M Unwin

1.5K posts

M Unwin

M Unwin

@creepm13

Katılım Haziran 2023
1.8K Takip Edilen126 Takipçiler
M Unwin
M Unwin@creepm13·
@ILovesTheDiff Paradise Garden no view soz Um low lounge. Amazing view over the bay. Nice drinks
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I Loves The ‘Diff
I Loves The ‘Diff@ILovesTheDiff·
A cousin writes: “Looking for suggestions - can you recommend somewhere to go for cocktails in Cardiff that isn't city centre preferably and with the option of outdoor seating and maybe a view?” Anywhere spring to mind?
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Harrison Ford
Harrison Ford@HarrisonFordLA·
May the fourth be with you
GIF
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Faisal Islam
Faisal Islam@faisalislam·
NEW Bank of England holds interest rates at 3.75%, but its chief economist votes for a rise to 4%. Bank outlines 3 energy shock scenarios, with some rate rises indicated even if global energy prices fall from here. IF oil prices remain above $120 till year end, AND gas prices rise substantially Banks forecasts point to possibility of rates at 5.25% this year
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Artur Nadolny
Artur Nadolny@ArturNadol7566·
BBC PAID HIM 6X MORE. THE TRIBUNAL SAID THAT WAS ILLEGAL. THE BBC SAID IT WAS COMPLICATED. Samira Ahmed @SamiraAhmedUK presented Newswatch on @BBC for years. Same format. Same length. Same job. Read viewer feedback on camera, wrap it up, go home. Jeremy Vine @theJeremyVine did exactly the same thing on Points of View. She got £440 per episode. He got £3,000. Ahmed spent years trying to fix it quietly through internal BBC processes. The BBC said there was no problem. She filed for tribunal. In January 2020, the tribunal ruled unanimously in her favour. The BBC could not explain the difference. They tried. They argued Vine needed "a glint in the eye" and to be "cheeky." The tribunal said that was not a skill. It was a story the BBC told itself. The total underpayment was close to £700,000. Sarah Montague, another BBC woman, settled separately for around £400,000. The National Union of Journalists flagged around 70 more cases waiting resolution internally. After Ahmed won, 700 BBC women received pay rises. The BBC's statement after losing? They regretted it had gone to tribunal. Not that they paid a woman six times less than a man for the same work for years. Just that it became public. Sources: @guardian, @BBC, @IFJGlobal, Others
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M Unwin
M Unwin@creepm13·
@forwardnotback I opposed it and realise I was totally and utterly wrong. I thought King Charles speeches, were excellent. Made me feel proud of the UK.
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Tim (still totally unremarkable)
a slight moan: It would be great if those who opposed and called for the visit to be cancelled admitted they were wrong as they praise the speech The government (and palace made the right call) Soft power diplomacy works and this is one benefit of the monarchy (there are others)
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Tim (still totally unremarkable)
The King’s Speech in USA It is good to see the overwhelmingly positive reaction in the UK to the speech It was imo a speech that in Trump World only the king could make and I think Trump will take notice - he loves the royal family and soaks up the reflected soft power
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Sarah Ironside 💙
Sarah Ironside 💙@SarahIronside6·
"Oh, do you think he was referring to you?" will go down in history as one of the most brilliant interview questions ever asked.
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M Unwin
M Unwin@creepm13·
@forwardnotback I’ve enjoyed the food updates. Im going to have to disagree with you re the toast. Nothing better on planet earth than some NASH Toast and tea. I think my experience is slightly skewed, because I’ve only ever had it after giving birth and being nil by mouth for HOURS.
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Tim (still totally unremarkable)
Tim (still totally unremarkable)@forwardnotback·
Morning BREAKFAST on what could be my last day I decided to try the TOAST again - the one food disappointment here - impossible to get right on a mass scale And the reliable PORRIDGE Both with Apricot jam 😍
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Lisa
Lisa@elisabetguwanto·
whenever i feel bored or underwhelmed, i always come back to this sentence:
Lisa tweet media
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n@enarchxve·
always mildly surprised that the collective grief of the pandemic didn't make people kinder to each other
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#FBIW Welsh Rugby Mad dragon 🐲
Wales suffered through 14 years of tory austerity. Wales has never voted tory in over 100 years Why now would they vote for the turquoise tories because reform is full of them. Why would you want our public services to suffer even more? Make it make sense
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Lisl Macdonald FRSA
Lisl Macdonald FRSA@liseymacd·
So I got some good news today. Passed my LLM (Masters in Law) with a Distinction. I’m 58 years old. Do your thing whatever age you may be. 😊🙏😅🥳
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ely⁷ ⊙⊝⊜ IS SEEING BTS
i just realized that august will be officially 14 years since i attempted suicide when i was 14. i doubled my age instead of stopping it. i think that is very cool
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David Yelland
David Yelland@davidyelland·
Don’t know her, but she made me cry.
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Mistress Dividend
Mistress Dividend@mistressdivy·
Antiques Roadshow is appraising Pearl Jam concert posters so it is time for me to make a reservation at the graveyard
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Joseph Fasano
Joseph Fasano@Joseph_Fasano_·
I'll never get over the fact that my mother kept this in her house for decades. I wrote it when I was 15 and our horse died.
Joseph Fasano tweet media
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Graham Linehan
Graham Linehan@Glinner·
My God what a story. Why hasn't this been filmed?
The Husky@Mr_Husky1

