Either Nick Fletcher, Conservative MP for Don Valley, really likes this photo or... he's managed to strike exactly the same pose, in exactly the same clothes 11 months apart. #DanHannanSpecial
It's been pointed out to Fletcher but he's clearly styling it out
Call me old fashioned but I think a fairly low bar for how much you can trust someone is to be able to believe that they are where they say they are. Especially when they're a politician
Maybe that's just me... maybe we're all totally cool with people flat our lying
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How much do you think it cost Roald Amundsen to send a telegram to Norway (from Canada) in 1906? He had just successfully navigated the North West passage so he had a lot to say - 1,000 words to be precise but how much... in US dollars.
We - like millions - obeyed the rules last Christmas. It was tough. My sister was up the road, my mum had just died, we all wanted to meet up. But we stuck to the rules - for the benefit of all. Then again... we're the little people aren't we. mirror.co.uk/news/politics/…
He's "doing his best" or something
If you think otherwise. It's you they hold in contempt. They think you're thick.
Long read on how British black propaganda and fake newsletters helped spark one of the worst atrocities in post war history. The events of 1965-66 in Indonesia and the purge against the PKI is little known here. Our part in them hardly known at all. theguardian.com/world/2021/oct…
Undoubtedly the History Reclaimed lot will just ignore this stuff.
In my twenties I bizarrely found myself talking to Margaret Thatcher at a drinks party and somehow the subject got onto this. "The problem with Indonesia is that it was never colonised by the British!" She declared loudly at me - and having drunk enough I politely corrected her.
Sounds impressive doesn't it. Cecil Rhodes the liberal who wanted to give "indigenous people" the same rights as white colonisers.
But take 30 seconds to fact check it and it falls apart like delicate tissue in a hot power shower.
Cecil Rhodes.... the reformer...
I went to school in Rhodes' hometown - Bishops Stortford - and they and we were all - then - very proud of him. The son of a small market town who had conquered Africa. I remember a very forthright teacher angrily lamenting the fact Rhodesia was being renamed Zimbabwe.