@NickBarnes63@Tweed_Barnesy I’ve just seen you driving along the sea front in your Porsche, chucking hand fulls of tenners out the window shouting ‘who’s the crypto king’ 🤷🏼♂️
Not a good look for Britain and our trust in the law.
Attack a police officer, walk away unpunished despite clear as day on CCTV.
Get stabbed and die bleeding after being falsely accused of racism.
The UK looks like an unserious country right now.
@Capt_Fishpaste Couldn’t believe how many empty seats there were in both ends when I was watching it. I can see Hull coming straight back down next season
Tommy Robinson was sent to prison for showing a film. Lucy Connolly was sent to prison for a tweet. A British Pakistani man can break the nose of a female police officer, have the footage go viral, and walk away free.
You can be stabbed by a Sikh and if he says the magic words, the police will handcuff you as you bleed out on the floor.
If you notice and complain, your own government will accuse you of hate. You cannot possibly hate them enough for what they have done to England.
@Philip_RJ89 For some reason Le Bris just doesn’t fancy Geertuida. Don’t expect to see him back here next season. I definitely agree with Le Fee in middle. We look a much better team with him there
@Philip_RJ89 Surely his only aim this season was to keep us up and he’s done that quite comfortably. Strengthen again in the summer and see what he can do for us next season
Funny how this country picks and chooses who it protects.
On one side, you’ve got men from the Special Air Service—the tip of the spear—walking away because they feel like they’ve got a target on their backs. Not from the enemy… from their own side.
Sent into chaos, told to get the job done. No headlines, no glory—just results.
Years later? Lawyers circling, investigations looming, and a government that suddenly can’t quite remember backing them.
Then look at veterans from Northern Ireland—dragged back through the mud decades on, while the people who sent them there sit comfortably out of reach.
But when failure happens here at home—think the Stockport massacre—what do we see?
Quiet resignations.
Full pensions.
No decades-long pursuit.
We’ll chase soldiers across half a century for decisions made in the fog of conflict…
But when leadership fails in plain sight, it’s a polite handshake and a send-off.
That’s not justice. That’s convenience.
And if you’re one of the lads watching all this unfold, why would you stay? Why would you risk everything knowing you might be the one left holding the bag years later?
We don’t have a recruitment problem.
We’ve got a loyalty problem.
No wonder the lads are getting out of the regiment—half the country hasn’t got a clue why they sleep soundly at night.