J. Ambrose

9.4K posts

J. Ambrose banner
J. Ambrose

J. Ambrose

@jacks1912

Swansea City AFC fan. Welsh National Team fan, too.

Jacksville.. Katılım Şubat 2011
904 Takip Edilen276 Takipçiler
J. Ambrose retweetledi
Peter Bleksley
Peter Bleksley@PeterBleksley·
My contempt for these men runs deeper than any ocean.
Jim Chimirie 🇬🇧@JChimirie66677

Starmer and Hermer Built the Machine Together. Now They Run the Country. In 2007, two barristers worked without pay on a case that would change the legal landscape for every British soldier who had served in Iraq. Keir Starmer and Richard Hermer appeared as interveners in Al-Skeini v Secretary of State for Defence, representing eleven human rights organisations including Amnesty International and Liberty. Their argument was that the European Convention on Human Rights should apply to British forces operating overseas. They lost in the Court of Appeal. They appealed to the House of Lords. They lost again. But the legal principle they had argued for eventually prevailed at the European Court of Human Rights, and what followed was the Iraq Historic Allegations Team, sixty million pounds of public money, seven years of investigations, and not a single prosecution. The soldiers it pursued were, in almost every case, found to have acted properly. Starmer believed in it enough to do it for free. Johnny Mercer, who spent years dismantling the consequences, put it plainly. Starmer had insisted on doing it for free. That is not the behaviour of a barrister following the cab rank rule. That is ideological conviction. Hermer's conviction, it subsequently emerged, was not without financial reward once the machinery was running. Documents obtained by the Daily Telegraph show that having helped establish the legal architecture pro bono in 2007, Hermer then used that same architecture to pursue Iraqi claims against British soldiers at £450 an hour, fifty percent higher than the only other KC involved in the group action. He set his success fee at the maximum level permitted, one hundred percent of his normal rate. The MoD's own lawyers challenged his fees as excessive and said he was too junior to command that rate. He is thought to have earned around six figures from the broader group action. The claims he was pursuing were eventually ruled to be deliberate lies. The soldiers were fully exonerated. Sergeant Richie Catterall had been cleared of wrongdoing by the British Army in 2003 for a fatal shooting in Basra. The Army found he had acted in self-defence. The legal precedent Starmer and Hermer established triggered two further investigations spanning thirteen years. A 2016 inquiry again concluded he had acted in self-defence and found a false document had been created to shift blame onto the military. Catterall was finally exonerated. He told the Telegraph he was gutted that Starmer had helped bring the case against him and that the Prime Minister owed him an apology. Starmer is now Prime Minister. Hermer is now Attorney General, appointed by Starmer personally, elevated to the House of Lords specifically for the role, chosen over Emily Thornberry who had held the shadow brief. The former head of the Army, General Sir Peter Wall, has said Hermer's role in the Al-Sweady claims was tantamount to treason. A former commanding officer of 22 SAS said Hermer must step down. The Bar Standards Board has been asked to investigate. Nigel Farage has reported Hermer to the House of Lords standards commissioner. The Troubles Bill that is now subjecting Northern Ireland veterans to the same lawfare is not an accident of policy. The process that drove Fred, a special forces veteran, to attempt suicide after his medical records were handed to terrorists' families was not an oversight. The machine that cost sixty million pounds and produced no prosecutions was not a mistake. Starmer and Hermer built it together, one working for free out of conviction, the other later working for maximum fees out of the same conviction, and now both occupy the positions from which they can ensure the machine keeps running.

