SReid

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SReid

SReid

@sreid5

Tech, security, politics etc. Following, retweets and links ≠ endorsement. https://t.co/U8vWDDNdwo on Bluesky.

UK Katılım Şubat 2011
687 Takip Edilen66 Takipçiler
Republicans against Trump
Republicans against Trump@RpsAgainstTrump·
Trump: “President Xi said America is a nation in decline. And I said, ‘You’re right.’” No American president should ever say this. Disgraceful.
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Robert Peston
Robert Peston@Peston·
PS Burnham also signals in @itvnews interview that rejoining the EU and scrapping the UK’s first-last-the-post electoral system would be for the next parliament. If he becomes prime minister his immediate priorities would be to increase public ownership and control of vital public services while somehow reducing the national debt (he tells @DanielHewittITV repeatedly that he won’t take excessive risks with the public finances, but provides no detail). And here is his mantra for the totemic Makerfield by-election: “Whitehall and Westminster don’t work for Makerfield.”
Robert Peston@Peston

Burnham to @DanielHewittITV: “Britain has been on the wrong path for a very long time”, including under the current Labour government. But “I’m not saying I’m the best” to lead Labour and the country (though this statement is probably not quite what he thinks) itv.com/news/2026-05-1…

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Bloomberg
Bloomberg@business·
The Trump administration allowed a waiver that encouraged more Russian crude sales to lapse, even as the Iran war stokes concerns about global oil supplies and higher fuel costs. bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
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SReid@sreid5·
@SkyNews About time. Starmer's exit should see Labour's policy change to rejoining the EU.
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Sky News
Sky News@SkyNews·
"Britain's future lies with Europe - and one day, back in the European Union." Former health secretary Wes Streeting says the UK needs a new special relationship with Europe, as he calls Brexit a 'catastrophic mistake'. trib.al/zxwWsWg 📺 Sky 501, Virgin 602
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Anonymous
Anonymous@YourAnonNews·
After all the shit they've pulled, it's hard not to view socialism in a positive light - especially when billionaires keep raping the system over and over and the working class have to bear all the burdens of this life.
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Elizabeth Warren
Elizabeth Warren@ewarren·
Defeating Trump just to go back to business-as-usual won't be enough. We need to hold him and his cronies accountable for breaking the law. Then we need to clean up the corruption in Washington to guarantee our government can never be hijacked again. That’s what I’m focused on.
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Viral Reel Addict
Viral Reel Addict@ViralReelAddict·
Mike Johnson just had a meltdown on Fox News about "mini-Mamdanis" popping up everywhere. He accidentally told the whole country exactly why Republicans are about to get crushed. The Speaker of the House went on Fox News and lost it. Not over a policy fight, not over a scandal, but over the fact that progressive Democrats are starting to win and people actually like what they're doing. His exact words: "Mini-Mamdanis popping up all around the country, and they're openly avowed to socialist Marxist ideology. This is something we have never seen before in American history. This is about moving away from a constitutional republic to a communist utopian ideology. And that's a dangerous thing for the future of the country." Translation: People are starting to like Democrats who actually fight for them, and I'm panicking. And yes, the "mini-Mamdanis" are absolutely real. Graham Platner in Maine. Brian Poindexter in Pennsylvania. Abdul El-Sayed in Michigan. All running on Mamdani-style platforms. All gaining traction. All scaring the absolute hell out of Republicans and the corporate Democrats who told you for decades that progressive policies are unwinnable. Why is this happening? Because Mamdani just proved every one of them wrong. He inherited a $12 billion deficit from the corrupt Eric Adams administration. He erased it without slashing public services and without raising taxes on working New Yorkers. He's investing $122 million to hire 1,000 new teachers. He just turned the blocks in front of 50 NYC public schools into car-free "Soccer Streets" so kids can play in celebration of the World Cup. That's the nightmare Mike Johnson is screaming about on Fox News. Not communism. Not a "utopian ideology." Teachers. Parks. A balanced budget. Kids playing soccer. Republicans spent decades convincing Americans that government can't do anything well, that progressives will bankrupt them, that taxing billionaires will end civilization. Mamdani called the bluff. The math worked. The schools opened. The streets filled with kids. And now every red-baiting Republican talking point is collapsing in real time. Mike Johnson isn't afraid of communism. He's afraid of competence. He's afraid Americans will look at New York, then look at the Republican-run hellscapes across this country, and start asking obvious questions. Bring on the mini-Mamdanis. Every single one of them.
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David Yelland
David Yelland@davidyelland·
'Rupert we have a problem...' - Murdoch press et al are now realising Andy Burnham is as left as Kinnock - prepare, now, to see the British press pile in and try to damage Burnham who is both radical AND popular.... panic is breaking out among the hacks.... maybe the final test of their power... it will get ugly.
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SReid
SReid@sreid5·
Hi @elonmusk, why do I see ads after I block and mute them ? It's clearly of no value to the advertiser, but you still get some income.
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SReid
SReid@sreid5·
A country that can elect someone like Trump once, never mind twice, has serious problems.
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Peter Jukes
Peter Jukes@peterjukes·
Lord David Frost reportedly received more than €43,000 in total, averaging over €3,600 per month. His tasks included appearing regularly, or at least twice a month, in British media.
Pete@splendid_pete

