Stewart

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Stewart

Stewart

@ComfortableBlue

Stuff, stuff, and more stuff.

Inscrit le Mayıs 2017
2.4K Abonnements2.3K Abonnés
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Stewart
Stewart@ComfortableBlue·
The ‘Othering’ of people by targeting their religion & ethnicity, gender & sexuality, and nationality & political background is a dangerous trend from all sides of the political spectrum from political parties, campaigning groups and the media needs to be called out and stopped.
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Kemi Badenoch
Kemi Badenoch@KemiBadenoch·
We’re all in a toxic relationship with government. It creates problems, then sells us solutions. We’ve stopped asking ‘Can I do this?’ and started asking ‘Why hasn’t government done it?’
 ➡️Britain isn’t broken. Big Government is killing the dream. And it’s time to break up. My piece in the Sunday Times below👇
Times Politics@timespolitics

Kemi Badenoch: Britain is not broken — stop the negativity #Echobox=1775334114" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">thetimes.com/uk/politics/ar…

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Garry Kasparov
Garry Kasparov@Kasparov63·
Unbelievably. Imagine the rage and horror of Ukrainians every day as Russia attacks their people and their nation while the wealthy free world that surrounds them, that they desperately want to be a part of, that could stop it, refuses to act.
Kate from Kharkiv@BohuslavskaKate

ZELENSKYY: Russia started war, committed war crimes, occupied part of our country. It's not just land — it's homes, people's lives. They stole childhood from our children. That's why, when we are asked what compromises we are ready to make, it sounds UNBELIEVABLY STRANGE to us.

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Kate from Kharkiv
Kate from Kharkiv@BohuslavskaKate·
ZELENSKYY: Russia started war, committed war crimes, occupied part of our country. It's not just land — it's homes, people's lives. They stole childhood from our children. That's why, when we are asked what compromises we are ready to make, it sounds UNBELIEVABLY STRANGE to us.
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Jacob Pape
Jacob Pape@JacobPape4·
🇬🇧Telegraph”Revealed: Shocking scale of anti-Semitism in Britain’s schools..”And it is shocking.. Aided and abetted,it has to be said,not just by children,but by teachers and teachers unions lie the NEU. What other minority can be treated like this? telegraph.co.uk/news/2026/04/0…
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Nicole Lampert
Nicole Lampert@nicolelampert·
Very good story 👇🏼
Nicole Lampert tweet media
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Heidi Bachram
Heidi Bachram@HeidiBachram·
The Home Secretary has the power to ban entry as it’s not conducive to the public good. A performer who has made a record called “Heil Hitler” definitely isn’t. Why was he even booked? @WirelessFest @ShabanaMahmood
Sophia Sleigh@SophiaSleigh

EXC - The Prime Minister has slammed Wireless Festival for booking Kanye West after his vile Nazi rants. Sir Keir Starmer said it was “deeply concerning” the controversial US rapper is headlining the event in July. Full story: thesun.co.uk/news/38728493/…

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Euan Philipps
Euan Philipps@EuanPhilipps·
Antizionism is a heady and intoxicating brew. Plenty in @UKLabour are drunk on it, while the Green Party seems to have fallen in and drunk a whole barrel.
Izabella Tabarovsky@IzaTabaro

I’m asked this a lot in my lectures: Why did the Soviets invest so many resources in propagating antizionism globally? Did they really hate Jews that much? The answer is that they invested in antizionism because it worked for them, both geopolitically and domestically. To be sure, there were many individuals in the Soviet antizionist apparatus who were driven by personal antisemitism. The Zionologists — individuals tasked with formulating the key tenets of the ideology — are the prime example. But at the state level, the demonization of Israel served much bigger, strategic purposes. It strengthened the Soviet-Arab alliance. It helped mobilize groups and states around the world against the US and the West, pulling them into the Soviet anti-Western orbit, including at the UN. At home, it functioned as a warning to other minorities: don’t organize around your own national interests, and definitely forget about any emigration demands. For the Soviets, antizionism was a tool — and a highly effective one at that. That’s why they kept using it, even when internal discussions acknowledged that their antizionist language was echoing the Protocols and Nazi propaganda. This is useful to understand because antizionism is still a political tool today. We talk a lot about antizionist hate, and there is no question that much of it is driven by that. But there are also political entrepreneurs who use antizionism to get ahead: to gain social media followers, raise money, advance socially and professionally, or pursue political goals. States do the same: witness South Africa filing its case against Israel at the ICJ or China deploying antizionist propaganda online. When incentives align, antizionism gets used. And right now, antizionism is rewarded. It’s a crucial aspect of its growing popularity, and it’s really important that we understand it as we develop strategies to combat it.

