Send These Emails
Tune in on Monday to watch the globalists spew their propaganda! The first in the world public debate regarding the proposed "Pandemic Treaty" is scheduled for 4:30 UK time on Monday 17 April 2023.
If you live in the United Kingdom, CLICK HERE to sign the new petition. If you live in the United States, CLICK HERE, HERE and HERE. If you live in Australia, CLICK HERE.
Regardless of where you live, this article contains templates for four emails that anyone on earth can send to the Members of Parliament in the UK.
Let them know that the whole world will be watching them!!!!
SEND ALL FOUR EMAILS
(Email addresses are at the bottom of this article - expect to receive an automated reply or a reply that is filled with propaganda!]
The proposed “Pandemic Treaty” is scheduled to be debated on Monday 17 April 2023 at 4:30pm UK time (8:30am Pacific, 9:30am Mountain, 10:30am Central, 11:30 Eastern)
Regardless of where you live, help spread the word about this “first ever public debate” regarding the proposed “Pandemic Treaty.”
WATCH IT HERE:
https://www.youtube.com/UKParliament
https://whatson.parliament.uk/commons/2023-04-17/
https://whatson.parliament.uk/event/cal42173
If you live in the United Kingdom, CLICK HERE TO FIND YOUR MP and then copy each of the template emails below and send them to your Member of Parliament:
https://members.parliament.uk/members/commons
However, regardless of where you may live, you can still send emails to any and all of the Members of Parliament in the UK. Email addresses are located at the bottom of this article. Scroll down for details. Send any or all of the emails below.
Let them know that people from all over the world will be watching them closely!
EMAIL #1:
BE FOREWARNED: The email listed below will be sent to all 600+ Members of Parliament in the UK with one click, so it is likely that you will receive 600+ automated responses.
https://inhere.salsalabs.org/UKAction/index.html
https://preventgenocide2030.org/uk-emails
Dear Member of Parliament:
It is urgently important that you use the powers of your office to protect the independence and sovereignty of the UK and its people from threats contained in the proposed amendments to the International Health Regulations (IHR), documented here: https://apps.who.int/gb/wgihr/index.html
Your action impacts everyone in the UK making it imperative that you accept input from everyone in this Realm, not limited to your constituents.
Our sovereignty is currently being negotiated away behind closed doors at the WHO via these proposed amendments to the IHR. Continued participation in these negotiations and in the World Health Organization (WHO) undermine the integrity and sovereignty of the UK. If these amendments are adopted at the World Health Assembly, Parliament will not be asked for its “advice and consent.”
TAKE THIS ACTION: It is essential that you use the full weight of your position and authority to protect the UK from these proposed amendments by compelling our delegates to these proceedings to explicitly oppose and reject all of these tyrannical amendments.
All of the proposed amendments have been submitted by other nations: the UK has submitted none. If adopted, the interests of other nations would control UK policies.
The proposed amendments would empower the WHO Director-General to declare a “Public Health Emergency of International Concern,” or an “Intermediate Health Alert” for any situation that merely has the potential to become an “emergency.” Each of the six Regional Directors would have the same power.
The proposed amendments, submitted without public input, seek to alter the role of the WHO from an advisory body to a central global controlling authority allowing the takeover of both the governance and operation of the UK’s health response and also personal health responses. These legally binding amendments would require “harmonization” of existing UK legislation, thus de facto capturing Parliament's legislative functions. They target many aspects of centralized public health policies, including surveillance, alerting, early warning and risk assessment, production and distribution of medications, mobilization and distribution of finances.
Consolidation of a system of global health certificates in digital or paper format, would include test certificates, vaccine certificates, prophylaxis certificates, recovery certificates, passenger locator forms and traveller’s health declarations. (Articles 18, 23, 24, 27, 28, 31, 35, 36 and 44 and Annexes 6 and 8)
WHO represents the special interests of “Relevant Stakeholders” who fund it including the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, GAVI Alliance, Rockefeller Foundation, and the pharmaceutical, financial, travel and other industry interests.
It is essential that you use the full weight of your position and authority to protect the UK from these proposed amendments by compelling our delegates to these proceedings to explicitly oppose and reject all of these tyrannical amendments.