The hypocrisy is absolutely volcanic. For years, Orbán’s propaganda machine screamed about “foreign interference”, “sovereignty”, “rolling dollars”, and evil foreign money corrupting Hungarian politics. Meanwhile, the same regime was quietly using Hungarian taxpayer money to build its own foreign influence network through the state-funded Danube Institute, tied to the Batthyány Lajos Foundation. According to Átlátszó, the Danube Institute became one of the regime’s main vehicles for cultivating foreign right-wing populists, MAGA-world conservatives, Brexit nostalgics, and sympathetic Western intellectuals. And this was not some harmless academic tea party. The contracts reportedly required media appearances, articles, conferences, networking, and the promotion of Orbán’s Hungary abroad. In plain English: Hungarian public money was used to manufacture foreign validation for Orbánism. The spending exploded. Átlátszó says Danube Institute research contracts rose from 76.76 million forints in 2022, to 179 million in 2023, to 284.6 million in 2024. Then in 2025, just before the election, DI-linked partners signed contracts worth more than 389 million forints. So while Hungarian hospitals were rotting, schools were begging, and ordinary people were counting every forint, the regime was shovelling public money into foreign cheerleaders. Lord David Frost reportedly received more than €43,000 in total, averaging over €3,600 per month. His tasks included appearing regularly, or at least twice a month, in British media. David L. Dusenbury was identified as receiving €4,666 per month for three years, totalling €168,000. His duties reportedly included writing books, teaching, and representing the institute at events. Timothy Burns reportedly received $12,500 for 36 days of work, plus a return transatlantic flight. Melissa Ford Maldonado was connected to an $8,400 contract for a 10-page paper on Hungarian migration policy and lessons for Texas. Philip Pilkington was linked to a €5,000-per-month contract involving British media networking and themes connected to Ireland, Northern Ireland, and alleged risks of liberal political shifts. Carlos Roa reportedly signed contracts worth $160,000 over 16 months. Rod Dreher was also part of this ecosystem, with Átlátszó previously reporting a Danube Institute contract worth $8,750 per month, or $105,000 a year. Jonathan Price reportedly received €5,000 per month for 12 months, totalling €60,000, while objecting to disclosure on privacy grounds. And then there was the article-production model: Átlátszó reported a $4,500-per-month contract requiring at least two articles per month for Western outlets such as American Conservative, National Review, Newsweek, The Federalist, The Spectator, and UnHerd. Átlátszó said the contract was most likely signed by Michael O’Shea. So let’s say it clearly. This was not “sovereignty protection”. This was Orbán’s taxpayer-funded foreign influence operation. A public-money laundromat for ideological networking. A state-financed fan club for foreign right-wing pundits, academics, Trump-world operators, Brexit nostalgics, culture-war influencers, and professional Hungary-praisers. They accused everyone else of foreign interference while literally paying foreigners to interfere on their behalf. They cried about NGOs while funding their own GONGOs. They screamed about the “dollar left” while running a forint-funded international propaganda export business. And the dirtiest part? Much of this was happening while Hungarian public services were collapsing. Hospitals without toilet paper. Schools without teachers. Families crushed by inflation. Villages abandoned. Public transport rotting. But there was always money for some Western “conservative intellectual” to write a love letter to Orbán or explain why Hungary is the glorious model of the future. NER using Hungarian taxpayers as an ATM for its international ego project.

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Joseph Elliott
Joseph Elliott@J_Elliott94·
Around a quarter of private renters in the UK spend over 40% of disposable income on rents. This is among the highest rates across the world. Meanwhile new analysis for JRF finds being a private landlord has been one of the best investment options available to individuals.
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Ruth Ben-Ghiat
Ruth Ben-Ghiat@ruthbenghiat·
Go down the list of Mr. Trump’s inner circle and think about it: He needs people who are flawed, because he can easily corrupt them.
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Really American 🇺🇸
Really American 🇺🇸@ReallyAmerican1·
Steve Harness: “When is a reporter gonna snap back and say don’t you fucking talk to me that way? I’m a goddamned adult. I’m here working. You work for us, asshole. Go fuck yourself. Somebody, for the love of God, I will buy the Pulitzer for you if you will just tell this man how fucking dare you, do not talk to me that way”
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Marcos Agustín
Marcos Agustín@marcosagusstinn·
Europe’s military fragmentation is one of the largest wastes of public money in the world. In 2025, EU defence spending is projected to reach €392B, around 2.1% of GDP. Yet Europe still operates around 178 major weapons systems, compared with roughly 30 in the U.S. The European Parliament estimates the cost of non-Europe in defence at €18–57B every year. This makes no sense. EU countries and the UK are each other’s main economic partners, share the same geography, supply chains, industrial base and geopolitical threats. Yet defence is still organised as 27 separate markets. Fragmented procurement means smaller production runs, higher unit costs, duplicated R&D, weaker interoperability and dependence on external suppliers. Joint procurement, common platforms and a real European defence industrial base are not ideology. They are basic economic logic.
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