Ed Davey, "It's so frustrating, so infuriating that Nigel Farage gets such an easy ride from the media"
"As he lies, as he divides, the BBC and others given Farage so much time and attention"
"But they never hold him to account for all the damage he has already done"
"The damage of Brexit"
"Farage was Brexit's champion"
"The damage of Donald Trump"
"Farage campaigned for Trump"
"Or the damage of Boris Johnson or Liz Truss"
"Farage backed them both
"So much that is broken in our country today is broken thanks to Nigel Farage"
Are immigrants responsible for:
❌ Long GP and hospital waits
❌ Crumbling schools & roads
❌ Underfunded local services
❌ Inflation & cost of living crisis
❌ £2.7bn UK government debt
Stop peddling the divisive agenda to blame minorities for everything
Our Portsmouth Armed Forces Day was just over a week ago - here's some highlights:
A special thanks to headline sponsor @BAES_Maritime and to @WorldofWarships for supporting.
And of course the Red Arrows and @RN_Raiders for amazing displays and the headcam footage 🪂Enjoy!
Today, I am thinking of human beings in Gaza buried under the rubble.
I am thinking of their joys, dreams, hopes & fears.
I wonder, if the dust ever settles, whether opponents of a ceasefire will look back and reflect on the cost of their inhumanity.
We need a ceasefire, now.
The individual captured in the photograph is Evgeny Stepanovich Kobytev. In 1941, as a young artist passionate about painting portraits and landscapes, he had just completed his studies at the Kyiv State Institute in Ukraine and dreamt of launching a career in art.
However, those aspirations were put on hold when Germany began its invasion of the Soviet Union, prompting Kobytev to join the war effort.
Kobytev participated in multiple intense confrontations in Ukraine, but by September 1941, he was injured and became a POW.
He was interned in the "Khorol pit" (Dulag #160), a notorious camp where nearly 90,000 civilians (including Jewish individuals) and POWs met their tragic end. This camp, previously an old brick factory, had a single shelter barrack.
Those lucky enough to find space inside were tightly packed, enduring an overwhelming stench. Yet, the suffocating interior was still preferable to the merciless exposure outside.
After enduring two harrowing years in captivity, Kobytev staged an escape. Wasting no time, he re-enlisted and continued fighting to reclaim German-occupied cities throughout Ukraine.
This is my brother Andy. He has Down’s, a life-long condition.
The Telegraph wants you to be angry at Andy for helping him to live a happy independent life. it has created a calculator to show how much you pay for disabled and sick people to live. it’s a grotesque attempt at…
trying to make people blame the disabled and sick for the cost of living crisis, which isn’t their fault at all.
FYI the Nazi’s got school kids to calculate how much the disabled cost them in the 1940s. This is the level media like this has sunk. Vile