@lil_doza@ThomasKerrMSP should also be asked questions he was stirring Racial Hatred recently across Glasgow during a Campaign along with his Owner Malky.
@lil_doza This is exactly what @ThomasKerrMSP & Co wished after Planting the seeds across Glasgow the last few weeks Divide & Conquer still in use. Shame that some Working Class folk fall for whilst Bills Increase and they continue to Shaft the Worker.
@asimrabbani This is exactly what @ThomasKerrMSP & Co wished after Planting the seeds across Glasgow the last few weeks Divide & Conquer still in use. Shame that some Working Class folk fall for whilst Bills Increase and they continue to Shaft the Worker.
@RangersBear55 Figures not far off what The “Think Tank” Labour Together Whilst in the Hands of Morgan Sweeney swindled just over £700,000 , seems like there all at it regardless of Political background.
🏴 Some Scotland supporters are at risk of missing the 2026 World Cup after their ESTA authorizations for entry into the United States were suddenly revoked just days before the tournament begins. 😳
ESTA is an electronic travel authorization that allows citizens of certain countries to enter the US without a visa. However, several fans report that their status changed from “Approved” to “Travel Not Authorized” without any explanation.
Some of them had already received approval months earlier and had spent thousands of euros on tickets and travel arrangements. ❌💰(Via The Times)
#FIFAWorldCup2026WithOltSports
The Messages Are Not Gone. They Are on Someone Else's Phone.
There is a certain kind of political scandal that ends not with a dramatic revelation but with a mundane one. Not a smoking gun but a forgotten detail. Not a conspiracy unravelled but a basic error of logic, sitting in plain sight, waiting for someone to point at it. This is one of those moments.
We have spent several weeks being told that Morgan McSweeney's messages are gone. Wiped. Unrecoverable. Lost to a street robbery in Pimlico and a remote deletion that, conveniently, destroyed the tracker along with everything else. Downing Street has leaned heavily on this narrative. The messages cannot be produced because the messages do not exist. The phone is gone. The evidence is gone. Move along.
There is a problem with this story. WhatsApp is not a one-way street. When two people exchange messages, those messages exist on both devices. Wiping one phone does not reach through the internet and delete the other. McSweeney's conversations with Lord Mandelson are not only on McSweeney's phone. They are also on Mandelson's phone. His conversations with Jonathan Powell are on Powell's phone. His conversations with Matthew Doyle are on Doyle's phone. The messages Downing Street has declared unrecoverable are, in fact, sitting in the pockets and cloud backups of everyone McSweeney spoke to.
Any child with a smartphone could tell you this. And it raises a question so obvious it is remarkable that it has taken this long to ask it loudly: why has nobody in Downing Street been asked to produce their devices?
The answer, in Mandelson's case, may already be known to the Metropolitan Police. He was arrested in February on suspicion of misconduct in public office. When you arrest someone on those grounds, you seize their phone. That is standard procedure. It is not optional. If Mandelson's device was taken, as it almost certainly was, then the Metropolitan Police are already in possession of the other end of every conversation Downing Street has spent months telling us is lost.
Read that again slowly. The government may have wiped one phone while the police were already holding the other.
If that is the case, then the claim that McSweeney's messages are unrecoverable is not an unfortunate consequence of a street robbery. Maintaining that claim in full knowledge of Mandelson's arrest and the likely seizure of his device is not carelessness. It is something considerably more serious.
Downing Street has refused to say whether any attempt was made to track the wiped phone. It has refused to explain why the ICO was not notified. It has refused to say whether MI5 or GCHQ were informed. It is now going to have to answer a fourth question, and this one is harder to manage than the others. If the police have Mandelson's phone, where are the messages?
"The messages Downing Street has declared unrecoverable are, in fact, sitting in the pockets and cloud backups of everyone McSweeney spoke to."
@SteveTa65152757@ScotExpress “So are you saying because they allegedly did it “ Your words. And no I ain’t saying they should not be called out far from it , just pointing out that all Political Figures are at it regardless of Party affiliation , Labour Together was another “think Tank” earning Nicely.
The Messages Are Not Gone. They Are on Someone Else's Phone.
There is a certain kind of political scandal that ends not with a dramatic revelation but with a mundane one. Not a smoking gun but a forgotten detail. Not a conspiracy unravelled but a basic error of logic, sitting in plain sight, waiting for someone to point at it. This is one of those moments.
We have spent several weeks being told that Morgan McSweeney's messages are gone. Wiped. Unrecoverable. Lost to a street robbery in Pimlico and a remote deletion that, conveniently, destroyed the tracker along with everything else. Downing Street has leaned heavily on this narrative. The messages cannot be produced because the messages do not exist. The phone is gone. The evidence is gone. Move along.
There is a problem with this story. WhatsApp is not a one-way street. When two people exchange messages, those messages exist on both devices. Wiping one phone does not reach through the internet and delete the other. McSweeney's conversations with Lord Mandelson are not only on McSweeney's phone. They are also on Mandelson's phone. His conversations with Jonathan Powell are on Powell's phone. His conversations with Matthew Doyle are on Doyle's phone. The messages Downing Street has declared unrecoverable are, in fact, sitting in the pockets and cloud backups of everyone McSweeney spoke to.
Any child with a smartphone could tell you this. And it raises a question so obvious it is remarkable that it has taken this long to ask it loudly: why has nobody in Downing Street been asked to produce their devices?
