Samantha Done

5.4K posts

Samantha Done

Samantha Done

@samanthadone

Mother, grandmother, wife, Socialist. Teach computer science and IT. Life long MCFC supporter. #HateBrexit #Socialist #mcfc #Rejoin #fbpe #ProEU #Wearamask 😷

North West, England Katılım Mayıs 2012
3.8K Takip Edilen3.2K Takipçiler
Samantha Done
Samantha Done@samanthadone·
news.sky.com/story/uk-faces…. 🤔Not a single mention in this article about the lack of employment opportunities and entry level jobs. Very few jobs that offer training and development opportunities. Mainly 0 hours, minimum wage and no prospects 😕
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KippaxKids
KippaxKids@KippaxKids·
Someone mentioned this on the Mancunian Way space earlier. It is beautifully done. Just when I thought I was done with weeping for the day, ah well, it is what it is.
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Thegingerwig
Thegingerwig@thegingerwig·
Which looks better? Yellow and Red Or Sky Blue and maroon
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Feargal Sharkey
Feargal Sharkey@Feargal_Sharkey·
You'll want to be sitting down for this bit. Water companies are currently £82.7 billion in debt, have paid themselves £85 billion in dividends, leak over a trillion of litres of water per year, dump sewage for almost 4 million hours per year, have been convicted of over 1,200 criminal acts since 1989 and an average of 35% of your bill goes on nothing but paying more interest and yet more dividends. And not a single company has ever lost their operating licence. 👇
Prem Sikka@premnsikka

Yorkshire Water and Northumbrian Water have nearly 200 criminal convictions between them. On 6 August 2024, Ofwat fined them £47m and £17m for sewage dumping. Fines not paid, will not be paid. Firms claim to have invested. No penalty for abusing laws leftfootforward.org/2026/01/public…

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Manchester City
Manchester City@ManCity·
Today marks nine years since 22 innocent lives were tragically lost in the Manchester Arena attack. The families of those who lost loved ones, and all whose lives were changed immeasurably that evening, are in our thoughts. #ThisCityRemembers #ACityUnited
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Rutger Bregman
Rutger Bregman@rcbregman·
This sounds nice, but it's a great way to undermine the welfare state. The strongest welfare states in the world (the Nordics) tax everyone, including nurses. And they give everyone universal healthcare, childcare, pensions, education in return. When the middle class has skin in the game, they defend the system. When welfare is 'just for the poor', it becomes a poor program: stigmatized, underfunded, easy to gut. That's why billionaires keep pushing this idea. The real scandal isn't that this nurse pays $12k. It's that Jeff Bezos pays $0.
Shay Boloor@StockSavvyShay

Jeff Bezos said the bottom half of Americans should pay zero federal income tax. He cited a nurse in Queens making ~$75K and paying ~$12K in taxes saying “we shouldn’t be asking this nurse in Queens to send money to Washington.”

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Manchester City
Manchester City@ManCity·
The Stones & Silva will open tomorrow (May 21) until Sunday (May 24) 🩵🍻   Taking over The Star & Garter (18-20 Fairfield Street, Manchester, M1 2QF) the pub will feature themed décor inspired by the pair’s unforgettable moments in sky blue 🏆   Full details ➡️ mancity.co/StonesAndSilva
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Basil the Great
Basil the Great@BasilTheGreat·
"Slept with" You mean... "raped by" You cannot hate the mainstream media enough
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PrestwichBlue
PrestwichBlue@PrestwichBlue·
Manchester City won their first major title (the FA Cup) in 1904, which was the first season Arsenal were in the First Division. It took Arsenal another 25 years to win their first trophy. I think you'll find that counts as "history" you moron.
Mod@CFCMods

Manchester City winning the league all these years made us all forget what it actually means to see a club with history win a league title, there are actual fans that this means something deep to, I know this feeling, not all these plastics.

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Reverend Raphael Warnock
Reverend Raphael Warnock@ReverendWarnock·
The President just used his power to exempt himself and his family from audits on every tax return they've ever filed. If that is not corruption to the highest degree, then what is?
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Joe Hardy 🇺🇦 🇪🇺♿️🐟 #RightToLove 💙
Low and middle earners most at risk of not saving enough for retirement. (Because they've got no fucking money) In other news, I'm hearing the Pope might be Catholic, bears might shit in the woods, and there is a distinct possibility that my best friend has pink hair. I know, truly shocking!
Department for Work and Pensions@DWPgovuk

• Low & middle earners most at risk, with many saving the minimum • 45% of working-age adults aren’t saving at all • Employer contributions favour higher earners • Just 4% of self‑employed save • 3 in 10 pension pots accessed early Find out more gov.uk/government/pub…

