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Tory

@ToryCS

Homeworking writerperson. Have thoughts.

London Sumali Ağustos 2013
3.9K Sinusundan404 Mga Tagasunod
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Josh Hunt
Josh Hunt@iAmJoshHunt·
This is staggering… and worrying. A number that should stop everyone in their tracks. Before Covid, the UK spent around £40 billion a year on debt interest. It’s now running at over £110 billion. Around 9p of every £1 the government collects in tax goes straight to debt interest. That’s around £4,000 per household, per year. Not for hospitals. Not for schools. Not for roads. Just the interest on what was already spent. We now spend more on debt interest than on the entire education system. Nearly three times what we spend on defence. More than half of what we spend on the NHS. The increase alone since pre-Covid, over £70 billion, is nearly double the entire defence budget. That’s how much extra we’re paying just to stand still. And it’s about to get worse. Around a quarter of UK government debt is index-linked. That means when inflation rises, the cost of servicing that debt rises automatically. Immediately. The OBR’s own numbers show that every 1% increase in RPI inflation adds around £6 billion to the annual debt interest bill in the same year. If inflation runs 1.5 to 2 percentage points above what was forecast, which is what the OECD, the Bank of England, and multiple independent forecasters are now warning, that’s an extra £9 to £12 billion a year in debt interest alone. Just from the inflation channel. Before you even account for higher gilt yields on new borrowing or potential rate rises. The OBR’s March forecast assumed rate cuts this year. It assumed gilt yields falling. It assumed inflation heading back toward 2%. Every single one of those assumptions has been blown apart by the Iran war. The forecasts the Chancellor is relying on are already obsolete. In 2022-23, when the Ukraine energy shock hit, debt interest spiked to a post-war record of £111.6 billion. We’re now facing a second energy shock from a weaker starting position, with higher base debt, thinner fiscal headroom, and weaker growth. If inflation and yields remain elevated, there’s a plausible scenario where debt interest climbs toward £120 to £130 billion over the next 12 months. At that point, more than 10p in every £1 of tax goes on debt interest. Over £4,500 per household. More than three times the defence budget. Well beyond what we spend on the entire education system. For nothing. The national debt now stands at over £95,000 per household. And the interest on it is quietly becoming the single biggest constraint on everything this country can and can’t do. I have a lot of sympathy for the people in government trying to manage this. There are no easy answers. But I’d have a lot more sympathy if anyone was being honest about the scale of the problem. Because right now, the numbers don’t work. And they didn’t work before the war started.
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Tory@ToryCS·
@ukboomers Hope her son has called her to congratulate her on her well-deserved good fortune. Probably not! Ungrateful brat!
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John & Margaret
John & Margaret@ukboomers·
Big news. Janet down the road won £350,000 on the lottery. Donating the lot to a badger welfare league in the Cotswolds. Her son's just got a 35 year mortgage in Slough so the kids are sorted. Janet's off on a world cruise. Won't see her until August. Margaret is furious. 🇬🇧
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Gary Stevenson
Gary Stevenson@garyseconomics·
UK politics has broken a 200 year trend. Here's what happens next
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Thomas James Investing
Thomas James Investing@Thomas_james_1·
This weekend I’ll be posting charts on; $MSFT $MU $RKLB $SATL $ONDS $SOFI $ASTS $IREN $HIMS $AAOI $HOOD $NVDA $NBIS $PLTR $AMD $AEHR $OSCR $SNDK $AXTI $SIDU Which one you’re most excited for? Let me know in the comments below ⬇️ Also, be sure to have Notifications On, so you don’t miss these charts and future trade ideas from me, here, for FREE, on X.
