Dylan's dad

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Dylan's dad

Dylan's dad

@mackemgit

Employed & tolerated bt BT

Durham Beigetreten Nisan 2009
26 Folgt320 Follower
Chris Parry
Chris Parry@DrChrisParry·
Just a reminder - statesmen don't hide under the table until the trouble goes away.
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Dylan's dad
Dylan's dad@mackemgit·
@MAMBarLife I kept trying with their portrayal of cops as well, even officially through BBC site. No avail...
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Mary Aspinall-Miles
Mary Aspinall-Miles@MAMBarLife·
The reason am pointing out what isn’t right in the trial scene on #EastEnders is because it’s important that potential witnesses in Crown Court trials do not worry we get up in their faces like that ever. We don’t.
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Dylan's dad
Dylan's dad@mackemgit·
@ali__samson WI, council planning dept, car park attendants... ...Yanks wouldn't stand a chance.
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ali
ali@ali__samson·
You wouldn’t make it past the first doctor’s receptionist or the council estate single mum’s on a night out.
Toasted Kracker@ToastedKracker

@Thrawn_UK @ali__samson Say whatever you want. We could easily run your entire island over in a day and there's nothing you could do about it. I bet we'd have more Brits on our side than the King has on his. Retards like you have allowed the UK to become the playground for foreigners to prey on girls.

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Paul
Paul@paulwhitmore98·
@dave43law If he's wearing that hoodie at the golf club,he'll certainly be amongst friends.
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dave lawrence 🐟🐟🐠
Apart from the obvious 🤣🤣 Has she just dumped her husband in it up to his neck with his Association and the Party?
dave lawrence 🐟🐟🐠 tweet media
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Dylan's dad
Dylan's dad@mackemgit·
@MozPerkins Had to explain why I'd used "sardonic" in a chaps review to him. "Remember the 1st firing of the Mk ?? SAM, press, MP's, Admirals etc. Full genny failure & a voice in the silence "That's f*cked it..."
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Moz Perkins⚓️🇨🇶🇬🇧 Author 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿
One of my reviews went something like, “You are one of my best radio operators, everyone speaks very highly of your work. Then at 4 o’clock the wheels seem to fall off…”
Moz Perkins⚓️🇨🇶🇬🇧 Author 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿@MozPerkins

Ah, Jack, by the great cartoonist Tugg. This could’ve been me being reviewed by my Divisional Officer back in the 1970’s… ⚓️🇨🇶

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Dylan's dad
Dylan's dad@mackemgit·
@TheAngry53586 Loved the place!!! Used to tell folk "I studied at Cambridge!" "Really? What did you study?" "FOUR FIVES!!!"
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The Angry Gunner
The Angry Gunner@TheAngry53586·
This is what they took from us (and to be honest I doubt the standard of gunnery in the RN has ever recovered).
The Angry Gunner tweet media
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Dylan's dad
Dylan's dad@mackemgit·
@cynicalbobby Sorry mate, 99% of the damage down to austerity Cameron & mostly May, as HS & PM...
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CynicalBobby
CynicalBobby@cynicalbobby·
“Do you have a copy of how to ruin a police service by KR Starmer?” “Oh you do, that’s marvellous”
CynicalBobby tweet media
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Dylan's dad
Dylan's dad@mackemgit·
@mik3_wbu @cynicalbobby @obbsie I resisted this in early 2000's as a response Sgt, hated putting my team at risk. Semi rural area, back up 15 - 20 minutes away. Stupid & short sighted...
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Mike
Mike@mik3_wbu·
@cynicalbobby @obbsie My force has just introduced mandatory single crewed. No matter the staffing levels. No doubly crewed cars at all across the force. 1 appointment car per area with instructions not to deviate, told they will have to explain to command team if they divert to a red button.
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CynicalBobby
CynicalBobby@cynicalbobby·
I’m pretty tired of hearing the public complain about it taking 4 cops to arrest one violent person. The same public who lose their minds when a single crewed cop punches somebody to subdue them. Also, budget cuts mean everybody is single crewed. Hence 4 cars outside. Live with it. It’s what you asked for.
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Dylan's dad
Dylan's dad@mackemgit·
@SarahChampion His face, man!!! The epitome of "don't know why you're miffed it's your job to extricate me from self inflicted peril..."
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Sarah Champion
Sarah Champion@SarahChampion·
Because sometimes being a dog mum means having to carry that dog through a field of stinging nettles 😅
Sarah Champion tweet media
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Hughes-on-the-Wold
Hughes-on-the-Wold@NotThatHughes·
Sliding doors moment if she'd stuck to this shit instead of calling for people to be burned alive in their hotel rooms.
Hughes-on-the-Wold tweet media
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Dylan's dad
Dylan's dad@mackemgit·
@JohnNicholRAF Anybody challenged you with "Yeah, what do you know about it?" yet?
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John Nichol ✈
John Nichol ✈@JohnNicholRAF·
This supposedly 'definitive' account of the F-15E rescue needs some serious fact-checking! "unclipped his safety harness and raised himself gingerly out of the battered ejector seat"❓ There's plenty more... so better to simply say it is 'imagined'?
John Nichol ✈ tweet media
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Dylan's dad
Dylan's dad@mackemgit·
@JohnNicholRAF Made me laugh!!! Clearly not a clue what happened. Loved the image of landing strapped into a seat...
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Dylan's dad
Dylan's dad@mackemgit·
@joerichlaw It wasn't an Army patrol it was MRF. If they had an honestly held belief they acted lawfully, there's no case to answer...
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Joe Rich
Joe Rich@joerichlaw·
The shooting on 13 May 1972, which is the subject of the charges, relates to young members of a British Army patrol ordered to shut down an illegal IRA ‘checkpoint’. They came under fire and were told to return it. Now they’re facing charges 54 years later. That’s Labour justice.
Jim Chimirie 🇬🇧@JChimirie66677

