shell.SDP

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shell.SDP

shell.SDP

@shellymellymish

England, United Kingdom Entrou em Ekim 2020
1K Seguindo537 Seguidores
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💂🏻‍♀️👋🏻вєαя🍻🇬🇧™
The Wizard of Oz is 87 years old. If Dorothy met men with no heart, no brains, and no courage today, she wouldn’t be in Oz. She’d be in Westminster.
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Konstantin Kisin
Konstantin Kisin@KonstantinKisin·
There is no way I would have remained as calm and articulate as @_ConnieShaw in the face of such obtuse and ignorant questioning by someone intent on never letting her finish a sentence. Excellent work.
The Free Speech Union@SpeechUnion

Matthew Wright proves our point on LBC this morning. The official definition of Islamophobia — now repackaged as “anti-Muslim hostility” — is already silencing legitimate debate and criticism of Islam and its practices. It amounts to a de facto Muslim blasphemy law. The treatment of Nick Timothy by Labour MPs is deeply sinister. The Shadow Justice Secretary criticised mass Muslim prayer in Trafalgar Square, was reported to the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, branded “Islamophobic”, and faced calls to resign from Labour MPs and even the Prime Minister. This morning, FSU External Affairs Officer @_ConnieShaw was invited on to discuss the comments made by Nick Timothy. Matthew Wright didn’t want to hear it. After the interview, he told another guest he had “closed her down” because she was “putting out anti-Muslim hatred”. Farcical. In a crowded field, Matthew is this week’s runner up as for chief enforcer of the blasphemy law this week. 👏

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Proudofus.uk
Proudofus.uk@ProudofusUK·
🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧 A blind man built 180 miles of road across the Pennines. He navigated by touch and memory. His name was Blind Jack. 🦯 Born in Knaresborough, Yorkshire, 1717. At six he caught smallpox and went blind. That never stopped him. He learned to ride. To swim. To hunt. At fifteen he became a fiddler. He fought at the Battle of Culloden. He ran a stagecoach company. He eloped with the innkeeper's daughter. The day before her wedding to another man. 💨 He bet a colonel he could walk from London to Harrogate faster than a coach. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁹󠁯󠁲󠁫󠁿 He won. Five and a half days on foot. 207 miles. In 1765, Parliament authorised new turnpike roads across the north. There were very few people with experience. Jack was 48 years old. He seized his moment. He walked every route first. Alone. Then he built. Proper foundations. Drainage. Techniques nobody had used before. 🛤️ Then he hit the bog. Other engineers said it was impossible. Jack cut heather from the moor. Bound it into rafts. Laid the road on top. The bog held. ✅ Across the north of England. 180 miles of road. You have driven on his roads. At 77 he walked to York to dictate his life story to a publisher. 📖 He died in 1810. He was 92. He left behind four daughters, twenty grandchildren, and ninety great and great-great grandchildren. Did they teach you his name? 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 Jack could never see the roads he built. He made them anyway. For everyone who came after. These stories are in the dark. You keep the light on. 👉 proudofus.co.uk/support 💡 Be Part Of Us. Be Proud Of Us. 🇬🇧
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Ginger
Ginger@Ginger68237919·
The first sunrise of Spring, 2026….. Stonehenge, England……
Ginger tweet media
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Nivashni Nair
Nivashni Nair@NivashniNair·
This morning, as I watched our neighbour's excited kids step out of their home, adorning their Eid clothing, I smiled to myself. How lucky we are to live in a country where we (most of us) are tolerant of each other's beliefs.
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Sarah Parry
Sarah Parry@SarahWoods66·
It’s that time again - the first day of trains past the house
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Ike Ijeh
Ike Ijeh@ikeijeh·
After a grim week for Christianity in Britain, this is very, very good news. It is through a clear and unambiguous commitment to Christianity, rather than enviro-activism or the Earthshot Prize, that the future King William will best serve his country. thetimes.com/uk/royal-famil….
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Maya Forstater
Maya Forstater@MForstater·
Zoe Williams profile of Jenni Murray for the Guardian is extraordinay. Let's just not talk about the last decade, eh? That nasty business when she stood up for women's rights and was cancelled for it. theguardian.com/media/2026/mar…
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Anglo Futurism Capital LP 🇬🇧🐿️
Clouston is the most statesmanlike leader I’ve ever seen in my lifetime. Principled. Sensible. Sincere. Authentic. Pragmatic. When people go on about “grown ups in the room” - this gentleman is who they mean.
Paul Embery@PaulEmbery

