Robin Alexander

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Robin Alexander

Robin Alexander

@jedi42c

Former traveller amongst unknown men. Patriot, Father & Outdoorsman. Veteran w mild TBI & cPTSD. Tweets on the move.

Washington, DC Katılım Kasım 2020
2K Takip Edilen270 Takipçiler
Robin Alexander retweetledi
Siddharth's Echelon
Siddharth's Echelon@SiddharthKG7·
This is a real video, not from any movie. In Vietnam war, when a bridge was destroyed by US Air Force and Vietnamese soldiers had to escape, women made this temporary bridge to cross and stood in water for hours. No way you can win a people’s war.
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Robert Clark
Robert Clark@RobertClark87·
Polite reminder that the @BritishArmy had circa 110,000 soldiers in 2010 & could barely sustain a Brigade in Afghanistan. To suggest that the UK could do so now in Ukraine with less than half that number (53k deployable troops) demonstrates the fantasy land @DefenceHQ inhabit.
Tymofiy Mylovanov@Mylovanov

Elviss: The UK government says it is ready to deploy British soldiers to support a ceasefire in Ukraine. Planning is already underway for a multinational division with a British brigade-sized force. The deployment would be sustainable long-term. 2/

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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Only Restore Britain can save Britain
Rupert Lowe MP@RupertLowe10

Right. Just so we’re all clear. Farage and Reform tried to put me in prison because I backed the mass deportation of Pakistani child rapists and their foreign wives/relatives who allowed it to happen. My home was raided by armed police late on a Friday night as a direct result of Reform’s allegations. My guns were seized. They tried to ruin my life. In every way. Farage admitted on national television it was all because I backed mass deportations. He said that was the moment they realised they ‘had to get rid’ of me. Not the bullshit allegations they went to the police with, but the fact I want the Pakistani rapists removed from our country. He admitted it. That all happened. Fair enough. I took it on the chin, and planned out our next step. I founded Restore Britain to give the British people the democratic option to agree with me. Restore Britain will, without apology, deport every last foreign rapist and all foreign accomplices who knew it was happening, yet failed to act. If that means entire communities go, that means entire communities go. I really don’t care. We will rid Britain of that cancer. Now Reform are incandescently angry that we are giving the British people that choice. Deploying increasingly desperate smears against our movement. If people don’t agree, they can vote for someone else who won’t deport. There are plenty of options - Reform, Labour, Tories. Take your pick. Go for it. But if you want those evil scumbags out of our country, along with every foreign coward who enabled it? You now have that genuine option. Restore Britain.

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Robin Alexander retweetledi
Higgy
Higgy@higgyboson·
"Well Josh, did your Mum happen to mention that she'll be able to save £1.64 on the family entry to Legoland during the summer"? "Yes Mr Starmer, and she asked me pass on her thanks. She told me to tell you she plans to take us twice in the holidays. That way she'll save over £3 which will be enough to buy a can of coke for us all to share". "That's marvellous Josh. I'm happy to help".
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Robin Alexander
Robin Alexander@jedi42c·
3 years…not with BAE!
Hidden History@HiddenHistoryYT

In a single afternoon on May 22, 1941, the Royal Navy lost two cruisers and a destroyer off the coast of Crete to German dive bombers. The fleet commander was urged to withdraw what was left. His reply has been quoted ever since, but the situation that produced it is less well known. By the morning of the 22nd, the German airborne invasion of Crete was four days old and on the brink of failure. Of the seven thousand paratroopers Kurt Student had dropped on the first day, roughly half were already dead. The Germans had taken huge losses trying to capture Maleme airfield in the west of the island. Without an airfield, no reinforcements could land. Without reinforcements, the invasion would collapse. What the Germans needed was a seaborne convoy of mountain troops, heavy weapons, and ammunition. Two such convoys were assembled in Greek ports and put to sea under Italian destroyer escort, hoping to slip across the Aegean to Crete. The Royal Navy intercepted the first convoy on the night of May 21. In a confused action in the dark, British cruisers and destroyers tore through a fleet of small Greek caïques crammed with German soldiers. Roughly three hundred Germans drowned. The convoy was destroyed. But by morning the Royal Navy was south of Crete in clear daylight, within range of the Luftwaffe's Fliegerkorps VIII, the most experienced and lethal dive-bomber force in the world. And the British ships were running low on anti-aircraft ammunition because they had spent most of it sinking the convoy. The Stukas came in waves. The cruiser Gloucester took two direct hits and capsized, taking 722 men with her. The cruiser Fiji was hit by a single bomb that ruptured her hull. She sank slowly, with most of her crew getting off, but 241 men were lost. The destroyer Greyhound was bombed and went down in fifteen minutes. The battleships Warspite and Valiant were both damaged, Warspite badly enough that she had to go to the United States for repairs. By nightfall on May 22, Admiral Andrew Cunningham, commanding the Mediterranean Fleet from Alexandria, was looking at a casualty list that included two cruisers, a destroyer, two damaged battleships, and roughly fifteen hundred dead British sailors. The army on Crete was asking for naval evacuation. The army on Crete also had thirty two thousand troops on it. Cunningham's staff, looking at what the Luftwaffe had done in a single afternoon, urged him not to commit the rest of the fleet. He could not protect transports from Stukas in daylight. Anything he sent into the waters north of Crete would be sunk. The navy had taken enough. Cunningham listened, and then he gave the order that is still quoted at Dartmouth Naval College. "It takes the Navy three years to build a ship," he said. "It would take three hundred years to build a tradition. The evacuation will continue." The fleet went back. Between May 28 and June 1, the Royal Navy evacuated 16,500 men from the south coast of Crete under continuous air attack. They lost three more cruisers and six more destroyers doing it. Thousands of British soldiers were left behind and became prisoners. But the navy did not abandon the army. The German victory at Crete was so expensive that Hitler never authorized another major airborne operation for the rest of the war. The paratroopers had taken the island, but the airborne arm as a strategic weapon was effectively destroyed in the process. Cunningham's decision was not a calculation about morale. It was a statement about what kind of institution the Royal Navy was, made in the moment when the institution was being tested. He was sixty years old. He had spent forty four years at sea. He understood, in a way that staff officers in London did not, that an institution that abandoned its soldiers in 1941 would still be remembered for it in 2041. Three hundred years to build a tradition. Eighty five years ago today, the bill came due, and Cunningham paid it.

