๐จ The Murrell of all car crash interviews!! Makes Andrew Mountbatten's stories about not sweating and Pizza Express in Woking seem credible by comparison. ๐๐คก #bbclaurak#BrassNic#Sturgeon
@AvonandsomerRob Familiar angry wee nyaff face that most of Scotland has seen too much of over the past decade finally makes an appearance on national television for all the fawning, leftie eejits down South to see.
NEW: Sky News came to Ireland in an attempt to question Nicola Sturgeon about claims she shut down scrutiny of SNP finances at the same time her ex-husband Peter Murrell stole ยฃ400k from party.
She entered the kitchen to avoid questions with security pushing me away.
@SkyNews
๐ We can today announce the signing of striker Lawrence Shankland on a two-year deal with an option for an additional year.
The @ScotlandNT international will join from @JamTarts on undisclosed terms once the transfer window opens.
โก๏ธ Read more: https://t.co/23s7F5nDSw
@joannaccherry@alexmeerkat87 You were complicit in damage Sturgeon has done to Scotland, the SNP & the independence movement you clapped like a seal and kept your cake hole shut and turned a blind eye and done what your were told
Britain crosses these lines brazenly now. No debate. No shame. A government decree, a police order, and suddenly the people who feed the country โ the most rooted, law-abiding citizens we have โ are the ones being marched away in handcuffs. Not for rioting. Not for violence. For turning up to protest a tax raid that threatens the survival of family farms. This is what decay looks like when it turns into something darker: the state deciding who may speak and who must be silenced.
The images from Westminster should chill anyone with a sense of Britain's old freedoms. Dozens of tractors draped in Union flags. Farmers who spend their lives in mud, dawn light and hard graft, standing in the capital because Rachel Reeves has reached for the most brutal tool in the Treasury drawer โ inheritance tax โ and pointed it straight at the land itself. One death in the family and the farm breaks into pieces, sold off to pay the bill. That is the reality behind the Budget's polite language. These men aren't in London for show. They are there because their futures have been put on the block.
And what did the state do? The Met, which can't find the strength to stand up to eco-fanatics or pro-Hamas mobs, suddenly discovered iron in its spine the moment it faced peaceful rural protest. Section 14 orders. Sudden bans. Farmers singled out and cuffed like criminals. Officers who were helping them park an hour earlier switched roles and started clearing them out. This is not policing. This is obedience enforcement โ selective, political, and aimed squarely at the demographic this government thinks it can steamroller without consequence.
The excuse was "disruption." As if tractors circling Trafalgar Square for a morning threaten the life of the nation, while city-blocking marches and flag-waving fanatics do not. It's the same double standard we've seen for years: indulgence for the activist Left; force for the ordinary citizen who dares to object. A country that treats its farmers as a nuisance is already half-lost. A country that arrests them for standing in public is well on the way to something worse.
This isn't happening by accident. It's the logical end of a government drunk on its own authority. They raid family farms for cash; then they send the police to muzzle the people affected. They ban tractors for "serious disruption" while gutting the mechanisms that once protected the public from the state. Speech tightened. Protest restricted. Juries stripped from trials. Now this. One brick at a time, the wall between the government and unchecked power is being pulled down.
Farmers don't protest unless they have been pushed to breaking point. A ruling class that still understood the country it governs would know that. This one doesn't care. It sees them as an obstacle, not a backbone. And that is why the images from Westminster matter: they reveal a state no longer restrained by shame or tradition. A state that believes it can handcuff the hands that feed it and get away with it.
The truth is simple: a government that fears peaceful farmers fears the country itself. And a government that turns the police on them is not preserving order; it is testing how far it can go. Britain isn't at the end of this road yet. But the direction of travel is plain to anyone with eyes open.
"Farmers singled out and cuffed like criminals. Officers who were helping them park an hour earlier switched roles and started clearing them out."
Tonight's Glasgow Council Planning Department meeting was a cracker.
Councillor Hanif Raja decided to go to the toilet in the middle of the meeting with his camera still running.
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