Robi Bee

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Robi Bee

Robi Bee

@winkyleak

Season ticket holder at the mighty Spurs. Occasional mountain climber. Superstar scaffolder. Bang average five-a-side legend. Once hit a golf ball over 97 yds.

Soho England Katılım Nisan 2017
659 Takip Edilen147 Takipçiler
Ronaldo Nazário
Ronaldo Nazário@Ronaldo·
As probabilidades podem estar contra a gente… mas nós já vencemos elas cinco vezes e fomos campeões do mundo. Tá liberado acreditar na sexta. 🤞🇧🇷🍻
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adidas
adidas@adidas·
In this Backyard, it’s “win or go home,” and this crew hasn’t left since the 90's. Where there’s a pitch, there’s a legend. #YouGotThis
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Robi Bee
Robi Bee@winkyleak·
@TheFootyFeed There’s always a tweet! This one was only 2 weeks ago.
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The Footy Feed
The Footy Feed@TheFootyFeed·
Really, it's hard to disagree with this...
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City Report
City Report@cityreport_·
Pep Guardiola on why he went to watch Stockport County vs Port Vale: “I saw the calendar. PSG vs Bayern Munich. Disaster game. Managers are not good. Really shit players… I’m in love with English football, so I went to Stockport!” 😍 🎥 @BeanymanSports
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westerosies
westerosies@westerosies·
The new trailer ‘HOUSE OF THE DRAGON’ Season 3 has been released. Premieres June 21 on HBO Max.
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Netflix Sports
Netflix Sports@netflixsports·
"The academy is ready." Throwback to this Pep Guardiola dressing room speech to the Manchester City players after a 2-0 loss to Southampton in the Carabao Cup in 2023. They went on to win the treble that season. Arguably the best coach of all-time for a reason 😤
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Pete North
Pete North@FUDdaily·
Occasionally I will tune out of politics, especially when it goes quiet. It’s really not healthy to expose yourself to the daily torrent of miserable news without a break. The basic gist of politics right now is that the cost of everything is going up by more than you can afford, your job is being abolished, the things you enjoy are being made illegal/prohibitively expensive, they're devaluing your assets, replacing you with sexually incontinent low-IQ third worlders, and they want a big war so they can send your children away to die. The future is that you will work to your grave and the moment you can’t afford your mortgage/rent, you’re either in the street or in a HMO, sharing with a bunch of strangers. Your pension will be worthless at this rate, especially if politicians appropriate the power to decide how it’s invested, and it doesn’t look like we’ll be able to take things like electricity for granted in a few years time. Depressingly, most of these things are wholly self-inflicted. Things could be turned around in the meantime, but only by a razor sharp government with a clue what it’s doing. That just seems unrealistic for Britain. I make no predictions about the next general election. It seems certain that the Labour vote will collapse, but the degeneracy and rank stupidity of the Green Party means there is no obvious place for the liberal left vote to go. We will know more which way this goes very soon. Labour is on track to lose up to 1,800 councillors. If Labour performs the way we think they will in the local elections, it is likely that Keir Starmer will be given his marching orders, giving way to something even more unwholesome. One pundit suggests the bond market is starting to price in more socialism. The 10-year gilt yield will go through 5% — and the next PM won’t last five minutes. As of late April 2026 the 10-year gilt yield is already sitting at 4.93–4.99%, the highest in years. Markets are grinding higher on sticky inflation, weak growth forecasts, energy shocks from the Middle East, and scepticism about any government’s fiscal credibility. A clean break above 5% would be brutal for mortgages, debt servicing, and whatever fiscal headroom the next lot think they have. It seems, then, that we could be looking a bigger crisis, bringing about a much earlier general election. If Starmer goes then it is likely we will see a full-blown outbreak of Looney Tunes civil war on the left. Angela Rayner is the name that keeps surfacing, and unless I’m wildly out of touch, absolutely nobody outside the Westminster bubble seriously sees her as a viable proposition. Rayner is the bookies’ favourite, but she remains a polarising figure outside the activist base. A leadership contest could easily fracture Labour further between the soft left, the unions, and whatever remains of the centrists — handing Reform and the Tories a clear run in any early election. What we’re likely to see, though, isn’t just anti-incumbent politics. Rather, it is structural fragmentation. First-past-the-post is breaking under multi-party reality - and virtually anything can happen, where turnout (unpredictable as it is) makes all the difference. Britain is becoming politically unstable and that’s not going to change for the foreseeable future. Supposing we see a Reform/Tory coalition, we know that Nigel Farage isn’t up to the job and will be gone in under two years, perhaps handing the reins to Zia Yusuf, and it is likely to produce a chaotic government that’s big on promise but short on delivery, walking into ambushes and making problems for itself against a backdrop of strikes and unrest. They’ll do a few good things then run out of steam as they disintegrate, by which time the Tories might well start looking like a recovery option. Populism is likely to fail by way of its unpreparedness. Here is where I concur with @kunley_drukpa. “Though Populist