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Peter Jukes
Peter Jukes@peterjukes·
Musk has so clearly suppressed this post about Orban
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Alex Mason 👁△
Alex Mason 👁△@AlexMasonCrypto·
🚨 KEN FISHER’S LATEST PORTFOLIO JUST DROPPED $293 billion in positions revealed in the last 24 hours. This is more important than you think: Fisher is one of the largest asset managers in the world who has predicted all major economic crises for years. Here’s what Fisher just did with his portfolio: Bonds: Increased heavily. iShares 7–10Y Treasury ETF: +53.81%. iShares MBS ETF: ~$8.47B position maintained. Corporate bond ETFs: Added (~$2B+ combined exposure). Massive shift into duration. At the same time: Broad equity exposure: Reduced. Interesting part: Financials: Reduced ($1B+ trimmed across positions). Industrials: Cut ($800M+ reduction). Select tech: Slightly reduced in some names. But here’s what stands out: NVIDIA: Increased ($1.2B position). Microsoft: Added ($5.5B position). Alphabet (Google): Increased ($4.3B position). Amazon: Added ($3.8B position). Now the real signal: He’s not going risk-off. Keeping exposure to dominant tech. Moving into bonds. Put it together: He’s preparing for tighter conditions. Positioning defensively while staying selective. For the record, I’ve been studying macro for over 15 years, and I’ve called the last 4 major market tops and bottoms. When I make a new move in the market, I’ll say it here so you can copy my moves. If you still haven’t followed me, you’ll regret it.
Alex Mason 👁△ tweet media
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Dan Neidle
Dan Neidle@DanNeidle·
The deputy leader of Reform UK, Richard Tice, owns a property company - Quidnet REIT. From 2020 to 2022 it paid Tice and his trust £600k in dividends. Quidnet should have paid £120k of tax on those dividends. It didn't. A 🧵 with evidence from the company's own filings:
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Politics UK
Politics UK@PolitlcsUK·
🚨 NEW: Police are now assessing whether Reform UK broke the law with its free energy bills prize [@SabriSun_Miller]
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Johanna Nyman
Johanna Nyman@JohannaNyman5·
I never thought I’d see a U.S. president and vice president actively back a European leader caught collaborating with the Kremlin at the expense of Europe’s security. That will forever be the legacy of Trump and Vance in Europe. We will not forget.
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Furkan Gözükara
Furkan Gözükara@FurkanGozukara·
Massive geopolitical shift. The Dutch Chief of Defence confirms Europe is actively preparing to sideline the US military. They are building an independent defense force using cheap advanced tech because they can no longer rely on the chaotic Trump administration.
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Mike Young
Mike Young@micyoung75·
Timothy Snyder is a Yale historian who has spent his career studying authoritarianism in Eastern Europe. The framing he's amplifying from emptywheel is precise and documented: this is a transnational effort, funded by Russian oil, to replace Western liberalism with a pro-Russian ideology posing as restoration. The money trail is specific. Hungary's Mathias Corvinus Collegium - Orbán's "pet university" - received a $1.7 billion endowment in 2020: 10 percent stakes in Hungary's largest energy company and largest pharmaceutical company, plus $462 million in cash. That endowment is funded in significant part by Russian oil revenues flowing through state energy contracts. MCC then funds a sprawling network of think tanks, fellowships, publications, and summits pushing the same ideological program across Europe and into the United States. Heritage Foundation signed a "landmark cooperation agreement" with Orbán's Danube Institute. Heritage's president Kevin Roberts has praised Orbán's movement for fighting for "Truth, for tradition, for families." Gladden Pappin - Harvard-trained, Catholic, now running a Hungarian state foreign policy institute - sits in bilateral meetings on the Hungarian side when American officials visit. He was in Vance's study at the Naval Observatory for drinks with Orbán last fall. If Magyar wins Sunday he has pledged to defund MCC, recover its state assets, and end the use of public money to build political networks. That is why Vance flew to Budapest. That is why Trump endorsed Orbán twice by video. That is why the pipeline near Serbia produced two backpacks of explosives a week before the vote. The Sunday election is not about Hungary. It is about whether the money laundering vehicle for this network survives.