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Samantha Done
Samantha Done@samanthadone·
@BWallArthur They were called “minute steaks” because they cooked in a minute. My grandparents loved them. No idea if you can still buy them 🤷🏻‍♀️
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Bradley Wall 🏳️‍🌈 🇪🇺🇬🇧🌍
Help me out. When I was a kid my parents used to have these thin beef/steak style slices that came in a box with paper in between them. They would have been relatively cheap. Anyone know what they erre called and if you can still buy them?
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David__Osland
David__Osland@David__Osland·
The boss of Tesco pays himself nearly eleven million quid a year while up to half his staff are so badly paid that they have to claim in-work benefits. Then politicians wonder why people are so pissed off these days.
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Parody Nigel Farage
Parody Nigel Farage@Parody_PM·
Actually, this photo is PROOF that gullible dimwits will believe a Shakira concert in Rio is London and it will be wildly shared and liked because Musk's X is designed to encourage and reward such lies and misinformation.
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Gordon Fielden
Gordon Fielden@GordonFielden·
Robert, what you are presenting is not fact, it is a narrative constructed from selective briefings and your own interpretation, and it risks misleading people about where the real balance of opinion lies. You omit a crucial point from the outset. Andy Burnham is not assured of winning that seat. In fact, it is far more fragile than is being suggested. This is not a safe Labour constituency by any stretch. It sits in an area that delivered some of the strongest support for Brexit in the country, and where recent local elections showed significant momentum for Reform. Opening that seat for a by election is not a routine decision, it is a high risk political gamble. Reform will target it aggressively, and the Greens will also see an opportunity. This would not be a contained Labour exercise, it would become a multi front contest in a constituency already shifting away from the party. Nigel Farage and his organisation will not miss the opportunity to frame it as a defining moment, and if that seat is lost, they will present it as proof that they, not Labour, understand those voters. There is also the question of the sitting MP. There is no compelling reason for that seat to be vacated beyond facilitating a leadership manoeuvre. Voters will see that for what it is, and many will resent being treated as a staging ground for internal ambition. They will not take kindly to being used as guinea pigs in a Westminster exercise designed to promote an individual. At the same time, you fail to address the most important factor of all. If any leadership contest were to take place, it is decided by the members of the Labour Party. Not by commentators, not by briefings, and not by the Westminster echo chamber. And those members are not passive observers. Across the country, they are deeply frustrated, in many cases livid, at the conduct of parliamentarians in this episode. The constant positioning, the public undermining, and the sense of a party turning in on itself rather than delivering on its mandate has not gone unnoticed. Nor is this confined to members. The wider electorate who voted Labour are watching this closely, and many are saying quite openly that if Starmer is forced out, they will not vote Labour again. That is not an isolated murmur, it is becoming a visible and growing warning. If the party ignores it, the consequences could be severe. No matter who replaces him, Labour risks following the same road as the Conservatives, declining from a party of government into a diminished force in British politics. There is no groundswell of support among members for Andy Burnham in the way your piece implies. Members know his record. They remember previous leadership contests and the outcomes of those campaigns. There is caution, even scepticism, about presenting him as the inevitable successor, and from what can be seen on the ground, support for him is far from assured. He may well find that the backing being assumed in commentary does not translate into votes when it comes to it. You also overlook the broader reality. There is no settled consensus around alternative leadership. Different names carry different liabilities, and none are guaranteed to command either party unity or public support. The idea of a smooth transition is far more uncertain than your column suggests. Under the party’s rules, Keir Starmer remains leader with a clear mandate. The influence of other actors is not what it once was, and to present his departure as inevitable is to move from reporting into assumption. What is being described as a foregone conclusion is anything but. The reality is more complex, far less certain, and far more dangerous than your analysis suggests. If this course continues, it will not simply damage Starmer. It will damage Labour itself, fracture its support, and open the door to Reform in a way that may prove catastrophic for the country.
Robert Peston@Peston

The consensus at the top of the Labour Party appears to be that Keir Starmer won’t announce a timetable for his departure until Andy Burnham fights the Makerfield by-election. But that makes very little sense to me. Because, as I said on ITV’s News at Ten, the probability he can survive as PM, even if Burnham were to lose the by-election is low. This is what his cabinet colleagues and trade union leaders have made clear to him (and to me). So the timing and manner of his exit are now at the mercy of events, which makes him a lame duck prime minister - whose utterances about policy will barely be heard above the racket of speculation about how and when he will go. This would be humiliating for any PM, but perhaps doubly so for Starmer given that his genuine success in taking Labour to a landslide victory after the nadir of the 2019 election would risk being forgotten and ignored if his last weeks in office are spectacularly chaotic. The limitations on his power are already conspicuous. As his closest colleagues tell me, he was only powerful enough to do the most limited and unambitious of reshuffles to fill the vacancy at health created by Wes Streeting’s resignation - although the disaster of last week’s elections would have been the trigger for a more comprehensive reshaping of the Cabinet if the PM were stronger. Starmer lacks the authority to force any of his ministers to move or leave the government. It’s telling that the Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood kept her job even after her allies briefed she told the PM his time is up, and that Streeting dictated the timing of his own resignation, even though his enforcers were actively briefing against the PM. In the Cabinet, the prime minister is supposed to be the first among equals. In Starmer’s case, scrap “the first” and maybe insert “second”. Also, resignations and sackings have over months left his Downing Street team depleted. As even his friends tell me, few want to take a career risk by working for him, partly because of the open secret that he won’t be in post much longer (and partly because the Whitehall zeitgeist is that he is the worst kind of delegator, one who insists on delegating but then shows little loyalty or understanding when things go wrong). So what’s the alternative to him being in office but not in power, as it were? Perhaps he should emulate Tony Blair, despite many in his party having repudiated the Blair years. In September 2006, Blair announced he would resign within a year and he stood down the following June. This longer timetable meant Blair wasn’t tainted by the chaos of unexpected immediate elections. And because the election schedule was dictated by him rather than by factors beyond his control, he looked commensurately stronger. He appeared to be the master of events, not the victim. The “will he? won’t he?” about Starmer last week was exhausting just to narrate, as I had to do. Goodness knows how bad it was for the main protagonist, Starmer. To be clear, any PM that says he’s off is weakened by that very pledge. But Starmer might actually have even less authority in today’s limbo, where everyone but he acknowledges the reality that he is a short-dated stock.

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sandra
sandra@mrsDugskullery·
City trader on @lbc says some banks are jittery at the thought of government tracking more to the left. 🙄 Well, they never complained when a Labour government were bailing them out after their own greed and mismanagement in 2008. We were all Socialists then weren't we.
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Manchester City
Manchester City@ManCity·
OUR FA YOUTH CUP CHAMPIONS! 🩵🏆
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