Fred 🇬🇧 ⚒

12K posts

Fred 🇬🇧 ⚒

Fred 🇬🇧 ⚒

@FredJackson37

Ex Fireman, Hammer, Brexiteer, Beatles fan

SE England เข้าร่วม Eylül 2019
749 กำลังติดตาม550 ผู้ติดตาม
Fred 🇬🇧 ⚒
Fred 🇬🇧 ⚒@FredJackson37·
@NathanTBatWaver There were vineyards in Yorkshire over two thousand years ago. Climate changes over the years and is unrelated to man made activity
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Guido Fawkes
Guido Fawkes@GuidoFawkes·
Burnham’s economic architect Miatta Fahnbulleh recommends, among other things: •A wealth tax and yet another windfall tax on oil and gas. •Mass nationalisation e.g. of land, transport, and energy. •Extending national insurance to investment income. •A cap on interest rates and charges on every form of consumer credit. •Hiking capital gains tax to income tax levels. •Hiking divided tax to income tax levels. •Abolition of the upper earnings limit for national insurance. •Huge expansion of the benefits system including a “minimum income guarantee” paid to everyone apart from the rich. •Nationalisation of banks and creation of new “green” banks with taxpayer funds. •Block on private banks lending to anyone with a “large amount of greenhouse gas emissions” and “penalisation of banks that provide too many carbon-intensive loans.“ •Forced sale of existing businesses to employees. •A tripling of the stamp duty surcharge to 9% for multiple homeowners and an increase to 6% for non-residents.
Cut My Tax@CutMyTaxUK

There are two worrying aspects to this New Statesman article: 1. Andy Burnham apparently doesn't have many brains. 2. Miatta Fahnbulleh is filling the gap. Quasi-Marxist Miatta Fahnbulleh, who wants a wealth tax, widespread nationalisation inc. banks, land, transport & energy & the forced sale of existing firms to employees, is one of the worst people to put in charge of economic policy. She's a high tax fanatic tax who wants there to be 'free basic energy' & for state owned companies to flood the energy market. 1/3

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Vivid.🇮🇱
Vivid.🇮🇱@VividProwess·
In the past 48 hours, Hezbollah terrorists: - Killed 5 Israelis and injured 12. - Fired 63 rockets. - Fired 7 suicide drones. And much more. Where is the world's outrage?
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Spirited1
Spirited1@helen_spirit1·
Keir Starmer could get the ultimate revenge on those he feels betrayed him & call a GE in the morning. Most of them would lose their seats. Wouldn’t that be fun? 🤞
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Benonwine
Benonwine@benonwine·
Mike Tapp has called for a major constitutional change: a law that would trigger a General Election whenever the governing party removes its leader. He argues that if a party forces out its own leader, the public not just MPs behind closed doors should get the final say at the ballot box. In his words: “That would stop the constant churn and focus all politicians on delivery, instead of workplace politics. The country would benefit.” I actually agree with him and think this is a good idea. What’s your thoughts?
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Billy Bonds Stand
Billy Bonds Stand@BillyBondsStand·
Most of us had a family member that first took us over Upton Park and you then become part of the biggest family in football - Thanks Dad ⚒️
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Olivia 🇺🇸
Olivia 🇺🇸@Excellentsalvic·
‼️ This Liberal woman says “Stop Islamophobia. Muslims are welcome here and they will not stand for this hatred What’s your response to her ??
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Lembit Öpik
Lembit Öpik@lembitopik·
Whatever happened to Rachel Reeves? Did she resign and nobody noticed?
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Fred 🇬🇧 ⚒
Fred 🇬🇧 ⚒@FredJackson37·
@Neccccy He can't do that Parliament would have to approve it and Labour MPs won't commit suicide
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Thomas King
Thomas King@TomK_Brit1993·
What's your honest opinion of Katie Hopkins?
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David Atherton
David Atherton@daveatherton·
Seven Afghans appeared at Norwich Crown Court, accused of 40 offences, of which 33 were rape. In the video 📹 I give you the details.
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Just Dave now
Just Dave now@justdavenow89·
something to cheer you up and restore your faith in humanity here is bitter hateful katie hopkins getting booed by people and asked to leave a pub by the people little assault at end there possibly too?? enjoy
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Basil the Great
Basil the Great@BasilTheGreat·
🚨RUPERT LOWE SAYS HE WILL NOT BACK DOWN "The British people deserve better government!" "I've now set up my own party to change the way we're governed" He's absolutely right Rupert should never stand aside We need to be represented
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Christopher Talbot
Christopher Talbot@Lord_Talbot64·
In the aftermath of the deeply distressing incident at Johnsons of Old Hurst zoo in Cambridgeshire, where a three-year-old boy was allegedly thrown into a crocodile enclosure and sustained critical injuries, attention has rightly turned to the role of the two carers who accompanied the 30-year-old man suspected of the act. Reports indicate that the man, described as having learning disabilities and considered a vulnerable adult, was under the supervision of two paid carers at the time. Witness accounts suggest the carers were positioned some distance behind him and were both using their phones rather than maintaining close supervision. Cambridgeshire Police have confirmed they are actively investigating the carers’ conduct as part of the wider inquiry. Under English law, individuals employed to care for vulnerable adults owe a clear duty of care. Where the person being cared for lacks mental capacity (or is reasonably believed to lack it), Section 44 of the Mental Capacity Act 2005 creates a specific criminal offence of ill-treatment or wilful neglect. This provision applies to paid carers and carries a maximum sentence of five years’ imprisonment on indictment. A deliberate or reckless failure to provide adequate supervision in a setting that presents obvious risks could, in principle, meet the threshold for this offence if the evidence establishes both the breach and the necessary mental element. Even where capacity is not definitively established, broader offences under the Criminal Justice and Courts Act 2015 (sections 20–25) make it a crime for a care worker to ill-treat or wilfully neglect an individual receiving social care. These provisions are not limited to cases involving a lack of capacity and can apply to paid care workers. If prosecutors can demonstrate that the carers’ distraction amounted to wilful neglect and that this failure foreseeably enabled or contributed to serious harm being caused to a third party, charges could follow. The care provider organisation itself may also face scrutiny. Under the same 2015 Act, care providers can be held criminally responsible for systemic failures in supervision, training or risk assessment. In addition, ordinary principles of negligence and vicarious liability would almost certainly expose the agency to civil claims from the injured child’s family. It is important to emphasise that the primary suspect remains the 30-year-old man, who has been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder. Any potential liability of the carers is secondary and would turn entirely on the evidence: care plans, risk assessments for the outing, CCTV footage, training records, and precise accounts of what supervision was expected and provided. Prosecutions of carers under these provisions are not theoretical; they occur when the evidence supports wilful or grossly negligent failures. Whether that threshold is crossed in this case will be determined by the police investigation and, if appropriate, by the Crown Prosecution Service applying the full Code for Crown Prosecutors. This incident serves as a stark reminder of the heavy responsibilities that accompany paid care roles and the legal consequences that can follow when those responsibilities are not met.
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