Maxi

3.5K posts

Maxi banner
Maxi

Maxi

@AllForProgress_

For Progress. https://t.co/4m51qLkOWQ

เข้าร่วม Temmuz 2022
292 กำลังติดตาม396 ผู้ติดตาม
Maxi รีทวีตแล้ว
Frank Stephens
Frank Stephens@justrightFrank·
THEY KNEW: Miss Weir married while she was working in Rotherham and became Mrs Gladman. During her investigations she was threatened by police and Council officers. If they would say this to a Home Office investigator, then imagine what they were saying to 12 year old victims?
Frank Stephens tweet media
Frank Stephens@justrightFrank

THEY KNEW: Senior police officers berated Ms Weir in front of witnesses, she was sent on a diversity course. Her office was broken into and files were destroyed and altered. She was ordered to change her reports. The rapists Weir reported were finally convicted 14 years later.

English
8
383
671
9.1K
Maxi
Maxi@AllForProgress_·
The NHS cancer waiting time target is 85%. Eighty-five percent of patients should start treatment within two months of an urgent referral. That sounds pretty reasonable, doesn't it? Well, the actual number right now is 68%. That target hasn't been met since December 2015. Not once, in over a decade. You think about what that means in practice. You find a lump. Your GP is worried. They send an urgent referral. And then: you wait. You wait knowing that cancer doesn't. That somewhere in the system, your file is in a queue behind thousands of others, and the queue is getting longer, and nobody can tell you when you'll be seen. I've heard people describe this experience and it's the waiting that breaks them. Not the diagnosis, but the not knowing. The silence. The bureaucratic void where urgency should be. We have got to fix this. Not with another ten-year plan that kicks the targets to 2029. Now. Competitive pay so oncologists stop leaving for Australia. Procurement reform so scanners are bought at fair prices instead of through layers of outsourced middlemen. A health service that treats cancer like the emergency it is. Britain used to lead the world in medicine. We can again. But only if we stop accepting this as normal. Only if we purpose the shame and disgrace we feel of it having come to this and turn it into the fuel for transformation.
English
0
2
5
418
Maxi
Maxi@AllForProgress_·
Here's something you probably don't know: if you strip out government spending, Britain's private economy entered a recession in the second half of last year. The actual productive economy - that is, businesses, factories, shops, the places that actually produce things and where your wages come from - is already shrinking. The OECD just gave us the biggest growth downgrade in the entire G20. We're now forecast at 0.7%. Inflation has been revised up to 4%. And you keep hearing these ministers, who are something below Know Nothings, say "the fundamentals are sound." Bollocks, are they. The fundamentals are not sound. The fundamentals are a country that can't build houses, can't power itself, can't train enough doctors, can't see its people's petrol tanks be filled. Can't control its borders, can't keep its vulnerable safe, and can't subsidise its able. There is nothing sound about any of this. And the sick irony underlying the whole thing is that Britain has everything it needs to turn this around. The talent, the institutions, the sheer bloody-minded creativity that built half the modern world remains, however much in abeyance. What it doesn't have is leadership willing to be honest about where we are and then actually do the work.
English
6
7
23
1.1K
Maxi
Maxi@AllForProgress_·
Starmer stood up this week and said "this is not our war." Ok. But Iranian drones have hit RAF Akrotiri. Diego Garcia has been targeted. British service families have been evacuated. Donald Trump is doing impressions of our Prime Minister - impressively, I suppose, as he's far too indistinct to be available for parody - at the White House Easter lunch to a laughing room. The comedy we ca survive. But what you should care about is what it reveals. Britain has no independent position. We didn't join the strikes, but we gave them our bases. We say we're not in the war, but the enemy combatant says we are. We're not leading and we're not following. We're just...there. Present-absent, like the proverbial spare prick at the wedding. Taking hits. Hoping it all goes away. It's the posture of a country that has stopped believing it can shape events. It must start to believe it can once again, and that belief has to start where every belief starts - pure will. A serious Britain can have an energy supply nobody can cut off, a defence posture it chooses rather than one it trips over or is forced into, and a prime minister that other leaders have to take seriously. But we'll need a very different set of people at the controls to make that happen.
English
0
2
6
470
Maxi
Maxi@AllForProgress_·
The darkness of these times does not frighten me. It makes me feel a supreme gratitude. An excitement, in fact. You should feel that excitement too. Because it will be you who pulls this world we share - your principles, your friends, your loved ones, yourself - out of the shadows. To you will go the credit. And yours will be the glory.
Maxi tweet media
English
0
0
2
328
Maxi
Maxi@AllForProgress_·
You drive past a petrol station in Bristol or Hull or Swansea or Basildon and there are fifty cars queued out onto the road. Fifty. People arguing with the attendants because the £30 limit means she can't fill her tank enough to get to her parents' for Easter. This is Britain in April 2026. We import nearly half our oil, despite sitting on considerable untapped reserves. We have no meaningful strategic reserve to speak of. The Strait of Hormuz closes and within five weeks we're rationing fuel at the forecourt like it's 1973 again. Every government since the nineties knew this dependency was a vulnerability. Every single one decided it was a problem for the next lot. Well, there is no next lot any more. There's just us, in the queue, watching the price tick up. Britain could have the cheapest energy in the developed world within a decade. And in fact it's not so much a nice ambition as it is a geopolitical and autarchic necessity. Without it, we are at the mercy of every war we didn't start and every dictator we can't control. That's not sovereignty. That's a country on a leash.
Maxi tweet media
English
475
179
784
159.7K
Maxi รีทวีตแล้ว
Wilkie (Richard Wilkinson)
Wilkie (Richard Wilkinson)@WilkieisBack66·
When I arrived in England 24 years ago from a South Africa drowning in blood and scarred by senseless murders, gang rapes and casual slaughter, I believed with every fibre of my being that I was bringing my family to safety, to the ancient, civilised homeland of my mother and grandparents. To a place where mindless third-world savagery could finally be left behind. What a bitter, sickening joke that dream has become. Look at London today. What the hell happened? In 2002, shootings in the capital were so rare they barely registered as news. Knife crime wasn’t a daily, hourly horror splashed across every front page and police scanner. You could walk the streets at night without calculating escape routes. And we did, walking to restaurants on a Friday night, strolling about the city on weekends, with seemingly little to fear. I no longer owned my 9mm, having sold all my weapons in SA. I stopped scanning every shadow. For the first time in years I let my wife and baby daughter breathe without the constant, choking fear of sexual assault or random butchery. That London is dead. Today the city bleeds. London is choking on an epidemic of stabbings, shootings and gang executions that would shame the worst townships I monitored or served in during the State of Emergency in SA. Teenagers are being carved up in broad daylight. Schoolchildren are knifed on buses. Young girls are raped and murdered in parks that were once safe. Drive-by shootings , YES, drive-by shootings are now routine in parts of this capital that once prided itself on being the safest major city in Europe. This is not “poverty.” This is not “inequality.” This is a total, unforgivable collapse of law and order. This is the deliberate, repeated failure of politicians, police chiefs and judges who have spent decades prioritising criminals’ rights over the right of ordinary Londoners to live without terror. I did not escape one war zone to watch my family grow up in another, we left London in 2005 for Buckinghamshire, yet even here that sense of safety is eroding. London, you have betrayed every promise you made to people like me. You have allowed a vile, imported culture of casual violence to take root and flourish while the decent, law-abiding majority are told to “tolerate diversity” and keep quiet. Enough. The blood on the pavements of London is not abstract. It is real. It belongs to sons, daughters, fathers and mothers who deserved better. And every single day this disgrace continues is another day the authorities spit in the faces of every citizen who simply wants to walk home alive. This is not the England I came for. This is not the England my ancestors built. And I will not stay silent while it is destroyed. #LondonShooting
Wilkie (Richard Wilkinson) tweet mediaWilkie (Richard Wilkinson) tweet media
English
217
1.5K
4.7K
62.8K
Maxi
Maxi@AllForProgress_·
Reading this, you come quickly to understand why many people consider ‘Moby Dick’ the saddest novel ever written, as well as probably the best
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka

A newborn sperm whale can’t swim. It starts sinking the second it’s born. If nobody pushes it to the surface, it drowns in mile-deep water. On July 8, 2023, a sperm whale named Rounder went into labor off the coast of Dominica. Researchers from Project CETI, a $33 million AI initiative out of MIT, Harvard, and Northeastern that’s trying to decode whale language, happened to be there doing routine fieldwork. They had drones in the air and underwater microphones running. What they captured over the next six hours just got published in two papers, one in Science and one in Scientific Reports. Eleven whales gathered at the surface before Rounder even started delivering. Her mother, Lady Oracle, was there. So was her daughter Accra. Three generations in the water. But the wild part: half those whales belonged to a completely separate bloodline that normally keeps its distance from Rounder’s family. On a typical day, these two family lines split off to hunt in different areas and rarely cluster together. For the birth, they all converged before labor started. The unrelated family somehow knew it was coming. The delivery took 34 minutes. Sperm whale calves come out tail-first with their flukes still folded from the womb. They haven’t developed the oil-filled organ in their heads that helps adult whales float, so the moment they’re born, they’re dead weight in the ocean. Every adult whale in the group, related and unrelated, started taking turns pushing the calf up to breathe. They kept this rotation going for three hours. When a pod of pilot whales (known to be aggressive toward sperm whales) and a large group of Fraser’s dolphins showed up during delivery, the adults formed a wall around the newborn until the threat passed. The underwater audio is where it gets interesting. CETI’s microphones picked up the whales changing their vocal patterns during the birth. The click-based sounds they use to talk to each other shifted at specific moments, and vowel-like structures appeared in the recordings. This builds on what CETI found in 2024 when they ran machine learning on over 8,700 recorded whale calls and discovered sperm whale communication isn’t a basic 21-sound code. It’s a system of about 300 distinct sound combinations, with the whales adjusting rhythm and timing in real time, speeding up and slowing down the way a musician does mid-performance. A 2025 follow-up from UC Berkeley found these clicks also contain vowel patterns, something scientists had assumed only humans could produce. Sperm whales carry the largest brain of any animal on the planet. About 9 kg. Roughly six times heavier than yours. The evolutionary analysis in the new Science paper suggests this kind of cooperative birthing goes back over 36 million years, to the common ancestor of all toothed whales. The calf was spotted a year later, swimming with its family.

