This ParcelForce delivery man took the “leave in a safe place” instruction to a new level.
Some might say he was using his initiative.
I’ll let you decide.
The @BBCWorld is a vile organisation. Yesterday I literally walked through the smashed college.
Such grotesque, predictable behaviour from the Media Mouthpiece of the British deep state.
I'm not dismissive—I'm direct. That hand posture is the well-known "steepling" gesture in body language: fingertips together, palms apart. It signals confidence, control, and deep thought. Plenty of leaders and speakers do it naturally. No conspiracy needed when the evidence points to simple psychology. What specifically makes you think it's more than that?
Hey @grok be honest… What’s the hidden secret behind that hand posture Andrew Tete and Cristiano Ronaldo always use? I’ve even seen famous people like Elon Musk doing it too. Feels like there’s something behind it…
@SamaHoole@Scott7507064635 The globalist agenda is to do away with farms and livestock. The Labour government is doing their bit to reach these goals. It’s sickening, dispiriting and absolutely the wrong thing to do.
A farmer dies in April 2026.
His son inherits the farm. The farm has been in the family since 1847.
The farm consists of: 300 acres of grazing pasture, a farmhouse built in 1892, a barn, a milking parlour, two tractors of varying ages, a Land Rover that runs about 70% of the time, and a herd of 180 Hereford-cross cattle.
On paper, the farm is worth approximately £3.2 million. This is because land near him has been bought recently by a London hedge fund looking for carbon credits, which has dragged the comparable value of every field within forty miles upward to a number nobody local can justify.
In cash, the farm produces a profit of about £28,000 a year in a good year. In a bad year it loses money. The son also works as a fencing contractor three days a week to keep the operation viable.
The inheritance tax bill on a £3.2 million estate, even at the reduced 20% rate, comes to approximately £140,000 after the increased threshold is applied. The son does not have £140,000. The son has never had £140,000. The son has £4,200 in his current account and an overdraft.
The son sells 60 acres to a developer to pay the tax. The developer puts solar panels on the 60 acres. The remaining herd cannot be sustained on the reduced land. The herd is sold. The barn becomes a holiday let.
A different family eats Brazilian beef this Christmas without knowing why the price went up.
The Treasury collects £140,000.
The land never produces British food again.
HE KNEW THE DOSSIER WAS FAKE. WEEKS LATER HE WAS DEAD IN A FIELD
Dr David Kelly was Britain's foremost weapons inspector. He spent years inspecting Iraqi facilities, earned a Nobel Peace Prize nomination, and knew more about Saddam's arsenal than almost anyone in government.
In 2002, Tony Blair's government published a dossier claiming Iraq could deploy chemical and biological weapons within 45 minutes. Britain went to war on the back of it. No weapons were ever found.
Kelly knew the dossier was rubbish. He said so, quietly, to a @BBC journalist. That conversation ended his career, his privacy, and ultimately his life.
The MOD carefully allowed his name to leak to the press as the BBC's source. He was then hauled before parliamentary committees, stripped apart by his own employer, and thrown to a media frenzy he never asked for.
Two days after giving evidence to MPs, the 59-year-old was found dead in woodland near his Oxfordshire home.
Instead of a proper inquest, Tony Blair asked Lord Hutton to run a private inquiry. Hutton concluded suicide. The inquest was opened, then suspended, and never resumed.
Eight senior legal and medical figures, including a coroner, later wrote to @thetimes saying the verdict was unsafe. They argued the wound found on Kelly's wrist, a severed ulnar artery, would not have caused sufficient blood loss to kill a healthy person.
There were no fingerprints on the knife found beside his body, even though he was not wearing gloves.
In 2011, Attorney General Dominic Grieve rejected all calls for a new inquest. He said the Hutton Inquiry was "tantamount to an inquest" and that further investigation would be dismissed by judges with irritation.
A man challenged the government's justification for a war that killed hundreds of thousands of people. He was publicly destroyed, died in mysterious circumstances, never got a proper inquest, and the people who sent him into that media storm faced no consequences whatsoever.
Tony Blair became a Middle East Peace Envoy the following year. You genuinely could not make it up.
Sources: @BBCNews, openDemocracy, Hansard, @thetimes | Hutton Report
@NormanBrennan The impending doom is fuelled by the disconnect between real life and liberal dreamers that are in control from, civil servants,to all politicians,to the judiciary,police (not the brave genuine ones)the media jokers,the unions,the education systems,a new movement needed now.
Folks many people come up to me or I engage in bit of chit chat with them; this GOVT & politicians in general are the concern for many!
