Keir Starmer Boasts About Giving Away 10 Million Free Breakfasts
“We’ve just hit another really important milestone. 10 million free breakfasts at our free breakfast clubs. And that’s bringing families and children together across the country.”
They’re not free though, are they? They’re paid for by hard-working taxpayers.
While families struggle with high taxes, energy bills, and the cost of living, Keir Starmer is celebrating 10 million free school breakfasts, that’s likely £20–30 million and rising, taken straight from our pockets.
Why exactly should people grinding away at work every day be forced to subsidise breakfast for kids who aren’t theirs?
Parents have a responsibility to feed their own children.
This isn’t “investing in the next generation” it’s expanding the welfare state and normalising the idea that the government (i.e. you and me) should pick up the tab for basic parenting.
If we keep going down this road, what’s next? Free dinners, free holidays, free everything? Enough. Taxpayers aren’t bottomless ATMs.
@Sausageandeggx@Waltika Interesting fact: one of the men is being assessed for work placements already. He is expected to get parole shortly.
The other three main culprits are eligible for parole in 2028, 2029 and 2031.
They broke his bones, gouged his eyes out, cut out his tongue and castrated him. He died of a heart attack after being set on fire and dragged himself 50 meters across the floor.
🚨🇬🇧Let me introduce you to Young Bob. He is a 17 year old British version of Charlie Kirk.
I’ve followed young Bob myself for well over a year. Almost 2, and he always comes across with a wealth of intelligence far beyond his years.
He has been attacked by Muslims and lefties on numerous occasions, and I came across this interview he gave in Southampton 2 nights ago. Absolutely magnificently put Bob 👏🏻. Hats off to you sunshine.
Follow Young Bob on all socials.
I remember the first question in my interview to become a British police officer:
“What does diversity mean to you?”
It was followed by several more questions about diversity.
Looking back, that probably tells you everything you need to know about why public confidence in policing is where it is today.
Me 15 years ago ⬇️😂
Keir Starmer is milking Henry Nowak’s death for every ounce of political capital it’s worth.
He summoned a grieving family to the most photographed doorstep in Britain and let them walk that gauntlet of cameras alone — arriving and leaving in the full glare, with no one beside them.
If this were really about Henry, Starmer would have gone to them. Quietly. To Hampshire. No press, no podium, no performance.
Instead, he turned their grief into a backdrop.
That’s not leadership. It’s cheap politics.
Much appreciated from those of us not infected by the intolerant woke virus. Our diplomatic ties must be hanging by a thread under this present government in office.
Away from the left leaning simpletons amongst us, the vast majority are just trying to get through the next few years until the next election. I’ve no idea how far we’ll have slumped by then, but please don’t desert us in our hour of need.
Yours Sincerely
The sane half of the UK.
Henry Nowak died the same way a civilization dies: abandoned, handcuffed by authorities who neither trusted nor cared for him, and accused of hate crimes he did not commit. His murder is as tragic as it is enraging. He should still be alive today, and he would be if the last few generations of European elites had stood their ground against the politics of self-hatred and the mass invasion of migrants, many of whom despise the West and the people who love it.
Henry was far from the first to so needlessly lose his life, and I fear he won’t be the last. Each time a life like his is lost, the proper response—the only response—is righteous anger. One of the most important things the Trump administration has proven to the world is that stopping the flow of mass migration and defending national sovereignty is a matter of political will and leadership. Anything else is an excuse.
It is because we love the West that we want to preserve it. We love our civilization. We love our country. We love our children. And nobody—nobody—should ever die the way that Henry Nowak died. May God comfort those who loved him, and may God rest his soul.
@DangleSpanners@LeoKearse@davidoff31249 Which people, and its anger that people are feeling. Anger at an government/establishent that sneers at them for raising concerns over a two tier system that facilitated in the death of poor Henry.
Take your left leaning fuckwittery elsewhere.
Shabana Mahmood has CONDEMNED the Henry Nowak protests in Southampton, saying those responsible will be arrested.
Meanwhile, here she is on a pro-Palestine protest which turned violent and forced a supermarket to close.
She has since deleted this video. Please don't RT it.
@narindertweets No one blames the Sikh community despite your best efforts at trying to convince everyone that’s the case.
Isn’t it time you found a proper job, or maybe a big brother reunion bash and see how all the other wannabe personalities are getting on?
Any return to ice age conditions could trigger a crisis unmatched in all human history.
Earth is still technically in an ice age and average global temperatures of around 15°C degrees are still much lower than the long-term global average of 16°C to 18°C A global warming scare has been running for 40 years, yet 10% of the world's total land area is still covered by glacial ice.
From a human perspective, the combined land area of every town and city on earth is still only 3% of the total.
Ice covers an area of 15 million square kilometers (5.8 million square miles), roughly a third of its full extent during the peak of the Last Glacial Maximum (26,000 to 19,000 years ago). This was the most recent time in Earth's history when global ice sheets were at their greatest extent.
The Antarctic ice sheet is still the largest and thickest ice formation on Earth by far, reaching up to 4.8 kilometres (about 3 miles) in depth. It holds 90% of the world's ice by volume & accounts for around 85% of total global glacial ice cover. Antarctica spans roughly 14 million square kilometers (5.4 million square miles) and covers about 8.3% of the total land surface.
Land area is only 28% of earth's surface. The oceans cover 72% to an average depth of 2.3 miles, forests cover 31% and deserts 33%. The oceans contain 86% of the global carbon reservoir and 91% of all retained heat energy; by contrast, the atmosphere holds a mere 1 to 2% of each.
The past 40 years has featured a global warming campaign raising fears of an impending climate crisis, chiefly based on forecasts of soaring temperatures and a global climate crisis. However, the fact remains that the Earth is still technically in an ice age, with ice cover at both poles all year round. We still live in the Quaternary Glaciation, which has lasted 2.58 million years.
The Quaternary Glaciation is a more severely cold extension of the Late Cenozoic Ice Age, which has lasted for 34 million years, since the time of the original glaciation of Antarctica. The chief causes were due to orbital anomalies (the Milankovitch cycles), the isolation of the Antarctic continent when Australia and South America shifted northward, as part of global tectonic changes.
The last great ice age that was similar to today was the Karoo Ice Age (also known as the Late Paleozoic Icehouse), spanning approximately 360 to 260 million years. This is one of the five major ice ages in Earth's history.
All modern human societies and every meaningful invention has occurred during the current Holocene warm interglacial period, beginning 11,700 years ago. The previous warm interglacial was the Eemian (130,000 to 115,000 years ago). Temperatures in the Eemian were also 2°C warmer than today and African megafauna and crocodiles lived in the Thames valley.
The generally accepted average extent of ice age interglacials is around 15,000 years.
So perhaps we should be considering our next move if the next glaciation comes early.