People crying out, almost literally, for joined-up social-democratic responsible governance, and through their tears, pledging their votes to millionaire fascist grifters whose incompetent, feckless cohorts will do absolutely nothing for them.
Dave Andress
@nick-pettigrew.bsky.social Could any of your Scouse followers please help me? Lost my wedding ring yesterday somewhere along the Kings Parade going towards the Albert Dock. Would be greatly appreciated.
The guy notionally in charge of the Pentagon doesn't understand what a question is.
I feel like I need to repeat this again
The UK government cannot directly ban websites by executive order.
It can only apply the laws of the land which give Ofcom the power to block access to websites & there is a procedure in law to follow.
A perception that a governent is weak simply encourages even more aggression against its state.
Labour's paralysis is a basic risk to UK national security.
From what I have seen online there are well researched links between the British far-right and Russian, American, Israeli and (formerly) Hungarian networks. Government and much of media is surprisingly quiet about it. Is that because the links are not true, or something else?
I've just started this and it is already terrifying and as gripping as any film script. Looking forward to reading more about it once I've finished.
Ireland never had an empire, but if we did…
www.theguardian.com/football/202...
Murray
REPORTER: If the response is hitting bridges and electrical infrastructure, how is that not a war crime?
HEGSETH: That's precisely the kind of disingenuous question I'm used to from the media -- impugning the motives of the folks on our side
Phil Tinline
Video
Aaron Rupar
Paul Singh
Dan/iel Mudford
Alexander Clarkson
Alasdair Cameron
It genuinely beggars belief. You have deep institutional figures like this baffled that the government response is just… what, exactly? They are so weak. SO weak.
Garvan Walshe
Phil Wilkinson
In conversations with residents, business owners and campaigners in Makerfield, the BBC found a mixed mood.
Neil Basu, former police national lead for counter-terrorism, said that 'the way anger was being stoked by powerful social media figures and hostile foreign states meant it was a bigger danger than Islamist terrorism.'
www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2026...