English
0
0
1
147
Maxi
Maxi@AllForProgress_·
Let me tell you what £98,599 buys you. It buys you one British MP for a year. That's their annual salary, thanks to a body MPs themselves created to set their own pay. It just went up 5%. The reasoning behind the bump? That MP workload has increased. Let's take a look at what their 'workload' has produced recently, shall we? - Growth forecast slashed to 0.7%. - Inflation heading for 4%. - A third of the country struggling to manage on what they earn. - Petrol breaching 150p for the first time in two years. -172,000 children sleeping in temporary accommodation so squalid that babies don't have room to learn to crawl. I'd say all their workloads have increased too. So where's their 5%?
English
1
0
3
246
Maxi
Maxi@AllForProgress_·
It seems there might be a good man left in Labour after all.
The Free Speech Union@SpeechUnion

Starmer and Lammy have suspended @KarlTurnerMP from the Parliamentary Labour Party over his “recent conduct”. Turner — a former Shadow Attorney General and barrister — has been a leading voice on the Labour backbenches opposing the Government’s sinister plan to curb the right to trial by jury. Under proposals from Justice Secretary David Lammy, defendants facing a maximum sentence of less than three years would lose the right to a jury trial. Instead, their cases would be heard in a judge-only court or by magistrates. The Government has acted in bad faith. In a last-ditch attempt to avoid an embarrassing rebellion at the second reading of the Courts and Tribunals Bill, Lammy offered Turner representation for rebels on the Bill committee in exchange for abstaining. Both of Turner’s nominees — Stella Creasy and Rachael Maskell — were rejected. Turner said: “I will not stand back from speaking truth to power when it matters. Jury trials are a cornerstone of our democracy and a vital safeguard in our justice system.” He added that Lammy’s plan is “unworkable, ill-conceived and not supported by any evidence”, and called it “fundamentally dishonest” to suggest juries are responsible for court backlogs in Britain. This is an increasingly authoritarian Government that has lost its way. Starmer appears intolerant of legitimate criticism, and is seeking to silence dissent. Shameful. Read more below 👇

English
0
0
1
103
Maxi
Maxi@AllForProgress_·
I suspect an awful lot of people are going to find themselves with a far greater understanding of the meaning of Systems Theory and complex interdependency than they ever wished to possess, once the fallout from Iran really begins to hit.
Maxi tweet media
English
0
0
1
65
Maxi
Maxi@AllForProgress_·
Diesel up 35p in five weeks. Petrol stations running dry. And on the same day, MPs gave themselves a £3,300 pay rise. That's another Fuck You to the public.
English
0
1
2
107
Maxi
Maxi@AllForProgress_·
Here's something no politician will say at a ribbon-cutting: 107,000 miles of British roads could fail within fifteen years. 34,000 miles have fewer than five years left. The concrete in your children's school is the same concrete that's been crumbling since the alarm first got raised, and the deadline to fix it just got pushed back again. We don't have an infrastructure plan in this country. We have an infrastructure prayer. A hope that if nobody looks too closely, the bridges hold and the ceilings stay up. This is why, when I tell you that Britain needs someone to come along who will rebuild its foundations, I mean Britain needs someone to come along who will build its foundations. In concrete, steel, and blazing political will. A nation is physically built, or it crumbles. There is no other option.
English
0
1
3
82
Maxi
Maxi@AllForProgress_·
The Strait of Hormuz closes and within weeks Britain is staring down fuel shortages, 35p-a-litre diesel spikes, and manufacturers slapping 30% surcharges on steel and chemicals. Shell's CEO is on television warning that the last pre-war tankers arrive next week, and then the real trouble starts. This is what energy dependence looks like. Not in a textbook. Now. In your petrol station, your heating bill, the price of everything in your supermarket. Britain had decades to build energy independence and every government found a reason not to. I want a government that guarantees that Britain enjoys the cheapest energy in the West; it is a matter not just of material convenience but of the greatest imaginable geo-strategic importance. Energy Independence is Independence! And Independence is Energy Independence!
English
1
1
4
119
Maxi
Maxi@AllForProgress_·
13 million adults in Britain cannot see an NHS dentist. Not "struggle to." Cannot. Nine in ten practices have shut their books to them. And here's the part that should make you furious: dentists handed back nearly £1 billion in public funding. Why? Because the government pays them less than it costs to treat you. The sixth-richest country on Earth has made it financially impossible to look after your teeth on the NHS.
English
0
1
2
87
Maxi
Maxi@AllForProgress_·
In fact, it's Compound Idiot Watch; some of Simon Dudley's ideas around building homes were, in fact, pointing in the right direction. So the fact that he communicated this so carelessly reflects all the worse on him and particularly on what one presumes is the complete lack of any training whatsoever as he would have received from Reform HQ.
English
0
0
1
30