Trish S 🏴 🇬🇧 retweetet
Trish S 🏴 🇬🇧
17.6K posts

Trish S 🏴 🇬🇧
@SayersTrish
Loyal to my country! Brexiteer with a liking for gin and tonic and a cigarette or two (for which I make no apologies). No DM's please
Beigetreten Aralık 2020
2.5K Folgt1.9K Follower
Trish S 🏴 🇬🇧 retweetet

The Health Secretary has taken £372,000 from private health-linked donors since entering parliament. That's at a rate of £10,000 a month since taking office. His biggest donor owns companies that recruit NHS managers AND private health executives.
This week he also gave himself the power to override the independent body that stops the NHS being overcharged for drugs.
Full story at the link below 👇

English
Trish S 🏴 🇬🇧 retweetet
Trish S 🏴 🇬🇧 retweetet

Grateful to Times columnist Giles Coren for putting to the sword a local council pipsqueak for trying to put out of business a restaurant in the middle of nowhere where owner Ruth Hanson does all the kitchen prep herself, the washing up, the bookings, the till, payroll and then cooks it.
The restaurant is called Hansom in Bedale, North Yorkshire. To give you an idea of its remoteness it’s 7 miles from Northallerton and 31 miles from York.
So, on occasions, her husband Mark, who had a job of his own, gives up his evenings to chauffeur some guests to and from their homes.
Coren points out when he reviewed the place last year ( he gave it a glowing recommendation) he had to hitchhike from Northallerton station.
No Bedale train, no metro, no Uber hanging around at the corner.
Enter Chris Doyle, licensing enforcement officer for N Yorkshire council, who has written to Ruth saying in his view Mark was operating a taxi service and that would require a raft of expensive and time consuming licences.
Ruth responded that Mark was her husband, he was unpaid and there was no separate charge for the journey.
Doyle said he didn’t care as there was deemed to be a commercial benefit and warned without a licence the council may take legal action.
Coren has a great last paragraph; “ Yeah, you sue her, you absolute local heroes.
“ You teach Ruth and Mark a lesson for being great at their jobs, for treasuring their customers, for trying to create a little joy and make ends meet in a collapsing world.”
PS Thought you’d like to see what a Ruth menus looks like. This is called the Sunday Sharing Feast.
Starters.
Smoked Leek and Pickled Croque
Monsieur
Whitby Crab Crumpet Pickled cucumber, Garden herbs.
Heritage beetroot, whipped goat’s Curd, Wild Garlic emulsion.
Main Course
Wensleydale chicken, Apricot and sage Wellington.
Honey and mustard mash, buttered spring , cider sauce.
Dessert
Yorkshire rhubarb and ginger trifle.
Cost; £55.
With publicity thanks to Coren’s column and this tweet I suspect the queue will be out the door and Mark can have his evenings off again.
English
Trish S 🏴 🇬🇧 retweetet
Trish S 🏴 🇬🇧 retweetet

Read this slowly.
In 2020 the Bank of England created money at the push of a button.
They bought government bonds at £100.
Today they sold them for £23.41.
Half a billion pounds. Gone before lunch.
They printed it. They lost it. They billed you.
Paid from your wage. Your tax. Your blood and sweat.
They handed every UK household a £7,000 bill. You did not see it because they hid it in your tax.
You did not push the button.
You will pay anyway.
This is theft.
English
Trish S 🏴 🇬🇧 retweetet

Oh look another quiet tweak to legislation by Statutory Instrument under the carbon tax framework. Sneaky.
the Government has just pulled aviation and shipping fully into the UK’s carbon budgets with no vote.
Forcing these sectors which include shipping, supply chains, imports and all flights inside a fixed carbon cap will increase prices if emissions don’t fall fast enough. Which they can’t.
Meaning the government taking even more tax into general taxation (they don’t use carbon taxes to change the climate you know)
And they have done it during a fuel crisis which has already increased prices and the government’s tax income.
Tax tax tax … taxed to the death of all industry.

English

@LeeAndersonMP_ They shouldn't be getting that much in benefits, they should be getting less than the personal allowance (and that's being generous)
English

Just throwing this one out there as I was asked this question earlier today.
A couple both working with a combined income of £50,000 would pay £11,500 a year in income tax and national insurance,
Another couple receiving £50,000 in benefits including Universal Credit, Personal Independent Payment, Housing Benefit, Income Support and Child Benefit would pay no income tax or national insurance, keeping the full £50,000.
Should the non-working couple on £50,000 a year pay the same amount of income tax and national insurance as the working couple?
Please leave a comment below.

