David Buttimore

2.8K posts

David Buttimore

David Buttimore

@ButtimoreDavid

Brit, Bloke, Cricket, Rugby, Wine & Ale, Tory, Non-PC.

UK Katılım Ocak 2019
2.3K Takip Edilen400 Takipçiler
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MOON
MOON@DailyMoonX·
Absolutely breathtaking view! Earth and Moon as one…
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Siaxares 🇮🇷 سیاکسارِس
As an Iranian who stayed connected through Starlink during the total internet blackout, I want to wholeheartedly confirm what President Trump just said: "The Iranian people want to be free. They have lived in a world that you know NOTHING about." For 47 years, my people have endured systematic torture, rape, murder, humiliation, anxiety, suppression, and grief under the Islamic Republic. It’s been a long, grinding suffering — punctuated by brutal spikes like the January protests, mass executions, and now war. The world has no idea of the scale or depth of these horrors. Only when this evil regime finally falls will the full truth pour out — in quality and quantity that will shock humanity. We have now reached a point where almost no cost is too great if it rids us of this regime. Because the cost of it staying in power is infinitely higher. If you’re reading this and you can’t understand how any Iranian could feel relief at their own country losing a war and getting bombed… I envy you. You have never lived what we have lived. You have never watched your people, friends, family, and loved ones get tortured, raped, or killed almost daily and over half a century. You have never seen an entire nation slowly but brutally suffocated like this. We tried every alternative imaginable: massive protests, dissent, peaceful reform, negotiations — everything. None of it worked. The regime’s answer has always been bullets, gallows, and more terror. Now, less than 24 hours before Trump’s deadline, I write this with a heavy heart from inside Iran: Whatever happens next — if there is still an Iran left to save and this regime is gone — the Iranian people will be happy with the result. No matter the cost. Because the cost of the regime remaining is higher, and for many of us, death itself is preferable to another day under this nightmare. This is the true sentiment of the majority of Iranians — the voice of a people who often have no internet, no platform, and no way to be heard. The world will soon understand why we say: Anything to be free. Anything to end this evil. #IranMassacre#IranRevolution2026
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David Poulden Esq
David Poulden Esq@DavidPoulden·
I say the London Trocadero should NOT be turned into a MOSQUE! Drop a ❤️ retweet and follow me if you agree.
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Fake KDKA News
Fake KDKA News@Fake_KDKA·
“That’s no moon,” says horrified Artemis II crew. More at 11.
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David Buttimore
David Buttimore@ButtimoreDavid·
@ToddYou86448804 @DrewPavlou Sounds like you have a very similar bunch of clowns in government that we in the UK have. Elections can't come soon enough. As for future recruiting in the armed services, who would now?
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Todd Young
Todd Young@ToddYou86448804·
Trump will NOT leave one of their own behind however, Albanese is content with abandoning an Australian war hero. A Victorian Cross recipient and sending him to jail 17 years after alleged war crimes. You send someone to war in hell. Where a mere civilian can’t possibly comprehend the conditions. To serve and KILL terrorists whilst risking their own lives and witnessing other Australian comrades being killed by the Taliban and this pack of pathetic bunch of fools (the federal government, Labor) think it’s fitting to send Ben to jail. 3 weeks before ANZAC day wtf has this country become 🤬 Disgraceful Pathetic
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Drew Pavlou 🇦🇺🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼
This is the part to the Ben Roberts-Smith story that makes my blood boil. On the night of August 29th, 2012 a Taliban sleeper agent in the Afghan National Army massacred three Australian soldiers in cold blood as they prepared to sleep on their own base. Their names were Private Robert Poate, Sapper James Martin and Lance Corporal Rick Milosevic. The rogue Afghan soldier was named Hekmatullah. It was the fourth insider, or ''green-on-blue'' attack by Taliban sleeper agents in the Afghan National Army against Australian soldiers in 15 months. Out of the 41 Australians who died in Afghanistan, 7 died by way of these insider attacks - attacks which technically constitute the war crime of perfidy. Hekmatullah's attack was a war crime under Article 37 of Additional Protocol I (1977) to the Geneva Conventions which prohibits perfidy as an act of war. By enlisting in the Afghan National Army and wearing its uniform, Hekmatullah presented himself as a co-belligerent fighting alongside Australian forces - not against them. He invited the confidence of Australian soldiers so as to lead them to believe that they were entitled to protection under international law, and then betrayed that confidence to massacre them as they prepared to sleep. Ben Roberts-Smith was one of the first on base after the attack. He was ordered to find and apprehend Hekmatullah in order to bring him to justice. Acting on intelligence, Roberts-Smith and his men were led to the village of Darwan, where Roberts-Smith is then alleged to have committed a war crime, supposedly kicking a farmer named Ali Jan off a cliff and ordering his execution. Roberts-Smith has always maintained that Ali Jan was a Taliban spotter in a village that was a Taliban stronghold. It is a matter of historical fact that there was confirmed armed Taliban presence in the village of Darwan the day of the raid. Robert Poate's father Hugh defended Ben Roberts-Smith and his actions: ''These citizens in the village could well have been a civilian one day and pulling the trigger the next, that‘s the way the Taliban operated. This perspective should have been included to provide some balance and context.'' The Taliban fought by blending into the civilian population. They pushed sleeper agents into the Afghan National Army and murdered our soldiers in moments of vulnerability. Where is Hekmatullah today? He lives in Afghanistan as a free man, feted as a hero by the Taliban. They don't give a fuck about international law or human rights or war crimes. They openly boast about the way they slaughtered our soldiers through acts of betrayal and perfidy. So my proposal is this: Australia can put Ben Roberts-Smith on trial when the Taliban hand over Hekmatullah, preferably dead, his head on a silver platter. Until that time, FREE BEN ROBERTS-SMITH.
Drew Pavlou 🇦🇺🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼 tweet mediaDrew Pavlou 🇦🇺🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼 tweet mediaDrew Pavlou 🇦🇺🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼 tweet media
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Crémieux
Crémieux@cremieuxrecueil·
Most of Africa had an economic lead over China not long ago. The leaving colonial nations left behind railroads, irrigation, and other infrastructure in Africa that China wasn't blessed with. Now China has the lead.
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Tom Harwood
Tom Harwood@tomhfh·
How long after colonisation will it take for people to accept that African poverty today is due to African policy today, not the colonial status of the countries sixty year ago? Other countries - colonised or otherwise - used the last half century in completely different ways.
Crémieux@cremieuxrecueil

