Tola is still #missing
She whilst on a walk 17 June from Selby, not far from the golf club
She chased a rabbit & did not return
She is chipped, spayed & reported missing & was wearing a red collar with tag
If you see her, please do not call or chase her, please call owner ASAP
DAY 19 💔💔💔💔
💔💔💔PLEASE HELP US FIND ELEANOR💔💔💔
Our little pony girl, Eleanor, we are so heart broken 💔💔💔💔.
She is out there, and we are desperately hoping for her safe return.
If you have Eleanor, or if you know where she is, please do the right thing and bring her home.
A €5,000 reward is being offered for her safe return.
No questions asked. Nothing will be said. We only want Eleanor back where she belongs, safe with her MLHR family.
Please, if you have any information at all, contact us immediately.
Text: +353 (87) 261 1463
Please help bring Eleanor home 💔💔💔💔💔
If you can donate to new higher, stronger fencing to keep our poor rescues safe from evil humans please donate:
https://t.co/gBLskZcYFk
#BringEleanorHome
Swipe to see Lydia Longlegs being the cutest girl in the world!!
She is a fun-loving, wriggly girl who loves to play ball and do zoomies around the place. Lydia is a very clever girl and likes to play games that get her brain thinking.
Lydia is an absolute sweetheart and would make an excellent new companion to a family looking for an active and friendly girl.
Get in touch today to find out more about this pawfect girl!
https://t.co/N9mKxyL2zX
@dogstrust
#adoptdontshop
#adogisforlife
#dogstrustwestcalder
I’m sorry, this is total bollocks. I have been looking after my river for a decade and you have done absolutely nothing to support me and the other hundreds of volunteers who give up their free time to do your job for you and to stop the river we love from dying.
This picture is the part of the Aldersbrook that we haven’t yet restored. Do you agree that allowing one of the ancient rivers of London to disappear beneath a layer of sewage, silt, rubbish & knotweed is a disgrace? If so, when can we expect EA teams down in the river to sort it out?
West Midlands-Foster
Annette always gets overlooked💔
In fact she's been cancelled 4 times, because 'she's not the one'.
She is 5 years old and is a calm, gentle girl who loves with her whole heart💖
She can live with dogs, savvy cats and savvy kids 10+
https://t.co/UKATK6O6W4
Are you fuckings joking??? Telling the england team to 'keep wininning' so guy dont beat their wives?!?!
HAVE WE AS A SOCIETY LOST THE FUCKING PLOT??????
MAYBE STOP BEATING WOMEN AND COMMITING FEMOCIDE!!! FUCKING SPEECHLESS!!! ABHORRENT AND TASTELESS WORDS FROM A FUCKING MP
URGENT - DRONE AND SEARCH HELP NEEDED
#BRUCE IS #MISSING NEAR THE SUMMIT OF #YGARN, #ERYRI (SNOWDONIA), #LL57 AREA,#GWYNEDD, NORTH WALES SINCE THURSDAY, 18TH JUNE, 2026
Last seen at https://t.co/JQBCu47Nfi
https://t.co/tjsGuHnj3I
The military camp at Crowborough was sold as the sensible alternative to migrant hotels – cheaper, controlled, a way to “get a grip”.
Now the numbers are out: £7.1m in four months to house around 350 asylum seekers, roughly £160 per person per night, more than the average £144 per night hotel bill.
So the Home Office has managed to turn a military training site into a boutique hotel that costs taxpayers more per head than the thing they told us they were replacing.
This isn’t policy, it’s theatre: punish the locals with protests, brutalise the landscape with barbed wire, and still send the taxpayer a bigger invoice.
We are struggling to find Junior a new home, despite his previous appeals. Can you please share to help him on his way?
Junior is a 6 month old Malinois cross Mastiff. He is available and looking for a new home through no fault of his own.
Junior would be best in a home with no other pets due to his size and dominance over other dogs.
He is young enough to be trained however we will be very specific in his new home as we'd like someone who is use to the breed and can demonstrate that they can train him and offer him the guidance he needs.
Junior hasn't been around kids much. He would be best with older children of a teenage age due to his size.