This is a compelling interview with SDP leader @WilliamClouston on the 'Heretics' podcast with @AndrewGold_ok. I would urge everyone to watch it. William is one of the most interesting and thoughtful political activists/commentators in Britain today. youtube.com/watch?v=dtHv2a…

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Social Democratic Party
We now produce three quarters of the energy we produced in 2004. This is a disgrace. It’s time for real economic change. Read our Energy Green Paper here.👇 sdp.org.uk/energy_abundan…
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Paul Embery
Paul Embery@PaulEmbery·
This is a compelling interview with SDP leader @WilliamClouston on the 'Heretics' podcast with @AndrewGold_ok. I would urge everyone to watch it. William is one of the most interesting and thoughtful political activists/commentators in Britain today. youtube.com/watch?v=dtHv2a…
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YouTube
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Andrew Leatherland
Andrew Leatherland@AndrewNotts_SDP·
@WilliamClouston was recently on the Andrew Gold podcast. Comments under the video near unanimous of a leader the nation needs. Go watch that. But also get a sense of the man below. A from heart view. No electoral triangulation or games. His principles out in the open.
William Clouston SDP@WilliamClouston

My personal view on an important matter. On the 18th of March the House of Lords rejected the amendments tabled to remove or meaningfully limit Clause 208 of the Crime and Policing Bill, a clause which decriminalises, without restriction, a woman ending her own pregnancy at any stage up to and including full term. Abortion is a matter of considerable moral complexity on which reasonable people hold differing views. It has long been held to be a matter of individual conscience by both myself and the Social Democratic Party (SDP). However, this clause was not in any party's manifesto. It was not debated during a general election campaign. Rather, it was inserted into the sprawling Crime and Policing Bill and given just 46 minutes of debate in the House of Commons. Abortion pills may now be obtained over the internet, without prescription or medical oversight. A full-term viable pregnancy may be ended at home with no legal consequence. Further, it could be argued that this law leaves vulnerable women more exposed, not less. It reduces vestiges of the legal framework by which coercion towards abortion would have been identified and prosecuted. It also opens the door to sex-selective abortion - which some societies practice at scale throughout the world - with no mechanism remaining to challenge it. This reckless legislative change has been passed without public consent, without adequate scrutiny, and - critically - without regard for the viable human lives it leaves entirely unprotected. My personal position is clear: I regard this as an appalling and distressing decision by the Lords. To decriminalise abortion at any point in pregnancy crosses a line which, hitherto, I had considered to be well beyond the majority view of any reasonable British parliamentary body. Sadly, I was wrong. It’s an extreme decision which some argue puts into question our claim to be a civilised society. Were I in government I would push for the restoration of the legal protections for viable human life that this clause removes.

