🚨 Starmer tried to scrub Katie Hopkins’ video with an emergency injunction.
X refused, citing free speech. The video was pinned everywhere.
Katie laughed: “The internet doesn’t have a border.”
Starmer’s Digital Iron Curtain just collapse
Dear Lush (cc Chelmsford City Council),
As a woman who had half a breast removed last year due to cancer, I am writing to raise my concerns about your “Proud of My Stripes” window display.
I am also, on behalf of other women who have experienced breast cancer, respectfully requesting its removal.
Because mastectomies are not a fashion statement, an identity marker or something to be celebrated.
They are something women undergo because they are ill, because they are frightened, because they are trying to stay alive.
Around 59,000 women are diagnosed with breast cancer in the UK every year. Many will undergo surgery - a mastectomy, lumpectomy or other procedure.
Others choose preventive mastectomies because they carry a high-risk BRCA gene mutation.
If a woman chooses to have her breasts removed to affirm a gender identity, that is her personal choice.
I honestly don’t know the number of women who have elective mastectomies for this reason.
What I do know is that it is a tiny number compared with those for whom breast surgery is medically necessary and not something to be celebrated.
I think I speak for many women who have experienced breast cancer - and for their families - when I say this:
Breast removal surgery is not something I regard as cute, playful or empowering.
Nor is it something I believe retailers should be celebrating.
For that reason, I am requesting that the display be removed and that @ChelmsCouncil apologise for promoting it on social media.
Yours sincerely,
Janet Murray
🚨Let's stop the social media ban once and for ALL!
We need to have a united opposition voice to this ban
Everyone who opposes it share this post 📨
If this goes viral, It will show Starmer that he can't pass this quite as easily as he thought
They say you should never meet your heroes… well today in Makerfield I met one of mine — the truly inspirational June Slater.
What an incredible lady. Strong, fearless, passionate and completely authentic.
It was an absolute honour to spend some time chatting with her. I left feeling even more motivated to keep standing up, speaking out and fighting for what I believe in.
Sometimes you meet someone you’ve admired for a long time and they exceed every expectation. June is one of those people.
Thank you for taking the time to chat today, June. It was a pleasure to meet you.
#Makerfield #JuneSlater #MeetingMyHero #InspirationalWomen #CommonSense #Patriot #MakingADifference #StandUpSpeakOut #ReformUK #Politics #GrassrootsPolitics #NeverGiveUp
Don’t argue with people over sixty. Just don’t.
It’s not just an age; it’s a masterclass in survival.
They grew up without Google, without DoorDash, without therapy podcasts, and without an "undo" button. If something broke, they grabbed duct tape, WD-40, a hammer, and a look of sheer determination that made even the broken appliance second-guess itself.
As kids, they knew exactly what kind of mood their mom was in just by the sound of how hard she slammed the cast-iron skillet onto the stove.
They were the original latchkey kids — walking home from middle school with a house key tied around their neck, with strict orders to heat up lunch and not burn the kitchen down. By the time they were ten, they could bike to the corner store, buy a gallon of milk for the neighbor, feed the family dog, and still have time to play freeze tag in the yard until dark.
Their knees were a permanent canvas of scrapes, bruises, and rubbing alcohol. Their universal first-aid kit was just a quick wash under the garden hose and a Band-Aid. If a bone wasn't sticking out, you were fine.
They drank water straight from that same hose, ate Wonder Bread covered in butter and sugar, shared a single glass bottle of Coke among five friends, and somehow didn't die from a lack of sanitization.
This is the generation that knows how to rewind a cassette tape with a No. 2 pencil. They know the suspense of waiting all week for a movie to air on TV, because if you missed it, it was gone. They remember rotary phones, looking up a family in a massive paper phonebook, and the excitement of getting a color television.
They survived party lines, typewriter ribbons, early brick cell phones, and flip phones — and today, they might accidentally send you a 7-minute voice memo where the first 6 minutes are just them breathing and asking, "Hello? Can you hear me?"
And don't you dare laugh.
Because without a GPS, these people could drive halfway across the country using nothing but an old paper map, a cooler full of sandwiches, and the gut feeling that "the exit should be coming up somewhere around here."
They are the ultimate masters of household magic. They can stitch, tighten, glue, and fix just about anything. And somewhere in their pantry, they have a "bag of bags" that is literally older than half the gadgets you own.
Leave people over sixty alone. They saw the world before the internet, and they navigated the world after it. And through it all, they didn't just get by — they thrived.
People scroll past. Some don't think I can make something worth buying. I'm disabled and I made this by hand, stitch by stitch. Prove them wrong with me. 🌸
🇮🇪YOU'LL NEVER BEAT THE IRISH🇮🇪
I just want to personally thank every account big & small worldwide that have shown OUR HOME & OUR PEOPLE such love & support.
You're all appreciated beyond any words ever written💚
True unity is what they fear the most🤝
God bless you all🙌🇮🇪
Dear electorate of #Makersfield
This time next week....
By voting for the nakedly ambitious #AndyBurnham:
You are voting to prop up a corrupt and failing @UKLabour government who show only contempt for us
By voting for @RestoreBritain:
You are voting by proxy for the nakedly ambitious #AndyBurnhamto to prop up a corrupt and failing @UKLabour government who show only contempt for us.
Vote @reformparty_uk
Or our future is lost