the ship, which is presently anchored in the Atlantic off Cape Verde, says it plans to move to the Spanish islands.

But on Wednesday, the president of the Canaries, Fernando Clavijo, told COPE radio station that he had requested an ‘urgent meeting’ with the Prime Minister of Spain, Pedro Sanchez, saying that the decision to allow the cruise ship to dock on Canarian territory was not based on ‘any technical criteria.’

He added that there is ‘insufficient information to maintain a message of calm and guarantee the safety of the Canary Island population.’

Clavijo also criticised the Spanish government for its ‘institutional disloyalty’ and lack of professionalism for failing to keep him informed. 

He also reproached the Minister of Health, Mónica García, for failing to provide him with explanations regarding the criteria used by the World Health Organisation.

‘I cannot allow it to enter the Canary Islands,’ he insisted.

Earlier on Wednesday, Spanish state broadcaster TVE reported the cruise ship was set to dock at the Canary Island of Tenerife, citing sources from the country’s health ministry. 

It comes as the Swiss government said on Wednesday that a man who had been a passenger on the cruise ship is being treated in Zurich after contracting hantavirus, with authorities in the Canaries and Cape Verde fearing potential cases of the virus. 

The Swiss government added that there is currently no danger to the Swiss population. 

It was also confirmed that two extremely ill crew members, including a British doctor, will be evacuated from the ship.

One crew member will be evacuated through Cape Verde to the Netherlands. 

At the same time, the British doctor, who is in serious condition, will be flown straight to the Canaries in a hospital plane, according to Spanish media. 

Spain’s health ministry said the ship was due to arrive at the Islands in ‘three to four days’, adding that upon arrival, ‘crew and passengers will be duly examined, cared for, and transferred to their respective countries.’ It is unclear which port the ship will dock at.

The health ministry said the World Health Organisation had explained that the Canary Islands were ‘the closest place with the necessary capabilities’ medically.

Cruise operator Oceanwide Expeditions said its plan was for the ship to sail north ‘to the Canary Islands, either Gran Canaria or Tenerife, which will take three days of sailing’.

The MV Hondius has been at the centre of an international health scare since Saturday, when the WHO was informed that the rare disease – usually spread from infected rodents, typically through urine, droppings and saliva – was suspected of being behind the deaths of three of its passengers.

As others fell ill, passengers and crew have been in isolation after Cape Verde authorities blocked the ship from docking. The ship is anchored just off the island nation’s capital, Praia.

Recent footage from inside the ship showed the ship’s decks mainly abandoned, with only a few people wearing medical masks moving about.

Common spaces were empty as passengers were isolated in their cabins. At least five people with full protective gear, white overalls, boots and face masks, were seen leaving from the ship into a small vessel.

The Dutch operator Oceanwide Expeditions revealed Tuesday that a solution was in sight, with plans to evacuate two sick crew members to the Netherlands for ‘urgent medical care’, along with a third person who had been in close contact with a German passenger who died on Saturday.

Once the evacuation has taken place, MV Hondius ‘can continue its route’, Ann Lindstrand, the WHO’s representative in Cape Verde, said. 

The cruise, which set sail from Ushuaia in Argentina on April 1, was bound for Cape Verde and had 88 passengers and 59 crew members, representing 23 nationalities, the WHO said.

One of the dead, a Dutch woman, had left the ship at the Atlantic island of Saint Helena and had flown to Johannesburg, where she died on April 26.

Two hantavirus cases have been confirmed – including in one of the fatalities and a British passenger currently in intensive care in Johannesburg – with five further suspected cases, the WHO said.

Three of those seven have died; the one in Johannesburg was critically ill, and three still on board had reported symptoms, including one who is now asymptomatic, it said.

The WHO was attempting to figure out how hantavirus had occurred on the ship, with the first person who died having developed symptoms on April 6.

Dozens of people are now being traced after they boarded a flight with one of the cruise ship passengers who later died of a rat–borne virus.

A Dutch passenger had left the ship in Saint Helena with ‘gastrointestinal symptoms’ on April 24 and was pronounced dead upon arrival at the emergency department of a Johannesburg hospital.