He is chipped and eats meat pouches and biscuits.
Junior is use to being left on his own for any length of time and is great meeting new people.
He hasn't met any cats.
Junior is okay on the lead but will need training with this. He is also registered at the vets and loves playing with toys.
He is walked around 3 times a day and likes to go to the park.
For any information please email [email protected]
He fed all 150 of us before he made himself a plate.
Friday the 13th. United flight 2480, San Francisco to Houston.
Somewhere over New Mexico, a passenger collapsed in the bathroom. The plane went quiet in that particular way, the kind where strangers who will never know each other's names start silently praying for the same person.
We made an emergency landing in Albuquerque. An ambulance was already waiting on the tarmac.
That should have been the story.
But the delay pushed our crew past their legal flying hours. FAA rules. Nobody's fault, just the math of safety regulations meeting a long, hard day. A new crew had to fly in from Chicago. We weren't leaving until almost 10:30 that night.
Seven extra hours. In an airport. With cranky kids, empty stomachs, and the particular exhaustion of watching a short delay quietly turn into an entire evening you didn't plan for.
United sent meal vouchers. Eventually. 7:15 p.m.
Every restaurant in the terminal was already closed.
150 people. A stack of useless paper. Nowhere to spend it.
That's when our captain picked up his phone.
He didn't ask corporate. Didn't wait for approval. Didn't make an announcement to the gate so everyone would know what he was about to do. He just called a local pizza place and ordered 30 pizzas.
Out of his own pocket.
When the boxes arrived, he didn't hand them off to a gate agent and walk away. He organized a line, by seat number, the only fair way to do it, and stood there in his full captain's uniform, serving slices to exhausted strangers one at a time. When a box ran out, he broke it down and opened the next one.
He fed all 150 of us.
Then, and only then, he made himself a plate.
Before we finally boarded the replacement flight, he stood at the door and shook the hand of every single passenger as they walked past him to their seat. Every one.
I've flown more flights than I can count.
I have never seen anything like this.
Nothing about that night was in his job description. Nobody would have faulted him for handing out vouchers and disappearing into the crew lounge to rest. He had every reason to be as tired as the rest of us.
He chose to be the one still standing, still serving, still making sure 150 strangers felt like someone in that building actually cared whether they ate.
That's not customer service.
That's just who he is when no one's required to be.
To the captain of Flight 2480, somewhere out there, you probably don't think this was a big deal.
It was. 🍕✈️
If Vladimir Putin changed the voting system days before an election to stop his opponents winning, every British journalist would call it what it is: rigging the rules.
Tonight, Labour rammed through a last‑minute switch in the Lords so that if Andy Burnham wins Makerfield and quits as Greater Manchester Mayor, his replacement won’t be chosen on a simple first‑past‑the‑post ballot, but on the supplementary vote system instead.
Why now?
Because Labour knows the race to replace Burnham would be a straight two‑horse fight with Reform UK – and under FPTP, the candidate with the most votes wins, no second chances, no back‑room redistributions, no “stop Reform” stitch‑ups.
Under SV, Labour gets a second bite of the cherry: if their candidate can limp into the top two, they can hoover up second preferences from every other party and magic a “majority” on the second count, even if Reform tops the poll on first preferences.
This isn’t “modernising democracy”. It’s the governing party using its Commons majority and the unelected Lords to hurriedly doctor the rules of one specific contest because it’s terrified the voters might choose someone else.
When the establishment preached to the world about “rules‑based order”, they forgot to mention one thing: in Britain, the rules are “based” on whether Labour thinks it might lose.
A £1 beach toy is costing seals their lives. Campaigners warn plastic flying rings are being lost and drifting into the sea. The founder of the Seal Research Trust Sue Sayer is now taking the fight to Westminster, calling for a UK-wide ban.
“They lead to slow, painful deaths - especially for young seals”
More here: https://t.co/b72eyr1aqw
💥 PLEASE HELP BRING ELEANOR HOME 💥 **From FB: DAY 14. We are heartbroken. Every day without Eleanor is agony. Someone knows where she is. Someone has seen something. If you have any information at all, please come forward.‼️ €5,000 REWARD for information leading to Eleanor's safe return. If Eleanor is with you, please show compassion. She is innocent, deeply loved, and desperately missed. No questions. No judgment. We just want our little pony home.