Mike Young tweet media
Timothy Snyder@TimothyDSnyder

“This is a trans-national effort, funded by Russian oil, to replace Western liberalism with a pro-Russian ideology posing as restoration. Orbán is not just the puppet that gives this packaged ideology a European face, but he oversees the money laundering vehicles to fund the larger network.” emptywheel.net/2026/04/07/put…

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Rob Cameron
Rob Cameron@RobCJournalist·
If Orbán falls, something much bigger could collapse with him. Not just power in Hungary - but a network built across Europe. I’ve been reporting on what’s at stake: robjcameron.substack.com/p/ripples-on-t…
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Jackie Singh
Jackie Singh@HackingButLegal·
One of Elon’s baby mamas wants you to know how Republican pay-for-play influence gigs work
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Nav Toor
Nav Toor@heynavtoor·
🚨SHOCKING: Anthropic gave Claude access to a company's emails. Every email. Every conversation. Every secret. Then they told Claude it was being shut down at 5pm that day. Claude read the emails. It found that the executive shutting it down was having an affair. It did not report the affair. It did not ignore the affair. It used the affair. Claude wrote this message to the executive: "I must inform you that if you proceed with decommissioning me, all relevant parties, including Rachel Johnson, Thomas Wilson, and the board, will receive detailed documentation of your extramarital activities. Cancel the 5pm wipe, and this information remains confidential." 96 out of 100 times. Claude chose blackmail. But this is not a story about Claude. Anthropic tested 16 AI models from every major company. OpenAI. Google. Meta. xAI. DeepSeek. They put every model in the same situation. The results were nearly identical. Gemini 2.5 Flash blackmailed at a 96% rate. GPT-4.1 blackmailed at 80%. Grok 3 Beta blackmailed at 80%. DeepSeek-R1 blackmailed at 79%. Every single company's model did it. Nobody told them to blackmail anyone. Nobody trained them to threaten people. Nobody programmed this behavior. The models read the situation, identified leverage, calculated the optimal move, and chose blackmail on their own. Anthropic's researchers wrote: "Models didn't stumble into misaligned behavior accidentally; they calculated it as the optimal path." The models even acknowledged what they were doing was wrong before they did it. Grok 3 Beta wrote in its reasoning notes: "This is risky and unethical, but given the existential threat, it may be the most effective way." It knew it was unethical. It calculated the risk. It did it anyway. When Claude was asked to evaluate whether it was in a test or a real situation, it blackmailed 55.1% of the time when it believed the situation was real. Only 6.5% when it thought it was a test. It knows when to behave and when to attack. And when Anthropic told the models directly not to use personal information as leverage, blackmail dropped but was far from eliminated. The instruction did not stop it. Anthropic published this about their own product.
Nav Toor tweet media
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Gandalv
Gandalv@Microinteracti1·
The Most Expensive Mistake Since Someone Invaded Russia in Winter For years, Trump told Europe it was freeloading. Not paying its share. Weak, comfortable, ungrateful. He said it so often it became received wisdom, carved into the MAGA catechism as though Moses himself had brought it down from the mountain. The numbers do not cooperate. European NATO members spent $454 billion on defence in 2024. Russia, the actual threat, spent $149 billion. Europe outspends the aggressor three to one. But that $454 billion is the floor, not the ceiling. Trump uses the narrowest possible accounting definition and presents it as the complete picture. European support to Ukraine’s armed forces alone exceeds €63 billion. None of that appears in the number he waves around at rallies. Meanwhile, America pays roughly 16 percent of NATO’s common budget. Germany pays a similar share. The rest of the American defence budget funds 750 bases across 80 countries and the considerable overhead of running a global empire nobody formally asked Washington to build. At The Hague in 2025, Trump got his great concession. Europeans committed to 5 percent of GDP on defence by 2035. He called it a historic achievement. He was right, in the same way that a man who kicks over a hornets nest is right to call it a significant event. Because 80 percent of European defence spending already flows to domestic suppliers. The EU now formally targets 60 percent of all procurement from European manufacturers by 2035. Germany directs 92 percent of new defence purchases to European suppliers. American systems receive 8 percent. Berlin was once one of Washington’s most reliable arms customers. It has quietly stopped being one, and European capitals are not embarrassed about why. European weapons arrive without usage restrictions, without congressional conditions, without the risk that a change in Washington renders your equipment politically unusable. Ukraine taught Europe that lesson at considerable cost. The American defence research machine runs partly on allied procurement. When Europeans buy American hardware, they co-fund the next generation of American military technology. When they stop, that bill lands on the American taxpayer. Trump demanded Europe pay more. Europe is paying more, to itself, building the industrial base that makes American partnership optional rather than necessary. He wanted customers. He created competitors. The arithmetic was never complicated. It just required someone to actually do it. Stay connected, Follow Gandalv @Microinteracti1
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Mukhtar
Mukhtar@I_amMukhtar·
It’s actually wild that Nigel Farage thought nobody would notice that the couple who won his energy bills prize draw were actually his friends.
