Posts

Are Charities Bent or Daft?

Are Very Dozy Sheep in Charge of Charities? Do charities care more for their mortgages than you? Let's look at evidence of some that are meant to assist disabled kids. Disabled kids are not being catered to properly and people -sometimes -tend to get wealthy on their pain and vulnerability- sadly there are no doubts at all about that.  Communication devices to non speakers: I had a fey-kind but watery- response from the government regarding this-an attempt to shut me up (lol) - absolute evidence I am correct about all this... Proof that professionals get it wrong across the board- kids are unique -but the stupid, very, very, painfully, lazy training - hasn't allowed for this absolute science.  The funds go to pay all the bloody professions and NOT to the disabled kids themselves!!! It is RAMPANT exploitation by people with nice homes thank you- who purport to live and breathe for good causes- as long as they get all the mod cons and 4 holidays a year in Corsica and staff to d...

NHS- the 58 BILLION pounds of YOUR Money on Negligence

NHS negligence 58 Billion - National Defence budget is for the 2025/26  is planned at around £59.8 billion. Tories were in charge. Labour footing the bill. Not one tory paper has covered this- doesn't say much for their *integrity*  Let that sink in. ..... The NHS can be a helpful, good service, especially in emergencies and for people on exceptionally low incomes, and it is run by kind-hearted, usually very well-meaning staff. 'Do-gooders' have their place as do interfering busy-bodies! Yet sometimes, healthcare in the UK becomes excessive, overreaching, and unnecessarily intrusive – which can be bloody dangerous. Opt-outs from data sharing, it seems, are not preventing fragmented records from circulating across departments, public services, and authorities. This risks erroneous data being passed around, which can cause huge harm, possibly life-changing or life-threatening outcomes as a result. Digital records may offer a great fix, but change takes time. Busy GPs...

Banned Vaccine Article

 28 Aug 2025, 23:59 BST  Removed and banned from the Medium platform. How sweet. A note to trolls. 'There is a disturbing habit among some pro vaccine advocates. Not science, but sneering. They mock those who say they were injured, they dismiss their pain, and they call it protecting the public. It is not protecting the public. It is cruelty. Medicine has never been risk free. Global safety data from the last ten years shows that around one in ten patients are harmed during healthcare and that much of this harm is preventable. This is what the World Health Organization itself has reported. Vaccines are part of the same system. They help many, but they are not free of risk. Regulators, compensation programs, and courts have documented harm. Here are more than ten examples of legally documented iatrogenic harm in the last decade. 1. In Utah a judge awarded nearly one billion dollars to a family after a baby suffered severe brain damage from a botched delivery at Jordan Valley Me...

Free Speech & Authorities

 25 Aug 2025 Article 10: Free Expression as Europe’s Anchor When religion and free speech collide, Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights is the reference point every authority must understand. It is not just a legal clause—it is the backbone of democratic culture. What Article 10 Says 1. Everyone has the right to freedom of expression. This includes freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by public authority. 2. Restrictions are allowed only when “necessary in a democratic society” for reasons such as national security, prevention of crime, or protection of the rights of others. Those protections and attitudes must be considered in multiple ways from different perspectives. The Core Principle The European Court of Human Rights has repeatedly stressed: free expression includes the right to offend, shock, or disturb. Democracies do not protect citizens from discomfort; they protect citizens’ right to speak. Key Rul...

Lucy Letby and the 200 Facebook Searches

'Conviction unsafe' says the expert program, again. This is hotly debated online, and I agree the number of searches sounds quite odd- so as per- I consulted a professional judges legal gpt - the prosecution argument obviously doesn't need more coverage and is left to the professionals involved - and so it should be - meantime- " CCRC submission combining the unsafe conviction argument and comparative evidence. ccrc submission – record search evidence introduction this submission concerns the reliance at trial on evidence that Lucy Letby accessed records of approximately 200 families of deceased infants under her care.  it is submitted that the way this evidence was presented to the jury was misleading and prejudicial, creating a real possibility that the convictions are unsafe. issue whether the record search evidence was wrongly or unfairly used to suggest criminal intent, and whether its presentation without proper comparative context deprived the jury of a fair and...

