W Y S I W Y G
73 posts

W Y S I W Y G
@Stu0099
Always Chase Your Dreams, Your Dreams Wont Chase You...
Katılım Ekim 2011
58 Takip Edilen86 Takipçiler

@Wolves Actions speak louder than words...over to you for a summer of recruitment Nathan, ypu absolutely need to get it right this summer else we will stagnate in the chump
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@JacobCollierMP The responses rell you what the country think of your leader. Sake up the man is a disgrace and a fraud
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@NevilleKent @Beverley_Races @RacingPost @RacingTV That's why we dont go racing any longer, the courses think we are cash cows and rip us off
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£8.15 for a pint of lager @Beverley_Races is bloody scandalous. The very last pint I’ll be buying here at that price. @RacingPost @RacingTV
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@LiamKeen_Star Why does the certificate of authenticity say 22/23 season, when the shirt is a current season...Just curious
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Incredibly generous of Wolves to donate this squad signed shirt towards my fundraiser - as we prepare for our challenge raising money for my friend that has been diagnosed with cancer.
Details this week on how to enter the raffle to win this shirt 🐺 #wwfc

Liam Keen@LiamKeen_Star
🚨 Slightly different video from me today…I need your help! 👇 Donate: movember.com/t/24-hours-for… Instagram: instagram.com/24hoursforharv…
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@TomGaymor @lindseyvonn Can't imagine what her body is going through.
3 surgeries in 4 days that must be hard
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🚨 You are an 18 year old professional footballer, with a big future ahead of you and you receive these two contract offers. ✍️
🏴 Wrexham (Championship): First-team starter. 5-year contract. £1M-a-year.
🏴 Man Utd (Premier League): Back-up player. 3-year contract. £3M-a-year.
Which contract are you signing? 🤔

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#26DaysOf2026
Yesterday we had Knudsen & Jorgensen, both Nordic champs & Gustafsson who was Nordic longtrack champ, so...
Day 14: N is for Nordic Champion
Jimmy Nilsen & Hans were Nordic champs, Crump & Butler in the pic too
But how do we get to the letter O from here 🤔

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@MrRyanLeister @BenHusband @MirrorFootball Fantastic piece you can't but agree with every word it's all so sad. at one stage it looked like the foundations were in place, turns out they were made of sand and washed away by wave after wave of mistakes presided over by a person that didn't understand his job or the club
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#wwfc | Wolves are in a state of terminal decline - Fosun need to sell before it's too late
By @BenHusband for @MirrorFootball
mirror.co.uk/sport/football…
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@LizKershawDJ Love the little red circular red stamp to make that bit more aggressive
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First time seen one of these aggressive letters re not paying #BBC #licensefee ! This house is for sale and empty. No telly. So bring it on!

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If you want to understand how far Britain has sunk, look at the case of Lorne Castle – the Dorset officer sacked for tackling a masked 15-year-old knifeman and telling him to "stop screaming like a bitch." For those who don't know the story: Castle brought down a youth suspected of assaulting an elderly man, carrying a blade, linked to drug dealing, and causing chaos in Bournemouth. The teenager wasn't harmed. The knife fell from his pocket. The arrest was clean. And for this, a decorated officer with a decade of unblemished service was dismissed for "gross misconduct."
A country that punishes a man for stopping a knifeman is a country that has lost its mind. This wasn't brutality. It was policing – real policing, the kind that keeps streets safe when they're full of gangs, blades, and feral teenagers who know the system protects them from consequences. Castle was at the end of a ten-hour shift, responding to warnings of gang fights and violent offenders still at large. He did what any sane society expects of its police: he acted fast, acted hard, and removed a threat. That should be praised. Instead, it destroyed his career.
The panel didn't care about the knife. They didn't care about the elderly victim. They didn't care that Castle had been awarded for saving a woman from a freezing river only months before. They didn't care that the youth had links to drug crime. No – they obsessed over a single phrase. A fleeting remark. A scrap of rough language in the middle of a dangerous arrest. One sentence outweighed a decade of duty, grit, and courage. That tells you everything about who now runs British policing.
Castle wasn't sacked for wrongdoing. He was sacked because the new managerial clergy inside UK policing despise old-school officers. They fear "perception" more than they fear armed criminals. They want constables who speak like counsellors, not men who can handle a blade-wielding thug in a dark street. They have built a system where morale collapses, crime soars, and frontline officers walk on eggshells while criminals laugh in their faces. After Castle's dismissal, drug dealers mocked the police openly: "Touch us and you'll get fired." They understood what the panel didn't – the leadership had handed the streets to them.
And here is the heart of the rot. A police force that sacks its bravest men is a force that has forgotten its purpose. A leadership so scared of bad optics that it treats a violent youth with more care than its own officer has no claim to public trust. This is what happens when institutions are captured by ideologues and risk-averse bureaucrats who view policing through the lens of PR, not duty. They would rather sacrifice a good man than stand up to activist outrage or a headline about "rude language."
The public saw through it at once. They backed Castle, raised over £130,000, and praised a man their own force tried to break. They understand what the police hierarchy refuses to admit: courage keeps a country safe. Cowardice destroys it. And sacking a man for doing his job is an act of pure cowardice.
Castle will appeal. I hope he wins. But the verdict we should fear isn't the one that ended his career – it's the one that reveals what Britain has become. A place where a teenager with a knife commands more institutional sympathy than the officer who disarms him. A place where leaders punish bravery and reward disorder. A place where the state turns its own protectors into targets.
This is how a nation decays: not in a single collapse, but through a thousand small betrayals of the people who still hold the line. And Lorne Castle was one of them.
"A country that punishes a man for stopping a knifeman is a country that has lost its mind. This wasn't brutality. It was policing – real policing, the kind that keeps streets safe when they're full of gangs, blades, and feral teenagers"



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@LiamKeen_Star Logically who should be appointed first, the Sporting director?
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Replacing the head coach and now no sporting director leaves Wolves with a lot of decisions - with January around the corner in their big relegation battle. The fans must be brought back on board to make a success of it - comment: #wwfc expressandstar.com/sport/2025/11/…
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