English
407
2.2K
9.8K
110.3K
J. Ambrose retweetledi
Curiosity
Curiosity@CuriosityonX·
The Moon isn't just a rock in the sky. It's the reason you exist. Without it, Earth would wobble out of control. Days would shrink to a few chaotic hours. Tides would vanish. Life as we know it would never have evolved. It sits 238,855 miles away at 2,288 mph And the wild part: it's slowly escaping. The Moon moves about 3.8 centimeters farther from Earth every single year. Its surface holds footprints that will outlast every human civilization. With no wind, no rain, no erosion, the boot prints from Apollo 11 in 1969 are still perfectly preserved up there. The same Moon that lit up the path of every ancient traveler is the exact one glowing outside your window tonight. Caesar saw it. Cleopatra saw it. Your great-great-grandparents saw it. It has watched empires rise, oceans shift, and entire species come and go, all without saying a word. A silent witness to everything.
English
263
1.3K
7.3K
288.5K
Jenny
Jenny@Jennnyyyyyy·
This one is actually challenging 😬 Difficulty - Hard 🤯
Jenny tweet media
English
4.6K
103
518
259.5K
J. Ambrose retweetledi
Kathryn Porter
Kathryn Porter@KathrynPorter26·
This is all true. Classic red herring Also classic attempt to look like you're doing something to address a problem when really you're not We're now in a crazy situation where we spend £billions to subsidise supposedly "cheap" energy Then we spend £billions to fix the problems that cheap energy causes on the grid (need for more power lines, backup generation or storage and managing real time intermittency) Then we spend £billions supporting consumers to be able to afford the previous £billions in cost we created And @Ed_Miliband is deluded enough to think the rest of the world wants to copy us
Claire Coutinho@ClaireCoutinho

Ed Miliband has announced plans to ‘break the link’ between gas and wholesale electricity prices. Once again he has NOT come to Parliament to announce these plans… no doubt because someone might ask him some questions… Here’s why they are red herring 👇🏾