Sincerely,
EMAIL #2:
I recently received the email template below from a UK citizen.
I added the text in italics.
An Email to Members of the UK Parliament:
On Monday 17th April at 16:30, the House of Commons is due to debate the World Health Organisation’s CA+ document known as the “Pandemic Treaty”.
Please be aware that the following petition has received more than the required 10,000 signatures in less than two weeks, and we are awaiting an official response from the UK government regarding amendments to the International Health Regulations that were adopted on May 27, 2022 but have not yet been discussed in Parliament and must be considered immediately. https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/635904
The latest version or “Zero Draft” of the proposed “Pandemic Treaty” is available here: https://apps.who.int/gb/inb/pdf_files/inb4/A_INB4_3-en.pdf
The European Union recently proposed a substantial addition to the “Zero Draft.” https://www.eeas.europa.eu/sites/default/files/documents/2023/EU%20proposals%20integrated%20into%20the%20ZD%2028%20March.pdf
All other member nations have been instructed to submit additional text by April 22, 2023 for inclusion in the “Bureau’s text” which will be made available by 22 May 2023.
There are literally dozens of objections which may be made to this proposed instrument. Due to the constrictions of time I shall only point out those matters which I consider to be the most important.
Already on the front page there is a statement “that the instrument should be legally binding and contain both legally binding and non-legally binding elements.”
Since this is a new treaty, then all members states will separately discuss this surrender of sovereignty independently. If the states each find that this is the right thing to do then due process has been followed and I can find no objection.
However, separately to the Treaty, but very pertinent to it, there are currently over 300 amendments to the IHR under consideration. The Working Group has compiled an article-by-article document of the amendments on 6th February 2023 given here:
https://apps.who.int/gb/wgihr/pdf_files/wgihr2/A_WGIHR2_7-en.pdf
The status of the WHO would move from purely advisory, as it currently is under the International Health Regulations (2005), to a commanding authority but only by the agreement of each of the nations.
https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789241580496
As merely amendments to an already existing treaty these amendments will NOT come before Parliament but will be discussed and voted on entirely within the WHO. The suggested amendment to Article 3 (i.e. the principles of the IHR) is most particularly concerning.
This amendment was originally proposed by India and the reason given was that the substituted principles of equity etc. were “central to the proposed Global Health Architecture.”
I must submit that coming from a supposed health organisation this is most concerning. It deals with classes of people and not the health of the individual, which it ought to.
Furthermore, equity has a dual meaning in law; equality of rights or monetary value of redemption. The document surely must define exactly what “equity” means.
It would seem that the inestimable importance of the individual has been lost in the current worldwide socio-political upheavals. The personal freedoms battled for through Magna Carta, the English, French and American revolutions are under attack. Therefore I feel compelled to attempt to demonstrate importance of the individual by describing what a healthy social body should look like and how the individual fits into this.
Society is the self-realisation of people in community. It has three inter-permeating functions: economy, culture and politics. Each of these is inseparable from society and each is, in its own sense, the whole of it.
Economy: In the economy all that matters is that the whole keeps going. No individual matters, not personal nor corporate. Any and each individual may go to the wall or die and the economy does not care, as long as the whole keeps moving. Thus it has an inbuilt tendency to amorality. Nobody matters. The economy functions to provide the material support for the cultural realm.
The economy depends upon innovation and all ideas manifest only in the individual human mind. Indeed, all efficiency in both the voluntary and business sectors turns upon self-motivated effort. It depends up the free will and dignity held by the individual! Therefore the economy depends absolutely upon culture and the individual!
Culture: By culture I mean the totality of all those things which make life worth living; all the things which are worthwhile and we pursue for their own sake. The things we gladly spend our own money on. This includes the whole of art, science and religion; education, health, sports and past times.
The tendency of the cultural realm is the enhancement, ennoblement and fulfillment of individuals. We express ourselves and get appreciated by others. Granted free expression the general tendency is to morality. From this comes the traditional high moral standing of teachers, doctors and priests etc.
Politics: Politics, including the law, finds itself as the beating heart between culture and economy. Its proper function is to hold the balance between these two. It is a battle ground because it is the field of the harmonisation of society.