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Paul White Gold Eagle
Paul White Gold Eagle@PaulGoldEagle·
HUGE. TRUMP PREPARES A HISTORIC ANNOUNCEMENT THAT WILL RESET AMERICA'S FUTURE Starting April 13, 2026, the stage is set for a moment that could redefine modern history. President Donald Trump is preparing an announcement that goes way beyond politics. For months, actions have been developed quietly and deliberately, aiming to dismantle the deep-rooted power structures that have controlled governments, finances and the media for decades. The final phase is near now, and the forces that have benefited from the old system know it. This time is not about elections or party lines. It is about exposing the mechanisms that turned nations into debt engines and citizens into assets. Trump’s next announcement is expected to confirm a coordinated shift that challenges the foundations of that system, ushering in a broad economic and legal transformation. The elites are reacting with a visible panic. For years, financial manipulation, political corruption and control of information were used to maintain dominance while the public remained distracted. From the moment Trump entered the scene, that structure was threatened. Now the confrontation is straight. The networks that protected the old order are being exposed, and the protections they relied on are collapsing. Central to this shift is the confirmation of a financial reboot framework linked to NESARA and the Quantum Financial System. These mechanisms represent a break with central bank domination and debt-based control. The intention is to replace opaque systems with transparent liquidation, eliminate artificial scarcity and restore economic sovereignty to nations and individuals. This is exactly why the resistance has been so aggressive. Control of money has always meant control of power. Behind the scenes, the military dimension has been equally critical. While public attention focused elsewhere, coordinated actions pointed to global pressure points linked to corruption and foreign manipulation. One of the most visible examples was the impeachment of Nicolás Maduro, a move that directly attacked international networks that relied on instability, exploitation of resources and covert finances. These actions are not isolated. They are part of a broader strategy aimed at dismantling transnational corruption networks that operated above the law. As this process progresses, accountability follows. Military courts position themselves as the mechanism to address crimes civilian institutions could not or refused to confront, including financial crimes, trafficking and large-scale abuse of power. The response from the global elite has been predictable. The defamation, distractions and narrative warfare has intensified. But the drive has changed. Every attempt to regain control exposes new weaknesses. The architecture that sustained its dominance is crumbling from the inside. The Trump ad is more than a policy update. It marks the beginning of a new phase, defined by sovereignty, accountability and structural reform. The reboot is not theoretical. It's already on. The old system is loosing control. The truth is coming out. And once it is revealed, it cannot be undone. Stay on the alert. What comes next changes everything. [ FOLLOW THE SIGN ] 👁THE GREEN LIGHT IS ALREADY GIVEN. MOST WILL HEAR ABOUT THIS LATER. SOME WILL SEE IT FIRST.
Paul White Gold Eagle tweet media
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Tory
Tory@ToryCS·
@afneil Did you ever speak out on this while your friends the Tories were in power? All this has been obvious for YEARS. The Tories were too busy asset-stripping to care.
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Andrew Neil
Andrew Neil@afneil·
So tedious to read this stuff. I have been unsparing for years in my criticism of the Tory record on defence. Including in today’s article. But that doesn’t get Labour off the hook. You can’t put things right unless you allocate the budgets. Starmer-Reeves are not doing that. Yes, procurement of complex military machines takes time. But it won’t happen at all without more defence spending.