The WHO said: ‘Contact tracing for passengers has been initiated.’

One weekly flight from the island is operated by Airlink, and it takes around four hours.

The South African authorities had asked the airline to notify the passengers that they must contact the health department, a representative said.

According to the UK Government’s hantavirus advice, symptoms typically appear between two and four weeks after exposure, but can range from two days to eight weeks, meaning illness may develop in other passengers in the coming days or weeks.

Around 40 per cent of cases result in death, according to the US Centres for Disease Control.

Fatigue, fever, pains in the muscles, and severe headaches are some of the early symptoms.

They normally only transmit through body fluids and intimate touch, not from person to person.

The chance of contracting the illness can be reduced through minimising contact with rodents.

Meanwhile, the UK Government is putting ‘plans in place’ for the onward travel of Britons stuck aboard the cruise ship, the Prime Minister said.

In a post on X, Sir Keir Starmer said: ‘My thoughts are with those affected by the hantavirus outbreak onboard the MV Hondius.

‘We are working closely with international partners to support British nationals on board, and we’re putting plans in place for their safe onward travel.

‘The risk to the wider public remains very low – protecting the British people is our number one priority.’

The people on board should be isolated in their cabins, but for no longer than 8 weeks before repatriation to their home countries to prevent further spread, even in severe outbreaks, because it’s neither medically justified nor practically safe.

Eight weeks is far beyond the incubation or infectious period of any known rat-born virus that affects humans. Even the longest-lasting ones (like Lassa fever) have an incubation period of typically 1-3 weeks. The infectious period is usually days, not months, and the monitoring period is normally 21 days, not 56.

So an 8‑week confinement would not align with established epidemiology, and cabin isolation for that long would create new health hazards, such as medical deterioration, particularly for older passengers. A mental health crisis, increased need for medical intervention, and a logistical strain on crew, food delivery, waste management, and ventilation systems, because cruise ships are not designed to function as long-term quarantine facilities.

When news breaks so dramatically, as this has, people tap into their collective memories of early 2020, but now we have a cruise ship with an emerging virus in the headlines, so it’s not surprising that our minds jump to patterns that we’ve seen before.

This isn’t a new virus, and it isn’t behaving in a new way. The Hantaviruses are well-known, and it’s a rodent-borne virus that has been studied for decades. It doesn’t spread easily between humans, and in most outbreaks, it doesn’t spread between humans at all, and the threat to the general public is extremely low. As in cases like on a cruise ship, rodent exposure would have been picked up somewhere along the way, not a new mutation or a human-to-human chain, so this is not the language of a virus gearing up for a global sweep.

An Aircraft Plunged 180 Feet In Turbulence

Passengers are suing an airline that killed a 73-year-old British grandfather and hospitalised more than 100 people after it fell 180 feet during turbulence.

Alison Read, Benjamin Read, and Bradley Richards are suing Singapore Airlines for damages related to their personal injuries.

All three of them were injured while aboard the Singapore-bound Boeing 777-300ER in May 2024.

Another passenger, Geoff Kitchen, 73, died from a suspected heart attack as the aircraft descended.

Meanwhile, dozens more people were left with injuries after flight SQ321 was struck by turbulence above Myanmar about 11 hours into the 13-hour flight.

Some 104 people were hospitalised, and 20 of them needed intensive care or surgery.

Mr Richards, a telecoms engineer, previously said he feared he would have to change careers after suffering life-changing injuries.

The 31-year-old was catapulted into the roof of the plane when it fell and was left with cuts to his head – he was forced to use a pillow to ease the blood flow.

He had to be lifted into a wheelchair when the plane made its emergency landing in Bangkok and described the traumatic experience as ‘something out of a movie’.

‘I remember waking up, and my head was just pouring with blood, kids were screaming, people running around everywhere, it was so frantic,’ he said. 

He suffered numerous fractures to the spine and neck, a spinal epidural hematoma and a cut to his head needing 20 stitches. 

A claim against Singapore Airlines was filed at the High Court at the end of last month, The Sun reported. 

The amount of compensation each passenger is requesting is unknown, and the firm has not yet responded to the claim.

All three claimants are represented by Keystone Law.