Yuval Harari hit the nail on the head when he said that the division between left and right has now less and less meaning. The real political division is between the global and the national. Given that the economy has been a world economy since late Victorian times then the globalists have the powerful advantage that they find themselves naturally aligned with the transnational companies and large financial concerns. The nationalists must fight to maintain the identity of their nation and its individual human beings.
I sincerely hope that you will be able to find the time and motivation to attend the Commons debate next Monday. The issues are profound and really need a good airing in public.
Sincerely,
EMAIL #3:
Click on the link below to send a series of 4 emails to your Member of Parliament.
https://saveourrights.uk/take-action/who-treaty/
Dear [MP’s Name],
I am writing to you to express my concerns regarding the UK Government’s position on signing the international treaty on pandemic prevention, preparedness, and response that is currently being prepared by the World Health Organization (WHO). Specifically, I am concerned that the Government is not committing to hold a public referendum before signing the treaty, and that the precedent set for such agreements is undemocratic.
As you may be aware, there is a petition that has gained significant support from the public, which calls for the Government to commit to not signing any such treaty, unless this is approved through a public referendum. The petition argues that the public must be furnished with the full ramifications of what and how any pandemic treaty could affect them and be given a public vote on whether the UK should sign up before the UK Government signs up to this.
The precedent set for such agreements is undemocratic, and the whole process needs amending. I do not consent to treaties drafted by an unelected body, and I believe that the public should be given a voice in such matters.
While I understand that it would come before Parliament to be ratified into UK legislation that still doesn’t give the people a voice as the whips ultimately control the MPs. Furthermore most members of this nation are over worked and under resourced and aren’t able to keep up to date with all legislation going through Parliament. Whereas a full referendum would ensure all were aware of the situation and were enabled to have a meaningful say in the proceedings.
Therefore, I would like to ask you to attend the upcoming debate on 17th April in Westminster Hall and argue in favour of a referendum. I believe that this would be the most democratic way to ensure that the public’s voice is heard in this matter.
Thank you for taking the time to read my concerns. I look forward to hearing from you soon.
Sincerely,
[Your Name]
EMAIL #4:
https://pandata.org/raise-objection-to-proposed-pandemic-treaty-of-the-who/
Please use the letter below as a template to write to Member(s) of Parliament to alert them to your concerns regarding the proposed WHO pandemic treaty. The letter is intended to stimulate discussion within parliaments on key issues. The concerns raised should be relevant irrespective of the attitudes of the Member to efficacy of various aspects of the COVID-19 response.
It is essential that debate moves on from disagreement on specific public health interventions, and addresses the longer term issues of sovereignty, proportionality and conflict of interest. There are ways for countries to cooperate together in public health without subverting laws and democratic processes that many have fought to achieve over previous centuries.
Dear [enter name here]
We respectfully raise the critical issue of the proposed International Treaty on Pandemic Prevention and Preparedness and the proposed amendments to the International health Regulations (IHR) [1] currently under negotiation by the Government and other member States of the World Health Organization (WHO). We call on you to oppose these proposed agreements by raising this issue in Parliament, demanding debate and open review, in the interests of preserving national sovereignty and individual rights.
These agreements seek to impose WHO dictates in place of national sovereignty and the rights of an individual to make choices regarding their own body and health, and is demonstrably inappropriate and disproportionate from a public health viewpoint.
Basic principles governing public health
The breadth of factors impacting an individual’s health, and the importance of personal, community and national control over health, are reflected in principles previously accepted by the World Health Organization:
Definition of health: Health is a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity. (Constitution of the WHO, 1946) [2]
Informed opinion and active co-operation on the part of the public are of the utmost importance in the improvement of the health of the people. (Constitution of the WHO, 1946) [2]
The people have the right and duty to participate individually and collectively in the planning and implementation of their health care. (Article IV, Declaration of Alma Ata, 1978) [3]
The UN Declaration of Human Rights [4], 1948, also supports the fundamental rights of the individual: All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights.
Public health priority of pandemics
Pandemics severely affecting a high proportion of younger and middle-aged people have not occurred since the pre-antibiotic era (1918-20), when a majority of deaths were considered to be due to secondary bacterial [5] infections. The WHO lists only four pandemics [6] in the 120 years prior to Covid-19; 1918-19, 1957-58, 1968-69, and 2009-10, with only 1918-19 causing more than 1.1 million deaths. Severe pandemics are rare events. The Covid-19 pandemic, whilst resulting in considerable disruption and collateral harm, resulted in mortality at an average age [7] similar to that of all-cause mortality, with severity concentrated within clearly identifiable population groups [8].
