Hugo Furst

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Hugo Furst

Hugo Furst

@Flyfisherme

Rachel from complaints dept has made us all poorer and screwed the economy.. EU is still a failed project. Nice idea after WW2.

Beigetreten Haziran 2017
5 Folgt34 Follower
Hugo Furst
Hugo Furst@Flyfisherme·
@Ben63 @DamianLow3 Isn’t it much better to be independent.? We can makes our own rules and do our own trade deals.. UK is in trade deals…Even when the awful EU
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Damian Low
Damian Low@DamianLow3·
Ten years ago today, Brexit was sold as a national renewal project. The argument wasn't simply that Britain would leave the EU. The argument was that leaving would unlock a more prosperous, more confident and better governed country. We were told public services would benefit, immigration would fall, economic opportunities would expand and Britain would regain control over its future. A decade later, what stands out is not the decision itself. Democracies make decisions all the time. Sometimes they work, sometimes they don't. What stands out is the extraordinary gap between what was promised and what was delivered. Immigration reached levels far higher than those discussed during the referendum campaign. Public services remain under immense pressure. Economic growth has been weak. Britain has endured years of political instability, multiple prime ministers and a level of governmental dysfunction that would have seemed unimaginable before 2016. Reasonable people can disagree about how much of that is directly attributable to Brexit. The pandemic happened. Global shocks happened. Governments make choices. But that is not really the point. The point is that Brexit was not sold as a complicated trade-off. It was sold as a solution. The British public were not told they might become poorer in exchange for greater sovereignty. They were told they could have greater sovereignty and greater prosperity. They were not told immigration might remain high. They were told Britain would take back control of its borders. They were not told there would be years of disruption and uncertainty. They were told the benefits would be obvious. That is why the debate still matters. Because many of the architects of Brexit now spend more time explaining why Brexit's promises were never fulfilled than explaining why those promises were made in the first place. The argument has gradually shifted from "Brexit will solve these problems" to "the real Brexit has not yet been tried." After ten years, that should raise obvious questions. If a political project is still being judged against outcomes that have yet to materialise a decade later, at what point do its advocates accept responsibility for the claims they made? And that is Brexit's real legacy. Not simply that Britain left the EU. But that some of the politicians who championed it helped normalise a style of politics where bold promises are made, expectations are raised and accountability disappears the moment reality becomes inconvenient. People will continue arguing about whether Brexit was right or wrong. Many will be much less forgiving about the gap between what was promised and what was delivered.
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Nigel Farage MP
Nigel Farage MP@Nigel_Farage·
10 years ago, we all dared to dream that the dawn was breaking on an independent United Kingdom.
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Hugo Furst
Hugo Furst@Flyfisherme·
@JackWDart Let’s be fair Jack you’ve had a nice living out of opposing Brexit. What would you be doing if UK was still in. European Movement wouldn’t need to pay you to lie for them. Farage & Brexit have given you a career..Ironic eh ? You’ve a lot to thank Farage & Brexit for..
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Jack Dart
Jack Dart@JackWDart·
Happy 10 year anniversary since the Brexit referendum. Since then, we’ve had 6 Prime Ministers. Brexit has significantly reduced trade with our largest partners, the EU. It has damaged our economy; our GDP by around 4-8%. Business is left with more paperwork and red tape, young people have fewer opportunities, and the conmen who brought it around have either disappeared, or are attempting to play the same games again, just under a different banner. Brexit has failed. It’s time to Rejoin.
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Hugo Furst
Hugo Furst@Flyfisherme·
@sonofr The self harm WAS JOINING IN 1973 . You got 35 votes… You live in EU, probably Ireland and basically you’re a selfish cunt..
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REJOIN CAMPAIGN
REJOIN CAMPAIGN@sonofr·
BREXIT. THE GREATEST ACT OF SELF-HARM IN OUR HISTORY. The second greatest act of self-harm in our history was not getting Brexit undone. We now have another opportunity to get Brexit undone and to build a better Britain. Let’s make sure we grab that opportunity. @AndyBurnhamGM @UKLabour
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Hugo Furst
Hugo Furst@Flyfisherme·
@DamianLow3 That 6% cut was a ridiculous Bloomberg guess..It’s been debunked many times Do you think if UK was still in the project UK GDP would be 10% higher than Germany or France ? The trouble with EUphiles is they either live in EU or are stupid civil servant types like you..
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Damian Low
Damian Low@DamianLow3·
On the 10 year anniversary of Brexit, the legacy is a 6% cut to the UK economy. Farage, Johnson, Rees Mogg and co lied about the benefits to further their own careers. Those are the facts.
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Don McGowan
Don McGowan@donmcgowan·
Brexit was a catastrophe. That's the tweet.
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Hugo Furst
Hugo Furst@Flyfisherme·
@donmcgowan Can you explain why you think Brexit was a catastrophe.? The Tsunami in Asia was a catastrophe, WW2 was a catastrophe. But being independent from a inward looking protectionist bloc is a catastrophe 😂😂😂
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Time Tales
Time Tales@Tales_TimeLord·
@SueSuezep We would be back hundreds. A generation of people with no human rights
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sue#NHSLove💙💙💙#FBNHS suesuezep.bsky.social
If Farage ever gets the keys to Downing Street, the damage to Britain would take years to undo. Division, weakened institutions and policies favouring wealthy interests are easy to impose but painfully slow to repair.
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Hugo Furst
Hugo Furst@Flyfisherme·
@SueSuezep If Farage becomes PM he would sort all you woke lying socialist & useless do gooders out. Division is a Labour mantra word ..It’s a word tossed about with no meaning, just a one word slogan.
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David Shaw
David Shaw@David90shaw·
🚨 A STUNNING SNUB TO THE KING AND OUR NATION. Keir Starmer is officially out, but the Labour Party has managed to deliver one final, sickening insult to our country's traditions. For the first time in modern history, a Prime Minister informed the Monarch of his resignation over the phone, announcing it to the media before even having the basic decency to go to Buckingham Palace. 🤡 Every other Prime Minister in our history has had the dignity to look the Monarch in the eye and resign in person. But this is exactly what the modern Labour Party represents. They have absolutely zero respect for our heritage, zero respect for our constitutional traditions, and zero respect for the British public. 💷 They treat our ancient institutions with total contempt, and they are already preparing to install another unelected, pro-EU careerist like Andy Burnham without a single vote from you. Starmer might be history, but the toxic Labour establishment is still running the show and managing our decline. RT if you are sick to the back teeth of this classless Labour regime and demand a general election now! 🔁🇬🇧🔥
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Hugo Furst
Hugo Furst@Flyfisherme·
@JackWDart @David90shaw That’s rich coming from you as you’re a fake news merchant. You’re paid to lie by European Movement as they’ve stopped posting on Twitter when they threw their toys out of the pram over Musk.. 200m audience..You’re all wankers..
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Hugo Furst
Hugo Furst@Flyfisherme·
@DamianLow3 I’m really enjoying Starmer’s downfall..I love it..
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Hugo Furst
Hugo Furst@Flyfisherme·
@AdHabb Anyone who thinks Starmer doesn’t deserve vitriol is frankly nuts. The man promised to smash the gangs, now in every town & villages there’s Africans walking about in groups on benefits.. He had a report done = 4,000 OAPs will die if The Tories stopped the fuel allowance..
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Adam Habib
Adam Habib@AdHabb·
I am not a supporter of Starmer and believe his leadership and tenure has been utterly disappointing. But there is much merit in what is said by Damian Low. Political actors in the UK are in urgent need for some introspection.
Damian Low@DamianLow3

