Conservative MP Edward Leigh thinks disabled people and pensioners cost too much.
He claims £2350 to pay his Council Tax, and £2500 to pay his energy bills every year
But he isn't disabled or a pensioner, he is on £94,000
He should pay his self and cut the bloody benefit costs
ENGLAND: Muhammad, a Pakistani with Canadian passport, moved to the UK to join a grooming gang, and was arrested for attempting to rape a 14-year-old British girl.
He plays the victim and screams for help, begging for forgiveness. No forgiveness for child abusers!
Magyar & the guys are burning entire trains
In Luhansk region, the titans destroyed a train with fuel and lubricants for the Occupiers.
Now there's neither a train nor fuel for the swamp Army.
Glory to the incredible Warriors of Ukraine 🇺🇦
@AmericanMama Pretty sure USA was not even colonised by europe in the crusades time. And it was france who started it off to protect christians on there pilgrimage to the holy land. England got involved a little later.
@thegingerpig@BlondeKbf It is robbery. Notball benifits are taxable pip for instance. It is nothe more than a flick of a switch to put state penions in the non taxable box. Private pen isca different matter andbwill remain taxable
@BlondeKbf what isn't always obvious the pension credit stops. also tax is almost all of it. like WFP etc. where you qualify with pen credit etc. go a 1p over; you pay the bill and the money back including pension credit. (and likely a criminal record). for fraud.
@BlondeKbf Just to add some facts. The IR can only take tax directly fr source. Altho state pen is a taxable income. No matter how much it goes up. tax will not be taken. Add a paid for job or private pen, taxed at source, your state pen is added to your total income & tax code adjusted.
"Carrying out a nuclear strike will result in not just a military defeat for Russia but the collapse of Russia. And they know this very well."
- Budanov 🇺🇦
@ghostsinner111@Rainmaker1973 Its called engineering. You make something that is robust and blah bla blah but the material cost are expensive. So you engineer with a cheaper material and facter in expected life span based on worth and intial cost.
France has made planned obsolescence a criminal offense, becoming one of the first countries in the world to treat deliberate product shortening as a serious crime.
Manufacturers caught intentionally designing electronics, appliances, or other goods to fail prematurely or become unusable—whether through hardware flaws, software updates that slow performance, or other engineered limitations—now face steep penalties: up to 2 years in prison and fines reaching €300,000, or as high as 5% of their average annual turnover in the most serious cases.
This landmark law, building on France’s earlier consumer-protection framework and reinforced by high-profile scandals (such as the 2017–2018 investigations into smartphone “battery-gate” slowdowns), explicitly targets both physical and digital tactics used to push consumers toward frequent replacements.
The legislation is more than just punishment—it’s a cornerstone of France’s broader “right to repair” agenda. By criminalizing practices that drive premature disposal, the government aims to:
- Slash the massive environmental footprint of electronic waste,
- Protect consumers from hidden “forced upgrades,”
- Encourage manufacturers to prioritize durability, repairability, and longer-lasting support.
France’s tough stance sends a clear message to global tech and appliance companies: the era of disposable-by-design products is ending. By leading the charge on sustainability and consumer rights, the country is helping shift the world toward a more circular economy—one where goods are built to last, repaired when needed, and discarded only when truly necessary.
@empire_res66190 Yes, if you respect the Monarchical system, you have to accept the Monarch’s themselves have different interests and personalities. This one is shy, hardworking, cares for his subjects in all the countries for which he is King.