The diversion of resources and various mitigation measures used mostly unsuccessfully during the Covid-19 public health response are demonstrated to have had a considerable negative impact on the economy and healthcare access. In doing so, they divert resources to private and corporate entities that are closely allied with WHO in promoting the proposed health emergency program. This underlines the importance of national and local control in time of disease outbreaks to ensure long-term harms do not outweigh intended short-term benefit, responses are in line with population priorities, and free of conflict of interest.
Dangers of the proposed agreements
This proposed treaty and IHR amendments raise a number of fundamental concerns that we believe should lead to their immediate abandonment:
1. People in countries complying with these instruments will lose sovereignty over major aspects of daily life to unelected international bureaucrats, who are subject to significant conflicts of interest from private individuals and industry.
2. These WHO bureaucrats will decide on the criteria for and timing of such take-overs.
3. The track record of the WHO in managing international outbreaks is poor. It is inherently dangerous to delegate control over complex issues that heavily impact the economy, society and public health to individuals in a distant location with no community or relevant national affiliations, and no direct stake in the outcomes.
4. Such centralization is contrary to the fundamental pillars of community-based, locally organised healthcare, and antithetical to the principles of individual rights and autonomy upon which the WHO’s constitution is based.
5. The increasing emphasis on pandemics instead of on the actual major causes of human illness and mortality is inappropriate, and the diversion of funds and activity will have hugely negative impacts on overall population and individual health.
The world needs international forums for sharing data, for concentrating technical expertise to support countries lacking these and to facilitate discussions between countries concerning health issues, including emergencies. Such organisations must be in service of member countries and their people, not act as unelected authorities, funded and influenced by conflicted, non-national interests that attempt to direct and control the lives of free citizens.
The definition of pandemic and health emergency used by the WHO are arbitrary [10], leaving the decision to subvert national sovereignty in health matters at the whim of individual interpretation.
The WHO was set up after World War II as a body to serve countries, governed by them, and not as a body that would govern the actions of member states. Our laws and process of governance have developed over centuries to protect the rights of individuals and to preserve national sovereignty at the will of the people. It is imperative that those setting policy and rules on complex issues have a direct stake in the outcomes.
We therefore request that steps be taken urgently to review the sovereignty and health issues that are at risk through the process currently under way, and to ensure that the role of the WHO, and other international organisations, remains strictly advisory and technical, whilst all decisions affecting citizens remain within the ambit of local and national government as well as the individuals themselves.
Sincerely,
Sign your name here
References:
1. WHO INternatonal Negotiating Body (INB) website for CA+ (pandemic treaty). https://www.who.int/news-room/events/detail/2023/02/27/default-calendar/fourth-meeting-of-the-intergovernmental-negotiating-body-(inb)-for-a-who-instrument-on-pandemic-prevention-preparedness-and-response
2. WHO Working Group for the International Health Regulations website. https://apps.who.int/gb/wgihr/index.html
