Carl Lids

42.7K posts

Carl Lids

Carl Lids

@CarlLids

Top Shed Foreman And Shunter At The ELR 👍

Beigetreten Aralık 2019
252 Folgt189 Follower
Daily Mail Celebrity
Daily Mail Celebrity@DailyMailCeleb·
Rhian Sugden reveals her smaller bust as she poses for racy lingerie snap -after debuting her 'mummy makeover' following breast reduction surgery trib.al/yukUHXA
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Daily Mail Celebrity
Daily Mail Celebrity@DailyMailCeleb·
Darren Day confirms he's been rushed to A&E with 'suspected broken bones' an HOUR before his latest panto appearance - after confirming he is now a grandfather trib.al/yCfEyZY
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Daily Mail Celebrity
Daily Mail Celebrity@DailyMailCeleb·
TOWIE's Bobby Norris says he is suffering with insomnia as he shows off his swollen face in new update after undergoing more cosmetic surgery trib.al/Urav7O7
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Daily Mail Celebrity
Daily Mail Celebrity@DailyMailCeleb·
Gemma Collins gives fans a glimpse inside her wholesome Easter Bank Holiday celebrations with her loved ones trib.al/qKH0yx9
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An Ordinary Man
An Ordinary Man@Marillionmark·
#TheGoodFridayEveningOutlook Tonight’s evening meal was brought to you in association with #CookingWithCasuals and the following fare… Pan fried hake Steamed mussels Baby potatoes in chicken stock, butter with garlic and chives Steamed pak choi Bon Appétit 👌
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Carl Lids
Carl Lids@CarlLids·
@PSCupdates No thank you. I’m too busy looking after our own people, incase you forgot the Grooming gang survivors. Our Own UK Citizens.
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Palestine Solidarity Campaign
🚨 Save the Date - Nakba 78: March for Palestine ⏰ 16 May, 12PM 📍 Central London On 16 May, we will be marching again for Palestine in London to commemorate 78 years of the ongoing Nakba. Join us!
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Carl Lids
Carl Lids@CarlLids·
A Red pen Day. Helped With The Main Line To Heritage Railway Crossover Today
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Carl Lids
Carl Lids@CarlLids·
@DailyMailCeleb A Nepo Kid. This is Really Boring. The fact that even one person, finds this of interest. Makes me question the average IQ of the public
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Daily Mail Celebrity
Daily Mail Celebrity@DailyMailCeleb·
Nicola Peltz shows off her abs to fans during lymphatic drainage treatment after doing the splits as she sparks concern with drastic weight loss from ballerina training trib.al/ePvcegp
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Daily Mail Celebrity
Daily Mail Celebrity@DailyMailCeleb·
RHOSLC fraudster Jen Shah denies scamming elderly despite jail term in self-pity interview: 'that's not true' trib.al/UyYsIVN
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Daily Mail Celebrity
Daily Mail Celebrity@DailyMailCeleb·
Katie Price's husband Lee Andrews 'confesses to playing with a woman's feelings to his advantage' as his ex-fiancée claims he scammed victim of $150,000 trib.al/32WJVWo
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Daily Mail Celebrity
Daily Mail Celebrity@DailyMailCeleb·
Love Island's Samie Elishi and Tyrique Hyde confirm romance as they share snaps from Morocco on their first holiday together - after her split from Ciaran Davies trib.al/b0xdh8T
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Carl Lids
Carl Lids@CarlLids·
@rocourt62 @Katie_Lam_MP As you have to respond with Insults. Which I find Amusing. It shows you are Upset And triggered. I find you mildly Amusing. 🤣🤣
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Katie Lam
Katie Lam@Katie_Lam_MP·
Under this Government, energy bills have gone up - and the war in the Middle East could see them climb even higher. Yet Ed Miliband still refuses to use our oil and gas reserves in the North Sea. He says that it wouldn't make a difference, but that's nonsense. Here's why 👇 First, some context on the North Sea. As a country, we’re exceptionally fortunate to have vast oil and gas reserves under the North Sea. If we actually used them, they would be enough to meet half of our needs. The Jackdaw gas field alone has enough gas to heat 1.6 million homes, and could be up and running in a few months. But because of this Government’s obsession with Net Zero, they’ve refused to grant any new exploration licenses, meaning that companies aren’t allowed to search for new oil and gas reserves in previously untapped areas. They’re also refusing to let companies extract more oil and gas from the reserves that we already know about. Instead, they’re spending huge sums of money on intermittent forms of energy, like wind and solar, which don’t work all year round, and which can’t insulate us from shocks like the one that will result from the war in the Middle East. People like Miliband say that there’s no point using these reserves, because doing so won’t bring down prices. They say that the price of oil and gas is set entirely on the international market, which means that increasing our domestic supply would only have a tiny impact on the overall price. But this is totally misleading. First of all, let’s look at gas. It’s true that there are ‘benchmark’ prices for gas internationally. They’re based on the global level of supply and demand. If the supply goes up but demand stays the same, or falls, the benchmark price