Launching April 1st

85 posts

Launching April 1st

Launching April 1st

@LaunchingApril1

Major new media project starting April 1st. Watch this space.

London เข้าร่วม Şubat 2026
110 กำลังติดตาม7 ผู้ติดตาม
ทวีตที่ปักหมุด
Launching April 1st
Launching April 1st@LaunchingApril1·
Launching an exciting new media project on April 1st 2026. Follow us in advance of the launch.
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RS Archer
RS Archer@archer_rs·
Im not sure why people are getting stressed over the Straight of Homuz problem, with rising global sea levels as a result of climate change it will soon be no issue.
RS Archer tweet media
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Claudia Webbe
Claudia Webbe@ClaudiaWebbe·
Today at the UN, 123 nations named the Transatlantic slave trade as humanity’s gravest crime. Britain abstained A Labour government! heirs to an empire that trafficked 3 million Africans, could not say yes to truth The abstention IS the verdict. Starmer, history has clocked you
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Peter Mitchell
Peter Mitchell@_bezpilotnik·
@LaunchingApril1 Anyway, what's your new media venture? Is it going to be boldly heterodox and free-thinking? Is it going to buck the trendy nostrums of wokeness? Is it going to provide a platform for the kinds of things other outlets are just too cowardly to publish? Please say yes mate
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Launching April 1st รีทวีตแล้ว
Peter Hague
Peter Hague@peterrhague·
British history seems to consist in large part of us making the world objectively better for everybody, getting no credit for it, and then once our empire was exhausted the same people we helped cynically lying about our history in order to get money from us.
Robbie@Robbie_Reasons

As Ghana calls for reparations and the left wing media rush to reinforce the white guilt some may feel, it is notable that none use this photo of a British Sailor removing the chains from a freed slave. Great Britain ended the slave trade and paid in blood and coin. No charge.

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Ross Baglin
Ross Baglin@ross_baglin·
@jhallwood @tm1fox I do feel great regret at the role certain wealthy British people played in the filthy transatlantic slave trade. However, I also know that slave trading was endemic to human history until the British, with minimal help, fought to being it to an end. That is the story here.
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Peter Mitchell
Peter Mitchell@_bezpilotnik·
@LaunchingApril1 You're not wrong there! When I see Andrew Doyle's virtuosic, whip-smart, fearless satire published in perhaps the nation's most prestigious journal of ideas I feel like a Salieri gazing in envy at young Mozart and knowing that he can never match up, that posterity will elude him
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RS Archer
RS Archer@archer_rs·
Management Consultancy. A business practice where a 19 year old virgin gives you advice on how to speak to women, that advice being, "Talk to women" in return for paying his firm €100,000
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Tom Harwood
Tom Harwood@tomhfh·
I, as an Anglo Saxon, demand reparations from the Danes.
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NPRG
NPRG@CptHastings1916·
@CliveWismayer It certainly sounds like you witnessed a handful of people being racially prejudiced in suburban London four decades ago.
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Clive Wismayer 🇪🇺🥪
Clive Wismayer 🇪🇺🥪@CliveWismayer·
I did 3 months as a locum in Sunbury-on-Thames in 1987. A picturesque, very white area, all-white staff. When the partners proposed to employ an asian secretary, the existing secretaries threatened to go on strike.
NPRG@CptHastings1916

On the "rural England is racist" charge: it shows the limits of "racism" as an explanatory concept. What ppl mean is that rural England is overwhelmingly white, culturally conservative, & that old implicit norms hold more sway, such that it *feels* more difficult for newcomers.

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Siôn Jobbins
Siôn Jobbins@SionJobbins·
@Brunte84 2021 Census of people who've moved into Wales. Facts.
Siôn Jobbins tweet media
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Brunte 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🇬🇧
If You Want More Of The Same Vote Plaid Cymru 🗳️ If You Want A Party That Looks After The Welsh People First Vote Reform Wales 🗳️✅🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿
Brunte 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🇬🇧 tweet media
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Ramon Agusta
Ramon Agusta@ramonagusta·
Genuine question as I'm baffled... Does anyone know what this bloke did to deserve a knighthood? 🤔
Ramon Agusta tweet media
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Adam Wren
Adam Wren@aswren·
I’m so glad this batley thing isn’t being left as is & forgotten, it’s unbelievable. It’s another one of those things where I think if you tried to explain it to someone that didn’t know you’d sound mental
Robert Jenrick@RobertJenrick

