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    Article here:

    Wes Streeting has ordered an LGBT+ health review despite previously axing a key women’s health target.

    For the first time, the NHS will conduct a six-month review of its “unequal” treatment of LGBT+ patients. Recommendations on improving the experiences of people who consider themselves LGBT+ will be made to the Government in December, the health service said.

    It is likely to ignite further criticism from women and campaigners, who accused the Health Secretary of “sidelining” women after he removed women’s health targets in annual NHS planning guidance earlier this year while also setting up a men’s health strategy.

    Anyway, LGBT isn't a thing – let alone the +. If the trans movement is noted for anything – apart from its misogyny – it's the homophobia. "Transing away the gay". LGB are same-sex attracted, while the Ts (and the +?) deny the reality of sex.

  • Tom Harris in the Telegraph:

    So here is the latest triumph in British international diplomacy as crafted by the Prime Minister and his Foreign Secretary, David Lammy: we will recognise Palestine as a state, but only as a punishment for Israel if it fails to secure a ceasefire with Hamas terrorists. If the Islamists, however, manage to obstruct a ceasefire agreement – for example, by refusing to release the hostages that are still languishing in Gaza – they will be rewarded with international recognition.

    A primary level child could see the problem with such a “solution” but it seems to have escaped our Prime Minister and his Cabinet. Not only has he created perverse incentives for Hamas to extend the fighting in Gaza for a couple of months, but he has also made the release of Israeli hostages, many of whom have already been murdered in captivity, less likely….

    Seems a fair summary. Some acolyte cobbled it together, they just glanced through it, said yeah fine: fingers crossed that'll keep the backbenchers and the Muslim vote happy for the moment….

    Added:

    A senior Hamas official has welcomed Sir Keir Starmer’s promise to recognise Palestine, saying that “victory and liberation are closer than we expected”.

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    "…who refuse to sign up to the fashionable doctrine that some men are women and deserve more consideration than actual women."

    It's a noteworthy fact, given the obvious class element here – a privileged management group trying to punish a working class woman for refusing to accept their elitist and misogynist beliefs – that not one single trades union that I'm aware of would support Sandie Peggie here. Certainly not the Royal College of Nursing. They're all completely behind the gender cause. Such an obvious case of workers' rights under attack from middle-class management, and they all look the other way.

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    Full text:

    Recognizing a Palestinian state while 50 hostages remain trapped in Hamas tunnels amounts to rewarding terrorism. Such recognition is not a step toward peace, but rather a clear violation of international law and a dangerous moral and political failure that legitimizes horrific war crimes.

    The abduction of men, women, and children, who are being held against their will in tunnels while subjected to starvation and physical and psychological abuse, cannot and should not serve as the foundation for establishing a state.

    If the international community truly desires peace, it must join U.S. efforts by demanding first the release of all hostages, followed by an end to the fighting.

    Recognition of a Palestinian state before the hostages are returned will be remembered throughout history as validating terrorism as a legitimate pathway to political goals.

    The essential first step toward ensuring a better future for all peoples must be the release of all hostages through a single, comprehensive deal.

  • After yesterday's look at North Korean workers in China, the Daily NK today turns to Russia:

    North Korean authorities have intensified surveillance of workers dispatched to Russia, immediately repatriating those caught accessing foreign content. This crackdown is creating a climate of fear as North Korea prepares for large-scale labor dispatches to earn foreign currency.

    According to a Daily NK source in Russia recently, at least three North Korean workers were sent home between late last year and early July after being caught with portable storage devices containing foreign cultural content, including South Korean dramas.

    One male worker in Moscow was questioned and repatriated early this year after being discovered with foreign content in December. A similar incident occurred in another Russian region around the same time. In early July, a worker in his thirties from Vladivostok was caught with a USB drive containing South Korean dramas and questioned by North Korean state security agents stationed in Russia. He is scheduled to be sent home later this month.

    Not just sent home, of course. A long period in a labour camp almost certainly awaits – after extensive "interrogation".

