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Boris...


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Anyway I tweet that doesn't suggest something that isn't there.......better check with vanity mag first though.

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Hahaha, incredible how eager you are to dismiss what happened in Dallas yesterday, it’s widely reported everywhere, here’s just a few.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/qanon-jfk-junior-trump-2024-b1949713.html

https://www.forbes.com/sites/teakve...n-dallas-awaiting-return-of-long-dead-jfk-jr/

https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2021/11/donald-trump-qanon-jfk-jr-texas

The funniest thing is that you obvs don’t want to believe it, as it makes conspiracy theorists look bad……<laugh>


If its not Neil Oliver on GB news, Brands on Youtube or anyone on Talkradio then it's just media misinformation Tobes.
 
Anyway I tweet that doesn't suggest something that isn't there.......better check with vanity mag first though.

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This the same guy who has been kicked off gofundme?
 
If its not Neil Oliver on GB news, Brands on Youtube or anyone on Talkradio then it's just media misinformation Tobes.
depends what they say, when they report someone dying after receiving a vaccine, they're telling the truth. But anything that doesn't fit w/e Abe's reality is, that'll be the zionists keeping the truth back.
 
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Peej I can see you pretending your germ comment didn't happen.....now who's the dull **** the Dr or thick **** peel

https://kidshealth.org/en/parents/germs.html

glad she referred to it as a germ. Cos everyone else thinks and comments on it as a virus.
Coronagerm sounds better.

but by all means reference talk radio, the station that has a presenter who thinks you can grow concrete.

ew got your bird flu passport. Rife in Wales.
 
What a presenter has to do with what the Dr says is beyond me fella.........deflection tactics are poor peej boy.

Anyways there's been no comment on the China school article I posted........are u guys against treating children like criminals or for it based on covid fear
 
Coronagerm in China.

ew should be worried about bird flu in Wales. Good job the pass-port system is assembled in Wales.
 
To anyone who thinks this poisonous, corrupt bunch of ****ers aren't rotten to the core...

Conservative Owen Paterson has avoided punishment for now as the government ordered its MPs to back a review of standards investigations.

The result of the vote was met with cries of "shame" from opposition MPs.

Mr Paterson was found to have misused his position as an MP to benefit two companies he worked for.

But he said the probe into his conduct had been unfair - and the government backed plans by his allies to overhaul the system.

Labour, the SNP and Lib Dems voted against the plans, along with 13 Conservative MPs, but it was carried by 18 votes after a heated Commons debate.

Labour's deputy leader Angela Rayner accused the Conservatives of being "rotten to the core" and called the move an "absolute disgrace".

She said Labour would "not be taking any part in this sham process or any corrupt committee", with the SNP and Lib Dems also saying they would boycott the overhaul.

The controversy comes after a committee of MPs recommended Mr Paterson be suspended from the Commons for 30 days, following a damning report into his conduct by the Parliamentary Standards Commissioner Kathryn Stone.

The report said the former Northern Ireland secretary had breached Commons rules by lobbying government bodies about Randox and Lynn's Country Foods, which employed him as a paid consultant.

At Prime Minister's Questions, Boris Johnson said MPs found to have broken the rules should get a right of appeal, as would happen with doctors and teachers found guilty of misconduct.

But the SNP's Pete Wishart accused the government of "attempting to turn back the clock to the worst examples of 1990s Tory sleaze".

There could be serious consequences in Parliament if the opposition parties decide to use this moment to withdraw cooperation on other committees or ways of working.

Some ministers already fear this is an episode that Downing Street may come to regret.

The Commons standards committee found that the North Shropshire MP had used his parliamentary office on 16 occasions for meetings relating to his outside business interests and sent two letters relating to business interests on House of Commons-headed notepaper.

It described the MP's actions as "an egregious case of paid advocacy".


If you don't like the rules and think they don't apply to you once you've been found guilty of breaking them... simply change them. This is the Britain we live in. Like a tinpot fcking backwater state.
 
To anyone who thinks this poisonous, corrupt bunch of ****ers aren't rotten to the core...

Conservative Owen Paterson has avoided punishment for now as the government ordered its MPs to back a review of standards investigations.

The result of the vote was met with cries of "shame" from opposition MPs.

Mr Paterson was found to have misused his position as an MP to benefit two companies he worked for.

But he said the probe into his conduct had been unfair - and the government backed plans by his allies to overhaul the system.

Labour, the SNP and Lib Dems voted against the plans, along with 13 Conservative MPs, but it was carried by 18 votes after a heated Commons debate.

Labour's deputy leader Angela Rayner accused the Conservatives of being "rotten to the core" and called the move an "absolute disgrace".

She said Labour would "not be taking any part in this sham process or any corrupt committee", with the SNP and Lib Dems also saying they would boycott the overhaul.

The controversy comes after a committee of MPs recommended Mr Paterson be suspended from the Commons for 30 days, following a damning report into his conduct by the Parliamentary Standards Commissioner Kathryn Stone.

The report said the former Northern Ireland secretary had breached Commons rules by lobbying government bodies about Randox and Lynn's Country Foods, which employed him as a paid consultant.

At Prime Minister's Questions, Boris Johnson said MPs found to have broken the rules should get a right of appeal, as would happen with doctors and teachers found guilty of misconduct.

But the SNP's Pete Wishart accused the government of "attempting to turn back the clock to the worst examples of 1990s Tory sleaze".