Lucy Letby - The Notes, Where The Law Failed

 14 August 2025 Why Private, Random Thoughts Should Never Be Used to Convict Someone The human mind produces thousands of thoughts a day — neuroscientists estimate anywhere between 6,000 and 60,000, most of which are fleeting, contradictory, and involuntary. Many are never acted upon, and many are not even consciously endorsed. Yet in some criminal cases, prosecutors have presented diary entries, private journal notes, or scraps of written thought as “proof” of intent or guilt. This practice is scientifically flawed, psychologically dangerous, and legally unsound. 1. Thoughts Are Not Actions From a neuroscience perspective, there is a clear distinction between thought generation and behavioural execution. Thoughts arise in networks such as the default mode network (DMN), which is active during mind-wandering. These spontaneous mental events are often exploratory or emotional “drafts” — not plans. Turning a thought into action requires activation of goal-directed executive circuits ...

Child Psychologists v Educational Psychologists

 Child Psychologists v Educational Psychologists The best help and I ever got with my learning disabled son, was from a regular child psychologist, Sharon. She gave very needed practical advice that was actually effective. I'll forever be grateful to her. Child psychologists are essential when deciding care and probably education too- educational psychologists could be best used to identify specific learning styles and/ disabilities only, an example would be an autistic child could benefit from an ep input if dyspraxia/dyslexia/apraxia etc were an issue.  The lines cross between the two professions and in my experience, I believe they really, really should not.   Ed Pychs are not really taught general mental health and should never be regarded as experts in that.  Distressed children—whether labelled or learning disabled or not—need safety, understanding, and therapy, not punitive behavioural modification that is often mistakenly supported by Ed Psychs.  La...

Journalists and PTSD

PTSD in Journalists: The Unique Pressures and How to Get Help Journalists face a higher risk of post-traumatic stress disorder than most people realise.  It is not only war correspondents who are affected. Investigative journalists covering abuse, corruption, organised crime, or systemic failure can also be repeatedly exposed to trauma.  The harm does not always come from witnessing violence directly. It can build up from reviewing distressing material, hearing survivor accounts, enduring threats, or being targeted for your work. Common PTSD symptoms in journalists include: 1. Re-experiencing Flashbacks, nightmares, and vivid mental images of traumatic events or details. 2. Hyperarousal Constantly being on edge, startling easily, feeling irritable, or struggling to relax. 3. Avoidance and numbing Pulling away from friends and family, avoiding certain assignments or locations, feeling emotionally shut down. 4. Reintegration problems Difficulty shifting from intense investigativ...

Lucy Letby Telegraph Today - Bacteria

 Today's Telegraph reported that there was dangerous, deadly bacteria at the Countess of Chester Hospital at the time Lucy Letby worked there. It made me question the likelihood of the bacterium being found by the coroner- as well as the obvious questions. I asked an ai to explain: 'Should the deadly bacteria in the Letby case have been found during post-mortems? Yes. Under UK medical law and standard hospital practice, if a baby dies unexpectedly, a coroner’s post-mortem is usually required. These post-mortems include infection screening through blood cultures, tissue samples, and swabs from areas like the lungs or brain. If a dangerous bacterium (like Serratia or something similar) caused or contributed to the death, it should have been detected. Who is responsible for identifying it? The hospital’s pathology and microbiology team are responsible for running these tests and reporting results. If the case is under the coroner, they also review the findings. If multiple babies ...

How To Make Therapy Effective

This something essential: the fact that our inner life — our moods, fears, and capacity for change — can’t be understood in isolation from the body that sustains it.  While therapy often emphasizes psychological mechanisms like fear extinction and neuroplasticity, that work can be hamstrung if we ignore the biological substrate on which it depends. Consider the following: Hormones: Dysregulation of cortisol, thyroid hormones, sex hormones, or neurotransmitters like serotonin and dopamine can destabilize mood and cognitive function. They can make it far harder to unlearn fear, or even to engage in therapy effectively. Nutrients: Deficiencies in B vitamins, vitamin D, magnesium, zinc, or omega-3 fatty acids compromise neurotransmitter production, brain plasticity, and can drive inflammation. These deficiencies don’t just make us feel worse — they reduce the brain’s capacity to change. Methylation: This is a basic cellular process, constantly at work, governing DNA repair, detoxificat...

