Brian Parker 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 🇺🇦💙💛

2.6K posts

Brian Parker 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 🇺🇦💙💛

Brian Parker 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 🇺🇦💙💛

@Gooner_Bri

Katılım Nisan 2020
112 Takip Edilen98 Takipçiler
Sky Sports
Sky Sports@SkySports·
Don't miss the Canadian GP this weekend
English
9
2
90
345.2K
Brian Parker 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 🇺🇦💙💛 retweetledi
Woolwich Arsenal FC 🔴⚪️
20 Years ago today! Great trip, sad result!
Woolwich Arsenal FC 🔴⚪️ tweet mediaWoolwich Arsenal FC 🔴⚪️ tweet media
English
8
8
182
17K
Mike Whitmore
Mike Whitmore@mikewhitmore·
If the original Star Wars movies were shown big screen theaters today, would you go see it?
English
640
24
1.1K
56.8K
Brian Parker 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 🇺🇦💙💛 retweetledi
Scalextric
Scalextric@Scalextric·
WIN the very first Ken Miles Triple Pack produced... No.1 of 1500 😲 All you have to do to enter is 1) Follow @scalextric 2) Reshare this post 3) Reply ‘done’ Head over to our Facebook and Instagram pages for additional entries and don’t forget to share with your friends and family! Entries close on 24th May at 11:59 PM. This competition is not affiliated with X. Full T&Cs can be found on the Scalextric website.
Scalextric tweet media
English
557
569
399
26.1K
Horley Town FC
Horley Town FC@HorleyTownFC·
𝗜𝘀𝘁𝗵𝗺𝗶𝗮𝗻 𝗟𝗲𝗮𝗴𝘂𝗲 𝗦𝗘 𝗗𝗶𝘃𝗶𝘀𝗶𝗼𝗻 𝟮𝟬𝟮𝟲/𝟮𝟳 ⚽️ Our allocation has been confirmed in our first ever season at Step 4 we will compete in The @IsthmianLeague South East Division 👇🏼 We renew local rivalries, look forward to some new seaside trips and competing against some teams for the first time! Secure your 2026/27 season for just £105 by emailing Horleytownfootballclub@gmail.com now #HTFC 💜💙💜💙
Horley Town FC tweet media
English
2
4
36
11.9K
The N5 History
The N5 History@TheN5News·
13th May 2002: Tony Adams testimonial against Celtic at Highbury. 🏆4 League Titles 🏆3 FA Cup 🏆2 League Cup 🏆1 Football Centenary Trophy 🏆2 FA Charity Shield 🏆1 European Cup Winners' Cup Mr Arsenal ❤️ @Arsenal @TonyAdams
English
22
287
2.1K
63K
Brian Parker 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 🇺🇦💙💛 retweetledi
now.arsenal
now.arsenal@now_arsenaI·
Don’t say anything, just repost!😂
now.arsenal tweet media
English
473
15.8K
42.4K
497.1K
Brian Parker 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 🇺🇦💙💛 retweetledi
Clean Up Britain
Clean Up Britain@cleanupbritain·
No one loves a Tosser...
English
2
76
223
9.3K
Brian Parker 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 🇺🇦💙💛 retweetledi
AST
AST@AST_arsenal·
The Arsenal Supporters’ Trust is disappointed by the 8:00pm Monday kick-off for Arsenal vs Burnley. This timing creates clear difficulties for both sets of supporters, particularly those travelling or relying on public transport, and increases costs and disruption. As the final home game of the season, it also means the traditional lap of appreciation will not take place until around 10:00pm, making it less accessible for many fans. We did engage with Arsenal ahead of the most recent broadcast deal, recognising that clubs, including Arsenal, play a role in approving these agreements and asking that it give greater weight to the impact on supporters of games being moved. While we understand the significant financial benefits involved and how they support the club’s growth, we would urge both Arsenal and the Premier League to do more so that scheduling better reflects the needs of match-going supporters.
English
78
224
1.4K
213.3K
Brian Parker 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 🇺🇦💙💛 retweetledi
D82🏆
D82🏆@Detective82·
Brilliant.
English
38
307
2.2K
288.3K
Brian Parker 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 🇺🇦💙💛 retweetledi
Elliott Mckimm
Elliott Mckimm@ElliottjMckimm·
Plays off final. Completed it mate !!! Over the moon, can’t get my head around it just yet. WE ARE GOING UP, SAY, WE ARE GOING UP 💜💙 @HorleyTownFC
Elliott Mckimm tweet mediaElliott Mckimm tweet mediaElliott Mckimm tweet mediaElliott Mckimm tweet media