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The Free Speech Union
The Free Speech Union@SpeechUnion·
Matthew Wright proves our point on LBC this morning. The official definition of Islamophobia — now repackaged as “anti-Muslim hostility” — is already silencing legitimate debate and criticism of Islam and its practices. It amounts to a de facto Muslim blasphemy law. The treatment of Nick Timothy by Labour MPs is deeply sinister. The Shadow Justice Secretary criticised mass Muslim prayer in Trafalgar Square, was reported to the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, branded “Islamophobic”, and faced calls to resign from Labour MPs and even the Prime Minister. This morning, FSU External Affairs Officer @_ConnieShaw was invited on to discuss the comments made by Nick Timothy. Matthew Wright didn’t want to hear it. After the interview, he told another guest he had “closed her down” because she was “putting out anti-Muslim hatred”. Farcical. In a crowded field, Matthew is this week’s runner up as for chief enforcer of the blasphemy law this week. 👏
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Colin Brazier
Colin Brazier@ColinBrazierTV·
For anyone struggling to understand why there’s any difference between religions, when it comes to prayers in public, take a look at today’s Charles Moore piece in The Daily Telegraph.
Colin Brazier tweet media
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Josh Howie
Josh Howie@joshxhowie·
Islamophobia.
Josh Howie tweet media
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The Free Speech Union
The Free Speech Union@SpeechUnion·
The Free Speech Union is bringing a judicial review against Communities Secretary Steve Reed, challenging his decision to impose an official definition of ‘anti-Muslim hostility’ (Islamophobia). This is a Muslim blasphemy law by the back door, which will silence legitimate criticism of Islam and prevent people from speaking out on issues such as the grooming gangs scandal. The proposed definition is vague and subjective, and liable to be weaponised to shut down lawful debate about Islam, Muslims, and Islamic practices and history. Adopting such a definition — let alone appointing an Islamophobia ‘Tsar’ — breaches the ‘occupying the field’ doctrine in public law. Our lawyers have sent a Pre-Action Protocol letter setting out why the definition is unlawful, and have asked the Government to pause both its rollout and the appointment of the ‘Tsar’ until the case is resolved. Judicial reviews against Secretaries of State are costly, but this is a fight we must win. Blasphemy laws were abolished by Parliament in 2008 — let’s keep it that way. Read our letter and support our crowdfunder 👇
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William Clouston SDP
William Clouston SDP@WilliamClouston·
As borrowing costs soar the government continues every day to add every day the >600,000 young people under 30 who are put on disability benefits. There seems to be no sense within the ruling elite that a crisis is coming, but it is…
William Clouston SDP tweet media
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Pete North
Pete North@FUDdaily·
It must be understood that the slide towards third-worldism is precisely because we have so many laws but so little enforcement. Enforcement cannot be done on the cheap, and it cannot be done without a functioning court system. If you want to live in a first world country then these are the corners you don’t cut.
Pete North@FUDdaily

x.com/i/article/2035…

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Proudofus.uk
Proudofus.uk@ProudofusUK·
One storm. One fallen tree. One field in the Lake District. ✏️ The entire global pencil industry. There is a field in the Lake District. Nothing remarkable about it. Fell sheep, grey sky, Cumbrian rain. Until one day a storm came through. It uprooted a tree and underneath the roots was something nobody had ever seen before. A black substance. Soft, dark, left a mark on everything it touched. The shepherds didn't know what it was, but they used it to mark their sheep. That was 1565. It was the purest deposit of graphite ever found on earth. The only one like it. Ever. 🌍 Word spread fast. The Crown seized the mine, put armed guards on the fell and flooded it between diggings to keep the price high. Stealing graphite became a criminal offence. Punishable by transportation to Australia. Because this wasn't just for marking sheep. It was perfect for lining cannonball moulds. It made England's cannonballs rounder. Faster. More deadly. ⚔️ England had a pencil monopoly for nearly a century. Every artist, every cartographer, every engineer in Europe. All of them wanted what was in that one Cumbrian field. Slowly, workshops appeared in nearby Keswick. Cottage industries. Families cutting graphite into sticks. Wrapping them in string. Then sheepskin. Then wood. The pencil was born. ✏️ In a Cumbrian field. Because a storm uprooted a tree. There is still a pencil factory in Keswick today. On the same site it has always been. Did you know that? These islands have thousands of stories the world has forgotten. We find them. We tell them. We put them in front of millions. You help us make that possible. Be Part Of Us. Be Proud Of Us. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧 proudofus.co.uk
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