Britain deserves strength, not excuses. Borders that mean something.
Leaders who speak with strength and honour, not cowardice and lies.
A nation proud of its culture, its people, its past and its future.
Britain will not decline. It’s time to lead with courage.
🇬🇧🇺🇸
@BasilTheGreat@HarryLines7 Meanwhile, you try to tell the lefties there is a two tier
System!
Now add in a 3rd strip at the bottom with the Leeds riots!
@pawelkrk24@IllustraView@woods_lola6914@liberte_av_tout I’m surrounded by brexiteers in my life and not one of them has said a bad thing about the polish. Polish are not the problem.
I suspect that sign you have seen is someone trying to cause problems that are not there
@Nigel_Farage@DestroyerGort Trump was talking about NATO, not specifically UK.
Like when he calls out ‘weak leadership’ in Europe, he doesn’t specify who that is. Although we all know.
@GBNEWS@PatrickChristys You should know it’s wrong if it’s coming out of two tiers mouth. Trump was talking about NATO, not specifically UK.
Like when he calls out ‘weak leadership’ in Europe, he doesn’t specify who that is. Although we all know.
@PatrickChristys Surprised here Patrick. You should know it’s wrong if it’s coming out of two tiers mouth. Trump was talking about NATO, not specifically UK.
Like when he calls out ‘weak leadership’ in Europe, he doesn’t specify who that is. Although we all know.
Trump wasn’t calling out the UK or British troops specifically. He was criticising NATO as a collective institution, which includes countries that absolutely did have heavy combat restrictions and limited frontline roles.
The UK clearly wasn’t one of those — British troops were on the front line in Helmand and took serious losses. That history speaks for itself.
But instead of naming individual countries and embarrassing them directly, Trump made a broad, blunt comment about “allies” — which is kind of his style. That lack of precision is what’s backfired, especially in the UK media, who’ve framed it as an attack on British troops when he didn’t actually say that.
You can disagree with how he worded it and still recognise that the underlying criticism — that some NATO countries pulled far less weight — isn’t wrong.
Trump wasn’t calling out the UK or British troops specifically. He was criticising NATO as a collective institution, which includes countries that absolutely did have heavy combat restrictions and limited frontline roles.
The UK clearly wasn’t one of those — British troops were on the front line in Helmand and took serious losses. That history speaks for itself.
But instead of naming individual countries and embarrassing them directly, Trump made a broad, blunt comment about “allies” — which is kind of his style. That lack of precision is what’s backfired, especially in the UK media, who’ve framed it as an attack on British troops when he didn’t actually say that.
You can disagree with how he worded it and still recognise that the underlying criticism — that some NATO countries pulled far less weight — isn’t wrong.