Scott Strathearn

7.8K posts

Scott Strathearn

Scott Strathearn

@StrathearnScott

preferred pronouns fan/dabi/dozi. don't call out people for lying when you follow liars.

เข้าร่วม Mayıs 2020
306 กำลังติดตาม189 ผู้ติดตาม
Sky News
Sky News@SkyNews·
No minister challenged Keir Starmer during the cabinet meeting, work and pensions secretary Pat McFadden has told Sky's @BethRigby. Politics latest: trib.al/WLFmeZb 📺 Sky 501 and YouTube
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Narinder Kaur
Narinder Kaur@narindertweets·
Keir Starmer says that Nigel Farage is a 'grifter and a chancer' who 'took us for a ride' on Brexit and then walked away 'I want to remind you what Nigel Farage said about Brexit. 'He said it would make us richer. Wrong. It made us poorer. 'He said it would reduce migration. Wrong. Migration went through the roof. No lies detected.
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Kirstie Allsopp
Kirstie Allsopp@KirstieMAllsopp·
pub family, I have been directly involved in the rescue of two pubs in two years, as well as having close family that run pubs and the idea that creating community pubs is one of her big ideas for change is insulting. We need pubs to thrive, not have to be rescued by the state!
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Kirstie Allsopp
Kirstie Allsopp@KirstieMAllsopp·
This Government has done everything possible to make life for those in the hospitality industry more difficult, it is laughable that in a major statement following Thursday’s appalling results Angela Rayner is talking about preventing pubs being sold. I come from a passionate 🧵
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KG
KG@KartikGadaATOM·
Almost no one with money believes in 'global warming'. How do we know this? Where in the world has prime coastal property fallen in price over the last 20 years? Not counting war or economic collapse, where? Remember, prices would plunge not when the water is at the front door, but if the water even rose 20% of the way to the front door, and actual risk was 10 years away. Real estate that is expected to be unusable in 10 years plunges in price *now*. There would also be a huge business evaluating which homes were 10 feet, 20 feet, or 30 feet above sea level. But no prime beachfront property, less than 10 feet above sea level, has declined in price. They have only risen. Hence, we know that demand has not fallen at all, or by 10% at most.
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Wilfred Reilly
Wilfred Reilly@wil_da_beast630·
So...the climate change hysteria was like 85% fake, and - after AI, grey-roof tech, modern sea-walls, space travel etc - we're just quietly pulling back from panic? How many births did this prevent?
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Matthew Stadlen
Matthew Stadlen@MatthewStadlen·
On stage this evening at the Forum in Tunbridge Wells with @DJRustyEgan, godfather of electronic music in the UK
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Jim Chimirie 🇬🇧
Jim Chimirie 🇬🇧@JChimirie66677·
@Jonny7Jonny7 @OBucsa "Now almost a million young people wake up with nowhere to go and nothing to do." x.com/i/status/20248…
Jim Chimirie 🇬🇧@JChimirie66677

How Labour Priced a Generation Out of Work There is a cruel irony at the heart of Britain's youth unemployment crisis. A government that claims to stand for young people has helped price them out of their first job. Youth unemployment has surged to levels not seen in more than a decade. Britain now sits above the European average and is edging towards the territory once used as a warning to the rest of the continent. This did not happen by chance. It did not arrive like a storm from nowhere. It is the direct result of political choices made in the name of fairness and dressed up as progress. The moral story was simple and emotionally satisfying. Paying younger workers less was branded discriminatory. Age bands were cast as injustice. Equal pay sounded like equality. It sounded compassionate. It sounded modern. It also ignored how labour markets actually work. Young workers are not cheaper because society values them less. They are cheaper because they are new, untested and still learning. They need training. They need supervision. They change jobs more often. They make mistakes. That is not a moral judgment. It is economic reality. Youth wage bands exist for a reason: they are the bridge between education and employment. Remove the bridge and the crossing becomes harder. The government did not merely narrow that bridge. It hammered it from every direction at once. Employer National Insurance was raised. Minimum wages surged. The youth rate jumped by close to twenty per cent. Regulation tightened. All of this landed on the sectors where young people get their first foothold: retail, hospitality and entry-level service work. The very industries that teach people how to turn up on time, deal with customers and earn their first wage packet were handed a sharp rise in the cost of hiring. Businesses did what businesses always do when costs rise faster than productivity. They hired fewer people. Vacancies fell. Recruitment froze. Opportunities vanished quietly, one unfilled job at a time. Now almost a million young people wake up with nowhere to go and nothing to do. The country has more young people out of work than Europe. Even Greece, once the symbol of economic collapse, is no longer safely behind us. That comparison should have sent shockwaves through government. Instead we hear deflection, promises and stubborn refusal to rethink the policy that helped create the problem. What makes this worse is that the warning lights are not coming from political opponents alone. Former officials from the Office for Budget Responsibility, voices inside the Bank of England, economists from think tanks close to Labour's orbit are all pointing in the same direction. Employment costs rose sharply. Entry-level jobs shrank. Youth unemployment climbed. The link is obvious to anyone willing to see it. The government now finds itself trapped by its own rhetoric. Reverse course and it admits the policy failed. Stay the course and youth unemployment risks becoming a permanent feature of the labour market. Either way, the damage has already been done. The ladder into work has been kicked away in the name of equality. This is not a technical economic debate. It is a generational failure. Being out of work at the start of adult life leaves scars that last decades. Skills fade before they form. Confidence drains before it has a chance to grow. Ambition withers before it has time to take root. The first job is not only about wages. It is about dignity, independence and the belief that effort leads somewhere. Remove that first step and the climb never begins. A policy sold as fairness has delivered exclusion. A policy sold as compassion has produced idleness. A policy sold as progress has pushed thousands of young people to the margins of the economy before they even began their working lives. This is how lost generations are made. "Now almost a million young people wake up with nowhere to go and nothing to do."

