On the day America celebrated the IPO of its biggest space company, Britain found out its government is banning underfloor heating.
The decline of our country is not inevitable, it is the choice of the rotten political class.
Politicians who fanned these flames should hang their heads in shame.
Time and again we've seen this story play out. Single incidents used to fuel a far right narrative - and communities across the nation paying the price.
@lornestloyal@FPL_Chunks@DanNeidle@KitsonJ1 They have totally different expectations of public services. Middle class people expect generous state pensions and out of work benefits.
In France you get 3-6 months of near full pay when fired.
In Britain if you work for 15 years and save up £16k you’re entitled to £0 on UC
Hinkley Point C might be delayed again.
Why? Because Natural England say the £700 million spent on fish protection at Britain's next nuclear power station is not enough.
We can't go on like this.
@StevenC13723287@MarkGodfre66306@BladeoftheS In Europe pensions (and welfare) are contributory. People with better jobs end up with higher state pensions and more generous unemployment benefit
In UK the state pension is basic, and people with better jobs get tax breaks to sort out their own private (workplace) pensions.
@MapdraughterUK@ClaireCoutinho Why does it delay acting now? It’s granting a license for a private company to do something. It doesn’t constrain us at all
I hope Hampshire Police and the CPS have a good explanation as to why Digwa’s brother and father have not yet been charged.
His mother is being sentenced soon for removing the murder weapon from the crime scene.
If his brother and father knew Henry had been stabbed, are they not accessories too?
The brother called 999 to falsely report Henry for racially attacking the murderer.
The father physically detained a dying Henry until the police arrived.
None of them informed the police that Henry had been stabbed. All watched him die, handcuffed, on the ground.
'His murderer was afforded decency. He was believed'
Henry Nowak's father says the 'contrast' in the police's treatment of his son and his murderer is 'unbearable' in a statement after Nowak's killer was sentenced to 21 years in prison.