There is no involvement from Mr Kitchen’s family, who perished on the aircraft.

Following his death, it was revealed that Mr Kitchen and his wife spent the weekend with their grandchildren before jetting off on their ‘trip of a lifetime’.

The retired insurance worker from Thonbury, near Bristol, and his spouse were travelling to South East Asia, Indonesia, and Australia for a six-week vacation.

A friend of the couple told the BBC they ‘loved to travel’ and were ‘very excited’ for the trip.

In June 2024, the airline said passengers who sustained minor injuries would receive $10,000 in compensation.

The airline said: ‘For those who sustained more serious injuries… we have invited them to discuss a compensation offer to meet each of their specific circumstances when they feel well and ready to do so.

‘Passengers medically assessed as having sustained serious injuries, requiring long-term medical care, and requesting financial assistance are offered an advance payment of $25,000 to address their immediate needs.

‘This will be part of the final compensation that these passengers will receive.’

In addition, the carrier said it would refund fares for all passengers who were on the flight, including those who were not injured.

The Transport Safety Investigation Bureau’s (TSIB) preliminary investigation discovered that the aircraft descended 178ft (54m) in just four seconds.

The agency said this likely caused the injuries to the crew and passengers.

The plane carrying 211 passengers and 18 crew diverted for an emergency landing after it was buffeted by turbulence that threw passengers and crew about the cabin, slamming some into the ceiling.

‘The aircraft experienced a rapid change in G (gravitational force). This likely resulted in the occupants who were not belted up to become airborne,’ the Singapore Transport Ministry said in a statement.

‘The vertical acceleration changed from negative 1.5G to positive 1.5G within 4 seconds. This likely resulted in the occupants who were airborne to fall back down,’ it said, citing information extracted from the flight data and cockpit voice recorders.

‘The rapid changes in G over the 4.6-second duration resulted in an altitude drop of 178 ft, from 37,362 ft to 37,184 ft. This sequence of events likely caused the injuries to the crew and passengers,’ it added.

Airlines have no control over the turbulence that they will face. The only thing airlines can control is how they react to turbulence, not whether it happens, because turbulence is a natural atmospheric event, just like thunderstorms, lightning, or strong winds, and aircraft just have to fly through or around it when achievable.

Atmospheric turbulence, which is caused by jet streams, weather fronts, storms, mountain waves, and clear-air pockets are invisible and always shifting. Of course, pilots get forecasts, but clear-air turbulence usually can’t be detected by radar.

Predicting the precise position and strength of turbulence is still difficult, even with contemporary technology.

Although they cannot completely eradicate turbulence, airlines can reroute to avoid known turbulent spots, and the pilots can slow the aircraft to ‘turbulence penetration speed’ to relieve pressure on the airframe. Seatbelt signs are switched on early if turbulence is expected, but of course, it’s not always expected, and aircraft are engineered to withstand far more force than turbulence can produce. Seatbelt safety is the most essential part of the whole picture.

Because turbulence is unexpected, the safest position is simply being strapped in. Most turbulence-related injuries occur to people who were not wearing seatbelts. It’s the same logic as wearing a seatbelt in a car.

It seems that you can sue for injuries caused by turbulence, but only if the turbulence counts as an ‘accident’ under aviation law and the airline failed in a duty, for instance, not warning passengers, not securing the cabin, or ignoring known risks.

When turbulence becomes a legal claim, which is under international aviation law (usually the Montreal Convention), passengers can claim compensation if they are injured due to an ‘unexpected or unusual event external to the passenger’. Turbulence can meet this definition, but not always. The fundamental question is whether the airline did something wrong or failed to prevent avoidable harm.

The chance of being hurt on a commercial flight is excessively low, but data indicate that medical events do happen, but serious harm is rare, and that aviation still remains one of the safest forms of travel.

The chance of injury on an aircraft is very rare, but it does happen, and when things like this do happen, people want to blame someone, and rightly so. When you travel with an airline, they have a duty of care to make sure their passengers are safe, and although statistically aviation is safe, when an injury does happen, it’s almost always because a system, a process, or a decision failed somewhere, and people are absolutely justified in expecting accountability.