Slavery 2025 + Support

First- my view on the prevention.   Children grow into adults who shape society, yet most leave school without tools to handle life’s challenges.  Teaching boundaries, resilience, practical skills, and philosophy is essential for building a just and free society.  Boundaries foster respect and healthy relationships, while resilience prepares students to face adversity without collapsing or lashing out.  Skills, from financial literacy to conflict resolution, empower independence.  Philosophy — including modern voices like Sam Harris, Krishnamurti, and Alan Watts — encourages critical thinking, self-awareness, and questioning dogma.  These thinkers invite students to explore ethics, consciousness, and the roots of freedom.  A curriculum grounded in these elements produces citizens who are thoughtful, strong, and resistant to manipulation, ensuring freedom is not just inherited but understood and sustained. Global Modern Slavery Trends (1999–Present) ...

Lucy Letby- Breathing Tube Science Refs & Stats

Facts we know about neonatal tube dislodgement and deaths in neonatal care- this is from deep prompts in chatgpt and google- please check this all out for youself.   More nuanced search and science is what the police and ccrc must be researching. "About that ‘40% tube dislodgement’ claim at Liverpool Women’s (2012–15): Neonatal care is extremely high-risk, especially for very premature babies. Peer-reviewed studies show: Nearly 50% of neonatal intubations fail on the first try. Adverse events (like tubes moving, oxygen drops, heart issues) happen in up to 40% of neonatal intubations, versus 20% in older kids. Most of these issues are linked to baby fragility, staff experience, and unit policies — not foul play. Sources anyone can read: 1. https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9032/13/11/1242 2. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8529572/ 3. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41390-025-04168-w Neonatal tube events and death rates in context (UK 2012–2016) Nearly 50 percent of neonatal ...

Phone Acting Weird- What To Do

  What to do if your phone starts acting weird 1. Put it on Airplane mode immediately it starts acting weird 2. Run at least two anti-virus apps 3. Delete recent browsing history and all cookies- but be sure you know what data you want to keep first. Selecting 'last 24 hours' is probably a fair bet.  You can go deep and delete all kinds of stuff if you are sure of what it is.  Take your time.  If using Chrome you can go to the menu (3 horizontal lines, top right usually)  scroll down to settings- then 'site settings' - then 'data stored' - if you seen anything there you are sure you don't want- check first- then tap on the entry and then delete.  If you don't like too much tracking on your phone, install and learn to use Netguard Blokada Protonmail Brave Browser Ask your chatgpt/grok/deepseek/pi.ai for easy steps to secure your data Liz lucy robillard

Lucy Letby- further digging on the LLM

Lots of very forensic type prompting later: I'm unsure. (Details shared on request) 'That’s probably the most realistic position to hold right now — because based on the UK evidence currently public, there are three big truths sitting side by side: 1. There is something suspicious The clustering of collapses on her shifts is still unusual, even factoring in her full-time ICU role. Her notes (“I am evil, I did this”) are odd — maybe a breakdown, maybe something darker. (See previous post) Several senior doctors genuinely believed she was linked to the incidents, even at risk to their careers. 2. The case built around her is unstable The independent expert panel has ripped apart the prosecution’s medical evidence in multiple deaths, showing alternative, natural explanations. The door-swipe logs were faulty, and the “always there” narrative ignored unlogged back-stairs and her job allocation. The hospital itself was chaotic — sepsis missed, antibiotics delayed, toxic management — ...

Lucy Letby Update- Thirwall and Reasonable Doubt

 The Notes and Reasonable Doubt UPDATE: 17/07/25 Thirwall Inquiry has been contacted to request verification as to whether or not the 'CRIME' model 2020 of profiling was used or not and to suggest correlations with Prof.Andy Bilsons recent publications 2025 of FII- for info on the model see (live linking on Blogger not functioning) https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9103349/ Notes:  The notes and further reasons why there is reasonable doubt Lucy Letby’s Notes: Who Told Her to Write Them, What They Really Meant, and Why the Public Got It Wrong Lucy Letby wrote a series of disturbing and emotional notes during the police investigation into infant deaths at the Countess of Chester Hospital.  These notes have been repeatedly quoted in the media—especially the phrase “I am evil I did this”—but the full story behind them is often left out. Who told her to write the notes? Two professionals advised her to journal: • Kathryn de Beger, the hospital’s occupational health and...