Five years ago today, a teacher from Batley Grammar showed a class a caricature of the Prophet Mohammed. Within days, a hundred Islamists were protesting outside the school gates. Outrageously, the teacher was suspended. The headteacher, Gary Kibble, apologised ‘unequivocally’. It was an astonishing act of appeasement and cowardice. The teacher was then subjected to a campaign of abuse and intimidation, including incitement to violence against him and his family. His kids had to miss school for months. They slept on mattresses in temporary accommodation. An independent probe later cleared him of any wrongdoing whatsoever. Another report likewise found that the school, council and police all ‘totally and utterly failed’ him. Too late - his life was changed forever. Have lessons been learnt from this shameful episode? I fear exactly the same thing would happen today. In fact ‘advice’ has recently been reissued by Labour councils including the one covering Batley, that children’s drawings in art lessons may be seen as ‘idolatrous’ under sharia law. Teachers are even warned that dance lessons could cause parental concerns over ‘physical contact between males and females’. Extremism is being mainstreamed. A climate of threatening and intimidatory harassment is poisoning our institutions. It's antithetical to our democratic way of life. Most of our governing class are simply too spineless to take on Islamists. Look at when I highlighted the chronic failure of integration in parts of Birmingham. I was denounced. And then proven right by West Midlands Police’s admission that violent Islamists living couldn’t be prevented from attacking Jewish football fans. The Police lied and blamed the visiting supporters in an effort to pretend they still had authority in the city. And now look at the reaction of the Prime Minister and much of the media to criticisms of a segregated Iftar in Trafalgar Square. They branded critics racist too. This was despite the Prime Minister himself pulling out of an Iftar in 2021 organised by the very same man, Omar Salha, who arranged this one, apparently because of his Islamist links. We’ve been led by weak hypocrites, who cover up, rather than confront what’s happening. The country is sliding down a dark path as a result. But innocent men and women like the Batley teacher are the greatest victims of extremism, and too many seem intent to forget them. We must defend them and stand up for all those who speak out.

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Launching April 1st
Launching April 1st@LaunchingApril1·
This is entirely correct. There is no distinction between someone born abroad and moving to the UK, and someone born in the UK whose ancestors have been here for 10-15 centuries. It's just racism to pretend otherwise
Zoe Gardner@ZoeJardiniere

@ConnorHollandUK We’re all of foreign descent you stupid racist.

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Launching April 1st
Launching April 1st@LaunchingApril1·
Account restored, so can start following again. We still have big launch April 1st.
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Matthew Horncastle
Matthew Horncastle@matt_horncastle·
I refuse to participate in the modern narrative that James Cook was a villain. Cook was born in poverty in 1728. He was not an aristocrat. He was not handed power. He worked from a young age, taught himself mathematics and navigation, and rose through sheer competence to become one of the most capable captains in the Royal Navy. What he achieved with the technology of the 1700s is extraordinary. He sailed into oceans where most of the map was blank. He charted enormous parts of the Pacific. His survey of New Zealand was so accurate that his charts were used by sailors for more than a century. Many of his coastal measurements were only hundreds of metres off modern satellite positions, achieved with nothing more than sextants, chronometers, and careful observation. His voyages were not just about exploration. They advanced science. One of his first missions was to observe the transit of Venus to improve humanity’s understanding of the solar system. He enforced strict health rules on his ships and virtually eliminated scurvy, something that had killed countless sailors before him. By the standards of the eighteenth century he was known for discipline, order, and attempts to avoid unnecessary violence with indigenous populations. He was operating in a harsh and dangerous era where exploration meant risking your life and the lives of everyone under your command. Was he perfect. Of course not. No human being is. Judging people from centuries ago as if they lived in our modern world is intellectually lazy. What matters is what he actually did. A poor man who rose to the top through ability. A navigator who mapped huge parts of the Pacific. A leader who pushed science, navigation, and knowledge forward. Men like James Cook expanded the known world and helped build the foundations of the modern, prosperous societies we live in today. That is not the story of a villain. That is the story of a remarkable human being.
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