will come down. If the supply drops but demand stays the same, or increases, then the benchmark price will go up. But this is a rough, international rule-of-thumb. It doesn’t mean that all consumers pay the same price everywhere in the world. After all, if that were the case, then why do American consumers pay so much less than British consumers? To understand how gas is actually priced, you have to look at the two main ways that gas moves around the world. The first way is through pipelines. These are mostly used for moving gas over relatively short distances. Generally, the buyer and seller will negotiate a price structure, and maintain that agreement over a long time. But increasingly, the gas market relies on LNG - liquefied natural gas. This is gas which is turned into a liquid, loaded on ships, and transported globally. Ships can be directed to whoever is able to offer the best price. The further those ships have to travel, the more expensive it becomes to deliver the gas. So, if we’re relying on gas imports from a long way away, we’ll need to spend more money to bring that gas to the UK. That’s what’s happening at the moment. We currently import about half of the gas that we consume, meaning that we need to bid with other countries for the gas on ships that are travelling around the world. Michael Cembalest of JP Morgan puts it very well: “Unlike oil markets, natural gas pricing is more localised…the majority of natural gas is consumed by countries that produce it…European pipeline/LNG prices are spiking…in contrast, US Henry Hub natural gas prices have barely budged…the same is true in Australia and Canada which also produce a lot of gas.” The vast majority of homes in the UK – 87 percent – use gas for heating. If we produced more gas domestically, then it would be cheaper to buy gas, because it wouldn’t have to travel as far – meaning that heating bills would, in fact, come down. It would also make us more resistant to shocks. If we lost access to gas from the Middle East, for example, we’d be able to rely on the gas that we produce domestically. So not only would bills come down, but we’d also avoid sudden increases to bills as a result of falling supply elsewhere in the world. The oil market operates a little bit differently, but it’s just as important. 97 percent of transport in the UK - cars, lorries, planes - relies on oil products, including petrol and diesel. If fuel prices increase for these companies, it becomes more expensive for them to transport goods that we all need - like food, or clothes. In order to cover their transport costs, companies will need to put up their prices. So when oil prices go up, it not only makes it more expensive for you to drive your car - it also makes it more expensive to buy everything else. The oil price is genuinely determined by the level of supply and demand around the world. However, that doesn’t mean that producing more oil in this country couldn’t bring down prices here in Britain. The companies which extract oil pay a huge amount of tax - more than £350 billion since the 1970s. If they’re able to extract more oil in this country, they’ll make more money selling it, which means that they’ll pay more tax. And the money from that tax can be used to reduce the price that consumers pay for oil. That’s because, when you pay for oil at the petrol station, 55 percent of the money that you spend actually goes to the Government in tax. In particular, whenever you buy petrol, you pay VAT and Fuel Duty. The Government want to put up Fuel Duty, which will mean that you pay more for petrol, at a time when the global price of oil is already increasing. But if we let companies drill for more oil in the North Sea, we could spend the extra tax money that we’d raise on keeping Fuel Duty down. It could save you hundreds of pounds. And it would also mean that the companies which transport goods like food and clothes would pay less too. They wouldn’t need to put up their prices, so you’d save money on the things that you buy every day. Miliband’s claims about oil and gas just aren’t true. If we extracted more oil and gas from the North Sea, we could end up with lower household bills, lower petrol prices, and less sudden price increases on everyday essentials. It would make us all better off. But his obsession with Net Zero ideology means that Miliband would rather leave the oil and gas in the ground. He’s choosing to make us all poorer.
ITVPolitics@ITVNewsPolitics

'Those people who say new exploration licenses will somehow create huge amounts of energy for us... I mean, they're just wrong' Ed Miliband told ITV News that drilling for oil in the North Sea wouldn't bring down Britain's energy bills

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An Ordinary Man
An Ordinary Man@Marillionmark·
@CarlLids @LukeEdwardsTele Carl, if you’re going to oppose his statement, it might be worth considering referring to a reliable source rather than a much criticised Dutch propaganda outlet where all but one of those examples shown are either false or outside the government’s responsibilities anyway! 🤦‍♂️
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Luke Edwards
Luke Edwards@LukeEdwardsTele·
Keir Starmer is quietly turning into quite an impressive PM for an international global crisis. Calm, astute and strong when he needs to be. Not that he’ll get any praise for it in the media or on here of course, but he has shown real leadership in an extremely challenging situation.
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