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FPL Snooker

@thehpweaver

Snooker exhibitionist. Husker Du obsessive. Bad FPL player. Followed by imaginary Mancunians for 26 years and counting. 🇵🇸❤️🇵🇸❤️

The Netherworld Katılım Şubat 2009
7K Takip Edilen1.4K Takipçiler
FPL Snooker retweetledi
William Dalrymple
William Dalrymple@DalrympleWill·
Today is Nakba Day. @EmpirePodUK is one of the only history podcasts that has bothered to explain the events at the heart of the conflict in the Middle East. Listen as Professor Eugene Rogan explains how 750,000 Palestinians were turned into refugees at the creation of Israel
Empire: World History@EmpirePodUK

The First Arab-Israeli War & The Creation of The Gaza Strip In the latest instalment of our Gaza series, @DalrympleWill and @tweeter_anita ask: how did neighbouring Arab nations respond to the displacement of Palestinians in 1948?

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Isla 🌺
Isla 🌺@iamisla_·
You can tell how good a guy is at eating p*ssy from the first place his mouth lands 🥉Average ・Cl!t ・P*ssy lips ・A$$ He dives in straight 🥈A Bit Good ・Inner thighs ・Lower stomach ・Hip bones He knows there’s more to it than just main course 🥇Overwhelmingly Good↓
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FPL Snooker
FPL Snooker@thehpweaver·
@DollidarityArmy I hadn’t forgotten but appreciate the reminder nonetheless. Thanks Mannie.
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FPL Snooker
FPL Snooker@thehpweaver·
@BenCrellin I think your FPL skills are too strong to ever have a terrible season Ben!
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Ben Crellin
Ben Crellin@BenCrellin·
79 points on Bench Boost. I thought I was due a terrible season after six consecutive top 10k finishes, but this just season has just been a bit disappointing, so maybe I'm still due a terrible season.... You can check your live rank here: fantasyfootballhub.co.uk/my-team/points… #ad
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alistair green
alistair green@mralistairgreen·
Nepo baby musician
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Rachel Millward
Rachel Millward@rachelmillward·
Not acceptable @BBCr4today, @margarethodge declared @TheGreenParty "antisemitic". The only rebuttal was that Zack "wouldnt agree". We take strong action against antisemitism. @ZackPolanski is hounded by vile cartoons and Nazi salutes. Antiracism is baked into our principles.
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Ramita Navai
Ramita Navai@ramitanavai·
Here is my BAFTA speech in full, with the important bit that hasn't been shown. Also, a heartfelt thank you to everyone who supported us, and to our colleagues who rallied around us. And thank you to @BAFTA and the judges for a great evening and a great honour.
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M2
M2@Amer1can_Barbie·
She can stay 😍🥵🔥
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FPL Snooker
FPL Snooker@thehpweaver·
@BenCrellin I’m sorry for all the trolls you’re getting here Ben. Delighted to hear you’re finishing top 50K this year in your general life. Your FPL record speaks for itself. Untouchably brilliant longevity.
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Ben Crellin
Ben Crellin@BenCrellin·
I’m feeling okay that I’ll finish outside the top 50k for the first time since I started taking FPL seriously (2011) because last summer I started taking life seriously.
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Pascal Groß
Pascal Groß@GroB_Official·
Hello, Pascal Groß here. I've decided to officially join X, looking forward to interacting with the amazing Brighton fans! Great win tonight! Also it wasn't a tackle, I definitely meant to pass to Minteh for the goal @OfficialFPL
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FPL Snooker
FPL Snooker@thehpweaver·
Mitoma off after 57 mins for 0 pts at home to the bottom team. Lovely work. #fpl #FPL
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Tehran Tadhg
Tehran Tadhg@TadhgHickey·
11 years sober today. Recovery is possible 💚🙏
Tehran Tadhg tweet media
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John Cusack
John Cusack@johncusack·
Moral clarity / intellectual honesty Justice /international law / compassion humanity
Yanis Varoufakis@yanisvaroufakis