English
24
289
783
16.5K
J. Ambrose retweetledi
WRCPAST
WRCPAST@WRCPAST·
Ford Capri 280 Brooklands 1 of 1,038 The Ford Capri 280, commonly known as the "Brooklands," was the final "Special Edition" produced to mark the end of the Capri's 18-year production run. Launched in early 1987, it is widely considered the ultimate iteration of the model. Exterior Every car was finished in Brooklands Green metallic paint. It featured 15-inch 7-spoke alloy wheels (manufactured by Ronal), which were larger than the standard 13-inch wheels found on earlier models. Interior Full Raven Grey Connolly leather upholstery with red piping and Recaro sports seats.  It’s said that Ford originally planned to build only 500 units (to be called the "Capri 500"). However, after realizing they had more bodyshells remaining than expected, they produced a total of 1,038 units. The final Ford Capri ever produced was a Brooklands 280, which rolled off the Cologne assembly line on December 19, 1986. It is now part of the Ford Heritage Collection Car spotted in the UK 📷 Credit to photographer 👏🏻👏🏻 #ford #capri #cars #classiccar
WRCPAST tweet mediaWRCPAST tweet media
English
14
25
226
5.5K
Zohi
Zohi@zohi_4125·
If You are a genius! then solve this problem.
Zohi tweet media
English
2.9K
100
630
164.7K
J. Ambrose retweetledi
Randy L
Randy L@RandyLa35983906·
Ford Capri
Randy L tweet media
Română
9
46
533
5.8K
J. Ambrose retweetledi
Cllr Stuart Davies Reform UK
Cllr Stuart Davies Reform UK@studaviesreform·
Strip him of his title NOW! Absolutely disgusting.
Cllr Stuart Davies Reform UK tweet media
English
98
1.6K
5.6K
25.8K
J. Ambrose retweetledi
Rubi🇺🇸
Rubi🇺🇸@Ruby__8090·
Only sharp minds can crack this… what’s 3 = ? 🧠 Genious people solve it??? 👀👀
Rubi🇺🇸 tweet media
English
746
89
176
17.5K
J. Ambrose retweetledi
Anika
Anika@anika_climate·
This is me and John Clauser. He’s a Nobel Prize winner in Physics (2022) for his groundbreaking work on quantum entanglement, one of the foundational discoveries that reshaped our understanding of quantum mechanics. His experiments helped confirm the predictions of quantum theory over classical physics and paved the way for modern quantum technologies like quantum computing and secure communication. And he DOES NOT believe in the theory of man-made climate change.
Anika tweet media
English
76
181
725
11.1K
J. Ambrose retweetledi
The Swan
The Swan@TheSwanPortal·
Norwich (A) 🔜 Michu on target at their place 14 years ago this month. Quite good wasn’t he.
English
1
5
98
4K
Arden Gray 🇺🇸
Arden Gray 🇺🇸@Arden_2210·
Primary School question let's Test Your iQ level Let's Try and win $85000
Arden Gray 🇺🇸 tweet media
English
1K
104
180
28.8K
Ⱥᴀʀᴏʜɪ 📍
Ⱥᴀʀᴏʜɪ 📍@aarohiyadav100·
Only sharp minds can crack this… what’s 3 = ? 🧠 Only Genious 0.09% solve this
Ⱥᴀʀᴏʜɪ 📍 tweet media
English
2.9K
184
588
172.4K
António Guterres
António Guterres@antonioguterres·
Fossil fuels are wrecking our planet & holding economies hostage. Renewable energy delivers what fossil fuels never can: real & lasting energy security. Let’s make the right choice & unleash the renewables revolution for climate stability, energy security & a liveable future.
English
1.1K
777
2.3K
143.6K
J. Ambrose retweetledi
Jim Chimirie 🇬🇧
Jim Chimirie 🇬🇧@JChimirie66677·
The Man Nobody Is Talking About. His Name Is Sir Philip Barton. Buried inside Tuesday's committee testimony, beneath the headlines about constant pressure, bullying and secret job searches, is the detail that may prove the most consequential of this entire affair. It concerns not Olly Robbins, not Morgan McSweeney, not even Keir Starmer. It concerns the man who was there before all of them. The man who said no. The man who then left his post eight months early. Sir Philip Barton was the Permanent Under-Secretary at the Foreign Office when Peter Mandelson's appointment was announced in December 2024. He was, in other words, the most senior civil servant in the building at the precise moment the machinery of state was being directed to place a man with documented links to Russia and China into the most sensitive diplomatic posting in the Western alliance. What Robbins told the committee on Tuesday is this. Barton pushed back. When the Cabinet Office argued that vetting Mandelson was unnecessary, that a peer and Privy Councillor did not require developed vetting, Barton refused to accept it. He insisted that vetting was a requirement. He had to be, in Robbins's own words, very firm in person. He also voiced reservations about the appointment to Jonathan Powell, the National Security Adviser, reservations that were noted and not acted upon. He was worried, Robbins suggested, about exactly the same reputational risks that had been detailed to the Prime Minister before the appointment was announced. Then Sir Philip Barton left his post. Eight months before his tenure would otherwise have concluded. The question Richard Foord put to Robbins on Tuesday was the right one. Why did Barton's tenure end early? Robbins said he did not know. He suggested ministers may have felt it was time for a change. That answer is not an answer. It is the absence of one. Consider what the timeline now shows. A senior civil servant pushes back against the appointment, insists on vetting when the Cabinet Office wants to bypass it, raises reservations with the National Security Adviser, and departs eight months ahead of schedule. His replacement arrives to find the appointment already treated as a fait accompli, the vetting process under constant pressure from Downing Street, and the question of outcome entirely subordinate to the question of speed. If Barton was removed because he stood in the way of this appointment, then Robbins was not the first civil servant sacrificed to protect it. He was the second. And the question of who else was moved aside, overruled or silenced in the months between December 2024 and the moment the security services finally said no, becomes the most important question this affair has yet produced. Starmer sacked Robbins for following the rules. The Foreign Affairs Committee will now call Barton to give evidence. What he says will either confirm what the timeline already suggests or provide an alternative explanation that the evidence does not currently support. There is a pattern here that goes beyond process failure. Process failures are random. They point in different directions. What this affair has produced is a series of events that point consistently in one direction. Officials who comply are retained. Officials who push back depart. The security services are bypassed. The vetting is treated as an administrative inconvenience. And the one question nobody at the top of this government will answer is why this appointment, this man, this post, mattered so much that every obstacle was removed to make it happen. Barton apparently asked that question. He left eight months early. The country deserves to know why.
Jim Chimirie 🇬🇧 tweet media
English
417
4.5K
9.2K
335.9K
Sophie Rain
Sophie Rain@noravibes_·
Test your IQ What comes next
Sophie Rain tweet media
English
901
102
186
31.1K
Zarii
Zarii@Gosleepriya·
What is the next number? 🤔 easy- hard one 🙄
Zarii tweet media
English
660
176
259
24.3K
J. Ambrose retweetledi
Benjamin Bloom
Benjamin Bloom@Benjaminbloom·
The four top scorers in the Championship were all on target last night! ⚽️🔥 22 - Vipotnik #Swans 🦢🎯 17 - Wright #PUSB 🐘⚽️ 15 - McBurnie #HCAFC 🐯🥅 15 - Windass #WxmAFC 🐉✨ #EFLChampionship 🏆🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿
Benjamin Bloom tweet media
English
0
1
54
4.5K