There could be serious consequences in Parliament if the opposition parties decide to use this moment to withdraw cooperation on other committees or ways of working.

Some ministers already fear this is an episode that Downing Street may come to regret.

The Commons standards committee found that the North Shropshire MP had used his parliamentary office on 16 occasions for meetings relating to his outside business interests and sent two letters relating to business interests on House of Commons-headed notepaper.

It described the MP's actions as "an egregious case of paid advocacy".


If you don't like the rules and think they don't apply to you once you've been found guilty of breaking them... simply change them. This is the Britain we live in. Like a tinpot fcking backwater state.
It’s stinks like a week old mackerel, but we don’t have a politics thread for a reason mate.

Cheers.
 
Something is not right about this whole thing, and I struggle to make sense of it - but I'm not just looking at the investigation carried out against him, I'm looking deeper going back to his wifes suicide.

His wife took her life during the investigation, she also commited suicide on his birthday. Yet despite it destroying his family, he still wants to hold his post, regardless of any finding by the investigation.

Odd all very odd.
 
To anyone who thinks this poisonous, corrupt bunch of ****ers aren't rotten to the core...

Conservative Owen Paterson has avoided punishment for now as the government ordered its MPs to back a review of standards investigations.

The result of the vote was met with cries of "shame" from opposition MPs.

Mr Paterson was found to have misused his position as an MP to benefit two companies he worked for.

But he said the probe into his conduct had been unfair - and the government backed plans by his allies to overhaul the system.

Labour, the SNP and Lib Dems voted against the plans, along with 13 Conservative MPs, but it was carried by 18 votes after a heated Commons debate.

Labour's deputy leader Angela Rayner accused the Conservatives of being "rotten to the core" and called the move an "absolute disgrace".

She said Labour would "not be taking any part in this sham process or any corrupt committee", with the SNP and Lib Dems also saying they would boycott the overhaul.

The controversy comes after a committee of MPs recommended Mr Paterson be suspended from the Commons for 30 days, following a damning report into his conduct by the Parliamentary Standards Commissioner Kathryn Stone.

The report said the former Northern Ireland secretary had breached Commons rules by lobbying government bodies about Randox and Lynn's Country Foods, which employed him as a paid consultant.

At Prime Minister's Questions, Boris Johnson said MPs found to have broken the rules should get a right of appeal, as would happen with doctors and teachers found guilty of misconduct.

But the SNP's Pete Wishart accused the government of "attempting to turn back the clock to the worst examples of 1990s Tory sleaze".

There could be serious consequences in Parliament if the opposition parties decide to use this moment to withdraw cooperation on other committees or ways of working.

Some ministers already fear this is an episode that Downing Street may come to regret.

The Commons standards committee found that the North Shropshire MP had used his parliamentary office on 16 occasions for meetings relating to his outside business interests and sent two letters relating to business interests on House of Commons-headed notepaper.

It described the MP's actions as "an egregious case of paid advocacy".


If you don't like the rules and think they don't apply to you once you've been found guilty of breaking them... simply change them. This is the Britain we live in. Like a tinpot fcking backwater state.

I agree but I remember that last political thread...so I'm like...

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To anyone who thinks this poisonous, corrupt bunch of ****ers aren't rotten to the core...

Conservative Owen Paterson has avoided punishment for now as the government ordered its MPs to back a review of standards investigations.

The result of the vote was met with cries of "shame" from opposition MPs.

Mr Paterson was found to have misused his position as an MP to benefit two companies he worked for.

But he said the probe into his conduct had been unfair - and the government backed plans by his allies to overhaul the system.

Labour, the SNP and Lib Dems voted against the plans, along with 13 Conservative MPs, but it was carried by 18 votes after a heated Commons debate.

Labour's deputy leader Angela Rayner accused the Conservatives of being "rotten to the core" and called the move an "absolute disgrace".

She said Labour would "not be taking any part in this sham process or any corrupt committee", with the SNP and Lib Dems also saying they would boycott the overhaul.

The controversy comes after a committee of MPs recommended Mr Paterson be suspended from the Commons for 30 days, following a damning report into his conduct by the Parliamentary Standards Commissioner Kathryn Stone.

The report said the former Northern Ireland secretary had breached Commons rules by lobbying government bodies about Randox and Lynn's Country Foods, which employed him as a paid consultant.

At Prime Minister's Questions, Boris Johnson said MPs found to have broken the rules should get a right of appeal, as would happen with doctors and teachers found guilty of misconduct.

But the SNP's Pete Wishart accused the government of "attempting to turn back the clock to the worst examples of 1990s Tory sleaze".

There could be serious consequences in Parliament if the opposition parties decide to use this moment to withdraw cooperation on other committees or ways of working.

Some ministers already fear this is an episode that Downing Street may come to regret.

The Commons standards committee found that the North Shropshire MP had used his parliamentary office on 16 occasions for meetings relating to his outside business interests and sent two letters relating to business interests on House of Commons-headed notepaper.

It described the MP's actions as "an egregious case of paid advocacy".


If you don't like the rules and think they don't apply to you once you've been found guilty of breaking them... simply change them. This is the Britain we live in. Like a tinpot fcking backwater state.
I hope he was paying the right amount of tax on that second income.
 
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The Muslims did it.....oh and rt news is a putin state sponsored news channel aired on UK TV for some reason :emoticon-0160-movie
 
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