The core point here is that when you board an aircraft, the airline takes on a legal duty of care. This duty isn’t symbolic; it’s a concrete obligation grounded in aviation law, consumer protection, and international conventions like the Montreal Convention, but the simple answer is, if you don’t feel safe, don’t fly!

Just A ‘Label’

Nigel Farage has publicly argued that many disability and SEND diagnoses are “over‑diagnosed” and create a “class of victims,” but charities and experts say these claims are inaccurate and stigmatising, and comments like this imply that a disability diagnosis, including lifelong congenital or hidden disabilities are just labels that fosters dependency.

Nigel’s statement is extremely incorrect, and he is out of touch with the real world. His framing perpetuates stigma, which undermines disabled people’s credibility and overlooks the truth of what is really going on, and because of this, society is still treating disabled people as an afterthought – way to go, Nigel Farage.

Nigel is a public figure suggesting that your diagnosis is just a ‘label’, and this is not neutral commentary; it reinforces the exact structural dismissal you’ve been fighting. Beware, next he will be suggesting that we euthanise all disabled people like a little mini Hitler.

Having a label or a diagnosis describes the reality of what is wrong with a person; it doesn’t dictate their future, and a diagnosis can explain patterns, needs, risks, or differences, but what it can’t do is tell someone who they will become, what their life will look like, what they are capable of, how they will age or what support they will need or won’t need.

Sadly, people usually project their own fears or stereotypes onto the world. They hear ‘diagnosis’ and visualise decline, limitation, or inevitability because they’re drawing on public misconceptions rather than lived experience.

This is especially true with hidden disabilities because others can’t see them; they think that it’s mild, temporary, just a peculiarity and that you just don’t require any help, and then when you do require help, they treat it as a failure or a surprise rather than a predictable part of your condition.

This is not a diagnosis problem; it’s a societal attitude problem, and having a diagnosis gives a person the language to explain what they’ve always known – access to support, a framework for planning, and a way to advocate for themselves, but when systems are unavailable, underfunded, or dismissive, the diagnosis becomes a burden instead of a bridge, and that’s not because the diagnosis is a life sentence, it’s because the systems around it are failing.

The anxiety that people feel comes from uncertainty, not inevitability.

You have lived most of your life with a congenital condition. You, of course, know your body, its patterns, your limitations, your strengths, but what you can’t anticipate and what understandably concerns you is whether support will exist, whether professionals will listen, whether accessibility will improve or decline, even whether society will value disabled people as they age.

I won’t mince my words because I’m not one for doing that, but I am sick to the back teeth of Nigel Farage and the politics that he represents, but I could vent all day, but it wouldn’t really get me anywhere.

This isn’t about individual wealthy people being ‘bad’. It’s about structural insulation because the higher up you go in class, the less you ever have to face the realities of hidden disability, ADHD as a lived experience, or what support truly looks like on the ground.

Of course, disabilities exist significantly differently depending on your class position.

For people with money, it is usually a manageable inconvenience because everything can be paid for with wealth; there are no barriers. So, when someone from a privileged background says that a disability isn’t real or it’s just a label, what they actually mean is that they’ve never had to see the consequences of it.

They just can’t relate to it because if they forget something, skip a deadline, or struggle with organisation, nothing crumbles. They can buy their way out of friction. Private diagnosis, private support, private schooling, all smoothing the edges, and they are encircled by people like themselves, tiny and filtered.

They do not interact with the systems that punish – benefits, housing, social care, rigid workplaces – these are all invisible to them, and this creates a worldview where disabilities just look like a quirky personality trait, not a structural disadvantage.

I am pointing out a truth that seldom gets said out loud. The people with the most power to change things are the least impacted by the problems, and this is why lived experience matters so much, and we need to push for disabled people’s leadership and structural reform, and that’s why the void feels so wide – because it is!

The Importance Of Visibility And Inclusion

Visibility and inclusion matter because they determine who gets to partake fully in society. It reduces erasure, strengthens belonging, and helps to disassemble systemic inequalities. However, visibility is more than just simply being seen. It’s about being recognised, understood, and accepted as part of the social geography.

