Hunmarnocker

51.7K posts

Hunmarnocker

Hunmarnocker

@Hunmarnocker

LFC. Jedi. Never ending studier. ex-2 RIR.

A new place Sumali Mayıs 2010
1.2K Sinusundan490 Mga Tagasunod
Hunmarnocker nag-retweet
Benonwine
Benonwine@benonwine·
This Video should send a cold shiver down every Britain’s spine. Members of ISIS have entered the UK. They have entered from small boats from France. They are heavily armed and operating on British soil. This is NO LONGER just a Immigration Crisis but National Security Threat
English
152
2K
5.1K
92.3K
Hunmarnocker nag-retweet
Hunmarnocker nag-retweet
Electroverse
Electroverse@Electroversenet·
Antarctica had far less sea ice just 1,000 years ago. Sedimentary DNA from Cape Hallett shows southern elephant seals breeding there between 2,500 and 1,000 years ago, which is only possible when the coast is ice-free. Today that site is locked in sea ice year-round, extending 2,000 km farther north than the seals' historic range. Penguin DNA tells the same story. As ice expanded, seals vanished and penguins moved in. This isn't ancient history, it's the Roman and medieval periods - well within human timescales. So when activists claim today's sea ice retreat is unprecedented, they're dead wrong. There was far less Antarctic sea ice just 1,000 years ago, naturally, centuries before modern CO2 emissions.
English
6
129
267
4.7K
Hunmarnocker nag-retweet
Essex Patriot
Essex Patriot@EssexgoonerMr·
In the UK 🇬🇧 - David Lammy announced that people under 17 caught carrying a knife will no longer be prosecuted. They will instead be referred to youth justice services by police in an attempt to help them 'change course'. This is absolutely ridiculous. David Lammy is dangerous.
Essex Patriot tweet media
English
800
989
2.8K
84.1K
Hunmarnocker nag-retweet
Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
The goat is the most underrated ruminant on the planet and I will not hear otherwise. The goat will eat what the cow ignores, what the sheep rejects, what the tractor cannot reach. Bramble, thistle, gorse, scrub willow, the regrowth after a fire, the hedgerow that's gone invasive: the goat considers all of it a reasonable lunch. This isn't indiscriminate eating, but rather, landscape management so precise that conservation organisations now hire goats: specifically hire them, with contracts, with transport, with management plans, to clear invasive scrub from Sites of Special Scientific Interest that machinery would destroy. The goat also has four stomachs. The goat is also running the fermentation technology. The goat is also converting inedible cellulose into milk fat of approximately 4.5%, higher than cow's milk, producing cheese that has been made in the same valleys of France and Spain for three thousand years. And the goat does all of this on terrain where the cow finds it difficult and the sheep finds it challenging. There are places in the Greek islands where the only possible food production is the goat. Where the soil is limestone and scrub and the slope is sixty degrees and every other agricultural system fails. The goat does not fail. The goat has never failed. The goat has been feeding humans in marginal environments since before writing existed. Keith is standing at the fence again. Keith is doing conservation work. Keith does not know this. Keith knows there's something interesting on the other side of the fence and he intends to find out what it is.
Sama Hoole tweet media
English
43
230
1.3K
9.7K
Hunmarnocker nag-retweet
Proudofus.uk
Proudofus.uk@ProudofusUK·
Slavery existed for over 5,000 years. Every major civilisation accepted it. For most of history, nobody seriously tried to stop it at scale. Then Britain did something different. It didn’t just pass a law. 👇 In 1807, Britain abolished the slave trade. Then it enforced it. For 60 years, the Royal Navy hunted slave ships. 1,600 ships captured. Around 150,000 people freed. And it cost lives. Around 2,000 British sailors died doing it. Then in 1833: Britain abolished slavery across its empire. 800,000 people set free. It paid £20 million to do it. Around 40 percent of government spending. This wasn’t quick. This wasn’t easy. And it didn’t start with politicians. It started with ordinary people. Women boycotted sugar. Hundreds of thousands of them. Thomas Clarkson rode 35,000 miles to gather evidence. A movement that took decades. This is part of British history. Not perfect. But not what most people are told either. Almost no one explains it like this. Proud Of Us is funded entirely by our community. No sponsors. No advertisers. If you believe this history deserves to be told properly:👇 Be part of us. 👉 proudofus.co.uk/support 🙏 Be proud of us 🇬🇧
English
11
338
1.1K
9.2K
Hunmarnocker nag-retweet
No Farmers, No Food
No Farmers, No Food@NoFarmsNoFoods·
The tide is turning back towards buying real food. 🥩
No Farmers, No Food tweet media
English
96
1.1K
4K
31.1K
Hunmarnocker nag-retweet
Breitbart News
Breitbart News@BreitbartNews·
Al Gore says the doomsday predictions from climate scientists 20 years ago "were proven dead right," so we should take them even more seriously now. He says it's "inevitable that we're going to see Greenland go and the west Antarctic ice sheet go." Reminder, in 2006, Gore warned that the world would reach a "point of no return" in 10 years. He also said there would be "no more snows of Kilimanjaro" within a decade, which proved false. He also predicted in 2009 that there was a 75% chance of the North Pole losing all of its ice during parts of the summer by the year 2016. That didn't happen, either.
English
937
374
1.8K
232.7K
Hunmarnocker nag-retweet
Inevitable West
Inevitable West@Inevitablewest·
🚨BREAKING: Thousands of nationalists in Belgium took to the streets last night demanding Remigration The majority of Europe feels the same.
English
412
6.2K
37.4K
436.5K
Hunmarnocker nag-retweet
Handre
Handre@Handre·
Thatcher inherited a Britain where the state owned everything from steel mills to telephone lines. Unemployment hit 11.9% in 1984, inflation ran at 18% when she took office, and strikes paralyzed entire industries for months (the three-day work week wasn't a lifestyle choice). She privatized British Telecom in 1984, British Gas in 1986, and rolled back union power that had strangled productivity for decades. The results speak louder than any economic theory: Britain's GDP per capita rose from $10,000 in 1980 to $19,000 by 1990. Critics still blame her for "inequality" - missing the point entirely. You can't redistribute wealth that doesn't exist first. The alternative wasn't some egalitarian paradise... it was Argentina.
English
172
253
1.8K
167K
Hunmarnocker nag-retweet
Séamus Peakus 🇮🇪
Séamus Peakus 🇮🇪@SeamusPeakus·
The issue, Leo, is that YOU kept "banging on" about how great and inspiring Khelif was AFTER he'd beaten up several women in a boxing ring. Do you think we're going to forget about a former Taoiseach gleefully cheering on televised domestic violence? Are you new to the Internet?
Leo Varadkar@LeoVaradkar

