Dunvallo Molmutius 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧

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Dunvallo Molmutius 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧

Dunvallo Molmutius 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧

@molmutius

Proud father of Belinus and Brennius. Victor in the Civil War of the Five Kings. Creator of the Molmutine Laws. Possibly invented by Geoffrey of Monmouth.

Barsetshire 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧 شامل ہوئے Aralık 2022
3.9K فالونگ4.8K فالوورز
پن کیا گیا ٹویٹ
Dunvallo Molmutius 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧
Whatever you believe about the politics of this account, let me make one thing clear: I am first and foremost a Groucho Marxist. Whatever it is, I’m against it.
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fleetstreetfox
fleetstreetfox@fleetstreetfox·
This happened yesterday. No journalist but me is reporting it. 1. A minister admitted govt lawyers knew of a whistleblowing report about a cover-up of radiaiton-exposed troops in 2014, and did not disclose it to ongoing legal proceedings. 2. Same minister wept at Despatch Box.
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Dunvallo Molmutius 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧
@chapofwessex One black boy in my primary school year (30 kids ). Two in my secondary school year (200 kids). Handful of Indians. 1990s suburb of a major English city. One black boy in father’s 1960s urban working class secondary school (major port city). These people are fools and liars.
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Epoch Nowell
Epoch Nowell@chapofwessex·
I did see a black person irl until I was 14-15.
Sam@SamCKx

I can no longer hold my tongue seeing the utter lies being spread about Britain, our history of migration, and how this country was built into what it is today. For those so deeply buried in fake news, manufactured outrage and billionaire‑funded propaganda, I’m going to lay out the truth – and exactly why you’re being fed all this poison. Britain was never a sealed white island. From Roman times there were African soldiers stationed on Hadrian’s Wall and living in British towns, people from across the empire walking these roads nearly 2,000 years ago. Through the Middle Ages and Tudor England you still find Black people in the records – sailors, craftsmen, servants, musicians – even Black musicians at the royal court and Africans being baptised, marrying and being buried in English parishes like anyone else. This isn’t some modern experiment; it’s older than half the castles people visit on their bank‑holiday tours. As Britain went out into the world, the world came here. Sailors and traders from India, Yemen and beyond were arriving in British ports from the 1600s. Some of those men were practising a new faith to most Britons at the time, praying quietly in boarding houses near the docks while they worked brutal shifts in the engine rooms of British ships. Over the centuries, more people from North Africa, the Middle East and South Asia passed through and settled, bringing their languages, foods and beliefs into port cities that were far more mixed than today’s nostalgia merchants like to admit. After two world wars, the truth is simple: this country asked the Commonwealth to come and rebuild it. People from the Caribbean, Africa and South Asia didn’t sneak in; they were recruited. They came to drive buses and trains, staff the NHS, work in mills and foundries, clean offices, run corner shops, open takeaways and small businesses, and yes, build prayer spaces and community centres alongside churches and temples in the neighbourhoods everyone now pretends were always “traditional” and “unchanged”. They did the work that kept Britain going while being told to go home, refused housing, and treated as permanent outsiders. And what have they been paid back with? Scandals where people who’ve lived, worked and paid taxes here for decades get told they don’t belong. Policies designed to make life so hostile that some give up and leave. A media that uses their names, accents, clothes or places of worship as props in endless scare stories. The message is always the same: you might toil for this country, but you will never fully be of it. So when you hear that “Britain was white until recently” or that the country has been “overrun”, understand that you don’t arrive at that belief by accident. You get there because your history has been deliberately ripped out and replaced with a comforting myth: that “real” Britain is white, homogenous, and constantly under siege from people who look, speak or pray differently. Now look at when this myth has been turned up to max volume. Wages frozen. Housing a sick joke. Energy and food prices out of control. Public services hacked to pieces. At the same time, the number of people hoarding unimaginable wealth at the top has exploded. Funny, isn’t it, how every front page is about boats and “swarms” and “our culture”, and almost never about the landlords, hedge funds, private equity and offshore trusts quietly buying up your city and your future. That’s because this isn’t just prejudice; it’s a strategy. If you’re sitting on a mountain of wealth, the last thing you want is ordinary people – of every colour and background – realising they have the same problems and the same enemy. Much safer if the factory worker is furious at the new family down the road. Much safer if the person who can’t see a doctor blames the nurse with an accent instead of the minister who cut the funding. Much safer if a man who can’t afford his rent spends his rage on the woman in a headscarf at the bus stop instead of the billionaire who owns half his city. Racist rhetoric, religious dog‑whistling, all of it, exists to break solidarity. It turns neighbours into enemies and stops people seeing that Black, brown and white working‑class communities have far more in common with each other than any of them will ever have with the people flying in on private jets. It keeps you so busy policing skin colour, passports and prayer mats that you never get round to asking why your kids can’t afford a home, why your parents can’t get a hospital bed, why you’re working harder and standing still. The real story of Britain is this: a crossroads, not a fortress. Africans on Hadrian’s Wall. Black people in Tudor courts and city streets. Sailors, traders and workers from South Asia, the Middle East and beyond in the ports. Caribbean, African and Asian workers rebuilding the country after the war, staffing surgeries and hospitals, driving cabs, running shops, cooking food, teaching kids. Today’s multi‑ethnic, multi‑faith working class is not a glitch; it is Britain. It built this place and it keeps it running. If you’re genuinely angry about what’s happening to this country, good. You should be. But aim it where it belongs. Britain was never pure, never untouched, never “theirs” to take back. The people ruining your standard of living are not the ones risking their lives to get here, or the ones whose names you struggle to pronounce. They’re the ones buying politicians, owning media outlets, writing the story of this country so you never learn your own – and never realise who is standing beside you.

