Kathy Gyngell

The German politician with the strength of Margaret Thatcher

ON MONDAY, in Committee Room Ten at the House of Commons, we were treated to hearing the remarkable German MEP, Christine Anderson. She was the guest of Andrew Bridgen on an international panel he had drawn together to discuss the World Health Organization power grab and how to save our sovereignty.  I had high expectations of this quite unusual politician who […]

Kathy’s TCW week in review

LIFE in Britain seems to me to be getting nastier, shorter and more brutish – another week when it’s been hard to find a highlight or an upbeat note to celebrate. Two abandoned newborns (one dead), more stabbings and a horrendous chemical attack (by somebody who should never have been allowed to stay in the country) […]

Kathy’s TCW week in review

THIS was the week I caved in. Another enforcement letter from TV Licensing, more menacing than the last, dropping on my doormat on the same day that I received a county court summons for a cool £19,000 damages claim against me I’d never heard about (for a near-invisible wheel hub I scraped more than three years ago that my […]

Kathy’s TCW week in review

HELLO again! We’ve had another great week of articles on TCW – the site where you can access the comment (and news) other media ignore.  Laura has been in fine form – her devastating article on Rochdale stands out. She found the report on the failure of the authorities to respond to the grooming gangs grim reading. These children […]

After 12 years of frustration, Mark Steyn’s brave battle for freedom of speech reaches court today

LONG before the covid era of repression and free speech censorship, well before students and universities began their routine censoring of incorrect speech, sending those who transgressed into the social gulag of non persondom (remember Professor Tim Hunt stripped of his position for observing that women cried), Mark Steyn had taken up arms on thought control and in defence of […]

Kathy’s TCW week in review

HELLO, and a belated Happy New Year. We hit the ground running so fast that I feel we’re two months into 2024 already. I can’t remember when we began the new year with such a stunning batch of articles and writers. Our starting gun sounded on January 6 with Professor Angus Dalgleish (of ‘ban mRNA […]

How will they explain away these latest excess death figures?

NO ONE can have missed the curious omission in the various explanations proffered by medical experts, public health officials and the mainstream media for the undeniable and dramatic rise in excess deaths as reported in the Lancet before Christmas which only this last week caught the eye of social media. Katie Hopkins did a particularly effective filleting of the headlines on X:  […]

The riddle of Russia, Part 6

This is the sixth and last in Hillsdale College’s October 2022 lecture series on Russia. The first, Russia from 1696-1917: An Overview, a veritable ‘history’ tour de force through Russia’s shifting borders, wars and alliances by the American historian Sean McMeekin, can be found here with my fuller introduction to the series. The second, by Steve Kotkin, another American […]

The riddle of Russia, Part 5

WE have arrived at the fifth in Hillsdale College’s October 2022 lecture series on Russia. The first, Russia from 1696-1917: An Overview, a veritable ‘history’ tour de force through Russia’s shifting borders, wars and alliances by the American historian Sean McMeekin, can be found here with my fuller introduction to the series. The second, by Steve Kotkin, another […]