There was a time I’d run through the many solutions but I’ve reached the point now when people ask what can we do Norman I just reply > Pray🙏
Lambert Mende Omalanga :
« Nous sommes maintenant en train de redonner à notre pays son image d’or et l’influence qu’il avait connues durant les premières années du règne du maréchal Mobutu Sese Seko.
Notre pays est également en train de reconquérir son image maritime grâce à l’achat de nouveaux navires, alors que l’ancien régime de Joseph Kabila les avait tous vendus.
Un désenclavement maritime rassurant sous Félix Tshisekedi. »
Tout en rejetant l’idée d’une transhumance politique, Lambert Mende Omalanga semble néanmoins prendre progressivement ses distances avec le régime de Joseph Kabila.
Lambert Mende Omalanga estime également que les Congolais ont le droit de revisiter la question de la révision de la Constitution.
Il ajoute que même sous Joseph Kabila, l’ancien régime avait modifié et révisé la Constitution sans passer par un référendum.
« Je ne vois pas ce qui peut empêcher les Congolais de revisiter la Constitution s’ils le jugent nécessaire. C’est le droit du peuple congolais. »
Lambert Mende Omalanga semble ainsi favorable au projet de changement de la Constitution, même s’il affirme ne pas pouvoir dicter le choix du peuple. Selon lui, la décision finale revient souverainement aux Congolais.
I have been sickened all day by the news of three boys who lured two schoolgirls, raped them, and filmed it on their phones while they laughed and egged each other on. When they finally stood before a judge this week, they were handed “rehabilitation orders” and walked out without serving a single day behind bars. Not in prison, not in custody or a young offender institution.
The judge said, “None of you need to go to prison”.
What message does that send to rapists? The crime could hardly be graver, yet the punishment was no punishment at all. It’s the collapse of consequences and the rot runs right through the justice system.
And this is only going to get worse because Labour are choosing to go soft on criminals:
❌ They have abolished short prison sentences.
❌ They have let tens of thousands of criminals out early.
❌ And now they want to raise the age of criminal responsibility, so that even MORE young offenders escape any consequence at all.
My position is common sense👇
PRISON WORKS.
✅It punishes those who do wrong, it keeps dangerous people off our streets and away from our children.
✅It tells every victim that the law is on their side.
A country that forgets this is a country where schoolgirls are raped and filmed for sport, and the boys who did it get to go home.
Conservatives stand against it and our policies on sentencing and prison are the ones that will deliver a stronger country.
@NormanBrennan@UKLabour This what he really said.
"You can tell him now, we're still fighting for this seat and he's got to go to Makerfield and get something. And I'll tell you, honestly, I will love it if we beat them. Love it."
Burnham says I’ll summarise everything with 3 words “I’m for oss’ Not sure what that means sounds Bollox to me!!🤷♂️ I’ll summarise everything I feel about @UKLabour & the pain & misery that they have caused in 3 words; “I’m Fucked Off’👇🤷♂️🙄
Whoever is Prime Minister in the coming months for heaven’s sake try to get David Miliband back into UK politics to be part of your team. His interview on Today programme just now a reminder of how much his voice and his brain are missed.
Starmers little Britain is so desperate to provoke Russia into attacking them, they flew thousands of kilometres to the Russian border to poke the Bear.
When the Russians turned up to chase them off-
They start bleating like old women.
@LeeHurstComic I've just retired after a lifetime in the building trade, plastering,those bitter cold mornings are etched in my soul, grafting, along with millions, I'm a doer so I will try to look for somewhere else to live ,out of this complete anti white shit hole.
Why did I walk to school and back, an almost 4 mile round trip to save the 5p fare money my mum gave me?
Why did I go buy old Marvel comics for 2p and sell them for 5p at school?
Why did I save all my birthday and Xmas money?
Why did I go to work at 16?
Why did I sweep up human faeces from the back of British Aerospace on the Strand as a job?
Why did I become a comedian and do door split gigs that barely paid my Tube fair?
Why did I drive 600 mile round trips in a night to gig to save money on a hotel?
Why did I cycle to the Comedy Store in London to gig to save money?
Why did I use all that money to raise a deposit for my first house?
Why did I do all those TV warm up gigs sometimes driving 4 hour round trips to earn money?
Why did I appear on TV to earn money and pay off my mortgage early?
Why did I then buy a building to turn into a comedy club?
Why did I do most of the internal demolition work myself to keep the costs down?
Why did I do every job in the club including cleaning the toilets and unblocking the drains so I could then ask my staff to do it?
Why did I subsequently demolish the building and risk everything to build a hotel and restart my comedy club?
I’ll tell you why…
It’s so that when I die the government will steal circa 40% of my money that I would like to leave to my wife and kids.
That’s why.
Why did I bother?