Fiona Jacobs

6.5K posts

Fiona Jacobs banner
Fiona Jacobs

Fiona Jacobs

@fionapjacobs

Katılım Temmuz 2009
541 Takip Edilen119 Takipçiler
Fiona Jacobs
Fiona Jacobs@fionapjacobs·
@maxrushden is it possible to hook your manager after 15 minutes as well as the goalkeeper? *sound the emergency Ryan Mason klaxon*
English
0
0
0
659
Fiona Jacobs
Fiona Jacobs@fionapjacobs·
@maxrushden After tonight I feel that nothing we ever see on a pitch will come close to exemplifying the phrase ‘the game’s gone’ than what’s just unfolded. The game well and truly has gone. What invented prizes will litter future World Cup draws?
English
1
0
14
780
Max Rushden 💛🖤
Max Rushden 💛🖤@maxrushden·
That post show green room is going to be something. Everyone in silence. Klum: “I think that went ok?” Gretzky: NORTH MACADEMIA Construction Worker: FIFA CUP! Silence again.
English
18
17
425
31.8K
Fiona Jacobs
Fiona Jacobs@fionapjacobs·
@maxrushden @danbardell @SamJDalling Should Nuno have waited for the Forest job instead of rushing into West Ham? Meanwhile we could have all just carried on as if nothing happened other than experiencing a 39-day collective fever dream and Ange’s bank account looking considerably more flush than it did previously.
English
0
0
0
83
Fiona Jacobs
Fiona Jacobs@fionapjacobs·
@maxrushden It was close with only 9 days in it, but Sam Allerdyce still has the record for the shortest stint as permanent premier league manager (to go along with the record as shortest stint as England manager)
Fiona Jacobs@fionapjacobs

@maxrushden @GeorgeElek @_JordanJBryan Big relief that Marinakis didn’t sack Postecoglu before the 9th October meaning Sam Allerdyce’s record for shortest stint as both the permanent premier league manager and England men’s team manager is safe. Leeds: 30 days, England: 67 days.

English
0
0
0
8
Fiona Jacobs
Fiona Jacobs@fionapjacobs·
@maxrushden @GeorgeElek @_JordanJBryan Big relief that Marinakis didn’t sack Postecoglu before the 9th October meaning Sam Allerdyce’s record for shortest stint as both the permanent premier league manager and England men’s team manager is safe. Leeds: 30 days, England: 67 days.
English
0
0
1
121
Fiona Jacobs
Fiona Jacobs@fionapjacobs·
@maxrushden @NickyBandini Thoughts on Bury’s club statement and the shoddy computer systems at the FA
Bury Football Club@buryfcofficial

🔵⚪ Club Statement: FA Trophy We would like to provide an update following news at the end of last week regarding the FA charges brought against the club for fielding an ineligible player. With the Shakers 3-1 up in the FA Trophy tie against Wythenshawe Town, Gavin Massey was introduced for his debut on 66 minutes. It was subsequently brought to the player’s, and the club’s, attention that Massey had been dismissed in AFC Fylde’s final game of last season against Barnet. Following the final whistle of that game, the referee brandished a red card in the direction of a group of players and staff of AFC Fylde in the changing room area. Massey left AFC Fylde in the summer and signed with the Shakers on 1st September. However, the FA Portal only allows clubs to see the player registration detail once a player has made their first appearance for the club, with the discipline records on the portal showing one suspension for the game, that of Aiden Walker’s following his dismissal against Stalybridge Celtic in the FA Cup replay in August. After being introduced against Wythenshawe Town, Massey’s record became visible to the club and showed that he should have been suspended for the FA Trophy tie. This evening, an FA hearing took place relating to the charges brought against both Bury Football Club, and Gavin Massey. Having provided the FA with all mitigating evidence, the panel decided that Gavin Massey will now serve a one match ban. A second hearing, in the case of the Football Club, has determined that the FA Trophy tie against Wythenshawe Town will be replayed. The replay will take place at Ericstan Park tomorrow evening, Tuesday 16th September 2025, 7:45pm kick off. Bury Football Club would like to put on record that no issues with player registrations occurred in this instance, and that usual processes were followed by our administration team in preparation for the FA Trophy tie. #BuryFC | #bfc140

