Diane Markham retweetledi
Diane Markham
98K posts

Diane Markham
@DianeMarkham37
75yrs young Northern Nana fighting for future generations.
North West, England Katılım Şubat 2023
442 Takip Edilen2.4K Takipçiler
Diane Markham retweetledi

For the avoidance of doubt, Folic acid is a laboratory produced substance that displaces natural folate, & causes cell division.
It is not good for ANYONE. Not just non pregnant women.
Research.
Avoid at all costs.
Jill@jilicious
All large bakeries in the uk now must add folic acid into their breads, pastas, etc. This is synthetic and not anything like natural folate. It is bad for non pregnant women and can do harm. Check before you buy. Buy from small bakers who aren’t bound by this rule. #nannystate
English
Diane Markham retweetledi
Diane Markham retweetledi
Diane Markham retweetledi

@Abouterf197543 @need49507 @marksandspencer @SexMattersOrg Utter shame on you M&S Marks and Spencer @marksandspencer !!
By telling this lady that women must try on swimwear in the same changing space as biological men in your store/s you are absolutely 💯 putting women at needless risk.
Same for girls?
How many rapes will it take ?!?
English
Diane Markham retweetledi
Diane Markham retweetledi

Colchester @marksandspencer I asked where the women’s changing room was to try on swimwear. Manager Andrew (he/ his /him) says gender neutral changing areas are “completely safe” for women and girls. For asking him this question, he told me to leave the store. @SexMattersOrg
English
Diane Markham retweetledi

@RupertLowe10 Somalians shouldn’t be claiming social housing in the UK 🇬🇧
That should be given to British veterans.
Somaliland Today@JSLToday
Deport them back to Somalia. Not your problem.
English
Diane Markham retweetledi
Diane Markham retweetledi
Diane Markham retweetledi
Diane Markham retweetledi

British economy snapshot over the last 4 years:
Gas: +94.1%
Electricity: +78%
Fuel: +49.3%
Airfares: +34.4%
Hotels: +37.8%
Groceries: +25.0%
Eating out: +26.5%
Baby food: +26.3%
Dog food: +58.1%
Rent: +25%
Used cars: +30.5%
Public transport: +18.7%
Real average weekly earnings: -2.8%
The UK population is being killed
Source: ONS
English
Diane Markham retweetledi
Diane Markham retweetledi

An old man is selling watermelons by the side of the road.
His sign reads:
1 for $3
3 for $10
A young man stops and buys one watermelon.
“That’ll be $3,” says the old man.
The young man then buys a second watermelon. And then a third.
After paying another $3 each time, the young man picks up his watermelons and starts to walk away.
Then he turns back, grinning proudly.
“Hey old man,” he says, “you realize I just bought three watermelons for $9 instead of $10? Maybe business isn’t your thing.”
The old man smiles and shakes his head.
“Funny… every time somebody comes by, they buy three watermelons instead of one… and then try to teach me business.”
English
Diane Markham retweetledi

Two Africans wearing ‘hi-vis’ vests, dressed like it’s winter in the middle of a heatwave, started intimidating and abusing a young lady, demanding she leave the station. They had no ID, they could literally be anyone.
Is this the type of people you employ, @MorsonGroup?
English
Diane Markham retweetledi
Diane Markham retweetledi
Diane Markham retweetledi
Diane Markham retweetledi
Diane Markham retweetledi

Judge Simon Berkson hands out his most favourite suspended sentence to a multiple offending sexual predator
This judge allowed a man convicted of three separate sexual assaults over many’s years to walk out of Chester Crown Court with a suspended sentence.
The offender, Timothy Jones, had repeatedly touched a woman over a six‑month period while working in a position of trust at a miniature railway attraction. Despite the persistence of the behaviour, the breach of trust, and the victim’s repeated objections, Judge Berkson decided that immediate custody was unnecessary.
He imposed a 12‑month prison term but suspended it for two years, meaning Jones served no jail time at all. The judge emphasised Jones’s lack of previous convictions, his autism and learning disability, and positive character references, treating these as outweighing the seriousness of the offending. For many observers, this was yet another example of the justice system bending over backwards to accommodate an offender while minimising the impact on the victim.
Safeguarding professionals and women’s‑safety advocates criticised the ruling as a clear instance of judicial leniency, arguing that repeated sexual assaults should not be met with a sentence that depends entirely on the offender’s future compliance.
The case fuelled wider concerns about how often full judges choose rehabilitation over consequences in sexual‑offence cases, even when aggravating factors are present.
It’s time this was investigated at the highest levels. ⛔️⛔️⛔️

English

















