andrew morris

13.7K posts

andrew morris

andrew morris

@andyjamesmorris

United fan, beer drinker extraordinaire, hate vermin and berties , stretford ender till i die HATE LEFTIE WOKE WANKERS

Bury, Lancs เข้าร่วม Haziran 2010
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Luke Littler: runs over a person due to dangerous driving Littler fanboys: “don’t forget he’s only 19 give it a rest you helmet” If you’re old enough to throw at the oche you’re old enough to receive abuse it’s as simple as that Doesn’t matter if he’s 19 or 119
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Nerine Halton
Nerine Halton@NerineHalton·
David Aaronovitch claims that no one likes Keir Starmer. That may be the case amongst the media hacks. I say with some confidence that he IS liked by many thousands of we ordinary folk. I think he’s done us proud through some serious crises. VOTE LABOUR 🌹
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Junior
Junior@Junior02334·
Darts needs Luke Littler more than Luke littler needs darts. Wouldn’t be surprised if he doesn’t walk away from the game in the next 3-5 years. Jeer him, fair game, that’s the game. Abuse him and his GF, that’s below the belt imo. The line has to be drawn somewhere.
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Georgi Siana
Georgi Siana@SianaNache79742·
That’s how the low IQ miserable racists look like in real life. Miserable c*nts
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Official_Nonso 🔴👹
Official_Nonso 🔴👹@raphnelson_abah·
Out of curiosity, if Rashford comes back from loan, what will happen with his jersey number, will he change it or Cunha has to give it back?? 🤔 #MUFC 👊🏾🛑👹
Official_Nonso 🔴👹 tweet mediaOfficial_Nonso 🔴👹 tweet media
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ESPN UK
ESPN UK@ESPNUK·
Premier League referees Michael Oliver and Anthony Taylor have been called up to officiate games at the 2026 World Cup 🤝
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Connie Nolan
Connie Nolan@feistywomankent·
#bbcpm Starmer, Cooper brought together 40 countries 3 days ago to discuss how to tackle the war started by Trump. No daily tweets, just careful negotiations and a joint statement with European countries, EU, Canada and Japan. Now he’s in Saudi meeting troops on the front line
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Ted Smith 🇪🇺
Ted Smith 🇪🇺@TedUrchin·
I’m pig sick of these continual attacks on Keir Starmer. He is doing a great job and in very difficult circumstances. Not only is he repairing the colossal damage done by 14 years of Tory mismanagement, not an easy task, but he is representing us superbly on the international stage. I suspect there is a concerted and clandestine effort to remove him originating from some very dodgy people indeed, not least the disgraceful administration in the US including the criminal Trump himself. Don’t be persuaded by these bastards, they seek to overturn our democratically elected government. Fuck ‘em, I say.
Del@Leedsleeds66

Starmer- The weakest and most embarrassing Prime Minister ever.

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BRITAIN IS BROKEN 🇬🇧
BRITAIN IS BROKEN 🇬🇧@BROKENBRITAIN0·
🚨BREAKING: The UK has just sent a WARNING to Putin 🇬🇧 🇷🇺 'To Putin, I say, we see you. We see your activity over our cables and pipelines. You should know that any attempt to damage them will not be tolerated and will have serious consequences.'
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Jeremy Vine & Daytime on 5
Jeremy Vine & Daytime on 5@JeremyVineOn5·
Has Sir Keir Starmer won you over with his handling of the Iran war? The PM is in the Middle East pushing for peace. Labour insiders think "Statesman Starmer" is winning people over, but the Tories say he's been "indecisive" and lost Trump's respect. What do you think?
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Steve Smith 🇪🇺
Steve Smith 🇪🇺@SteveSmith_cam·
Starmer , off to the Gulf. For diplomatic talks. To try to find a solution. people on here : 'But why didnt he tweet anything !!' you want him doing government like Trump does then ? absolute fucking madness theguardian.com/uk-news/2026/a…
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Robert Peston
Robert Peston@Peston·
2/2 But in this dangerous world, a medium size nation like the UK needs as much goodwill as it can muster in the international community. In the coming days I will try to gauge whether the leaders in this region are simply going through the motions in seeing Starmer or whether he can recreate some of the warmth - and significant commercial advantage - that was generated and enjoyed by Thatcher.
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Robert Peston
Robert Peston@Peston·
Hours after President Trump announced a two-week cessation of hostilities against Iran, I travelled to the Gulf with the prime minister and his team, in the official government plane. We have just landed in Saudi Arabia. For diplomatic and security reasons, I have been asked not to disclose our itinerary or Starmer’s schedule of meetings with government heads. But it does not take enormous intellectual effort to deduce that the first set of talks will be with arguably the most powerful of the Gulf leaders, Saudi’s crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman. The most pressing question in all Starmer’s meetings, including with MBS, is whether the ceasefire between Iran and America and Israel can endure long enough for there to be meaningful talks on a sustainable peace - which are scheduled to start on Friday in Pakistan. According to British sources - and frankly this won’t surprise you - the ceasefire is real, holding so far and very unstable. One source of anxiety is Israel’s somewhat ambivalent commitment to it - and notably that Netanyahu is explicit the hiatus does not restrict the Israel Defence Forces’ aggression in Lebanon. Another is that the devolved structure of Iran’s military, the IRGC, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, and the absence of a centralised power structure in Iran brings the risk of continued sporadic and unlicensed attacks by Iranian militia on Gulf countries - and also means that very few shippers of oil, gas and other vital commodities will yet take the risk of moving their tankers and ships through the precarious Strait of Hormuz. As one intelligence source put it to me, Israel’s assassination of so many Iranian leaders makes it incredibly difficult to know who is in charge in the country, if anyone. On the more positive side though, there may be a little more underlying common ground between Tehran and Washington than their public positions on their “non negotiable” aims for any peace settlement would suggest - though I don’t have a clue how their respective positions on Iran’s nuclear ambitions or Iran’s determination to be turnpike keeper of the Hormuz Strait can be bridged. Because the Hormuz Strait is the supply route for a fifth of the world’s carbon energy, and therefore a kind of oesophagus for the global economy, much of Starmer’s focus in talks with Gulf leaders will be a continuation of British diplomatic activity with 40-odd other nations in recent days, namely whether there is any practical way to make the Strait safe for commercial traffic. But his other message is bound to be along the lines of “when this chaos is finally over, don’t forget who your true allies and friends are.” The point is that - like Starmer - none of the Gulf states wanted Trump to attack Iran when he did. And although the UK’s military has been exposed by both the Ukraine and Iran conflicts as depleted and unequipped for this era of drone wars, the UK has been deploying planes and weapons to protect the region from Iran’s assorted uncrewed aerial threats. In the eyes of Gulf leaders, the UK - and Europe more widely, including Ukraine with its formidable drone capabilities - presumably looks a less intimidating friend than either America or China. They have a material interest in strengthening ties with Britain. This is important because Trump’s Iran war is re-configuring the global balance of power in a fundamental way. For Starmer and the UK there are risks, especially if the US were to precipitously withdraw its military umbrella from our continent. And to be clear, there is no sign of Starmer unilaterally abandoning the UK’s historic entente with America, even if Trump is an unreliable, and sometimes abusive, friend. 1/2
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