@grantshapps Try Googling "what is the evidence that Russia ordered an attack on Starmer?" No evidence, only links to articles repeating the same claim. If this was true, wouldn't the country be up in arms?
@grantshapps Did they though? Or would the establishment rather falsely accuse Russia than openly admit the sitting PM has a penchant for Ukrainian rent boys?
@CMcKinnellMP Delighted that children can't watch music practice, maths, history, science, chess and other videos on YouTube? It is surely up to parents to regulate their children's social media use, not government.
@leicesterliz Are you saying parents won't or can't say no to the children whose phones they bought and whose phone contracts they pay for, without being able to point at a law (without any penalties)?
@Telegraph And the least logical, given how much good educational content there is on Youtube (music practice, maths, science, history...). This is a bizarre law, which the bad children will get around, and the good will suffer from.
@DavidDeutschOxf 100% agree. It would be a nonsense if the final law banned YouTube. And yes it was a mistake to move from the classic Grammar/logic/rhetoric, to autopilot regurgitation of prescribed "facts".
@business The only person Khan thinks is doing a good job is Khan. And he is wrong about that, so his opinion isn't worth anything, except possibly to contrarians.
@AlexAndBooks_ Or, one serious non-fiction, one serious fiction, and one just fun to read (but well written). So mine are Breakneck, Sentimental Education, and Flashman.
@dhh There seems to be a deep sickness in a lot of journalism these days. Possibly comes from changing education from the classic Trivium (grammar, logic, and rhetoric), to modern memorisation and autopilot regurgitation, instead of critical thinking and communication.