English
Trish S 🏴 🇬🇧 retweetet
Trish S 🏴 🇬🇧 retweetet
Trish S 🏴 🇬🇧 retweetet

🚨Argentina tells Falklanders to go back to England
Milei’s claim to the Falklands has been boosted by Trump’s threat to review the official US position.
Two problems with Argentina’s comments…
Firstly, Falkland Islanders are born on the islands - it’s naive to order them to go back to a place they’ve never lived in…
Secondly, and more importantly, Argentina has never owned the Falklands. Rather, their invasion in 1982 was illegal.
The Falklands must remain British!
But Starmer will probably sell us out in the same way he’s tried with Chagos and Gibraltar…

English
Trish S 🏴 🇬🇧 retweetet
Trish S 🏴 🇬🇧 retweetet
Trish S 🏴 🇬🇧 retweetet

@toryboypierce @GBNEWS
Absolutely spot on about @AlistairCarns ..MP and Defence Minister..
a former Army officer who’s gone ..
AWOL for the vote on prosecuting soldiers who served in Northern Ireland during the 70’s
This would remove the safeguards put in place by the last Tory Gov.
Apparently a trip abroad was more important 🤔
Quite astonishing and extremely disappointing..
but just shows what this @UKLabour Gov. really think..
@Keir_Starmer, Lord Hermer and CO’s fingerprints ..
are all over this !
Meanwhile the IRA terrorists were given immunity !!
English
Trish S 🏴 🇬🇧 retweetet

We don't have a strong military.
And this little shit wants to prosecute our Veterans.
Evil Penfold can trot on.
Attorney General's Office@attorneygeneral
The Attorney argued that that a strong military goes hand in hand with international law – making the nation more prosperous, more just, and more secure. Read more here: gov.uk/government/spe…
English
Trish S 🏴 🇬🇧 retweetet

Do you know what this is?
It is a Bentley. Average price is about Euro 300k.
According to Richard Leopold, Bentley’s regional director, the top three cities where the most Bentleys were sold in 2025 are:
1. Padua (Italy)
2. Rotterdam (Netherlands)
3. Kyiv (Ukraine)
Wait. What? Ukraine? You mean the Ukraine that just got another Euro 90 billion from the EU?
Two fun facts:
The average price of a Bentley sold in Kyiv is Euro 400k because they are buying the top end models.
Demand for Bentleys in Kyiv has more than doubled in the three years since the war started.
So if you are in the UK or EU, you can go back to struggling to pay for your supermarket shop this week, and take comfort that your taxes are being well used to prop up the luxury car market in Kyiv.

English
Trish S 🏴 🇬🇧 retweetet

A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE FALKLAND ISLANDS FOR MY AMERICAN FRIENDS.
British by discovery, British by settlement, British by blood.
First sighted by Englishman John Davis in 1592 and first landed by Captain John Strong of the Royal Navy in 1690 — 126 years before Argentina even existed.
Britain founded Port Egmont in 1765. The islanders today are overwhelmingly of British stock — English, Scottish, Welsh, and Ulster descent — speaking English, flying the Union Flag, and identifying as British in every census.
When Galtieri’s junta invaded in 1982, Thatcher’s Task Force sent them packing in 74 days. British losses: 255. Argentine losses: 649 dead, over 11,000 surrendered as prisoners. The cruiser General Belgrano alone took 323 of them to the bottom of the South Atlantic.
In 2013, the islanders voted 99.8% to remain British.
English
Trish S 🏴 🇬🇧 retweetet
Trish S 🏴 🇬🇧 retweetet

Labour continues its destruction of industry. You decide for yourself if it’s incompetence or design.
By imposing duty tariffs on imported steel, we now have the most expensive steel in Europe – up 25% since the start of the year.
The aim was to protect British steel, er …. Which we don’t have much of because of our net zero restrictions and energy costs.
And now we also have shortages, rising costs, and panic across manufacturing and construction.
Instead of helping the industry their policy has wankered (technical term) what was left. Brilliant 🤡

English
Trish S 🏴 🇬🇧 retweetet

Benefits were sold to the public as a last‑resort safety net: you pay in through your taxes and National Insurance so that if the worst happens, nobody is left with nothing.
That social contract depends on one thing – the people funding it believing it is tightly focused on essentials, not optional extras.
Yet we now have a system where being on benefits is increasingly tied to “perks” and “discounts” for non‑essentials – days out, attractions, “experiences” – at the exact same time as working families, taxed to the hilt, are cutting back on those very things for their own children.
The basic question writes itself: how is it remotely fair that the people financing the system can’t afford these outings, but the system is being used to subsidise them for others?
This isn’t an argument against a safety net. It’s an argument against a political class that has quietly rebranded welfare from emergency support into a parallel lifestyle infrastructure, while telling workers there is “no money” to ease their tax burden or improve their own living standards.
That should not be happening in any serious, responsible country.
English








