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Seacat's avatar

Very positive developments with your substack. Hope it continues to go from strength to strength with the media addition. Your site is a valuable resource.

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It doesn't add up...'s avatar

Your articles are of course being even more widely syndicated. I've seen them at NALOPKT and thence at WUWT which brings them to international attention. They are also being linked and cited by commenters at sites with a much broader range of topic coverage such as Guido Fawkes and at least the less left wing parts of the national press.

I think the great value is that instead of being just another channel of political rants that assume the reader understands the underlying facts, you take the trouble to analyse the official data and the economic and physical realities and the inadequacies of the people behind the policies, and work brick by brick. That provides a secure foundation for people coming to their senses slowly, and one by one, as Charles Mackay observed.

The mainstream media no longer employs the sort of specialised journalists that it used to who had strong backgrounds in their subjects. A few have tried to remedy this by reading avidly but it's very hard to do without the background. Reading your work can be a big help to them, but achieving an MSM breakthrough under your own byline allows you to negotiate the priority subjects with editors. Incidentally, someone pointed out that the BBC have been fairly restrained in their reporting of the CFD auction: perhaps they know that they don't know, and will be exposed, thanks to the complaints they got from us recently.

Another important plank is striking right at the heart of the complex by providing well reasoned responses to consultations and calls for evidence from Select Committees, DESNZ, OFGEM, NESO etc. Drawing attention of sympathetic MPs to such efforts is also useful: this requires establishing contact in ways that go beyond email. Securing an invitation to talk to an APPG really helps, and so do any senior contacts that can be cultivated in the quangos. OFGEM is not a happy workplace.

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