    The heightened surveillance follows a corruption case involving Choi Sung Chol, a North Korean state security agent stationed in Russia, which gained international attention when North Korean workers exposed it publicly. In response, North Korea overhauled its worker control systems, preparing for additional large-scale labor dispatches to Russia.

    North Korean state security agents deployed overseas conduct comprehensive surveillance that goes far beyond ideological oversight. They monitor workers’ daily routines, conversations, behavior, and outside contacts, then report their findings to authorities.

    In worker dormitories, personal belongings are inspected daily after evening roll call. “Optional searches” – surprise inspections of lockers, luggage, and even under beds – occur frequently, according to the source.

    “What’s happening now isn’t arbitrary control by state security, but systematic management based on clear state orders,” the source explained. “They’re building a system to prevent problematic elements and uncontrollable incidents before North Korea significantly increases overseas worker dispatches.”

    Possessing electronic devices like laptops or MP3 players, or storage devices like USB drives or SD cards, is strictly forbidden and can lead to severe punishment for “ideological deviation.” Workers are extremely cautious about not only sharing foreign content but even consuming it privately.

    Workers are also prohibited from meeting foreigners. Personal conversations with local Russians or workers of other nationalities are considered “independent activity without organizational approval” and trigger investigations by state security agents.

    “In some locations, CCTVs monitor dormitory and workplace hallways, and workers are completely forbidden from leaving at night,” the source said. “Workers who enter at unusual times or visit unclear locations must explain themselves and sometimes face punishment.”

    Yep – however much you resist the cliché, as Christopher Hitchens noted 15 years ago, you just can't avoid the Orwell 1984 comparison. They make you say it. 

  • On that fake "starving child in Gaza" story:

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    Refusing a ceasefire has served Hamas very well so far. The more intransigent they are, the more the West panders to them. Why change course now?

  • From the Daily NK:

    A new investigation reveals that North Korean workers dispatched to Chinese fisheries were forced to surrender 80-90% of their wages to the state, receiving only 10-20% for living expenses. Seafood produced through what amounts to forced labor has been distributed not only to the United States, Canada, and Spain, but also to South Korea through approximately 30 domestic companies, with products sold in major supermarkets and fish markets.

    Daily NK’s AND Center presented these findings in a “Report on Forced Labor of North Korean Workers at Chinese Fisheries” at a Seoul Foreign Correspondents’ Club (SFCC) briefing held at the Korea Press Center in Jung-gu, Seoul on the afternoon of July 17. Based on testimonies from North Korean workers dispatched overseas, the report highlighted the reality of North Korea’s foreign currency earning operations and loopholes in global supply chains that circumvent sanctions against North Korea.

    According to the report, North Korean workers must pay substantial bribes to officials even before being dispatched, and women, in particular, must endure sexual humiliation in exchange for obtaining life evaluation certificates. This demonstrates that worker deployment is far from “voluntary contracts,” with the report defining it as “systematic exploitation” rather than legitimate contracting.

    The report noted that human rights conditions deteriorate further after dispatched workers arrive in China. Their passports are immediately confiscated by supervisors, they face 24-hour surveillance in factory dormitories, and strict controls on movement make contact with the outside world virtually impossible.

    Workers endure 12-14 hour workdays and routine verbal abuse, the report revealed. Those who attempt to escape face severe punishment if caught, or are forcibly repatriated and subsequently disappear without trace of their fate. This complete deprivation of workers’ freedom to refuse labor constitutes the core requirements of forced labor as defined by the International Labour Organization (ILO).

    Forced labour – or slave labour. Take your pick.

  • From the Telegraph:

    An Algerian criminal has won the right to stay in Britain after claiming he would face ridicule and abuse in his home country for being transgender.

    The 27-year-old has been jailed for robbery and committed multiple offences, including burglary, theft and battery, since being granted refugee status in the UK in 2013.

    In arguing against his deportation, the repeat offender – identified only as MS – claimed he would be targeted in Algeria because of his sexuality, described to a court as “gay, transvestite and/or transgender”.