When groups are visible, they are more likely to be represented in decision-making, media, and public life, which in turn leads to more inclusive policies and cultural narratives.

Most people assume that by a certain time in our lives we should feel sorted, or that life should be predictable or even stable, but for disabled people, the reality is so far from that. It’s the uncertainty, and that they are not sorted, it’s not predictable, and it’s certainly not stable, and that is not a failure or flaw on their part; it’s a failure on other people’s part, and their reflection of how life should be.

What people have to remember is that life changes, careers change, health shifts, relationships evolve, and responsibilities grow. Stability isn’t fixed; it’s something that moves, but many people quietly carry uncertainty about finances, health, family, or identity; they just don’t say it out loud, and the life you envisioned, say at the age of 20, doesn’t always match the life you end up living, and that void can feel unsettling.

My being disabled makes me feel self-aware, reflective, and I am willing to articulate something that most people bury – that’s strength, not instability.

Life is not straightforwardly ‘better’ for Disabled people now in the UK – some rights and attitudes have improved over the decades, but recent welfare reforms, rising living costs, and the tightening of the benefit rules mean numerous Disabled people are experiencing declining conditions rather than progress.

Access is unpredictable, there is weak support and mindsets that lag far behind public narratives. This is the reality for numerous disabled people, neurodivergent people, LGBTQ+ people, and anyone whose needs rely on systems that weren’t built with them in mind.

Some workplaces, councils, or communities adapt quickly; others hardly move, and this is why so many people feel like they’re continually having to justify themselves, re-explain their needs, or fight for things that are apparently already guaranteed.

Progress has happened, but it hasn’t yet reached the ground in a reliable, lived way, and that’s the part that gets obliterated when people say, ‘But things are better now.’

I am pointing out something real, not imagined, not exaggerated, and not in my head, and disabled people are being pushed back while the world pretends that there has been progress.

The accessibility gaps in housing, transport, and public buildings remain enormous, despite decades of lawmaking, while medical professionals still receive minimal training on disability, chronic illness, or congenital conditions.

Older disabled people encounter a double invisibility: ageism + ableism, and policy decisions are still made about them, but not with them, and our younger generations often don’t know the history of disability rights, the activism, the protests, the sit-ins, the fights that forced change, and why? Because they have been deliberately ‘dumbed down.’

Schools, the media, or the government are allegedly teaching our children less than they should, on purpose. They have lower attention spans because they are growing up with mobile phones, fast content and endless distractions, making learning harder.

As for disability and accessibility, it’s not that some places can’t be accessible; it’s the ones that claim they are accessible, and then you find out that they’re not, and that’s not a minor inconvenience; it’s a breach of trust, which also means they are in breach of the Equality Act.

The core issue is misrepresentation. When a venue promotes itself as accessible, disabled people plan around that promise – transport, carers, equipment, energy levels, time. When that reality doesn’t match, the consequences are real.

Wasted journeys — time, money, and physical effort lost

Safety risks — steps, narrow doors, broken lifts, inaccessible toilets

Exclusion — being turned away from a space you were told you could use

Emotional impact — embarrassment, frustration, or feeling like an afterthought

Sadly, accessibility is treated like a tick-box, not a lived reality.

Unfortunately, when one is disabled, whether it be visible or a hidden disability, as well as managing your condition, you are also managing how the world perceives you. That double load ends up building a kind of quiet, chronic uncertainty about their future, but believe me when I say, fear isn’t a sign of weakness; it’s a rational response to living in a system that often only recognises what it can see, and you are not alone in that experience.

Irish Woman Fined Over Vile Racist Rant At Hotel Workers

An Irish woman living and working in the UK has been convicted of racism charges and ordered to pay nearly £1,000 after she embarked on an ”anti-English” harangue whilst staying at a Holiday Inn hotel.

Cait O’Halloran, 40, yelled: ‘All British should burn in hell!’ and ‘All British people should die!’ after a row erupted with staff when she asked for a new key card for her room.

During her vile outburst, O’Halloran, who lives in the West Sussex seaside resort of Littlehampton, abused one staff member by saying, ‘He is a live creature’ before later turning on colleagues, screaming: ‘Go to hell. F*** off and die. All British should die.’

