
Passing Observations 295
Dr Vernon Coleman
1. You might think that `Free Suits’ Starmer went to China to collect tips on how to use social credit to oppress the English. Not so. I suspect that `Free Suits’ went to give the Chinese advice on how to use social credit to oppress the Chinese more ruthlessly and more effectively.
2. One in five individuals is a psychopath. You can find out all you need to know about psychopaths you by reading my book `Are you living with a psychopath? The 39 simple ways you can diagnose a psychopath.’ For details CLICK HERE
3. I have no idea why anyone under 30 who has earning skills and ambitions hasn’t left Britain. Here are some reasons for leaving: the economy is fucked; there is no health care (and unlikely ever to be any as long as the NHS exists) with GPs having no interest in looking after their patients and hospitals as overcrowded and lethal as they were in mediaeval times; the cost of living is horrendous (largely because of extremely high energy prices); there is absolutely no leadership at national or local levels; education is appalling since teachers indoctrinate rather than teach, and children and students are never taught to think for themselves; immigration has clogged the country with millions more people on benefits (though we aren’t allowed to mention this and anyone who does will immediately be classified a racist); property prices are absurdly high and unaffordable; traditional culture is suppressed by woke and politically correct nonentities, there is no justice (except for immigrants); crime levels are soaring, and in towns and cities it is dangerous to go out after dark; the tax system is the most complicated, irrational and unfair in the world; roads are merely narrow ribbons of tarmac connecting the potholes; trains, buses and planes offer a service most adequately described as `worse than poor’; freedom is just a memory; the media is bent and prejudiced and serves up a diet of propaganda (with the BBC being the Government’s main propaganda unit). A warning, however: many of these faults are global and anyone leaving the country should take care not to jump from the frying pan into the fire.
4. The average IQ is 100 so an awful lot of people have an IQ under 100. I think this explains quite a lot. It certainly explains why so many people voted for Starmer.
5. Doctor assisted suicide is not about helping terminally ill people who want to die. It is about helping the State get rid of people who are no longer considered useful.
6. In the bad old days hospitals used to have hairdressers and beauticians on the wards. Making female patients look their best helped them feel better. Today’s nurses are so out of touch with the healing process that they won’t even allow flowers on the wards.
7. I saw a council workman using as leaf blower to move leaves from a stretch of grassland onto a pavement. I asked him why. `I work for the parks department,’ he explained. He nodded towards the pavement: `That’s highways.’
8. Another council has found a unique way to deal with potholes. They have put up signs saying `Potholes: Beware’. The signs are to provide some legal protection. I’d have thought it might have been cheaper to repair the potholes than to have signs made.
9. The British Government (the first blatantly communist Government Britain has ever had) is punishing the elderly simply for having had the audacity not to be dead. I have never before felt quite so ashamed of being English. Starmer, Reeves and company should be honest about their genocide against the elderly and should simply send apparatchiks round to shoot anyone over 65-years-old. Britain’s worst ever Prime Minister `Free Suits’ Starmer has been abroad over 40 times since the election – with most of his luxury trips paid for by taxpayers. I don’t blame him. He’s buggered up Britain so badly that most of us would like to spend our days abroad.
10. In New York a woman who was being attacked shouted and called for help. Around 40 people watched from their windows but no one helped or even rang the police. No one `wanted to get involved’. This was not an unusual event. People are not necessarily uncaring but they are frightened of being filmed, abused, arrested or sued.
11. A few people object to the use of the word `vaccine’ when describing the toxic and useless concoction which is supposed to provide protection against covid-19. This objection was inspired by governments and drug companies which were worried that the distrust of the covid-19 vaccine would rub off onto all the other vaccines which are given. And that is exactly what has happened. Distrust of the covid vaccine has damaged uptake of other vaccines. And for those of us who believe that vaccines do more harm than good that is decidedly a good thing. So, if you want to damage the vaccine industry please keep calling the covid-19 vaccine a vaccine. If you want to help the drug industry just call it the covid-19 marshmallow or the covid-19 giraffe or whatever tickles your curious fancy. If you oppose vaccination in general then the covid concoction must be called a vaccine.