    An asylum judge agreed, upholding his appeal against the Home Office’s revocation of his refugee status.

    Upper tribunal Judge Christopher Hanson said: “Were MS to return to Algeria and be open about his sexuality, he would be at risk of mockery, harassment, discrimination and potential harm from non-state actors.

    “Were he to wear women’s clothes and makeup, he would certainly draw negative attention to himself, and would likely be subjected to ridicule, hostility and possible harm."

    Oh dear.

    Couldn't he wear a burkha?

    Anyway, don't the Algerians have a proud tradition of celebrating men who present as women? Olympic gold boxer Imane Khelif comes to mind….

  • Much talk of recognising Palestine, following Macron's latest move. Paul Friesen has some thoughts (via Jerry Coyne):

    Let’s start with the simplest geographical question: where is this Palestine Macron plans to recognize? The 1967 lines? Adjusted borders? A demilitarized Gaza under Mahmoud Abbas’ theoretical authority, which he hasn’t been able to exercise even over Ramallah’s traffic lights without Israeli security coordination?

    No answer.

    A state without borders is either a fantasy or a threat. Fantasy, because you can’t govern what you can’t locate. Threat, because ambiguity is always the friend of maximalism; it gives every faction the right to fill in the map with its preferred crayons—green flags for some, blood-red slogans for others….

    Macron writes to Abbas as if the PA can govern Gaza by decree. He writes about demilitarizing Hamas as if it’s a customs offence. He speaks of elections in 2026 as if the militant factions will queue politely and accept the result. This is not policy; it is therapeutic prose—designed to soothe the conscience of a continent that outsourced its moral courage to metaphors.

    Gaza already answered the question Macron refuses to ask. In 2005, Israel uprooted every Jew, dismantled every settlement, and even removed the dead. Gaza became a laboratory. The reagents: international aid, Israeli withdrawal, and Palestinian self-rule. The result: rockets, tunnels, human shields, and ultimately the largest pogrom against Jews since the Holocaust. The experiment ran for eighteen years. The conclusion writes itself….

    There is a path forward. It is not a utopia, but it is achievable:

      • Palestinian reform must come before international recognition, not as a reward for avoiding it.

      • Hamas must be defeated, not “demilitarized.” You do not negotiate disarmament with a group that views compromise as apostasy.

      • Education must be de-radicalized, not subsidized. Palestinian children deserve books that teach coexistence, not maps that erase Israel.

      • The right of return must be relinquished, not romanticized. No peace will come from imagining that Tel Aviv is negotiable.

      • And finally, Israel must be recognized not merely as a fact, but as a moral necessity—a refuge state for a people nearly extinguished, and the only one of its kind.

    Until those terms are met, every recognition letter, every UN podium gesture, every Elysée photo-op is an act of profound irresponsibility—a theatre of virtue where tragedy is the curtain call.

    Macron’s letter is already being archived as “historic.” It is no such thing. It is the bureaucratic paraphrase of a failure to learn, a polished signature at the bottom of a diplomatic hallucination. The same moral calamity that allowed Europe to whisper through the rise of Islamism at home now shouts Palestine abroad, hoping it buys a little more credibility in the salons of global virtue.

    What it buys, in fact, is a narrative in which Israel becomes the permanent villain for surviving and the Palestinians the permanent victim for refusing to evolve. It preserves grievance, fossilizes failure, and punishes memory. And it dares to call that “peace.”

    Let it be remembered, when the next war breaks out—and it will—that the match was struck not in Rafah or Tel Aviv, but in the offices of those who mistook theatrical compassion for strategy, and who never paid the price for their illusions. Others always do.

    But very much worth reading in full.

    No political group that's arisen in Palestine has ever signaled a willingness to recognise Israel. No political group that's willing to recognise Israel would stand a chance in Palestine – Gaza or the West Bank. And the more they show their hatred of Jews, and their readiness to resort to violence, the more so many in the West, from Macron on down, are willing to appease them.