English
0
0
2
102
Fiona Jacobs retweetledi
dave lawrence 🐟🐟🐠
Hunt avoids £100k of Stamp Duty Sunak wife 'non dom' status Zahawi underpays millions in tax and pays a fine Mone PPE - no resolution over millions Rayner - given wrong advice over £40k of Stamp Duty - loses everything
English
2.2K
3.8K
16.7K
985.4K
Fiona Jacobs
Fiona Jacobs@fionapjacobs·
Noctilucent cloud. Congleton. 26 June 00:05
Fiona Jacobs tweet media
English
0
0
1
46
Fiona Jacobs
Fiona Jacobs@fionapjacobs·
@maxrushden spinning around like a carriage clock? Surely the most middle class reference since the brandenberg orchestra
English
0
0
0
13
Fiona Jacobs retweetledi
James Surowiecki
James Surowiecki@JamesSurowiecki·
This is truly amazing. The Deputy White House Press Secretary is claiming that I'm wrong, and that the "tariff rates" on Trump's chart were calculated by "literally" measuring every country's tariffs and non-tariff trade barriers. To prove it, he screenshots the formula the USTR says was used to calculate the reciprocal tariffs we imposed on other countries. And when you back out the Greek symbols, what is that formula? Trade deficit/imports - exactly what I said it was. I don't know if the Deputy Press Secretary was misinformed, or is just being misleading. Either way, the Trump administration did not "literally calculate tariff and non tariff barriers" to determine the tariff rates it's imposing on other countries. As I said, it divided our trade deficit with a country by our imports with that country, and then multiplied by 0.5 (because Trump was being "lenient"). Oh, and if our trade deficit/imports with a country is less than 10%, or we have a trade surplus with a country, Trump slapped a flat 10% tariff on that country.
James Surowiecki tweet media
English
1.2K
9.3K
53.9K
4.3M
Fiona Jacobs retweetledi
James Surowiecki
James Surowiecki@JamesSurowiecki·
This tweet is correct, but it's actually worse than I thought: in calculating the tariff rate, Trump's people only used the trade deficit in goods. So even though we run a trade surplus in services with the world, those exports don't count as far as Trump is concerned. x.com/JamesSurowieck…
English
173
1.5K
10.9K
978.8K
Fiona Jacobs retweetledi
James Surowiecki
James Surowiecki@JamesSurowiecki·
Just figured out where these fake tariff rates come from. They didn't actually calculate tariff rates + non-tariff barriers, as they say they did. Instead, for every country, they just took our trade deficit with that country and divided it by the country's exports to us. So we have a $17.9 billion trade deficit with Indonesia. Its exports to us are $28 billion. $17.9/$28 = 64%, which Trump claims is the tariff rate Indonesia charges us. What extraordinary nonsense this is.
James Surowiecki@JamesSurowiecki

It's also important to understand that the tariff rates that foreign countries are supposedly charging us are just made-up numbers. South Korea, with which we have a trade agreement, is not charging a 50% tariff on U.S. exports. Nor is the EU charging a 39% tariff.