governments will start to come to power in Europe in coming years probably inevitable many will be turfed out for inadequacies and you’ll have to wait until Second Wave Populism to see sustained results.” First-wave populism (Reform, AfD, etc.) excels at channeling rage and breaking the Overton window. It is far less good at the grinding work of statecraft: detailed policy, competent personnel, and surviving the inevitable media-lawfare ambushes. A chaotic Reform-influenced government that delivers some wins on immigration and net zero but fails on growth and living standards would simply discredit the brand permanently - proving the sceptics right that rage alone is not a governing strategy.. This is precisely why I wanted to see something like Restore Britain, with a more serious agenda than Reform, but what we got was slop-tweeting from Rupert Lowe, zero policy development, and the rather frank admission from Lowe that if Restore doesn’t win in 2029 then he’s off elsewhere. What was actually needed was something that presumes Reform incompetence, building for the moment when it imploded. A ten to fifteen year plan. There was never any possibility of replacing Reform as the default anti-incumbent party in the interim. Reform has brand recognition and exposure that Rupert Lowe simply cannot match in a short time. Unless you happen to be following Restore figures on X its political footprint is non-existent. Having deliberately steered by X algorithm away from the fringe right, even I’m surprised by how little reach it has. Again we are confronted with the sad fact that the right doesn’t want to do the hard yards of starting from scratch. They want the solution delivered to them on a plate by somebody else and looks to the same handful of Ukippy flunkies to produce it. Britain’s political system is fragmenting under first-past-the-post while facing deep structural crises that no single election will fix. The most likely path is continued instability, weak governments, and accelerating public disillusionment until a genuinely competent “second wave” emerges — or until something breaks. The latter seems more likely. Ultimately, the public can persevere if there is light at the end of the tunnel. But there isn’t even a glimmer. Hardworking people have to endure increasing job insecurity, shrinking buying power, exorbitant bills and diminishing hopes of ever reaching a state of financial security. The ongoing conflict with Iran has pushed things to the brink. One more global shock could be the thing that ends the world as we have known it.
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Virality Clips
Virality Clips@ViralityClips·
bro got off from 15 hour shift and his wife said we’re all going out to eat
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Princess 💫
Princess 💫@cutiewontmiss·
GAME OF THRONES SEASON 9 (2027) TRAILER What if Daenerys Targaryen rose from the dead not as a mindless wight but as the Night Queen, fully conscious and returning to reclaim everything the world took from her? This concept trailer reimagines the ultimate continuation of Westeros with her commanding an army of the dead while Joaquin Phoenix embodies the Ancient White Walker, a supernatural being older than the Night King himself. Jon Snow must face the woman he killed, carrying the sword that ended her and the love that never left his heart. Queen Sansa as queen of the North, Arya's ship back toward the darkness she trained her entire life to fight.
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Jay Barlow
Jay Barlow@barlowjacob·
2 and a half minutes of pure Arsenal rattle. Enjoy 😂
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Latest in Culture
Latest in Culture@latestinculture·
Bro didn't even try to stop 😭
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Robi Bee
Robi Bee@winkyleak·
My seat in the south stand is available for Brighton on Saturday 18th April and Leeds on Monday 11th May. £65 each or £110 for the pair. @THFC_TICKET #thfc #coys #spurs
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Robi Bee
Robi Bee@winkyleak·
@AllForProgress_ @AllisonPearson @summitscaffold so absolutely perfectly put, this is exactly what our country has become. “the job of the state is no longer to solve the crime but to manage the reaction to it, forcibly”. It’s crazy what this country is becoming, genuinely crazy.
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Maxi
Maxi@AllForProgress_·
On Saturday morning, a woman in her twenties was raped outside Epsom Methodist Church on Ashley Road. She had left a nightclub; she was followed by a group of men; the attack took place between two and four in the morning, in the heart of a market town in Surrey that most of the country thinks of, if it thinks of it at all, as somewhere you go to see the horses run. The residents of Epsom have asked Surrey Police reasonable questions. "Who are the suspects? What do they look like? Is there CCTV?" Surrey Police has declined to answer. They have said they do not have "sufficient information" to release descriptions. They have urged the public "not to speculate," because speculation "may lead to additional tensions within local communities." Translated from the institutional dialect, this means: we know what you are likely to conclude from the descriptions, and we would rather you didn't. On Tuesday evening, hundreds of residents gathered in the town centre to ask the question again. The police response was to deploy public order units, riot shields, and helmets against people standing on the pavement of their own high street demanding to know what the men who raped a woman six doors down from them actually look like. The local Lib Dem MP - who represents these people and the town - told the protesters to "take it elsewhere." "Take it elsewhere." This is the settled posture of the modern British