Police called to the hotel in Runcorn, Cheshire, on January 17 this year found the £ 32,000-a-year office worker was intoxicated. A court heard she has a ‘hazy’ recollection of the incident.

Appearing at Warrington magistrates’ court, O’Halloran pleaded guilty to racially aggravated harassment and was fined £614 and ordered to pay £331 in costs and a surcharge. 

At the end of Friday’s sentencing hearing, she asked if she now had a criminal conviction – and was told she did and would need to inform her employer. It is not understood why she flew into a rage.

Umer Zeb, prosecuting, said: ‘A 999 report was made from Holiday Inn in Runcorn of a heavily intoxicated female who was being verbally abusive to staff. It was anti-English abuse.

‘The defendant requested a new key card, but whilst at the reception desk, she became abusive. She said, ‘He is a live creature’ and ‘All British people should die.’’

Mr Zeb said she was provided with a new room key, and she later returned to the area before going to the smoking area. But on entering back into the reception area, she abused a different member of staff.

He added: ‘She has become verbally abusive and said they ‘should burn in hell’ and ‘All British people should burn in hell’.

‘She said, ‘F*** off and die’ to both employees.’

Mr Zeb said O’Halloran had no previous convictions.

He added that while sentencing guidelines suggested a fine as a suitable punishment for the offence, there should be an ‘uplift’ because of its ‘racist nature’.

In mitigation, O’Halloran’s solicitor Peter Green said: ‘This is totally out of character for her. She has no previous convictions recorded against her.

‘Clearly, alcohol has played a part in this offence. Miss O’Halloran’s memory and recollection is somewhat hazy. She is mortified by her actions. 

‘She is working and earns £32,000 per year. No doubt you will fine her, but I ask that you keep that fine to a minimum, bearing in mind her income.’

Sentencing, JP Paula Jones told O’Halloran: ‘It is obvious you acknowledge your remorse, which makes a big difference in these cases, taking responsibility for this offence. We also acknowledge your early guilty plea.’

According to Government figures in the year ending March 2025, there were 98,000 race hate crimes recorded by the police in England and Wales. 

While the exact number of people convicted of abusing English people specifically is not published as a single metric, data reveal that in 30 per cent of known-ethnicity hate crimes, the victim is identified as white.

The woman had obviously had a skinful and said a few ‘hurty’ words. Although those words shouldn’t have been said, I’m sure whoever it was said to will get over it. But the answer is: don’t get so drunk that you can’t actually remember what you said. Of course, she is mortified by her actions, and drinking is a mug’s game – lucky for some that she wasn’t driving anywhere, otherwise this could have been a lot more serious, someone could have been killed, so ‘hurty’ words are the least of our problems.

Locals Outraged By Parcel Locker Placed In Cul-De-Sac

Residents living in a quiet cul-de-sac were left enraged after an 8ft-tall, bright green parcel locker was suddenly ‘plonked’ right outside their doors.

Homeowners on Arne Road in Walsgrave, Coventry, were ‘up in arms’ about the unwelcome arrival on April 10. Their fervent opposition successfully persuaded the company to remove the container.

The battery-run, solar-powered delivery point is owned by Yeep!, a specialist in parcel lockers, and has been placed half a mile from the nearest shop.

Locals claim they were initially told a concrete base had been installed for a new salt box, and were outraged to then spot the ‘eyesore’ box just yards from their living rooms. 

They also say they haven’t seen the parcel lockers used once since it was installed on their doorsteps.

Lynda Congrave, 79, has lived on the street for 40 years and says the locker poses risks to local kids.

Ms Congrave said: ‘I can’t believe it’s right outside my living room window. It’s disgusting.

‘I used to be able to check in on my friend across the road by looking through her front room – now I can’t see past this block.

‘It blocks my view from this window, and I’m all concerned about the young children who play around here.

‘We have no problem with them, but if cars are going to come speeding down to drop parcels in there, they’re only young kids.

‘They might run out, and there could be somebody run over. We don’t want that risk here.’

John and Suzanna Davies, who live just a few doors down from where the locker was pitched, believe it is still yet to be used even once.

