The Wall of Wolf Street

2.9K posts

The Wall of Wolf Street

The Wall of Wolf Street

@WallofWolf

London, England Katılım Temmuz 2017
76 Takip Edilen113 Takipçiler
Gareth
Gareth@gareth_youreds·
Here’s one then trickies. What’s your top 3 worst decisions against us since we’ve been back in the PL? My three: 1. Mbuemo handball vs Man Utd 2. Willy Boly sending off vs Bournemouth 3. Wissa winning a penalty for a miskick vs Brentford #NFFC
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Sky Sports Premier League
"I think that's an absolute shocker in every single way!" Gary Neville reacts to the referee overruling VAR to allow Cunha's goal to stand.
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J krupa
J krupa@krupaman1·
@henrywinter By the laws of the game it's not handball. Same thing happened against United a few seasons ago against MBoro ( I think?) in a cup match. No-one complained then.
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Henry Winter
Henry Winter@henrywinter·
He’s a pinned-ball wizard, there has to be a twist. And there is. Referee somehow deems as accidental Bryan Mbeumo clearly pinning the ball with his arm, controlling it. #MUNNFO
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@DWillis1997 @henrywinter The laws state even if accidental, it’s a handball if it leads to a goal. If the ref knows the laws then it’s a disgraceful, possibly corrupt, decision.
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Daniel 🇬🇧
Daniel 🇬🇧@DWillis1997·
@henrywinter The rules state it's a goal Henry. Go and read the rules. It deflected off his body into his arm, he was in a natural position, and he wasn't the goalscorer.
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Henry Winter
Henry Winter@henrywinter·
How on earth is that accidental!! It’s handball by Mbeumo. VAR was trying to bring some justice to the initial decision, invites ref to think again, to check the monitor. Ref sticks with his earlier aberration. Bizarre. Nottingham Forest rightly furious. #MUNNFO
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We look the better side. Just the final ball lacking. And the 2 CB’s unwilling to head the ball. #nffc
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Micah talking shit to get his boy Foden on the plane despite MGW outperforming him on every level. #nffc
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The Wall of Wolf Street retweetledi
Right over Left Everytime
Right over Left Everytime@RightSide_Uk·
In the marble halls of Westminster, where promises dissolve like mist on the Thames, Keir Starmer once strode like a man who believed his own myth. The knighted prosecutor, the self-proclaimed “man of the people,” the Labour leader who swore he would restore trust, decency, and competence to British politics. What a hollow crown he wears now. From the moment he seized power in 2024 on a wave of anti-Tory exhaustion, the mask began to slip. He pledged no tax rises on “working people”—then hammered them with the biggest raid on pensions and employers in a generation. He vowed to fix the NHS—yet waiting lists ballooned while his government slashed winter fuel payments for millions of pensioners shivering in the cold. He promised border control—then watched small boats smash records while his ministers dithered and virtue-signalled. Every U-turn, every broken word, every lecture about “working people” from a man who spent decades in the Westminster bubble exposed the same truth: Starmer was never the steady hand he claimed. He was a shape-shifter, a careerist in a red tie, more interested in focus groups and Guardian headlines than the forgotten towns choking on his failures. The scandals piled higher than the in-trays he ignored. Freebies, donor cash, sleaze that would have made the last lot blush—yet Starmer’s response was always the same: deflection, denial, and that sanctimonious glare. While families scraped by on stagnant wages and energy bills that still bit like winter frost, he jetted off to international summits, preening on the world stage while Britain burned at home. His approval ratings sank into the political Mariana Trench. Even his own MPs whispered that the man had lost the plot. Then came the spring of 2026. May 7th—the local elections that became a national reckoning. Labour didn’t just lose. It was eviscerated. Over 1,400 council seats vaporised. Heartlands in Sunderland, Barnsley, Wakefield, and Gateshead turned blue and yellow as Reform UK stormed the ballot boxes. Conservative strongholds fell too, but the real story was Labour’s collapse—14 councils lost, including their first-ever London borough to Reform in Havering. The people had spoken in the clearest possible terms: enough. Enough of the lectures. Enough of the broken promises. Enough of Keir Starmer. Any decent leader would have looked at the wreckage, heard the roar of rejection, and done the honourable thing. Resign. Step aside. Let the