Seeing some of the embarrassingly hateful reactions to Starmer's resignation today, I thought it was worth resharing this. The level of personal hostility directed at Keir Starmer deserves scrutiny in its own right. Not because he should be immune from criticism, but because the tone and intensity of the attacks tell us something unhealthy about the state of democratic politics. Starmer is a conventional political figure. Cautious, legalistic, incremental. He frustrates people precisely because he is managerial rather than messianic. Yet the reaction to him often goes far beyond disagreement, tipping into visceral hatred more commonly reserved for authoritarians or demagogues. Much of this hostility is disconnected from concrete policy. It is not about specific votes, proposals or outcomes, but about projection. A belief that Starmer embodies betrayal, bad faith or hidden malice. That kind of politics runs on suspicion rather than evidence. This matters because democracy depends on the assumption of good faith among opponents. You can think a leader is wrong, timid, or misguided without believing they are fundamentally illegitimate. Once politics becomes moralised to the point of demonisation, compromise is reframed as treachery and pluralism as weakness. The pattern is familiar. In fragmented, polarised systems, anger concentrates not on extremists, whose intentions are clear, but on moderates, who disappoint maximalists on all sides. The centre becomes the lightning rod precisely because it resists totalising narratives. There is also a media and online dynamic at work. Incentives reward outrage, not proportionality. Algorithms favour contempt over analysis. Over time, this creates a political culture in which relentless personal attack feels normal, even virtuous, rather than disgusting. None of this is a defence of Starmer’s decisions, instincts or record. Those should be argued over robustly as you do in a democracy. The problem is the substitution of critique with hostility and the quiet erosion of democratic norms that follows when political opponents are treated as enemies rather than rivals. A democracy cannot function if every election is framed as an existential struggle against internal evil. At some point, the target may change, but the damage to trust, restraint and culture remains.

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Damian Low
Damian Low@DamianLow3·
For those celebrating Starmer's resignation and saying he was the worst Prime Minister, where were you for Liz Truss?
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Hugo Furst
Hugo Furst@Flyfisherme·
@Iromg Tom Watson called this Royal Mail ad ‘insensitive.’ This is the same Tom Watson who called a war hero a paedophile murderer and rapist under parliamentary privilege. A vile coward The audacity of Labour is astounding..
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Hugo Furst
Hugo Furst@Flyfisherme·
@JackWDart The moment when Starmer resigns on TV all hell breaks loose with cheers.. Starmer is a wet,weak,woke, gormless civil servant. You said you were a LIBDEM that’s was 100% a fucking lie. But you are a gobshite liar employed by European Movement..
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