@PretPret promised to stop using frankenchicken in 2018. The 2026 deadline has now passed with no progress.
You say your food is natural-but there's nothing natural about Frankenchickens. I won't be buying food at @Pret until you keep your promise.
Six years ago, @KFC_UKI promised better welfare for chickens by signing the Better Chicken Commitment. But as the deadline nears, they’re still using cruelly bred Frankenchickens. Millions of birds are suffering. Partial progress isn’t good enough. #KFCCrisis
@RoyalMailHelp I have tried to organise redelivery of a parcel through the Royal Mail website but unfortunately it does not appear to be working.
No red card was left when the 2nd attempt to deliver was carried out?
Is there any other way I can organise redelivery?
@Bobby_Dean, Breaking news! The Royal College of GPs has made the sensible and pragmatic decision to drop its opposition to assisted dying.
Like many of your constituents, I support law change for terminally ill adults. Please stand with us and support this vital reform.
@SteveReedMP@DefraGovUK remember those 10 primary school kids who your Minister Emma Hardy met with last week? Giving them a future free of plastic pollution is in your hands!
Sewage on our beaches, pollution in our rivers, nature in collapse. Enough is enough. Our communities deserve better.
I just showed my support for a new Act that would enshrine our right to a healthy environment in law – will you join me? https://t.co/zWfabSrrqK
The best types of tea:
-The tea brought to you in bed on a Sunday morning
-The tea that comforts you after bad news, gives you the energy to carry on
-The leaning on the worktop after cleaning the kitchen tea (usually held in two hands)
-The “struggle to take a glove off as someone hands it to you” gardening break tea
-The tea you almost forget to drink when you’re in a rush but you remember it just in time
-The hotel room tea
-The tea with a cooked breakfast
-The recovering in hospital tea
-The tea on the freezing sidelines of a Sunday League football match
-The back at the desk after a long meeting tea
-The first tea of the day
-The first tea of the new year
-The tea you take to bed
-The tea while slapping a new coat of paint on the walls
-The tea in the shed
-The tea while staring out the window on a rainy Saturday afternoon
-The tea you celebrate with (and calm down with) when you’ve just received very good news
-The tea you didn’t expect to be offered
-The tea in a museum cafe
-The free tea
-The tea after an argument
-The tea that gives you an excuse to open the good biscuits
-The tea with a view
-The tea with buttered toast
-The “afternoon tea” with lots of little sandwiches and cakes
-The tea in a tent while camping
-The tea from a flask on an Autumn hike
-The tea while reading a book in an armchair on a rare day off with not a care in the world
-The tea after a hard day at work
-The tea after getting in from a run / bike ride
-The first tea back in your home after a holiday
-The picnic tea
-The ‘break up a long car journey’ tea
-The tea you make for someone and they say it’s a really lovely cup of tea, one of the best teas they’ve ever had
-The tea made by your Mum/Dad
The #CopOutLive arena is costing @coopuk millions. Meanwhile, the supermarket says it can't afford to invest in decent welfare for chickens 🤔 We descended upon Co-op's new vanity project to ask passing @ManCity fans what they thought.
Shoutout to everyone who doesn’t have a naturally smiley face. You smiley people will never know how exhausting it is to be forced to smile with a naturally non-smiley face. Then you expect us to hold it for ages for a photograph… our facial muscles start spasming as we plead “okay please just hurry up and take it” through gritted teeth like a haunted ventriloquist’s dummy.
How to know you’ve truly angered a British person:
1. They beg for your pardon
2. They write you a strongly worded letter/email
3. They mutter “charming”
4. They say “you’re welcome” - which you can only just hear because they’ve waited for you to walk away a bit
5. They tut
6. They say “erm” and then pause before saying “excuse me”
7. They say “that was uncalled for”
8. They say “honestly, it’s fine”
9. Their email sign-off goes from “kind regards” to simply “regards”
10. They say nothing at all for three years then bring it up at Christmas dinner