12. Sir Ramick Hobbs tells me that he recently saw a television advertisement in which a white actor appeared. `Most people in Britain are white,’ he says. `So we don’t want white people in our adverts as well.’
13. More money will not improve the NHS. The NHS has too much money but wastes most of it. It would be possible to cure all the ills of the NHS simply by telling GPs that they must again be responsible for looking after their patients 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. At the moment GPs earn £150,000 for a 23 hour week. GPs who won’t take on 24 hour a day responsibility are useless and should be fired. Many refuse to see patients face to face and it is their short working week which means that patients can’t be seen for weeks or even months. GPs who offer virtual appointments should be fired because trying to diagnose or treat patients over the phone or the internet is potentially deadly and any GP who doesn’t know this probably needs help getting dressed. Those GPs who won’t take blood samples, syringe ears or remove stitches should be fired summarily since these are basic tasks which any GP should be able to perform.
14. If your home has downpipes try to have water butts fitted to as many of them as possible. Buy the lids to cover them so that they don’t fill up with dead leaves and other debris. Water is essential and when the pumping stations don’t work your taps will dry up. Even if you have your own water supply you could be without water if your supply relies on anything other than gravity to reach your home. Water in a bore hole will stay where it is without electricity. You can buy water purification tablets and water purification cups online. These are usually bought by travellers, campers and explorers but you can use these to purify the water you take from your water butts. If you don’t need the water from your butts for drinking and cooking you can use it to flush the loo and for washing. Keep a stock of bottled spring water. Keep it in a cool, dark place.
15 .Those who have a little money put aside (and they are members of a shrinking minority these days) have been advised to put their money into Bitcoin and other crypto inventions so that their savings will be `safe’ when the world comes to an end. That’s a bad, bad idea. Cryptocurrencies are entirely dependent on electricity and the internet. When they go, the currencies disappear for ever. Bitcoin is the 21st century of the Dutch tulip madness. Oh, and by the way, quantum computers will soon be able to break all encryption models. When this happens all crypto currencies will be vulnerable.
16. My long-standing prediction that this would be a dark, miserable winter is coming true. It wasn’t a difficult prediction to make. When the geo-engineers started to block the sun it was inevitable that our winters would be darker (and more depressing). It’s all part of the depopulation plan, of course. I wonder how many thousands of old people will die this year because they can’t afford to keep warm. Britain’s communist Government has cleverly arranged for energy costs to go up just as we enter the misery months.
17. Post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is now commoner among civilians than it ever was among the military. The explosion in the incidence of PTSD is hardly surprising . Symptoms include nightmares, disordered sleep, distressing thoughts, sweating, nausea, negative thoughts and hallucinations. I suspect that PTSD already affects millions in the UK, US, Canada, Australia and Europe.
19. Best news of the week is that the United Nations is in money trouble. Since the United States stopped handed over its subscription money the UN has had to start looking down the back of the sofa. Did you know, by the way, that UN employees don’t pay tax?
20. Ignorant folk sometimes argue that since I worked as a GP I have less knowledge than hospital specialists. However, I edited two medical journals and have published a variety of health newsletters and lectured doctors and nurses at a number of medical schools. I have contributed to the Open University and written papers and articles for many medical journals including: the British Medical Journal, Nursing Times, Nursing Mirror, Journal of Medical Ethics, Lancet, New Physician, Pulse, Doctor, General Practitioner, Cardiology, Nursing, Journal of Alternative Medicine, World Medicine, Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, Geriatric Medicine, American Journal of Nursing, Hospital Life, Hospital Times and Medical News. In the early 1980s I co-wrote the first medical software for general use. For over 50 years I was acknowledged to be the world’s leading expert on iatrogenesis and drug and vaccine side effects. Then came covid and overnight a single anonymous propagandist decided, with no evidence whatsoever, that I was a discredited conspiracy theorist.
Copyright Vernon Coleman February 2026
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