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Jim Chimirie 🇬🇧
Jim Chimirie 🇬🇧@JChimirie66677·
Fifteen Percent. Fifteen Hundred Seats. A Ten Year Plan. One Word Covers It. Delusion. Keir Starmer's response to the worst local election result in Labour history is to announce that he intends to govern for a decade. Let that land for a moment. Fifteen percent of the national vote. Fifteen hundred councillors lost. Wales gone to Plaid Cymru for the first time since devolution. Sunderland fallen after fifty years. Gateshead, Blackburn, Tameside. Josh Simons, the former director of Labour Together, the organisation that put Starmer in Downing Street, writing in the Sunday Times that he has lost the country. Forty of his own MPs calling for his resignation. The general secretary of Unite demanding a timetable for his departure. And Starmer's answer to all of it is that he plans to be in Downing Street until 2034. One word covers it. Delusion. A man who has lost the country does not get to decide he will govern it for another decade. Starmer's interview in the Observer contains something even more revealing than the ten year claim. After the most emphatic rejection of Labour's agenda in modern electoral history, driven in significant part by public fury over immigration and the loss of border control, Starmer's bold response is to announce a new youth mobility scheme with the European Union that will allow tens of thousands of young Europeans to come to Britain annually. He describes this as being full-throated and bold. The voters who handed Reform those fifty year Labour strongholds on Thursday will have a different description. Moreover, the Catherine West stalking horse challenge raises a question that deserves to be asked plainly. Is this orchestrated? Under Labour's rules a leadership challenge can only be triggered once per year before conference. If West fails to reach the 81 nomination threshold the challenge collapses and Starmer gains a year of protection. If she reaches 81 and triggers a full membership ballot, Starmer goes on the ballot paper automatically and Labour's membership, which historically skews left, decides. The serious candidates, Burnham, Rayner, Streeting, have all scrambled to distance themselves from West's move. They may have calculated that a failed stalking horse challenge now locks Starmer in and removes the pressure for an orderly transition. The beneficiary of a botched challenge is Starmer himself. Meanwhile the Mandelson files have not yet been fully released. Parliament returns after the King's Speech. Ian Collard's written evidence to the Foreign Affairs Committee is still outstanding. The privileges committee referral remains in play. Whatever Cat Little would not discuss in open committee is still sitting in that vetting file. Starmer's ten year project depends on none of that reaching critical mass. It is a considerable bet. Starmer's attack on Nigel Farage's funding is the most transparent deflection in the interview. A Prime Minister facing forty resignation demands from his own MPs, a stalking horse leadership challenge, historic local election losses and unresolved national security questions about his most controversial appointment reaches for a story about cryptocurrency donations to his political opponent. The country is not fooled and neither is the press. Josh Simons, until this weekend one of Starmer's most loyal allies, wrote that Starmer has lost the country and cannot rise to this moment. That is not a verdict from an enemy. It is a verdict from someone who built the machine that put him in Downing Street. A Prime Minister who responds to that verdict by announcing a ten year project has not heard it. A Prime Minister who responds to the worst immigration driven electoral revolt in Labour history by announcing new immigration routes from Europe has not heard it. A Prime Minister who calls a stalking horse challenge a distraction has not heard it. The country spoke on Thursday. This man cannot hear it. And that, more than anything else, is why he has to go.
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Aaron Bastani
Aaron Bastani@AaronBastani·
Ireland should have a population of 30 million today. The island has fewer people now than 200 years ago! The only remotely similar national demographic event in modern European history is Poland before & after WW2. Yet we barely think about it in Britain.
NW Nature Lover@nwnatur

Ireland's tiny population is a staggeringly unnatural outcome given its rich soil. I am convinced that Ireland had at least 10 million people before the Great Famine. A thread on how Ireland's huge population losses after the events of the 1840s have been underestimated 🧵

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Narinder Kaur
Narinder Kaur@narindertweets·
Take this down immediately
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Narinder Kaur
Narinder Kaur@narindertweets·
You have 48hrs to take this down
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Alan D Miller
Alan D Miller@alanvibe·
A Cornish open-air theatre has cancelled an opera following a single complaint about its ‘colonial themes’. Just when you may think things have turned a corner: you get slapped in the face with this nonsense Delibes Lakme is a masterpiece @minacktheatre show some backbone - for the sake of the best of what has been written thought made and performed. Let’s put cancel culture to bed
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Ayn
Ayn@Ayn1560116·
@alanvibe @minacktheatre Send this man back to a place where he can get his jollies from telling everyone else what they are ‘permitted’ to do. As an Asian who enjoys the opera I am offended at people scurrying to ‘obey’ this psychopath. He is a product of his upbringing…narrow minded.
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Sky News
Sky News@SkyNews·
Nigel Farage told Sky's @BethRigby that he took a £5 million gift from crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne in early 2024, before he announced he would stand for parliament, for 'protection'
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Scott Strathearn
Scott Strathearn@StrathearnScott·
@vocalreasoning @SkyNews @BethRigby I honestly couldn't give a toss about the human rights of ANY criminal, I don't have suicidal empathy, I'd love to know the ratio of sex offenders from Finland compared to Afghanistan here in the uk ?
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NoName
NoName@vocalreasoning·
@StrathearnScott @SkyNews @BethRigby 2024 was higher than any year since 2016. And should we forget about Human Rights generally, or just in immigration matters?
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NoName
NoName@vocalreasoning·
@StrathearnScott @SkyNews @BethRigby We have 23 countries where it is deport first and appeal later but there are many more countries where people can be deported to. Afghanistan is particularly difficult because of the Taliban.
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