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Gabriel Pogrund
Gabriel Pogrund@Gabriel_Pogrund·
EXCL: MPs promoted luxury Dubai property scheme run by Pakistani fugitives banned from UK over corruption and forced to forfeit £190m after National Crime Agency (NCA) investigation Ayoub Khan, Naz Shah, Afzal Khan say they weren’t aware of the context thetimes.com/uk/politics/ar…
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Catherine Warr
Catherine Warr@HiddenYorkshire·
The Green Man is one of the most famous figures in British folklore. Does he represent a survival of pre-Christian paganism? Not really. So what's the real story? And what does he tell us about how we interpret the past? Link ⬇️
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Rt Hon Sir Grant Shapps
Rt Hon Sir Grant Shapps@grantshapps·
Energy security is national security. When you abandon nuclear, you import risk. Britain must build for resilience and self-reliance, which is one of the primary reasons I backed Sizewell C 🇬🇧 bbc.co.uk/news/articles/…
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Puja Teli
Puja Teli@ThePujaTeli·
‘Afghanistan was bloody. But NATO took the hit. Without them, every single one of those casualties would have had an American name. Trump called allies like these losers. Suckers. If you are a certain kind of broken person, that probably makes sense to you. But for the rest of us, what those soldiers did has a different name. Honor. The bond between men who have been in the same dirt, under the same fire. Between Brits and Americans, Frenchmen and Norwegians, Canadians and Danes. Not a diplomatic relationship. A blood bond. Brotherhood forged in places most people will never see and cannot imagine. In that culture, you do not mock a fallen ally. You do not sneer at the dead. It is the lowest thing a human being can do. Trump did it to a standing ovation.’
Gandalv@Microinteracti1

Let me explain something to the MAGA crowd, because clearly someone needs to. They seem to think NATO is cosmic room service. You pick up the phone, say “hello, we’re having a bit of a war here,” and thirty-one countries march to your rescue. A continental Uber for military adventures. That is not how it works. Article 5 is a mutual defense clause. The clue is in the word mutual. And it has been triggered exactly once in NATO’s entire history. After September 11. When America was attacked. Not Europe. America. Every NATO member showed up. They went to Afghanistan. They fought. They bled. They died. In America’s war. On America’s behalf. Now imagine they hadn’t. Over 1,100 allied soldiers died in Afghanistan. British, Canadian, German, Danish, Polish. And yes, even Ukrainian soldiers, who had no NATO obligation whatsoever. Gone. Without them, those are American names on those graves. Sons from Ohio. Fathers from Georgia. Kids from Nebraska who never came home. Then there is the money. NATO allies spent over 100 billion dollars on a war that started on American soil. Without that, Washington pays every cent. On top of the 2 to 3 trillion the war already cost. And without allied bases across Europe and Central Asia, American supply lines collapse entirely. Without British forces in Helmand and Canadians in Kandahar, the Taliban reconstitutes in three years instead of ten. The gaps get filled one way. More American deployments. More American coffins arriving at Dover. Afghanistan was bloody. But NATO took the hit. Without them, every single one of those casualties would have had an American name. Trump called allies like these losers. Suckers. If you are a certain kind of broken person, that probably makes sense to you. But for the rest of us, what those soldiers did has a different name. Honor. The bond between men who have been in the same dirt, under the same fire. Between Brits and Americans, Frenchmen and Norwegians, Canadians and Danes. Not a diplomatic relationship. A blood bond. Brotherhood forged in places most people will never see and cannot imagine. In that culture, you do not mock a fallen ally. You do not sneer at the dead. It is the lowest thing a human being can do. Trump did it to a standing ovation. If you are a MAGA supporter travelling to NATO countries, understand this. There are no friendly pats on the back waiting for you. No one will buy you a beer. The governments who share your worldview sit in Minsk, Moscow and Pyongyang. Brutal dictatorships where journalists disappear, elections are theatre and dissent is a medical condition treated in basements. Not London. Not Paris. Not Rome, Stockholm, Copenhagen, Berlin or Ottawa. You have abandoned the open societies, the free press, the rule of law, the places where people actually want to live. You traded the best of civilization for a very small, very dark room. Frankly, it serves you right.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ Gandalv / @Microinteracti1

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Claire Coutinho
Claire Coutinho@ClaireCoutinho·
For years Ed Miliband has peddled the myth that North Sea gas is all ‘sold abroad’. This is RUBBISH. All of it is used here and it’s about half of our supply. Without it we’ll import more dirtier gas from abroad. Where’s the sense in that?
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Stewart
Stewart@ComfortableBlue·
@66Steph82 For a moment, I thought they had googly eyes on the headlights
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Claire Coutinho
Claire Coutinho@ClaireCoutinho·
Strawman argument. Drilling in the North Sea doesn’t stop you building a nuclear power plant or a wind farm for that matter. It does stop you importing higher emission gas from abroad. Why does Bob want to do that? He’s clearly a climate vandal. Don’t be like Bob.
Bob Ward@ret_ward

I wonder @KemiBadenoch and @ClaireCoutinho how much more secure would the U.K. be if we have to generate 100% of our electricity from natural gas?

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Kemi Badenoch
Kemi Badenoch@KemiBadenoch·
Ed Miliband is still refusing to grant new North Sea licences. Time and again, Keir Starmer has U-turned under pressure. I won’t stop pushing until he overrules Ed Miliband and does what everyone knows is right. Let’s get our oil and gas out of the ground. Fuel Britannia!
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Ben Obese-Jecty MP
Ben Obese-Jecty MP@BenObeseJecty·
“Milei reaffirmed the longstanding sovereignty claim over the disputed islands, as well as South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, and called for renewed negotiations with London.” The Falkland Islands, South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands are British sovereign territory. They are a vital strategic gateway to Antarctica, are for oil exploration of the North Falkland Basin. Given the sacrifice made to defend them in 1982 they must never be put on the table. The Government should issue a firm rebuttal to these renewed ‘Malvinas’ sovereignty claims from Javier Milei, particularly given their meek surrender of the Chagos Islands and the doubt this has fuelled that a Keir Starmer led Labour Government would defend British interests in the South Atlantic. That is of course, assuming the Royal Navy had any ships available.
Ben Obese-Jecty MP tweet media
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