party regroup before the next general election became a massacre. But not this man. Not Sir Keir. In the days after the bloodbath, while Labour MPs queued up to demand his head and the country reeled from the scale of the rebuke, Starmer dug in like a limpet on a sinking ship. No leadership challenge had been formally triggered, he sniffed. He would “get on with governing.” He would not “plunge the country into chaos.” Chaos? The chaos was already here—his chaos. The arrogance was breathtaking. The contempt for the electorate, visceral. In one breath he admitted “tough results” and “unnecessary mistakes”; in the next he clung to office as though the premiership were a personal fiefdom rather than a public trust. This is not leadership. This is hubris dressed in a suit. This is the behaviour of a man who believes the rules of accountability apply to everyone except himself. While Nigel Farage’s Reform movement surges on the back of raw public anger, Starmer sits in Downing Street like a squatter who refuses to read the eviction notice. Britain did not vote for five more years of this. The local elections were not a protest—they were a verdict. History will not be kind. It will record Keir Starmer as the man who took a landslide victory and turned it to dust in under two years. The man who mistook silence for strength and arrogance for resolve. The man who, when the country cried “enough,” simply replied: “I’m not going anywhere.”
Right over Left Everytime tweet media
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Claret and Blue Army
Claret and Blue Army@WestHamCBArmy·
Been told from a very good source inside the club that senior officials and legal team are now exploring potential legal action against the Premier League following what they believe is “a concerning pattern of controversial calls going against WHU” (1/4)
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Beth Rigby
Beth Rigby@BethRigby·
This coming from a government source. A less supportive assessment of cabinet meeting “Keir said in Cabinet that he wouldn't discuss the elections or his leadership, and that he will only speak to cabinet ministers about that individually. Then after the meeting he refused to see Cabinet ministers individually”
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The Wall of Wolf Street
The Wall of Wolf Street@WallofWolf·
@Keir_Starmer “We will not allow people to come to the UK, threaten our communities and spread hate on our streets.” Which you’re allowing on a daily basis, by the boatload. Resign you traitorous coward.
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Keir Starmer
Keir Starmer@Keir_Starmer·
We will block far right agitators from traveling to Britain this weekend for a march designed to confront and provoke our diverse capital city. We will not allow people to come to the UK, threaten our communities and spread hate on our streets.
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The British Patriot
The British Patriot@TheBritLad·
If Keir Starmer resigns, what’s the first thing you’ll do?
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The Wall of Wolf Street@WallofWolf·
@Keir_Starmer "Strength through fairness". Oh just fuck off with your vacuous nonsense. Everyone just wants to be rid of you. Strength through not having a weak, traitorous tool as our PM.
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Keir Starmer
Keir Starmer@Keir_Starmer·
Strength through fairness. Hope for the future. Real answers to the challenges facing our country. This morning, I’m setting out the path ahead to build a stronger and fairer Britain. Watch my speech across my social media channels.
Keir Starmer tweet media
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Mike Gardner
Mike Gardner@mikegardner_wb·
Let’s get our word bingo cards ready for Starmer’s 43rd relaunch speech tomorrow. Mine has these: Toolmaker Change Renewal Fixing the foundations 14 years £22 billion black hole Far right Division Reform Farage Not our war Brexit Breakfast clubs Lifting children out of poverty
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The Wall of Wolf Street
The Wall of Wolf Street@WallofWolf·
@Keir_Starmer A reset of a reset, which was a reset of another reset!? He ought to read the room. No-one can abide the bloke. His party’s policies are making everyone worse off, unless you’re on benefits of course. Or Muslim. They’re the only one’s voting for him now.
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Keir Starmer
Keir Starmer@Keir_Starmer·
It’s important that we reflect and respond to these results - we haven’t done enough to offer people hope for the future. In the coming days I’ll be setting out the path ahead.
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Matthew Stadlen
Matthew Stadlen@MatthewStadlen·
Big disappointment for Reform. Looking like they’ve done worse than last year.
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