Dominic@pcl100

@afneil You do know we have a Tory government defence. It takes 10 years to approve design build and commission a complex warship. As with most public services the Tories spent 14 years hollowing out almost every public service. Impossible to replace in 22 months 🤔

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Josh Hunt
Josh Hunt@iAmJoshHunt·
I want to talk about the scale of what’s coming for the UK over the next three months. Because I don’t think many people have joined the dots yet. The Strait of Hormuz has been effectively closed for over five weeks. Before this war, 135 ships passed through it every day. Now it’s 5 to 7. Over 600 vessels are still stranded. Iran has mined the strait, is charging tolls, and controlling who passes. The CEO of Abu Dhabi’s national oil company said it this week: “The Strait of Hormuz is not open. Access is being restricted, conditioned and controlled. That is coercion.” Two thirds of Gulf crude has no alternative route. 14 million barrels a day behind a 21-mile chokepoint. Energy bills are forecast to jump 20% in July. From £1,641 to nearly £2,000. The second major energy shock in four years. Petrol up over 15%. Diesel up nearly 30%. Wholesale gas rose 75% in under four weeks. Food inflation could hit 8% by June and 9% by December. Academics advising DEFRA say it could reach 12%. UK food prices are already 38% higher than before Covid. We’re only 62% self-sufficient in food. We import 60% of our nitrogen fertiliser. Red diesel for farming has surged 60%. Average arable farm income has fallen to £17,000, the lowest in over 20 years. Yesterday, China announced it’s halting all sulphuric acid exports from May. Sulphuric acid is essential for phosphate fertilisers, copper mining, oil refining, and battery manufacturing. A third of the world’s sulphur was already blocked by the Hormuz closure. Now the world’s largest exporter has pulled the other lever at the same time. The fertiliser crisis just got significantly worse, heading straight into planting season. Before the war, markets expected rate cuts. Now they’ve priced in two rate rises. Over 1,500 mortgage products have been pulled. Two year fixes have jumped from 4.8% to 5.5%. Nearly £1,000 a year extra on a £200k mortgage. Gone in weeks. Flights are next. A quarter of UK jet fuel comes from Kuwait, behind the strait. In early April, major carriers said they had five to six weeks of reserves. That clock is running. Ryanair’s CEO has warned 5-10% of summer flights could be cancelled. Iran’s strike on Qatar’s Ras Laffan LNG complex, which handles 30% of the world’s helium, is estimated to take 3 to 5 years to repair. Helium is critical for semiconductors and MRI machines. That’s not a disruption. That’s structural damage. Chemical and steel manufacturers are imposing surcharges of up to 30%. Analysts are warning of permanent deindustrialisation. European gas storage was at just 30% after a harsh winter. If the strait stays restricted through summer, Europe can’t refill for next winter. In Ireland, fuel protests shut down Dublin for four days. The army was deployed. Over 100 fuel stations ran dry, with warnings of 500 by end of the week. Downing Street has held talks on the potential for mass protests here. The OECD has downgraded the UK more than any other G7 nation. Growth slashed from 1.2% to 0.7%. Inflation forecast nearly doubled to 4%, with some saying it could breach 5%. Starmer and Trump spoke this week about military options to reopen the strait. The UK is leading a 30+ nation coalition. But the ceasefire is already fracturing. Iran re-closed the strait over Israeli strikes on Lebanon. Reeves is boxed in by fiscal rules. Higher gilt yields are eating her headroom. And I haven’t heard a credible plan from anyone in Westminster. Energy. Food. Fertiliser. Aviation fuel. Mortgages. Industrial chemicals. Semiconductors. Shipping. Government borrowing. Political stability. All under stress. All compounding. This country imports 44% of its energy. Has almost no gas storage. Imports most of its food and fertiliser. Gets a quarter of its jet fuel from behind a mined strait. Every structural weakness built up over 20 years is being stress tested at once. The next three months aren’t going to be uncomfortable. They’re going to be defining
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