The most violent World Cup match of all-time. Italy v Chile from 1962, which was dubbed ‘The Battle Of Santiago’
Commentator David Coleman
#WorldCup#FIFAWorldCup#Italy#Chile
This government will not stand by while children are put at risk online.
Today I am calling on the tech companies to introduce device-level controls to prevent children from taking, sharing or viewing nude images.
And if they don’t act, we will.
Lewis Hamilton says he has a problem with people getting too wealthy
This is a man who is worth $580 Million from driving cars and lives in Monaco, avoiding tax telling people communism might be a better idea
You're welcome to give your money away any time you like Lewis
@martianwyrdlord These Islamic invaders will be the death of the West if we continue to make excuses for their BARBARITY.
Every last one needs to be deported.
Uproar on Newsnight.
Watch to the end as Laila Cunningham battles a woke panel determined to attack Nigel Farage for calling out the sickness in our justice system - rather than addressing the issue.
Laila’s right. It’s crazy.
We’re all sick of being shut down in this way.
@policylaila@Nigel_Farage
Crystal Palace are now Champions Of Europe in the same way that the slow kid from your year used to get the Best Attendance certificate on School Prize Day.
Morrisons just said the quiet part out loud.
Around 100 convenience stores are now on the chopping block.
Hundreds of jobs are at risk.
And the reason given is not “greedy supermarkets”, not “corporate profiteering”, not “Tory austerity”, not any of the slogans Labour spent years throwing around.
It is “significant cost increases resulting from Government policy choices”.
That is corporate-speak for: Labour made it more expensive to employ people, more expensive to operate, and harder to keep marginal stores alive.
This is the basic economic reality the Government pretends does not exist.
You can raise employer costs and call it “fairness”.
You can increase wage mandates and call it “growth”.
You can load more regulation onto businesses and call it “responsibility”.
You can demand lower prices at the till while making every input cost higher behind the scenes.
But eventually the spreadsheet wins.
And when the spreadsheet wins, shops close.
Not the imaginary shops in a Treasury forecast.
Real ones.
Local ones.
The ones people use for milk, bread, prescriptions, newspapers, top-up groceries and last-minute essentials.
The ones staffed by people who do not have the luxury of working from home while lecturing everyone else about “resilience”.
This is the part Labour never wants to own.
Their policies are always sold as compassion.
But the consequences are brutally practical.
A store that was just about viable becomes loss-making.
A worker who was just about employed becomes “at risk”.
A community that had a local shop now has an empty unit with metal shutters.
And then ministers will stand up and blame “global pressures”, “market conditions”, “corporate decisions” or “the legacy we inherited”.
NO.
Morrisons has named the problem directly: government policy choices.
That phrase matters.
Because it means this was not inevitable. It was chosen.
Andy Burnham:
Voted for the Iraq war.
Was a Labour MP for 16 years.
Would follow Rachel Reeves’ fiscal rules.
Wants to reverse Brexit.
Let down Pakistani rape gang victims.
He isn’t a “breath of fresh air,” he’s as bad as the rest.
Vote Reform.