It's the start of GAY PRIDE MONTH. As an older gay man I'm not proud.
My generation fought SO hard for assimilation, NOT distinction.
WE ACHIEVED IT.
We just wanted to have the same rights as anyone else. We wanted equality in the workplace, society, the right to marry, have children, families and be regular members of society after years of indescribable persecution, emotional and psychological damage.
WE GOT THAT.
No one cared anymore. We won.
Future generations destroyed everything we worked so hard to create for FOR THEM.
They alienated the public through their ridiculous antics and gender politics to the point that I would not be caught dead at a PRIDE event or associate myself with the rainbow flag, or anything to do with the
community they have hijacked.
I'm not proud. I'm ashamed.
You, spoiled, entitled pink and blue haired little pricks, with no concept or regard for history have annihilated all of our suffering and hard work.
You have nothing to be proud of and THERE ARE ONLY TWO SEXES.
DEAL WITH IT. @dnc@HRC@Pride@LGBAlliance_USA@lgbinternationl
The Somerset Farmhouse of 1 North Street, Williton were approached by a "food influencer" that wanted to charge them £2,000 for a review.
They put out a video of Sally eating a sausage roll instead 😆.
Lets make Sally and the Somerset Farmhouse famous for free.
@Real_Politik101@captive_dreamer Oh get real. The man has integrity and is calling out a low and unworthy Reform attack on Badenoch. That may not be how politics is done - but it's honourable.
Perhaps it seems a small detail, but we should not use the term “racist”.
Our problem is that our regimes are anti-White.
The term “racist” is still anchored to the egalitarian framework (everyone is qual). Which is a yoke we must cast off – it is strangling us.
Thus, it should be framed in the following way:
Young White British men are bleeding in the street as a direct result of our anti-White establishment.
As a former police officer, former Police Federation representative, and former lay magistrate (Justice of the Peace), I am profoundly disturbed by the circumstances surrounding the death of Henry Nowak.
An 18-year-old male, suffering from multiple visible puncture wounds to the abdomen, reportedly informed attending officers that he had been stabbed and was struggling to breathe. Despite this, he remained restrained until he collapsed. He later died from his injuries.
The suggestion that he “would have died anyway”, or that officers were merely “misled”, raises extremely serious concerns regarding operational judgement, prioritisation, and the discharge of the police’s most fundamental duty: the preservation of life.
Where a detainee presents with obvious and potentially catastrophic injuries, officers are under a clear duty to respond with urgency, caution, and immediate medical intervention. If the reported facts are accurate, there appear to have been grave failures in that duty.
Having once worn the uniform myself, I find the allegations deeply troubling. Public confidence in policing depends upon accountability, professionalism, and the proper exercise of duty under pressure. Those standards appear, at the very least, to warrant rigorous independent scrutiny in this case.
In my view, the conduct of the attending officers should be subject to full investigation for potential gross negligence manslaughter, alongside consideration of gross misconduct proceedings where appropriate.
The Independent Office for Police Conduct must carry out a thorough, fearless, and fully transparent investigation. Given the seriousness of the allegations and the level of public concern, there is also a compelling case for a wider public inquiry into whether any systemic or institutional failings contributed to this tragedy.
Henry Nowak should not have died in handcuffs while reportedly pleading for help.
My thoughts are with his family and loved ones.
Germany is in a multi year recession
France is heading for an IMF bailout
The pipeline of new EU members are all broke countries
But yes, re join this bloc, it’s going so well