English
5
4
76
6.4K
Brian Parker 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 🇺🇦💙💛 retweetledi
lewis pearch
lewis pearch@PearchLewis·
What a day, what a way to win it and what a way to end the season. What a special bunch @HorleyTownFC . I love this game ⚽️
lewis pearch tweet media
English
12
7
89
5.2K
Brian Parker 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 🇺🇦💙💛 retweetledi
Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
If you are old enough to remember driving in Britain in the 1980s, you will remember the windscreen. You could not see through it by July. A journey from Leeds to London in August ended with a front bumper that looked like it had been through a war and a windscreen that needed a proper scrubbing with a sponge at the services. Insects on the headlights. Insects in the wing mirrors. Insects packed into the radiator grille so densely that mechanics had to fish them out. This was simply the weather of the British summer, the cost of moving through a country that was still, in living memory, full of flying things. Get in a car now. Drive the same route. Stop at the services. The windscreen is clean. The Bugs Matter survey, run by Kent Wildlife Trust and Buglife since 2004, has been measuring exactly this. Volunteers clean their numberplate, drive a journey, count the splats on a grid. Between 2004 and 2021, the UK average fell by roughly 59 per cent. England alone: 65. Kent: over 70. The 2024 update found a further 63 per cent drop on top of that. The windscreen phenomenon has the data to back it up now. And not just the insects. Between 1970 and 2024, the UK Farmland Bird Index fell by 62 per cent. Turtle doves down 99. Grey partridge down 94. Tree sparrow down 90. A generation of British children has grown up without ever hearing a turtle dove call, because there are, in functional terms, no turtle doves left to call. Defra's own bulletin lists the causes without embarrassment. Loss of mixed farming. The switch from spring to autumn sowing, which took away the winter stubble the small birds had been feeding on since the Neolithic. The grubbing up of hedgerows to make fields bigger for bigger machines. Increased fertiliser. Increased pesticide. Specifically, the pesticides. Neonicotinoids on oilseed rape. Glyphosate sprayed as a pre-harvest desiccant on wheat and barley. Chemicals applied in combinations and volumes that would have seemed psychotic to a farmer in 1950, applied to grow the crops that feed directly into the plant-based shakes marketed to people who believe they are helping the environment. The insects died in the fields where the crops were grown. The birds that used to eat the insects, starved. The windscreen, accordingly, is clean. None of this happened on the permanent pasture that cattle graze. A herb-rich meadow grazed by cattle has more pollinators, more ground-nesting birds, more beetles, more everything per hectare than the arable field next door. The South Downs and the Welsh uplands and the Cotswold commons where sheep and cattle have been grazing for a thousand years are the places British biodiversity is still, just, holding on. The countryside did not empty because of the cow. It emptied because we replaced the cow with the combine harvester, the meadow with the oilseed rape, and the hedgerow with another half-acre of monoculture that needed spraying fourteen times a season to keep it alive. When someone tells you eating a steak is destroying British wildlife, ask them what was on the field before it became the soy farm, the rape farm, the wheat farm that produced the oat milk in their fridge. It was grass. And on the grass, there were cattle. And when the cattle were there, the windscreen needed cleaning.
Sama Hoole tweet media
English
306
2.2K
6.6K
255.2K
dan barker
dan barker@danbarker·
Milkmen were amazing. An electric vehicle that delivered locally sourced, organic produce before dawn every day, no single-use plastics, and recycled the waste as part of the deal. It sounds almost futuristic.
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole

In 1995, 45% of British milk was delivered to the doorstep before seven in the morning by a milkman in an electric float. In 2026, it is 3%. The milkman has been effectively abolished inside one human generation. The supermarket walked in, undercut the cost by a few pence per pint, and the daily ritual of British household life, glass bottles clinking on the step at half past six, was gone by the time the children of 1995 had finished secondary school. The cost to the customer was a few pence per pint. The cost to the system was, in rough order: the glass bottle that was washed and reused hundreds of times, replaced with a plastic bottle that is used once and recycled imperfectly. The local dairy that supplied one town, replaced with a national processor that supplies half the country. The milk that arrived four hours after milking, replaced with milk that arrived three days after milking after a journey of 200 miles. The conversation on the doorstep, replaced with a self-checkout beep. The milkman himself, incidentally, had the lowest recorded rate of heart disease of any male occupation in Britain. He walked approximately 12 miles a day, finished work by 10am, and ate a cooked breakfast. He has been replaced, in the same delivery role, by a zero-hours Amazon Flex driver sitting in a Ford Transit. A small piece of British daily infrastructure was quietly demolished. Nobody was consulted. The milk is still being produced. It is just being produced further away, transported further, kept in plastic, and sold at a different margin, by a different business, to a customer who never sees who milked the cow. The milkman knew your name. The self-checkout does not.

English
121
1.5K
15.4K
565.2K
4 The Arsenal
4 The Arsenal@4TheArsenal_·
The bias in sky commentary is insane. Every Arsenal free kick is questioned like a dive. Not a word said about City doing the same
English
18
72
1.2K
15.6K
Brian Parker 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 🇺🇦💙💛 retweetledi
NonLeagueHQ
NonLeagueHQ@NonLeagueHQ1·
A look at each team and which position they occupied during the season and for how long (days) - @ComCoFL Premier South Cobham hit the top on 20th Sept and stayed there..206 days out of the possible 263! Guildford City occupied the least different places, 7 during the season peaking at 8th on 16th Aug. Knaphill on the other hand paid a visit to 18 of the possible 20 positions during the season! Only 1st and 16th evaded them! 5 teams achieved time in the play offs AND the relegation place with Tadley Calleva having quite the season turnaround. 16th on 22nd Oct, they eventually finished 2nd! 7th place was the most popular position. 18 teams were there at some point with just Guildford and Thatcham avoiding it. Abbey Rangers actually spent more time in the top 5 than Cobham!! 224 days to 215. @CobhamSportFC @TadleyCallevaFC @OfficialTmufc @FCFleetTown @HorleyTownFC @ARFC_Official @KnaphillFC @redhillfc @Sheerwaterfc @BLFC1907 @CorinthianCas @EpsomEwellFC @official_scrfc @Thatcham_TownFC @alton_fc @chipsteadfcsurr @EversleyCaliFC @BalhamFC @CamberleyTownFC @guildfordcityfc
NonLeagueHQ tweet media
English
2
12
38
12.8K
Brian Parker 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 🇺🇦💙💛 retweetledi
NonLeagueHQ
NonLeagueHQ@NonLeagueHQ1·
English
0
14
30
9K
Brian Parker 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 🇺🇦💙💛 retweetledi
Big Willy
Big Willy@Salibasexual02·
Big Willy tweet media
ZXX
27
1.8K
14.2K
1.8M
Sara McGee for Texas HD 132
Sara McGee for Texas HD 132@SaraForTexLege·
I started my original Twitter account in 2009 to talk about football. I only tweeted about football, I only followed football related accounts and I only commented on and participated in discussions about football. My entire timeline was football. Once Elon bought Twitter, I would randomly get a Benny Johnson or Charlie Kirk, etc post popping up in my timeline. Daily. No matter how many times I clicked “not interested,” muted people, blocked people, it didn’t matter. He bought this app to systematically brainwash Americans and we really should talk about it more.
Adam Cochran (adamscochran.eth)@adamscochran

Part of it is that Elon pushes out push notifications for these alt-right propaganda slop accounts. If you create a new account on mobile, follow no one, and have your location set as US, you will almost certainly get notifications about Nick Sortor, Eric Daugherty and Jackson Hinkle tweets within the first two weeks.

English
171
1.5K
11.6K
378.2K