John, 77, said: ‘Everybody is up in arms about it, all the residents.

‘It’s on the lawn that’s tended by the residents themselves. All the gardens are kept prim and proper around here, and we take pride in the area.

‘There were small parcels of land when the estate was built, and a company had the rights to them. They put them up for sale, and people bought them up.

‘A chap in Kenilworth bought this land. A couple of months ago, he was around scratching in the soil. When asked what he was doing, he said the council asked him to do it as they were putting a salt box there.

‘We all thought that was a tremendous idea. We always need salt boxes.

‘They put a concrete base in, but then this great big box appeared. He’s completely pulled the wool over our eyes so he could drop it in there without us knowing or getting in his way.

‘Nobody can understand it all, it’s not next to a supermarket. It’s not like people can easily come and go to pick up and drop off parcels. It’s in front of someone’s home, blocking their front window and getting in the way.

‘It’s in a residential area, there’s been no planning permission for it. It was chucked up around two weeks ago, but we don’t know who intends to use it.

‘We’ve not seen any use of it in that time either. There’s a bingo hall around half a mile away with a supermarket, and they have plenty of lockboxes there. So why do we need this one here, with nothing around it?

‘The council came out the next day and said they’d do the best to get it moved.’

Coventry City Council confirmed that the installation is under investigation to determine whether it was erected illegally.

A spokesman for the council said: ‘Nothing further to say at this stage, the matter is under investigation and officers have contacted the landowner and locker company.’

Jamie Dickinson, CEO, YEEP, said: ‘YEEP! would like to apologise unreservedly to the residents of Arne Road in Walsgrave, Coventry.

‘We have investigated the circumstances surrounding the installation of the locker.

‘We acknowledge that the location was wholly unsuitable and have taken immediate action to deactivate and remove the locker.

‘We have also reviewed our internal procedures and are implementing strengthened controls and additional improvements to prevent a similar experience occurring.’

This was a ludicrous place for this parcel locker, and the company need to remove it immediately.

Sadly, these will be our modern-day post boxes. The ones we see now will be a thing of the past, like our telephone boxes. Clearly, the location was not suitable, but perhaps it was placed there because the nearby residents sent or received a considerable amount of parcels, but let’s face it, they are a complete eyesore, and it could have been put in a more discreet location.

Give it a week, and it will be vandalised and clad in graffiti, and every dog will have marked their territory there, and it’s amazing how fast the planning department jumps on you if your extension is 1 foot larger than it should be, yet this monstrosity can be placed with no questions asked.

Coventry City Council confirmed that the installation is under investigation. What is there to investigate? It would be a brief review of the records that would tell them one way or the other if they had clearance to put it there, but it seems it takes multiple brain cells to do this! Come on, Coventry City Council – chop chop.

  China’s Control Over The UK’s Antibiotics Supply

  

Britain could be cut off from antibiotics supplies because of its ‘potentially catastrophic’ reliance on China for medication, a worrying new report reveals.

With China producing up to 90 per cent of the ingredients used in antibiotics, experts have warned that President Xi could deny the NHS and Armed Forces access to infection-killing medicines at any time.

While the UK and US source most of their antibiotics from India, India actually relies on China for 91.5 per cent of its antibiotics ingredients, the report from think tank Council on Geostrategy reveals.

This extreme concentration ‘exposes the US and Europe to the geopolitical calculations of the Chinese Communist Party’.

And in the event of a military conflict, this could see Beijing instantly severing medical supplies to Western forces and hospitals.

But China could also quietly apply a ‘health blockade’ outside of war by squeezing India’s supply, which would instantly starve the UK, Europe and America of important medications.

In the report’s foreword, Labour MP for North Durham Luke Akehurst warns that industrial failure in China, a sudden restriction on exports or a souring of relations between China and the UK could ‘paralyse the healthcare of Britain and its allies and partners across the Euro-Atlantic area within just a few weeks’.

Shadow home affairs minister Alicia Kearns adds that ‘we now face a reality where a single contamination event or geopolitical decision in a foreign and potentially hostile state could trigger catastrophic shortages across the United Kingdom’.