The answer, in Mandelson's case, may already be known to the Metropolitan Police. He was arrested in February on suspicion of misconduct in public office. When you arrest someone on those grounds, you seize their phone. That is standard procedure. It is not optional. If Mandelson's device was taken, as it almost certainly was, then the Metropolitan Police are already in possession of the other end of every conversation Downing Street has spent months telling us is lost.
Read that again slowly. The government may have wiped one phone while the police were already holding the other.
If that is the case, then the claim that McSweeney's messages are unrecoverable is not an unfortunate consequence of a street robbery. Maintaining that claim in full knowledge of Mandelson's arrest and the likely seizure of his device is not carelessness. It is something considerably more serious.
Downing Street has refused to say whether any attempt was made to track the wiped phone. It has refused to explain why the ICO was not notified. It has refused to say whether MI5 or GCHQ were informed. It is now going to have to answer a fourth question, and this one is harder to manage than the others. If the police have Mandelson's phone, where are the messages?
"The messages Downing Street has declared unrecoverable are, in fact, sitting in the pockets and cloud backups of everyone McSweeney spoke to."
@SteveTa65152757@ScotExpress Nope not once have I mentioned that, that is indeed you who has came to that conclusion, if you read my initial response before going on an Utter Cycle of Rage typing you may have came to the correct conclusion that I was pointing out and how Political figures bend rules.
@PolymarketFC The US has Denied entry to Scotland Football Fans who obtained Visa’s Numerous weeks ago whilst booking accommodation , Flights , Match Tickets etc. ££££Thousand’s now out of Pocket
CHECK OUT this picture of Israel-Premier Tech cycling team co-owner Sylvan Adams with his friend, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
And this article from June 2024 showing just how friendly and close Sylvan Adams is with Israel's leaders.
https://t.co/LRRFapAaTb
@SteveTa65152757@ScotExpress Think it’s similar to how the No Thanks/Better Together branch Ran it stated it was separate from Labour & Conservatives to the Electoral commission but was being Financed & Funded , Moran McSweeney has been all over the news recently he played a Role.
The Messages Are Not Gone. They Are on Someone Else's Phone.
There is a certain kind of political scandal that ends not with a dramatic revelation but with a mundane one. Not a smoking gun but a forgotten detail. Not a conspiracy unravelled but a basic error of logic, sitting in plain sight, waiting for someone to point at it. This is one of those moments.
We have spent several weeks being told that Morgan McSweeney's messages are gone. Wiped. Unrecoverable. Lost to a street robbery in Pimlico and a remote deletion that, conveniently, destroyed the tracker along with everything else. Downing Street has leaned heavily on this narrative. The messages cannot be produced because the messages do not exist. The phone is gone. The evidence is gone. Move along.
There is a problem with this story. WhatsApp is not a one-way street. When two people exchange messages, those messages exist on both devices. Wiping one phone does not reach through the internet and delete the other. McSweeney's conversations with Lord Mandelson are not only on McSweeney's phone. They are also on Mandelson's phone. His conversations with Jonathan Powell are on Powell's phone. His conversations with Matthew Doyle are on Doyle's phone. The messages Downing Street has declared unrecoverable are, in fact, sitting in the pockets and cloud backups of everyone McSweeney spoke to.
Any child with a smartphone could tell you this. And it raises a question so obvious it is remarkable that it has taken this long to ask it loudly: why has nobody in Downing Street been asked to produce their devices?
The answer, in Mandelson's case, may already be known to the Metropolitan Police. He was arrested in February on suspicion of misconduct in public office. When you arrest someone on those grounds, you seize their phone. That is standard procedure. It is not optional. If Mandelson's device was taken, as it almost certainly was, then the Metropolitan Police are already in possession of the other end of every conversation Downing Street has spent months telling us is lost.
Read that again slowly. The government may have wiped one phone while the police were already holding the other.
If that is the case, then the claim that McSweeney's messages are unrecoverable is not an unfortunate consequence of a street robbery. Maintaining that claim in full knowledge of Mandelson's arrest and the likely seizure of his device is not carelessness. It is something considerably more serious.
Downing Street has refused to say whether any attempt was made to track the wiped phone. It has refused to explain why the ICO was not notified. It has refused to say whether MI5 or GCHQ were informed. It is now going to have to answer a fourth question, and this one is harder to manage than the others. If the police have Mandelson's phone, where are the messages?
"The messages Downing Street has declared unrecoverable are, in fact, sitting in the pockets and cloud backups of everyone McSweeney spoke to."
Latest on Mandelson/McSweeney messages:
* Downing Street briefed journalists the messages relating to the 5 September reshuffle had been withheld at the request of the Metropolitan Police. But today the Met have told the Mail on Sunday this is untrue, and they did not ask for the messages to be held back
* Two of the unpublished messages from Mandelson to McSweeney reportedly relate to Darren Jones and Peter Kyle. Both of them were subsequently promoted in that reshuffle
* On 27 February Mandelson accompanied Keir Starmer to a meeting at the Washington offices of Palantir. No minutes were kept of the meeting, and it was not included in Starmer's official schedule. The Mail on Sunday has learnt that a week after Starmer returned from Washington Cabinet Ministers received an instruction from No.10 to meet with Palantir representatives.