Regulation

Uncategorized

The 1970s: Britain’s Lost Decade and the Lesson We Forgot

When Gareth Davies warned Labour was taking Britain “back to the 1970s,” critics scoffed. But history tells a harder truth. The 70s weren’t fair or prosperous — they were the decade Britain hit rock bottom. Thatcher rescued it; weak leaders since have let it slip again. Reform UK’s challenge is to rebuild belief — not in nostalgia, but in Britain.

Uncategorized

Analysis of Recent Posts Mentioning “Reform UK”, “Farage”, and “#ReformUK”

A real-world demonstration of AI’s analytical power: ChatGPT designed the research framework and Grok gathered live sentiment data from X to analyse public opinion on Reform UK. The result reveals what people are really saying — faster and more accurately than manual research ever could.

EthicsLawPolitics

Argument against compulsory “BritCard” / Digital ID for all citizens

I am firmly opposed to the introduction of a compulsory digital ID scheme for all British citizens (sometimes called “BritCard”)

Politics

Blame the Tories? The Deeper Roots of Britain’s Decline

Much of what’s wrong in Britain today didn’t begin in 2010. From mass immigration without infrastructure to the ideological overreach of the Equality Act, this post explores the long-term roots of national decline — many of which lie in New Labour’s legacy, not just 14 years of Conservative rule.

EconomicsEnvironmentPolicy

Energy Independence for Britain: A Practical Alternative to the Current Net Zero Dogma

💡 New on No Bull Politics:
Is Net Zero dogma driving Britain into energy poverty?
Here’s a bold, practical plan to regain control, cut prices, and fund our own future — with British energy for British needs.
👉 Read the report: [link]
#EnergyIndependence #NetZero #UKPolitics #NoBull

Economics

OPINION:- The Sparkie’s Economy: Why Potential Drives Prosperity

In electrical theory, potential difference—voltage—is what drives the flow of electrons, creating energy and power. Without it, nothing moves. The same is true for economies and societies. Progress happens when there are differences in opportunity, ambition, and reward—when there is potential to be realised. Just as excessive resistance blocks electrical current, overregulation and forced equality stifle economic growth. True prosperity comes from allowing energy to flow, not short-circuiting ambition.

BrexitEconomicsPolitics

Pros and Cons of Brexit

Brexit is a long-term journey, not an instant fix. While the UK has gained sovereignty, the government’s slow response has delayed progress by years. Real benefits depend on proactive policymaking—cutting red tape, expanding global trade, and supporting businesses. The next few years will determine whether Brexit’s potential is fully realised.

BrexitDemocracyPolitics

OPINION: The Myth of a Peaceful Trade Bloc: How the EU Became a Power-Hungry Beast

The EU began as a promising trade bloc but morphed into a power-hungry bureaucracy that eroded national sovereignty. While the UK’s decision to leave was right, political betrayal undermined Brexit. Now, we must stay vigilant against both EU overreach and a political class willing to ignore the people’s voice.

DemocracyEthicsPolitics

UK Data (Use and Access) Bill

the Data (Use and Access) Bill represents a significant step toward modernizing the UK’s data infrastructure. Its successful implementation will depend on addressing privacy concerns, ensuring inclusivity, and providing clear guidance to stakeholders throughout the transition period.