And the report’s author, Andrew Rechenberg, an economist specialising in pharmaceutical supply chains, writes that China’s control over antibiotics is ‘not just an economic problem’ but a ‘direct health security and national security vulnerability for the United States, Britain, and Europe’.

He adds: ‘When so much of the world depends on so few upstream plants and firms, even a single disruption can cascade across hospitals and health systems.’

This comes as the top four Chinese suppliers of antibiotics ingredients – North China Pharma, Sinobright Pharma, MS and Centrient Pharmaceuticals – account for 54 per cent of India’s imports, leaving global supplies dependent on only a tiny number of individual companies.

Meanwhile, only seven sites that manufacture the compound that produces penicillin are based in China, creating a severe ‘chokepoint’ in the global penicillin supply chain, the report warns.

And ‘sustained price suppression’ by China has cut the West out of the antibiotics manufacturing market, with only one penicillin production facility now operating in Austria.

Subsidised Chinese fermentation producers have driven global import prices down by around 80 per cent for antibiotics ingredients since 1992, crushing the margins of Western counterparts.

The report calls for Western governments to bring forward financial incentives to boost antibiotic manufacturing capabilities outside of India and China, and for tariff-rate quotas to counter the low-cost prices of antibiotics made abroad.

This is all extremely questionable, isn’t it? Our politicians do their best to convince us that China can’t be trusted, yet they still do business with them, making us dependent on their supplies.

Our UK government really have sold us out, and people are seeing the truth now, but then the truth always comes out in the end, and the truth is that the UK is driven by people who don’t even live here.

Our government and our preceding governments have allowed us to become dependent upon other countries for almost everything. Do we actually make anything for ourselves anymore?

You would have thought that after COVID, someone in government with even half a brain would have looked into this and identified areas where we are vulnerable and either need to produce ourselves or have more contingencies in place in case of shortages. Unfortunately, Labour has driven businesses into the ground, so now we are always going to be reliant on everyone else.

Assisted Dying

I came across an article on Facebook today about Assisted Dying. I won’t say the name of the person who put it on there, but to be honest, when I saw the post, I was mortified.

The caption said, ‘You’ll be ‘offered’ Assisted Dying when you are too old to work.’

Of course, it’s understandable that you’d respond strongly to this concept, and it taps into a very genuine worry that many people have right now: as society ages, economic forces may silently influence how governments discuss end-of-life options.

There is no UK policy, recommendation, or legal means that would permit the state to ‘offer’ Assisted Dying because someone is too old to work, and Assisted Dying is still prohibited in the UK, and any future changes would need strict safeguards, parliamentary approval, and medical oversight – not economic criteria.

However, even though the claim isn’t ground in current law, the anxiety comes from real pressures because workforce shortages and an ageing population are openly debated by ministers and think tanks, and in some countries with legal Assisted Dying have had controversial cases involving people who felt economically or socially pressured, and of course, public debate often mixes ‘dignity’, ‘burden’, and ‘cost’, which understandably makes people suspicious, and these pressures create a environment where people fear that ‘choice’ could become ‘expectation.’

So, what is the UK’s existing legal position on this? Well, Assisted Dying is forbidden under the Suicide Act 1961, and any modification would need a full Act of Parliament, and no bill has ever suggested that being ‘too old to work’ could qualify someone.

Even if Assisted Dying were legalised in the future, the Age Discrimination Law (Equality Act 2010) prevents decisions based on age alone, and medical ethics require voluntary, informed consent without coercion.

As far as safeguards are concerned, in every country Assisted Dying explicitly forbids offering it based on employment status, cost, or social value, and the NHS cannot recommend a treatment or intervention for non-medical reasons, and a government ‘offering’ Assisted Dying because someone is no longer economically productive would violate numerous layers of the law, ethics, and medical regulation.

However, this fear deserves to be taken seriously, and we are not imagining the cultural shift that numerous people feel because older people are being treated as if they are economically problematic.

Social care is underfunded, and politicians talk about ‘dependency ratios’ as if people are numbers, and the importance of older adults is framed in ‘economic terms,’ and when you merge those narratives, it’s easy to see why people worry about where the line might move.

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