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Sky News
Sky News@SkyNews·
BREAKING: UK facing biggest economic hit from Iran war of any major country Economics and data editor @EdConwaySky reports trib.al/SjZUkYs
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Matt Walsh
Matt Walsh@MattWalshBlog·
My user experience just got 500 times better
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Adam 🇺🇦
Adam 🇺🇦@PlinthBotherer5·
Nottinghamshire Police seem genuinely pissed off at Valdo Calocane's victims having come into contact with him. If only everyone had kept out of the way of this violent and volatile man forever, he wouldn't have been a risk to the public and the police won't have looked so stupid
Adam 🇺🇦 tweet mediaAdam 🇺🇦 tweet media
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Dunvallo Molmutius 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧
@PYeerk There has been a cultural discontinuity due to mass immigration. That’s kind of the point. For example I can recognise modern comedy made in Britain as British only insomuch as I can detect the continuity going back to Hancock, Will Hay, the Grossmiths, etc.
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Yeerk.P 🦆
Yeerk.P 🦆@PYeerk·
Sorry for not liking grime the compulsory musical taste of every British person from the 2000s onwards- I will try to do better in future
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John Bull
John Bull@54JohnBull·
Terrible situation for a group of house owners where a council continually places rubbish families in the one council owned property on the street. 4 families over 20 years had to be evicted, and now it sounds like they want to dump illegal immigrants on them.
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Variety
Variety@Variety·
NEW 'LORD OF THE RINGS' MOVIE Stephen Colbert is co-writing "The Lord of the Rings: Shadow of the Past" (working title), which will go into production after "The Hunt for Gollum." The synopsis: "Fourteen years after the passing of Frodo - Sam, Merry, and Pippin set out to retrace the first steps of their adventure. Meanwhile, Sam’s daughter, Elanor, has discovered a long-buried secret and is determined to uncover why the War of the Ring was very nearly lost before it even began." Colbert is co-writing the script with his son, Peter McGee, and franchise veteran Philippa Boyens. variety.com/2026/film/news…
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LetcalfeLark
LetcalfeLark@LetcalfeLark·
@PoseidonOilRig @Rambaudian @molmutius I'd agree with one over the other, sure, but I also see the point that negative income tax either won't work as expected or would easily become an addition to current benefits rather than a replacement for them*.
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Camus
Camus@newstart_2024·
Jimmy Carr just dropped a radical rethink of taxes, education, and national wealth: - No tax for anyone under 30 → let young people keep every penny they earn and actually start their lives. - University should be free… but only for STEM fields that grow society (not a luxury item for 50% of kids). - Over 60? No tax either — stop pretending we can pay endless pensions with fewer young workers. - Sovereign wealth fund from UK oil, gas, wind farms, and mobile masts — assets that should belong to everyone, not just the Crown. On AI and the future: We need flexibility of thought. Old ideologies won’t cut it when everything changes. Why does everything have to come from taxing workers? Why not undercut Ireland on corporation tax, mine Bitcoin with idle power stations, or treat national resources as shared wealth? Do you think no-tax zones for the young and old + free STEM education could actually work? Or is this too radical for a country stuck in old thinking? Your take 👇
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