state toward its own citizens. When a town asks for the most basic information about a violent sexual offence committed on its streets - information that, thirty years ago, would have been on the front of every regional paper within hours - it is met first with bureaucratic evasion, then with riot police, then with a sitting member of parliament telling them to do one. Epsom is not an unruly place. It is not a place with a history of disorder. It is a comfortable commuter town in Surrey whose residents have been told, in the space of seventy-two hours, that the police will not tell them who is hunting women on their streets, that asking about it constitutes a threat to community cohesion, and that if they persist in asking they will be treated as a public order problem. There is a specific and ugly contempt encoded in this response. It is the contempt of an administrative class that has decided the British public cannot be trusted with the truth about anything happening to it, and that the job of the state is no longer to solve the crime but to manage the reaction to it, forcibly. The people of Epsom have not misbehaved. They have done the thing that citizens of a serious country are supposed to do when something terrible happens where they live: they have turned up and asked questions. And the answer they have received, delivered in riot gear, is that their questions are the problem.
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Jim Chimirie 🇬🇧
Jim Chimirie 🇬🇧@JChimirie66677·
If you think Britain is struggling now, hold onto something solid. Because the Green Party, currently polling ahead of both Labour and the Conservatives, has published a programme that makes this government's failures look like a golden age of competence and order. Start with immigration. Not controlled immigration. Not managed migration. Open borders. The Greens' own internal documents describe a system that treats every arrival as a citizen in waiting, entitled to NHS access, welfare benefits and the right to vote in all elections, including those who have never achieved settled status. A Panmure Liberum analysis estimates that under Green government, net migration would run at around 900,000 a year, adding 4.4 million people to Britain's population by 2034. Call it what it is. A demographic transformation imposed without consent. Germany provides the evidence of what happens when a government throws open its doors and works out the consequences later. Angela Merkel's open borders decision in 2015 was greeted with the same progressive applause the Greens would generate. According to German government statistics by 2021, asylum seekers made up 2.5 percent of Germany's population but 13.1 percent of all sexual assault suspects. In 2023 there were 761 registered gang rapes, almost two every day, nearly half involving foreign suspects. Knife crimes in North Rhine-Westphalia nearly tripled between 2020 and 2023. Berlin's own police chief stated publicly that violence in the capital was young, male and had a non-German background. The lesson sits there, documented, ignored, while Zack Polanski's party proposes to repeat the experiment at four times the speed, in a country already facing an active Iranian state threat and twenty foiled terrorist plots on British soil. Then there are the other policies. Legalised heroin and crack cocaine. The disestablishment of the Church of England, severing a constitutional settlement that has held for five centuries. A conference that descended into chaos over a motion declaring Zionism a form of racism while party WhatsApp groups contained messages describing Jews as an abomination to this planet. The abolition of immigration detention. Amnesty for every failed asylum seeker. And the scrapping of Prevent, which for all its flaws has kept people alive, at the precise moment MI5 assesses the domestic threat as the most complex it has ever faced. Picture the Britain that emerges from a single Green parliament. A population swollen by four million, the border a memory, detention abolished, Prevent gone, heroin dispensed on the high street, the Church disestablished, campuses already hostile to Jewish students rendered ungovernable, and the IRGC, which this Labour government cannot bring itself to proscribe, operating freely through networks the state has just defunded its ability to monitor. Labour under Starmer is a kakistocracy, paralysed by demography and incapable of naming what it can see. That is dangerous enough. The Green Party is not paralysed. It has a programme, a growing membership of 226,000, a youth wing that is the largest in Europe and a polling trajectory built on a generation of left wing progressives processed through captured institutions who have been taught to call this manifesto enlightenment. It knows exactly what it wants and it is acquiring the means to deliver it. What is happening now will seem like order.
Jim Chimirie 🇬🇧 tweet media
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Robi Bee
Robi Bee@winkyleak·
@summitscaffold @KingPhelz 107 days apparently. Club is done and relegation might be the only thing that saves us from these owners, just it like it did for Newcastle.
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King Phelz
King Phelz@KingPhelz·
The last time Tottenham won a league match was DECEMBER 28, 2025, we are in April 2026 😂 Guess who they won? 😂
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Robi Bee
Robi Bee@winkyleak·
@summitscaffold @JosiahMothWHU Honestly don’t care anymore, it’s all our own fault and everything feels like it’s falling perfectly into place for it to happen with the managerial merry go round, injuries, players downing tools. What a fucking shit show.
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Memerinho
Memerinho@Memerinho1·
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