@DobbySolanoNUFC 150 million wasted on 3 awful awful players.
Elanga, Wolt, Wissa 3x of the worst signings we've ever made when you consider the price.
But you can come here illegally having never contributed a penny and expect us to foot the bill for your accommodation, healthcare, living expenses and lawyers for an indefinite period along with tens of thousands of others?
It’s very clear to see how terrible British mentality is.
The UAE are covering the cost of tourist who have had their travel disrupted.
Hotels, flights all in the name of helping.
Meanwhile in the UK we are questioning if we should help British citizens in Dubai because some of them might have left our country due to tax.
We are such an unserious county.
We were once the biggest, most influential global powers.
Now we are throwing our own citizens on the fire because they chose a different nation to live in.
We are in a race to the bottom on our nations brand and reputation.
It’s sad.
Only Brits currently paying tax here deserve our support according to @EdwardJDavey.
But an immigrant with the education level of a 9 year old deserves all the support we can give them.
@xrtrmlynrmlgrl @HHB_SS@sumanthraman When I say blast I mean blast.
It's the interception explosion most probably, enough to shake my bedroom doors and windows and feel the vibration through me.
Nothing has hit the ground here as far as I know since the drone hit my street yesterday
Unfortunately, I had to leave Dubai for Europe a week ago — so I’m not only missing the free fireworks from Iran, but also exposing myself to greater risk. Given Europe’s crime rates, Dubai is statistically safer even with missiles flying. Can’t wait to be back.
A state has a duty to protect its youth, not only physically, but intellectually and morally. When university spaces become arenas where extremist narratives are normalized, romanticized, or disguised as activism, responsible governments reassess risk.
The UAE invests heavily in education abroad because it believes in global exposure, academic excellence, and cross-cultural engagement. Sending students overseas is not a privilege handed out lightly. It is a strategic investment in future diplomats, engineers, policymakers, and innovators. That investment must be matched by an environment that is safe, balanced, and grounded in genuine scholarship.
When certain campuses allow ideological movements to frame terrorism as resistance, glorify violent actors, or pressure students into polarized identity politics, it raises legitimate concerns. Emirati students represent their country’s values of tolerance, coexistence, and stability. They should not be placed in environments where extremist rhetoric is normalized under the banner of free expression.
The UAE’s approach to education has always centered on moderation, institutional stability, and zero tolerance for political Islam networks that exploit youth spaces. If safeguards are insufficient, reassessment becomes a matter of national responsibility. Education abroad must remain an opportunity for growth, not exposure to radicalization pipelines.
Protecting students is not isolationism. It is governance.