English
2.4K
21.2K
92.6K
19.8M
Fiona Jacobs
Fiona Jacobs@fionapjacobs·
@maxrushden I fear the intro of the show when you mention Barry has a travel anecdote and ‘the yips’ in the same sentence. Flashback to the Munich train anecdote 😬
English
0
0
0
15
Fiona Jacobs
Fiona Jacobs@fionapjacobs·
@atrupar I’d have thought it was a very common word peaking in popularity around the early part of December when the Christmas tree and decorations come out of the loft?
English
0
0
0
41
Fiona Jacobs
Fiona Jacobs@fionapjacobs·
@maxrushden it’s great to hear Josh widdicome back on game day, the last time i heard him he was advocating the brilliance of Gloucester service station, as we were literally driving past so obviously had to pop in. A great services, and a missed talkSPORT feature.
English
3
0
0
44
Fiona Jacobs
Fiona Jacobs@fionapjacobs·
@trussliz I’m not sure Liz, it mentions the treatment of corns but nothing about wilting lettuces
Fiona Jacobs tweet media
English
0
0
0
19
Liz Truss
Liz Truss@trussliz·
Same problem in Britain. And it goes even further back. It's why the big bazooka is needed.
Jeffrey A Tucker@jeffreytucker

I'm concerned that many people do not understand the historical and institutional context in which the DOGE labor reforms are unfolding. They look at this as if these are some random, chaotic, arbitrary, strange, and even cruel measures to impose on a devoted civil service. The reality is very different, and I'm not even sure that Elon entirely understands this. For more than a century, even dating back to 1883, the civil service has grown and grown without check from the elected branch, either the presidency or the legislature . The bureaucracies have ballooned from a few to 450 or so. The bloat and absurdities have grown too. Get this: no one has ever known what to do about it. Not Coolidge, not Hoover, not Nixon, not Reagan, not Clinton, no one. No president has been able to crack this nut. The only reforms ever to have made it through are those that make the administrative state bigger, never smaller. Countless cabinet secretaries have come and gone, always with the intention of making a change but leaving saddened, demoralized, outwitted, outgunned, and ultimately devoured. No president has seriously taken on this problem because they simply did not know how. The unions are powerful, the intimidation from the deep institutional knowledge is overwhelming, the fear of the media as been powerful, and every single president comes to power vaguely feeling threatened by the intelligence agencies. The industries that have captured every single agency were also far too powerful to unseat or control. This combination of institutional inertia has blocked serious reform for a full century. No one has dared. No one has even had a theory or strategy about what to do about this problem. It had become so terrible that most people in politics have simply surrendered, like homeowners who know there are rats in the basement and bats in the attic but long ago gave up trying to fix the issue. All this time, the American people have felt themselves ever more oppressed, weighed upon, taxed and regulated, spied upon, brow beaten, and otherwise overwhelmed. Voting never made any difference because the politicians no longer controlled the system. The bureaucracies ruled all. The Biden years underscored the point. We didn't even need a conscious and present executive. We only needed a figurehead to pretend to be president, just like the Soviet premiers in the old days. The institutions ran everything and the people controlled nothing. How to deal with this? Trump alone figured it out in his last term: he simply took charge of the agencies in a limited way. There were screams of horror and plots galore. They performed a long stream of clever schemes to destroy him and show him who is boss, which is not the democratically elected president but the forces behind the scenes. The job of the president, goes the message from all the insiders, is to PRETEND to be in charge but not actually do anything meaningful. Shut up, mug up, obey, and disturb nothing, let the administrative state do its thing without oversight or disruption, and then you will get your honorary library and bestselling autobiography and go down in history as great. Trump refused the deal and look what happened. Four years have gone by and Trump is back again, this time with a determination to slay this beast, one that he knows all-to-well. The efforts of DOGE and MAHA and MAGA are epic in scope, breaking a century of pathetic acquiescence toward the deep, middle, and shallow states, at last using moral courage to confront the problem head on, come what may. They are profoundly aware that the MUST act fast and with some degree of ferocity else we will default back to the status quo of leaders who pretend to be in charge while the embedded system runs things behind the scenes. It has been this way for TOO LONG. The voters this time have demanded change, and mustered the faith to believe that change is possible. This is precisely what DOGE is attempting, to make good on a promise, a promise that for once the voters actually believed was credible. They simply must succeed. There might never be another chance. The way of failure is the path everyone knows the US was on, toward economic stagnation, political scolerosis, and eventual irrelevance in the unfolding of the next stage of social evolution.

English
214
96
594
66.2K