3. https://pandata.org/proposed-amendments-whos-ihr/
4. https://pandata.org/proposed-who-instruments-for-pandemics-and-health-emergencies/
5. Council of the European Union, An international treaty on pandemic prevention and preparedness, https://www.consilium.europa.eu/en/policies/coronavirus/pandemic-treaty/
6. WHO, Constitution of the World Health Organization, https://apps.who.int/gb/bd/pdf_files/BD_49th-en.pdf#page=6
7. https://cdn.who.int/media/docs/default-source/documents/almaata-declaration-en.pdf?sfvrsn=7b3c2167_2
8. International Conference on Primary Health Care, Declaration of Alma-Ata, https://www.un.org/en/about-us/universal-declaration-of-human-rights
9. National Institutes of Health, Bacterial Pneumonia Caused Most Deaths in 1918 Influenza Pandemic, https://www.nih.gov/news-events/news-releases/bacterial-pneumonia-caused-most-deaths-1918-influenza-pandemic
10. WHO, Non-pharmaceutical public health measures for mitigating the risk and impact of epidemic and pandemic influenza, https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/329438/9789241516839-eng.pdf?ua=1
11. Office for National Statistics, UK, Average age of those who had died with COVID-19, https://www.ons.gov.uk/aboutus/transparencyandgovernance/freedomofinformationfoi/averageageofthosewhohaddiedwithcovid19
12. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, USA, People with Certain Medical Conditions, https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/need-extra-precautions/people-with-medical-conditions.html
13. WHO, Special session of World Health Assembly 29 November 2021 - 1 December 2021, https://www.who.int/news-room/events/detail/2021/11/29/default-calendar/second-special-session-of-the-world-health-assembly
14. WHO, Non-pharmaceutical public health measures for mitigating the risk and impact of epidemic and pandemic influenza, https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/329438/9789241516839-eng.pdf?ua=1
If you live in the United Kingdom, CLICK HERE TO FIND YOUR MP and then copy the template email below and send it to your Member of Parliament:
https://members.parliament.uk/members/commons
Or, just send any and/or all of the emails above to all the Members of the UK Parliament…
aaron.bell.mp@parliament.uk
aaron.callan@parliament.uk
abena.oppongasare.mp@parliament.uk
abrahamsd@parliament.uk
adam.afriyie.mp@parliament.uk
afzal.khan.mp@parliament.uk
alan.brown.mp@parliament.uk
alan.campbell.mp@parliament.uk
alan.mak.mp@parliament.uk
alberto.costa.mp@parliament.uk
alec.shelbrooke.mp@parliament.uk
alex.burghart.mp@parliament.uk
alex.chalk.mp@parliament.uk
alex.cunningham.mp@parliament.uk
alex.daviesjones.mp@parliament.uk
alex.norris.mp@parliament.uk
alex.sobel.mp@parliament.uk
alexander.stafford.mp@parliament.uk
alicia.kearns.mp@parliament.uk
alison.mcgovern.mp@parliament.uk
alison.thewliss.mp@parliament.uk
alister.jack.mp@parliament.uk
allan.dorans.mp@parliament.uk
alok.sharma.mp@parliament.uk
altsale@parliament.uk
alun.cairns.mp@parliament.uk
alyn.smith.mp@parliament.uk
amanda.milling.mp@parliament.uk
amanda.solloway.mp@parliament.uk
amy.callaghan.mp@parliament.uk
andrea.jenkyns.mp@parliament.uk
andrea.leadsom.mp@parliament.uk
andrew.bowie.mp@parliament.uk
andrew.bridgen.mp@parliament.uk
andrew.griffith.mp@parliament.uk
andrew.jones.mp@parliament.uk
andrew.lewer.mp@parliament.uk
andrew.mitchell.mp@parliament.uk
andrew.percy.mp@parliament.uk
andrew.rosindell.mp@parliament.uk
andrew.selous.mp@parliament.uk
andrew.stephenson.mp@parliament.uk
andrew.western.mp@parliament.uk
andy.carter.mp@parliament.uk
andy.mcdonald.2nd@parliament.uk
angela.crawley.mp@parliament.uk
angela.rayner.mp@parliament.uk
angela.richardson.mp@parliament.uk
anna.firth.mp@parliament.uk
anna.mcmorrin.mp@parliament.uk
anne.mclaughlin.mp@parliament.uk
anneliese.dodds.mp@parliament.uk
annemarie.morris.mp@parliament.uk
annemarie.trevelyan.mp@parliament.uk