Please share, keep a lookout, and take photos if you think you've spotted her.
Please help bring Eleanor home.** https://t.co/exJspKOWIR #HorsesOfTwitter #Horses #MissingPony
22 YEARS LATER AND NOBODY HAS ANSWERED FOR WHAT HAPPENED TO DR DAVID KELLY
His name was Dr David Kelly. Most people have forgotten him. They shouldn't.
He was a quiet, mild-mannered scientist who spent his career inspecting weapons facilities around the world.
He knew more about Iraq's arsenal than almost anyone alive.
In 2003, Tony Blair's @InstituteGC government published a dossier claiming Saddam Hussein could deploy chemical weapons within 45 minutes. That claim was used to justify a war.
Kelly knew the intelligence behind it was being exaggerated. He said so, privately, to a @BBCNews journalist.
That one conversation destroyed his life.
The government found out he was the source. Instead of protecting a man who had served his country for decades, they quietly let his name reach the press. He was publicly identified, dragged before two parliamentary committees, and grilled by his own employer.
His wife said he came home a broken man.
On the afternoon of 17 July 2003, he left his house for a walk in the Oxfordshire countryside. He was 59 years old. He never came back.
His body was found the next morning in woodland. A knife beside him. A blister pack of painkillers nearby.
Here is where it gets worse.
Tony Blair personally intervened to replace the normal coroner's inquest with a private inquiry run by Lord Hutton.
The original inquest was suspended before it even properly began. It was never resumed. To this day,
Dr David Kelly is the only person in England and Wales in living memory to have died in unexplained circumstances without receiving a full coroner's inquest.
Lord Hutton concluded suicide. Case closed.
Except eight senior doctors and a former coroner wrote to @thetimes saying the verdict was medically unsafe.
The wound found on Kelly's wrist, a severed ulnar artery, would not cause fatal blood loss in a healthy person.
There were no fingerprints on the knife. The painkillers found were not in a quantity that experts considered lethal.
The government's response, delivered by Attorney General Dominic Grieve in 2011, was essentially: the Hutton Inquiry was good enough, stop asking questions.
Think about that. A man quietly raised concerns about the biggest political deception in modern British history, a war that led to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people. He was publicly exposed, professionally destroyed, and found dead days later and the government personally made sure there would never be a proper independent investigation into how he died.
Tony Blair went on to become a Middle East Peace Envoy. He has a knighthood.
Dr David Kelly got a private inquiry, a rushed verdict, and a sealed post-mortem report that was not released to the public for years.
Nobody was ever held accountable. Not for any of it.
This story should be on the front page every single year. Share it if you think it matters.
Sources: @BBCNews@guardian@thetimes@PrivateEyeNews
17 June 1940. A date that should never be forgotten. 🌺
Today we remember the 4,000+ people who lost their lives when the RMS Lancastria was sunk off the coast of France during the Second World War.
For decades, the scale of the tragedy remained largely unknown, yet it remains one of the greatest losses of life in British maritime history.
We also remember those who survived, including Charlie Napier, whose experiences help ensure the stories of that day continue to be shared and remembered.
As we reflect on the sacrifice of those who never came home, we honour their memory and recognise the lasting impact on the families, friends and communities they left behind.
Lest we forget. 🌺🕊️
Photos: Charles Napier, June 2008 – Public Domain (via Wikimedia Commons)
Pauline Marie, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons. https://t.co/XOeAPri2ZO
This is someone that wants endangered species like dormice to be murdered. What a hypocrite to be outraged at the mythical deaths of ponies but to endorse the mass slaughter of protected species in the name of economic ‘growth’.
To floating voters in #Makerfield, I say this: firstly congrats on achieving levitation, and more importantly the Conservatives have been polling at 1%. #VoteBinface and we can beat the Tories, pulling off the biggest electoral humiliation since I beat Britain First in 2024!