Three former soldiers will appear at Belfast magistrates court on April 20th. One is charged with a killing that took place in May 1972. He is not accused of acting outside his orders. He is accused of acting within them. The distinction no longer appears to matter. This is the reality behind Labour's Northern Ireland Troubles Bill, a piece of legislation dressed in the language of reconciliation that functions, in practice, as an engine of persecution. The state that sent these men to Northern Ireland, that gave them their orders, that relied on their judgment in circumstances no minister has ever faced, is now the state that funds the machinery pursuing them through the courts half a century later. That is not a technicality. It is the central fact. Taxpayer money flows to the lawyers challenging the actions of soldiers whose actions were sanctioned by the taxpayer. The government calls this justice. General Sir Peter Wall, who commanded the British Army for four years, calls it something without moral backbone. He is right. The operational consequences are already visible. Elite soldiers are leaving the SAS and SBS rather than face the prospect of prosecution decades hence for missions carried out under government orders. The crisis has become sufficiently acute that reservists are being brought into the regular SAS to fill roles vacated by those walking out. Britain's most capable fighting force is being quietly hollowed out by a bill whose architects appear indifferent to the result. Seven former SAS commanders have warned that the legislation is doing the enemy's work, that operational secrets exposed through inquiries give hostile states a narrative of lawless troops. Moscow, Tehran and Beijing do not need to discredit British special forces. Westminster is doing it for them. The asymmetry at the heart of this legislation is not incidental. It is structural. IRA members were released under the Good Friday Agreement. Many destroyed evidence, stayed silent, or received letters guaranteeing they would not be pursued. Soldiers kept records, gave statements, and remained traceable. Decades later, only one group remains available for scrutiny. Not because they are more culpable, but because they are more reachable. The Coagh ambush of June 1991 illustrates the logic perfectly. Three IRA men were stopped by the SAS on their way to murder someone. A coroner ruled the force used was justified. Years later a family challenged that ruling, arguing the soldier should have paused after each shot to consider whether to fire the next one. A judge described that argument as ludicrous and utterly divorced from reality. The challenge continues, funded by legal aid, heard at the Court of Appeal just days ago. No verdict ends the process. The process is the punishment. Keir Starmer has said publicly he is absolutely confident there will be no vexatious prosecutions. Three soldiers will be in a Belfast court in sixteen days. His confidence has not reached them. The government insists its bill provides robust protections for veterans. General Sir Nick Parker, who oversaw the final operations in Northern Ireland, says ministers do not understand the duty of the state to stand by those who serve it. The duty to stand by those who serve is contractual, not sentimental. A soldier who follows orders in a war the state authorised cannot later be offered up as payment for political convenience. What is being constructed here is not a legacy process. It is a permanent legal industry, sustained by public money, targeting the most traceable participants in a conflict the state itself waged. The soldiers kept their records. That is now their liability. A serious country does not behave this way. This one, apparently, does. "Keir Starmer has said publicly he is absolutely confident there will be no vexatious prosecutions. Three soldiers will be in a Belfast court in sixteen days. His confidence has not reached them."

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James Stafford 🇺🇦
Question for, ahem, 'older' rugby fans. Do you think there are fewer officiating controversies since the introduction of the TMO into rugby? Or are the controversies now just different, but just as frequent?
James Stafford 🇺🇦 tweet media
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