annie.winsbury@parliament.uk
anthony.browne.mp@parliament.uk
anthony.mangnall.mp@parliament.uk
antony.higginbotham.mp@parliament.uk
anum.mp@parliament.uk
apsana.begum.mp@parliament.uk
bambos.charalambous.mp@parliament.uk
baronj@parliament.uk
barronj@parliament.uk
bell.ribeiroaddy.mp@parliament.uk
ben.bradley.mp@parliament.uk
ben.everitt.mp@parliament.uk
ben.lake.mp@parliament.uk
ben.spencer.mp@parliament.uk
bennh@parliament.uk
bernard.jenkin.mp@parliament.uk
beth.winter.mp@parliament.uk
bill.esterson.mp@parliament.uk
bill.wiggin.mp@parliament.uk
bim.afolami.mp@parliament.uk
bob.blackman.mp@parliament.uk
bob.neill.mp@parliament.uk
bob.seely.mp@parliament.uk
bob.stewart.mp@parliament.uk
bonep@parliament.uk
boris.johnson.mp@parliament.uk
bottomleyp@parliament.uk
bradshawb@parliament.uk
brandon.lewis.mp@parliament.uk
brendan.clarkesmith.mp@parliament.uk
brendan.ohara.mp@parliament.uk
brennank@parliament.uk
bridget.phillipson.mp@parliament.uk
brownl@parliament.uk
buck.mp@parliament.uk
buckk@parliament.uk
byrnel@parliament.uk
carla.lockhart.mp@parliament.uk
carmichaela@parliament.uk
carol.monaghan.mp@parliament.uk
caroline.ansell.mp@parliament.uk
caroline.dinenage.mp@parliament.uk
caroline.johnson.mp@parliament.uk
caroline.lucas.mp@parliament.uk
caroline.nokes.mp@parliament.uk
carolyn.harris.mp@parliament.uk
cashw@parliament.uk
cat.smith.mp@parliament.uk
catherine.mckinnell.mp@parliament.uk
catherine.west.mp@parliament.uk
charles.walker.mp@parliament.uk
charlotte.nichols.mp@parliament.uk
cherilyn.mackrory.mp@parliament.uk
chi.onwurah.mp@parliament.uk
chloe@chloesmith.org.uk
chopec@parliament.uk
chris.bryant.mp@parliament.uk
chris.clarkson.mp@parliament.uk
chris.elmore.mp@parliament.uk
chris.evans.mp@parliament.uk
chris.grayling.mp@parliament.uk
chris.green.mp@parliament.uk
chris.hazzard.mp@parliament.uk
chris.heatonharris.mp@parliament.uk
chris.law.mp@parliament.uk
chris.loder.mp@parliament.uk
chris.philp.mp@parliament.uk
chris.skidmore.mp@parliament.uk
chris.stephens.mp@parliament.uk
christian.wakeford.mp@parliament.uk
christina.rees.mp@parliament.uk
christine.jardine.mp@parliament.uk
christopher.pincher.mp@parliament.uk
claire.coutinho.mp@parliament.uk
claire.hanna.mp@parliament.uk
claudia.webbe.mp@parliament.uk
cliftonbrowng@parliament.uk
clive.lewis.mp@parliament.uk
colleen.fletcher.mp@parliament.uk
colum.eastwood.mp@parliament.uk
conor.burns.mp@parliament.uk
conor.mcginn.mp@parliament.uk
contact@lucypowell.org.uk
coopery@parliament.uk
coxg@parliament.uk
craig.mackinlay.mp@parliament.uk
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craig.whittaker.mp@parliament.uk
craig.williams.mp@parliament.uk
crispinbluntmp@parliament.uk
cruddasj@parliament.uk
daisy.cooper.mp@parliament.uk
damian.collins.mp@parliament.uk
damian.green.mp@parliament.uk
damian.hinds.mp@parliament.uk
damien.moore.mp@parliament.uk
dan.carden.mp@parliament.uk
dan.jarvis.mp@parliament.uk
daniel.kawczynski.mp@parliament.uk
daniel.poulter.mp@parliament.uk
daniel@danielzeichner.co.uk
danny.kruger.mp@parliament.uk
darren.henry.mp@parliament.uk
darren.jones.mp@parliament.uk
dave.doogan.mp@parliament.uk
david.davies.mp@parliament.uk
david.davis.mp@parliament.uk
david.duguid.mp@parliament.uk
david.evennett.mp@parliament.uk
david.johnston.mp@parliament.uk
david.linden.mp@parliament.uk
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deans@parliament.uk
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douglas.ross.mp@parliament.uk
drew.hendry.mp@parliament.uk
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eaglea@parliament.uk
ed.miliband.mp@parliament.uk
eddie.hughes.mp@parliament.uk
edward.argar.mp@parliament.uk
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edward.leigh.mp@parliament.uk
edward.timpson.mp@parliament.uk
effordc@parliament.uk
eleanor.laing.mp@parliament.uk
elizabeth.truss.mp@parliament.uk
ellie.reeves.mp@parliament.uk