In 1984, Ruth Coker Burks was 25 years old, visiting a friend at a hospital in Little Rock, when she noticed nurses drawing straws outside a patient's room. Someone had to go in. She didn't wait for the straws. She opened the door herself. What she found inside would define the next decade of her life. 🕯️** Inside was a young man reduced to bones — maybe 80 pounds, dying alone, terrified. He kept whispering one word. *"Mama."* Ruth told the nurses to call his mother. They laughed. *"Honey, we've called. He's been here six weeks. Nobody's coming."* Ruth made them give her the number. She tried one last time. The mother's answer was cold and final: her son was sinful, already dead to her, and she would not be coming. So Ruth went back into that room. She took his hand. She stayed. For 13 hours, she held the hand of a dying stranger, promising him he wouldn't leave this world alone. When he died, his family refused to claim the body. Ruth decided she would bury him herself. She owned plots in her family cemetery in Hot Springs — where her father and grandparents rested. The nearest funeral home willing to handle an AIDS death was 70 miles away. Ruth paid from her own pocket. A local potter gave her a chipped cookie jar for an urn. She used posthole diggers to dig the grave herself. She spoke kind words over the earth because no minister would come to pray over a man who died of AIDS. Ruth thought that would be the end. It was the beginning. Word traveled through the quiet networks of fear and desperation across Arkansas. *There's a woman in Hot Springs who isn't afraid. There's a woman who will sit with you. There's a woman who will make sure you're buried with dignity when your own family won't claim you.* They started arriving. Dying young men from rural hospitals across the state, abandoned by the people who were supposed to love them most. Over the next decade, Ruth Coker Burks cared for more than 1,000 people dying of AIDS. She personally buried 40 of them in Files Cemetery — digging the graves herself, with her young daughter beside her carrying a small spade, holding their own funerals because no one else would speak over these graves. Of those 1,000 people, only a handful of families didn't abandon their dying children. Ruth called parents. Begged them to come say goodbye. To claim their child's body. Most refused. *"Who knew,"* she said, *"there'd come a time when parents didn't want to bury their own children?"* But she also witnessed something else — something that stayed with her. She watched gay men care for dying partners with a devotion that shattered every stereotype. She watched a terrified community take care of its own — and take care of her. *"They would twirl up a drag show on Saturday night and here'd come the money. That's how we bought medicine. That's how we paid rent. If it hadn't been for the drag queens, I don't know what we would have done."* By the mid-1990s, new treatments emerged. The crisis began to shift. And then, like so many heroes of the AIDS crisis, Ruth Coker Burks faded from public memory. She wrote a memoir in 2019 called *All the Young Men* because she needed people to understand what happened in Arkansas. What happened across America. What happens when fear convinces people to abandon their own children. And what happens when one person refuses to walk past a door everyone else fears. She didn't have medical training. She didn't have institutional backing. She didn't have money. She had compassion. Courage. Posthole diggers. And a family cemetery. That was enough to make sure 1,000 people didn't die believing they were worthless. The next time someone says one person can't change anything — Remember the red bag on the door. Remember the 13 hours she stayed with a stranger. Remember the 40 graves she dug with her own hands. She walked through that door in 1984. And 1,000 lives were forever changed because of it.

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Andy Bush
Andy Bush@bushontheradio·
Solo parenting this weekend as Katie is away. I want to cook the girls the ULTIMATE DAD DINNER. What should I make them?
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Moving Home with Charlie
Moving Home with Charlie@moving_charlie·
FTBs: Don't obsess over high mortgage rates. Yes, they're up. But in this market you can also negotiate a lower price you'd be unlikely to get otherwise, which will offset the higher rate. Don't stop viewing. Keep viewing, be prepared for if that ideal opportunity comes along.
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