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Robin Alexander retweetledi
Robert HJ Marshall
Robert HJ Marshall@roberthenryjohn·
They just don't care about the many. . .
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Robin Alexander
Robin Alexander@jedi42c·
@thinkdefence Can it carry AJAX? Whilst we all see and miss CBRT for what it was, it appears the jobs in wales mean the future is neither light nor mobile!
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Think Defence
Think Defence@thinkdefence·
Pictures: MAN SV Recovery Trailer, supplied by Andover Trailers
Think Defence tweet mediaThink Defence tweet media
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Rick Tyson
Rick Tyson@dambury67·
@jedi42c Agreed, but in truth Gov after Gov after Gov since the late 80's have driven that decline, accepted it... Grim
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Rick Tyson
Rick Tyson@dambury67·
@jedi42c Too busy stripping parts to keep one at sea, alongside lack of experienced crews, maintenance facilities etc etc etc..
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Robin Alexander retweetledi
Lee Nallalingham
Lee Nallalingham@LNallalingham·
🚨 This is how badly Britain has fallen behind on major infrastructure. South Korea built FOUR nuclear reactors in UAE for roughly £19bn in around 9 years. Meanwhile in Britain? Sizewell C could take nearly 19 years, cost up to £48bn… …and deliver just TWO reactors. That’s more than double the cost and time to deliver half the number of reactors. Everything in this country now takes too long, costs too much and delivers too little. No wonder nothing works anymore.
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Tymofiy Mylovanov
Tymofiy Mylovanov@Mylovanov·
Petraeus: The U.S. has not remotely learned the lessons it should from Ukraine. This is the future of war: Ukraine alone uses 10,000 drones a day, and 90% of Russian casualties are caused by drones. That should force institutional change. 1/
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Robin Alexander
Robin Alexander@jedi42c·
@js7959409 It was conceived and justified as unlocking the northern powerhouse, which it now doesn’t reach! It’s tripled in cost, halved in scale and forecast by govt agencies to return 30p on every pound. Whatever capacity it unlocks or creates it’s a fractional RoI.
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john smith
john smith@js7959409·
@jedi42c HS2 is never really about speed - it’s about creating new capacity on lines that have been almost full for close to 20-30 years
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Robin Alexander retweetledi
Rishi Sunak
Rishi Sunak@RishiSunak·
Unemployment is now 5% and only half of under-25s are in paid employment. Every Labour leadership contender should have a coherent answer to how we can reverse these trends and avoid creating a lost generation of young people. Today's @thetimes column👇 thetimes.com/comment/column…
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Bernie
Bernie@Artemisfornow·
Is there ANYONE in this government with a brain cell?? We don’t have enough money for the equipment or manpower to properly protect the UK and so we’re going to spend £1 BILLION on chip fat fuel so the RAF can pretend its hit net zero by 2040 It’s insane 🤡
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Robin Alexander
Robin Alexander@jedi42c·
@thinkdefence @eideticeye That’s the plan dear boy…everyone’s waiting for the next UoR batches to make up for planning assumption & delivery failures
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Think Defence
Think Defence@thinkdefence·
When British soldiers are being killed by Russian drones in a future conflict in Estonia because we can't afford proper counter drone equipment, the endless wailing and gnashing of teeth about the Red Arrows is going to look pretty fucking ridiculous
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Robin Alexander retweetledi
Thomas C. Theiner
Thomas C. Theiner@noclador·
Laid down in 2017... delivery at best in 2027... In the same timespan other shipyards have laid down, delivered and (!) commissioned: 🇯🇵 Mitsubishi Heavy Industries: 12 frigates 🇮🇹 Fincantieri: 10 frigates 🇫🇷 Naval Group: 8 frigates
Navy Lookout@NavyLookout

HMS Glasgow in sunny Scotstoun today. Still plenty of work to be completed before sea trials in late 2026 or early 2027. Via @air_maritimepic

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