elliot.colburn.mp@parliament.uk
email@ranil.uk
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esther.mcvey.mp@parliament.uk
evansn@parliament.uk
fabian.hamilton.mp@parliament.uk
farront@parliament.uk
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fiona.bruce.mp@parliament.uk
fleur.anderson.mp@parliament.uk
flick.drummond.mp@parliament.uk
florence.eshalomi.mp@parliament.uk
francie.molloy.mp@parliament.uk
gagan.mohindra.mp@parliament.uk
galerj@parliament.uk
gardinerb@parliament.uk
gareth.bacon.mp@parliament.uk
gareth.davies.mp@parliament.uk
gareth.johnson.mp@parliament.uk
gareth.thomas.mp@parliament.uk
gary.sambrook.mp@parliament.uk
gavin.newlands.mp@parliament.uk
gavin.robinson.mp@parliament.uk
gavin.williamson.mp@parliament.uk
george.eustice.mp@parliament.uk
george.freeman.mp@parliament.uk
george.howarth.mp@parliament.uk
geraint.davies.mp@parliament.uk
gerald.jones.mp@parliament.uk
gibbn@parliament.uk
giles.watling.mp@parliament.uk
gill.furniss.mp@parliament.uk
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penny.mordaunt.mp@parliament.uk
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richard.graham.mp@parliament.uk
richard.holden.mp@parliament.uk
richard.thomson.mp@parliament.uk
richard@richardburgon.com
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rishi.sunak.mp@parliament.uk
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ruthcadburymp@parliament.uk
sajid.javid.mp@parliament.uk
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sarah.green.mp@parliament.uk
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sarah.owen.mp@parliament.uk
scott.benton.mp@parliament.uk
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seema.malhotra.mp@parliament.uk
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shailesh.vara.mp@parliament.uk
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shaun.bailey.mp@parliament.uk
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steven.bonnar.mp@parliament.uk
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stewart.mcdonald.mp@parliament.uk
stuart.anderson.mp@parliament.uk
stuart.andrew.mp@parliament.uk
stuart.mcdonald.mp@parliament.uk
suella.braverman.mp@parliament.uk
suzanne.webb.mp@parliament.uk
swayned@parliament.uk
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taiwo.owatemi.mp@parliament.uk
tamim@parliament.uk
tan.dhesi.mp@parliament.uk
teresa.ridley@parliament.uk
thangam.debbonaire.mp@parliament.uk
theo.clarke.mp@parliament.uk
theresa@theresavilliers.co.uk
therese.coffey.mp@parliament.uk
thornberrye@parliament.uk
timmss@parliament.uk
tobias.ellwood.mp@parliament.uk
toby.perkins.mp@parliament.uk
tom.hunt.mp@parliament.uk
tom.pursglove.mp@parliament.uk
tom.randall.mp@parliament.uk
tom.tugendhat.mp@parliament.uk
tommy.sheppard.mp@parliament.uk
tonia.antoniazzi.mp@parliament.uk
tony.lloyd.mp@parliament.uk
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trickettj@parliament.uk
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tulip.siddiq.mp@parliament.uk
valerie.vaz.mp@parliament.uk
vicky.ford.mp@parliament.uk
vicky.foxcroft.mp@parliament.uk
victoria.prentis.mp@parliament.uk
victoria@victoriaatkins.org.uk
virginia.crosbie.mp@parliament.uk
wallaceb@parliament.uk
wendy.chamberlain.mp@parliament.uk
wendy.morton.mp@parliament.uk
wera.hobhouse.mp@parliament.uk
wes.streeting.mp@parliament.uk
whiteheada@parliament.uk
will.quince.mp@parliament.uk
william@williamwragg.org.uk
withammp@parliament.uk
yasmin.qureshi.mp@parliament.uk
yvonne.fovargue.mp@parliament.uk
zarah.sultana.mp@parliament.uk
by James Roguski
The old system is crumbling, and we must build its replacement quickly.
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James God bless you and keep you safe and healthy! Thank you for sharing the truth with all. We need to stand up for our freedom. God …country …truth …justice… Amen
Yes! The WORLD IS WATCHING!!!