IN PRAISE OF FRANCESCA ALBANESE There is a question that visits me in the small hours, when sleep will not come and the mind turns over old stones. The question is this: “What would I have done in the 1930s, on the morning after Kristallnacht?" Not what I say I would have done. Not what I hope I would have done. But what would I actually have done—when the trains began to run, when the neighbours grew quiet, when the cost of decency became the loss of everything? Most of us, I think, would have done little. Not from malice. From fear. From the soft, creeping conviction that someone else will speak, that the situation is complex, that we must be 'reasonable'. Lest we forget, the ordinary is the extraordinary's alibi. And how we have clung to that alibi! How we still cling to it! And then, every once in a terrible while, someone appears who does not cling. Someone who steps forward when others step back. Someone who speaks the name of the thing when everyone else is busy naming something else. Francesca Albanese is that someone. She stands before the world—alone, unarmed, armed only with law and language and a rare courage—and she says what the centrists will not say, what the foreign ministries will not say, what the editorial boards will not say. She says: "This is a genocide. And we are watching it happen." Do not tell me that is hyperbole. Do not tell me the term is contested. She has not used it lightly. She has used it as a physician arrives scientifically at a diagnosis—not to wound, but to warn. Not to inflame, but to name. And for that, they have come for her. Oh, how they have come for her. Smears. Investigations. Vicious editorials. Frozen bank accounts. Dispossession of the only apartment she had ever owned. The machinery of the respectable turned to crush her. Because the respectable cannot abide what she represents: a mirror held up to their complicity. Let us, once again, travel back to the 1930s. Back to the few who stood up when the trains began to run laden with Jewish people. There was Aristides de Sousa Mendes, a Portuguese consul in Bordeaux. He defied his own government. He signed thousands of visas, by hand, for hours, until his fingers bled. He saved more lives than Schindler. And he died penniless, disgraced, erased. There was a German officer in Warsaw named Wilm Hosenfeld. He hid a Jewish pianist in the rubble. He did not save thousands. He saved one. But that one—Władysław Szpilman—carried the memory. And memory is "the only haven from which we cannot be expelled." There was Raoul Wallenberg. There were the villagers of Le Chambon. There were the anonymous, the quiet, the furious few who said: “Not on my watch.” Francesca Albanese is their heir. Not because she carries a gun. Not because she hides refugees in her basement. But because she does something equally dangerous in a world that has perfected the art of not seeing. She sees. And she speaks. She does not speak as a diplomat. Thank Goodness she doesn't! Diplomats have given us the language of "there are arguments on both sides" and "restraint" and "proportionality." Diplomatic language is the perfumed grave of moral clarity. No, she speaks as a jurist. As a human being. As a woman who has looked into the abyss and refused to call it a "complex geopolitical landscape". Edna O'Brien once described a character who "had the recklessness of those who have already lost everything worth losing." Francesca Albanese has not lost everything. She has her dignity, her office, her voice, her family. But she has calculated the cost of speaking truth to power. And she has decided that that cost is infinitely less than the cost of silence. What is that cost? Let us name it. She has been called antisemitic—she, who stands on the ground of international law forged in the ashes of Auschwitz and the fires of Nuremberg. She has been called a conspiracy theorist—she, who cites every source, every footnote, every UN resolution. She has been called naive—she, who understands better than most the machinery of realpolitik. These accusations are not arguments. They are the spittle of the threatened. Because Francesca Albanese threatens something very precious to the powerful: the right to commit atrocity without being named. Friends, the 1930s did not arrive with jackboots and pogroms on day one. They arrived in small increments. With "reasonable" restrictions. With "proportional" measures. With the silence of the respectable. We tell ourselves that we would have been different. That we would have been Sousa Mendes. That we would have been Wallenberg. But most of us, I fear, would have been the neighbours who later said, "I didn't know." Francesca Albanese knows. And she refuses to pretend otherwise. So let us praise her. Not with statues or awards she does not seek. But with something harder: with our own refusal to look away. With our own voices, raised in places that are safe for us but dangerous for her. With our own bodies, if it comes to that. A brave woman, who was injured while demonstrating outside a US nuclear military base in 1982, the infamous Greenham Common, had told me that "the heart is a hunter for what it cannot have." But I say the heart is a hunter for what it will not lose. And what we will not lose is the memory of those who stood up when standing up cost everything. Francesca Albanese is standing up now. In our time. In our name. Under our indifferent sky. Let us stand with her. Not tomorrow. Not when it is safe. Now. [Extract from a speech in Athens on Sunday 3rd May 2026]

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