Keith - am happy to 'let it go'. Haven't said a word about Khelif in over a year. It's others who keep banging on about it - not me. Maybe take it up with them? My point stands - she was assigned female (girl) at birth, in their world that can never be changed. It's not my view.

English
4
65
611
18.3K
Hunmarnocker nag-retweet
Rupert Lowe MP
Rupert Lowe MP@RupertLowe10·
@The5th_estateUK I don’t want foreign nationals standing, or voting, in British elections. No apologies from me.
English
153
1.1K
16.2K
85.1K
Hunmarnocker nag-retweet
BRITAIN IS BROKEN 🇬🇧
BRITAIN IS BROKEN 🇬🇧@BROKENBRITAIN0·
🚨BREAKING: Multiple EU countries have formed a deportation coalition 🇪🇺 Germany, Greece, Denmark, Austria, and the Netherlands have all joined forces and plan to build immigrant deportation centres before the end of the year! This is absolutely MASSIVE. The tides are turning all across Europe, and the people are DEMANDING Remigration❗️
English
301
1.7K
8.6K
155.1K
Hunmarnocker nag-retweet
Hunmarnocker nag-retweet
Andrew Neil
Andrew Neil@afneil·
Yes, yes, yes, the Navy classifies them as warships. But they are lightly-armed, designed for maritime security and policing roles rather than high-intensity sea warfare. Which is why they’re not warships in the sense of say a T-45. Unless, of course, you think they could form part of a carrier group or be positioned off the coast of Cyprus. If you self-styled naval experts worried less about nomenclature and more about what was happening to our navy, we might still have one.
The Angry Gunner@TheAngry53586

@afneil OPV’s are warships I’m afraid. Daily you display a complete lack of understanding about maritime stuff. It’s like, you’ve watched Cruel Sea, and now think you are Johnny Walker😂

English
49
83
725
67.2K
Hunmarnocker nag-retweet
Peter St Onge, Ph.D.
Peter St Onge, Ph.D.@profstonge·
Australia has 403 billion barrels of shale oil -- 17.5 billion of which is immediately recoverable. But it banned fracking. So now it's begging for diesel from countries that don't have a gallon to spare 🤡
Wall Street Mav@WallStreetMav

Australia used to have 8 refineries. Now they have 2. They import diesel and gasoline from South Korea and Singapore. With oil blocked in the Middle East, South Korea and Singapore are limiting exports of diesel and gasoline. Australia gets crushed

English
154
604
2.6K
58.2K
Hunmarnocker nag-retweet
Tony Kelly
Tony Kelly@TruckTony1·
I wonder which EU country will be the first with a Deportation Hub. We should have one beside Baldonnel airport. And Shannon and Donegal and Cork or Kerry aswell.
English
10
10
78
2K