Tim Smith
11.4K posts

Tim Smith
@MUFC_68
Manchester United news, updates, rumours and opinions. Not official. Fan since before Moran's red card. #MUFC
Katılım Temmuz 2016
2.4K Takip Edilen2.6K Takipçiler
Tim Smith retweetledi
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Ashley Cole - hilarious, one wasn’t him. Paul Scholes - neither were him!
RJ@rjNUFC
This AI shite needs to stop man. Wait for Ashley Cole haha.
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Tim Smith retweetledi
Tim Smith retweetledi

This will probably cost me followers.
It’s taken all day — writing, deleting, rewriting — to get this as honest and accurate as I can, because this is a subject where sloppy words do real damage. I’m not interested in cheap outrage or easy applause. I’m interested in truth.
So if your response is to skim this, scream “racist”, and feel morally superior without engaging a single point — save us both the time.
I’m not here to be liked. I’m here to be honest.
Now, let’s talk like adults.
⸻
I’m going to say this carefully, because adults should be able to talk about serious things without screaming “racist” like it’s a fire alarm.
I know full well not all Muslims are the same. Some are good people, some are bad people — exactly like the rest of society. Anyone pretending otherwise is either dishonest or deliberately obtuse. This is not about race, and it is not about ordinary individuals going about their lives.
But the West does have a serious Islam problem, and pretending we don’t is how we ended up where we are now.
This is not an attack on people.
It is about ideas, systems, and the West’s catastrophic habit of tolerating intolerance in the name of being “nice”.
Islam, in many of its dominant interpretations, is not just a private faith. It is a political, legal, and social framework. That matters when it enters liberal democracies built on free speech, equality before the law, secular government, women’s rights, and individual liberty.
Criticising an ideology is not racism.
We criticise Christianity, Communism, Fascism, Nazism — Islam is not some untouchable sacred cow that gets a free pass.
Let’s talk about reality, not intentions.
We now have armed police patrolling Christmas markets.
We have anti-vehicle barriers in town centres, public squares, and festive events.
We are told to stay alert, report suspicious behaviour, and accept inconvenience as the price of safety.
And let’s be honest for once:
these measures are not there because of Christians.
They exist because of a very specific, persistent threat that everyone knows exists — but few are allowed to name without being shouted down.
The horrors on our own island — and across Europe — speak for themselves.
Concert halls. Buses. Bridges. Markets. Nightclubs. Churches.
Each time, we’re told it’s an “isolated incident”. At some point, adults are allowed to notice patterns.
The real problem is that the West has imported illiberal values and then enforced silence around them. We were told mass immigration would enrich us, that integration would happen naturally, and that anyone raising concerns was simply backward or hateful.
Instead, we got:
• parallel communities
• cultural segregation
• policing afraid to act
• politicians terrified of being called names
• and citizens told to shut up “for the greater good”
That isn’t tolerance.
That’s submission dressed up as politeness.
Integration used to mean: you’re welcome here — but our laws and values come first.
Now it means bending over backwards to avoid offence, even when women are pressured, gay people are silenced, and free speech is quietly throttled.
And then there’s the question people whisper but aren’t allowed to ask out loud:
why the silence?
Why do so many self-described “moderates” refuse to openly and unequivocally condemn Islamist violence without qualifiers, deflections, or excuses?
Why does every attack instantly pivot to concern about “Islamophobia”, while the victims barely get a sentence?
Condemnation that is conditional, whispered, or drowned out by grievance does not reassure anyone.
Here’s another uncomfortable fact: Islamist groups and individuals have repeatedly stated their intentions openly, including on social media. This isn’t paranoia — it’s documented. They speak in the language of conquest, punishment, and historical grievance.
See page 2
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Tim Smith retweetledi
Tim Smith retweetledi
Tim Smith retweetledi
Tim Smith retweetledi
Tim Smith retweetledi
Tim Smith retweetledi

Keir Starmer dies...
...and ends up at the pearly gates.
St. Peter looks at him and finds his name in his book.
"So, you're a politician...hated one"
"Well, yes. Is there a problem?"
"Oh no, there is no problem. But we have a policy for people in your profession, you have to spend a day each in heaven and hell and then you will be free to choose where you want to spend the rest of eternity."
"Why can't I choose now? Why do I have to spend a day in hell?"
"Well, that is the policy."
First, Starmer the hated spends a day in heaven.
He sees angels singing and people playing harps. He finds heaven very boring for him.
Next, he spends a day in hell.
Upon arriving there he expects to see barren wastelands with rivers of lava and people being boiled alive, but instead sees lush greenery and a large five-star hotel in front of him. At the hotel entrance, he sees Satan wearing a tuxedo and sipping on a martini.
"This isn't what I expected hell to be."
"Oh, hell has been completely misrepresented. We have a luxury five-star hotel with seven-course meals prepared by the best chefs. And we have all the sporting facilities you could imagine with a very large pool. All this is for free."
So Starmer spends the entire day playing golf and eating his meals by the poolside.
At the end of the day, he sleeps in the most luxurious bed he could imagine in a very large suite.
The next morning, when he wakes up, he is back at the pearly gates where St. Peter is waiting for him.
"So what will it be?"
"I can't believe I'm saying this, but I prefer hell."
So, Starmer is transported back to hell, where he sees a barren wasteland illuminated only by the glow of rivers of lava and hears the screams of people being tortured.
The people were starving and were dressed in rags.
The air is full of the stench of sulphur. Once again, he sees Satan in his tux.
"What happened to the hotel, the golf course, the pool and all the greenery I saw yesterday?"
"Well'' said Satan, we followed your political career and decided to copy you. Yesterday, we were campaigning; today you voted, and now you must live with Socialist Fabianism."
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Tim Smith retweetledi

How can a thinking person not see what Mr Lowe is saying?
Rupert Lowe MP@RupertLowe10
@hfc_felix The real tragedy is that there aren’t more saying it.
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Tim Smith retweetledi
Tim Smith retweetledi

Since Andy Burnham is apparently lining up to be the next Labour leader, here’s a reminder:
Andy accused victims of Pakistani-Muslim grooming gangs of trying to “propagandise” the issue.
He tried to block the grooming gangs inquiry in Manchester and nationally.
He claimed that Pakistani-Muslims grooming gangs are a “thing of the past” despite clear evidence that little girls are still being victimised to this day, including in his local area.
He tried to shift the blame onto victims by refusing to acknowledge them as children —
Children who were raped, exploited and even murdered by Pakistani grooming gangs while powerful people like him turned a blind eye.
Andy Burnham belongs in prison, not in Parliament. And certainly not in 10 Downing Street.

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But we don’t get our two extra points back. The referee was desperate to disallow it and it should have gone to var.
SimplyUtd@SimplyUtd
🚨 The Premier League’s KMI Panel says Lisandro Martinez’s goal against Burnley was WRONGLY disallowed, ruling the contact with Walker was exaggerated. [BBC]
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