In 1962 Harold Macmillan personally approved the demolition of Euston’s Great Hall and its Doric Arch, the largest Greek propylaeum ever built.
The stones were dumped into a canal off the River Lea like rubbish.
The RIBA called it one of the greatest acts of post-war architectural vandalism in Britain.
The replacement station is now one of the most hated in London.
One man signed it off.
And we're still living with it.
First time I've seen this. I was reliably informed that the man had attacked a police officer. But the man was attacked and punched to the ground by some enrichers, and then the police officer immediately attacks the man. Obviously the man doesn't know it's a police officer attacking him so he tries to defend himself, and gets arrested.
Maybe the video is missing something at the start where he does something illegal like installing air conditioning, but he looks like the victim of an assault here. What the fuck is wrong with the police in Britain?
"The more homogenous our citizens can be made in these particulars [principles, opinions, values and manners], the greater will be our prospect of permanent union."
General George Washington
1st President of the United States
Depressing to visit Selly Oak, the student area of Birmingham, and see in its heart this beautiful Edwardian library boarded up and derelict
Surely we can do better than this?!
Did Birmingham Police think of looking at this statement again at any point between it having Zero and 10 million views? Do they really intend to press charges? Should the sweary Police woman and the system that trained her not also be looked at? https://t.co/Ogg5PoSHng
It's curious that in modern Britain people seem to have concluded that the rebels were the Good Guys in the American Revolutionary War. In Canada...not so much.
Dim grifter Gary Stevenson has made an idiot of himself in a Times interview, declaring that “I’ll be totally honest with you, I think I am one of the best, if not the best, inequality economists in the world."
Further evidence that dopey Gary is self-obsessed & divorced from reality is his claim that his Youtube programme is "the biggest political show in the country." He claims that in his third year at the LSE "I didn’t even have to study and I still got a straight first,” and describes himself as the "most famous" person in the far-left so-called patriotic millionaires group.
Gary says that threats to leave the country if a wealth tax is introduced are "just scaremongering.”
The Times pointed out that "Statistics from the recent Sunday Times Rich List suggest they’re not: one in six people on the Rich List just two years ago do not appear in the 2026 list; almost a third (111) of the UK citizens who appear in the main list of 350 individuals no longer live on the British mainland, and at least 15 foreign nationals who appeared in last year’s Rich List have been removed because they now live elsewhere".
Asked if he gives away some of his wealth, Gary admits “I don’t, no".
He argues that his contribution to humanity is producing videos calling for the state to confiscate other people's money.
So sad.
I became a citizen just six years ago and I’m happy to lecture and educate you on what it means to be an American and why your party is undermining American values.
Listen to what the police officer says is the reason for this man’s arrest. Did I mishear?
“Because you called Muhammed a r*pist and a kïller”
What is the specific law this man has allegedly broken, if that’s the reason for his arrest?
Historian Andrew Roberts argues, 'if we had stayed together as one political entity then Kaiser Wilhelm II’s Germany would never have dared to invade Belgium in August 1914.
'Had there been no First World War, there would have been no Russian Revolution, no Stalin, no gulags and no Communism. Absent the First World War One and there would have been no Second World War, no Hitler, no Holocaust.'
As Roberts says, 'we must celebrate our great ally’s 250th anniversary, of course, but we should also mourn what might have been' ⤵️
https://t.co/hl8LgBMjnJ
The most stunningly successful thing about the American experiment is that in the late 1700s, the thirteen colonies were hardly valuable at all.
They had no known great natural resources, they were far from a jewel in the crown of the British Empire.
The British were far more desperate to keep the profitable sugar islands than the thirteen colonies. That’s why upon the entry of the French to the war, peace was sought soon - and the priority was to keep the profitable Caribbean and control of the seas.
In seeking peace, Britain was thinking with its treasury not its heart. War is expensive. And while losing the thirteen colonies was embarrassing, it was not the kind of hit to the British economy that losing other colonies would have represented.
In stark contrast to the relatively barren North America, the Spanish Empire in South America had vast obvious natural resources. Spain extracted gold. But it never built anything to last.
The United States of America proved what far too many countries are yet to understand today.
The wealth of a nation is not in its natural resources. It is not fixed. The world is not zero sum.
America became the wealthiest country on the face of the planet, not thanks to its soil - but thanks to the men who stood on it.
The institutions they built - the English liberties they codified - created the basis for a stable, prosperous, market economy. Freedom under law.
It’s thanks to the systems of government the founders built that the United States became what it is today.
Were any other group of people - with any other ideas about how a society should be structured - to settle that land, America would be like any other country today.
But it isn’t. And that’s thanks to the enlightened ideas of its founding.
Happy Treason Day, cousins. 🇬🇧🇺🇸