Most of Africa had an economic lead over China not long ago. The leaving colonial nations left behind railroads, irrigation, and other infrastructure in Africa that China wasn't blessed with. Now China has the lead.

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Conner Haul
Conner Haul@ConnerHaul·
No, Africa lives rent free in my country. 52% of African households in London live in Social Housing. In Islington it's 80%! Most Africans in London can only live there because the government takes our earnings to pay for it. Most of Gen Z will never have children. We can't afford to have families because importing millions of extra people made housing unaffordable. Britain, we will have to choose, would you rather have grandchildren or millions of Africans? We can only have one.
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Benbu@Benbu145412

@ConnerHaul @RupertLowe10 Africa lives rent free in your head.

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Camus
Camus@newstart_2024·
The guy just landed a spacecraft on a comet — one of the most impressive scientific achievements in years. His reward? A public struggle session because his bowling shirt had scantily clad women on it. Helen Andrews points out the quiet cost of institutional feminization: HR departments now hunt down any maverick personality and stamp it out. We’re losing innovators we’ll never even know about, all because someone focused on the shirt instead of the comet. This is how wokeness actually works. Have you seen real excellence get punished for something trivial like this?
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Melinda Richards 🇦🇺🇺🇸
This was the moment the climate debate shifted - if only a little. It was a moment of pure clarity & facts. Love or hate Alan Jones, he nails it here and it is worth another listen. x.com/Ryandally08/st…
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Mees Wynants
Mees Wynants@MeesWynants·
The British government hid this data for years. Now it is out. 79% of everyone arrested for theft on British railways was a foreigner. 40% of all arrests. 37% of sexual offenses. 36% of violent crimes. All foreign nationals. They knew exactly what the consequences of their immigration policy were. They just never told you.
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Zia Yusuf
Zia Yusuf@ZiaYusufUK·
Labour is boasting today that it has lifted the 2 child benefits cap. The big winners are foreign born households, the big losers are British taxpayers. 341k households, a third of those with 3 or more children, are foreign born. 191k of them came from just 10 countries. Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nigeria and Somalia are top of the list, with 125k families from those countries who will now benefit from a big increase in welfare handouts. This is a sick insult to British people.
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Andrew Neil
Andrew Neil@afneil·
Every measure you list involves spending wealth. You don’t list one measure that creates wealth. And if you don’t create wealth you will soon run out of it to spend, which is already happening (hence all your extra taxes and borrowing).
Rachel Reeves@RachelReevesMP

Minimum wage rising 📈 State pension increasing 💷 Two child limit abolished 🏡 Child poverty falling 📉 Rights at work strengthened 💪🏻 Labour promised change. We are delivering change. theguardian.com/commentisfree/…

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Lance Forman
Lance Forman@LanceForman·
Love this article by ⁦@KemiBadenoch⁩ in ⁦@thetimes⁩ today. The only leader to talk about the over reach of the State. Glad she has set out her philosophy and belief in the free market and in people. This is the leadership we need.
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Graham Linehan
Graham Linehan@Glinner·
It's so offensive how he tries to piggyback on gay rights by talking about 'coming out'. You're a straight cross-dresser, Eddie, you've not come out of anything. Do us all a favour and come out of the women's toilets.
Gay Not Queer@Gaynotqueer1

"I came out in 1985." 2023.

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Geoffrey Myers
Geoffrey Myers@geoffreyMyers1·
A strong word indeed but I can find no other to describe what he allows to happen #Treachery #KierStarmer
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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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Andrew Neil
Andrew Neil@afneil·
ANDREW NEIL: We’re being run by a bunch of know-nothing numpties — and the Labour Party should be renamed the Welfare Party mol.im/a/15708293
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Stuey Beef 🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿
In 2016, 17.4 million people voted to stop sending money to Brussels and stop being subject to its rules. In 2026, Keir Starmer is in talks to send Brussels £2.9 billion a year — permanently — and is openly not ruling out returning to the Single Market. Nobody voted for this. Nobody was asked. The people who howled loudest about “respecting democracy” after 2016 are now engineering the reversal of it, one “ambitious trade deal” at a time.
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