a feminist. believer in and promoter of equality, social justice & human rights. CEO of All We Can - tweets mine..

Joined May 2012
1,542 Photos and videos
David Thomson retweeted
Today marks the start of #REFUGEEWEEK 🧡 Throughout the week, we’ll be sharing lots of informative content around refugees and our work. @RefugeeWeek #RefugeeWeek #Refugee #Refugees #WorldRefugeeDay #HumanRights #AllWeCan #Humanitarian #AllWeCan
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David Thomson retweeted
We wanted to hop on this trend to let you know that you can COUNT YOURSELF IN now for Harvest with All We Can! ➕ ➗ ✖️ ➖ 🟰 Access our Harvest resources now: allwecan.org.uk/harvest #Harvest #CountYourselfIn #AllWeCan #HarvestResources #WorshipResources #Education
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David Thomson retweeted
Israel is the world’s greatest killer and I can’t find a single Western headline about it.
BREAKING: Israeli army responsible for 56% of civilian deaths by explosive weapons in 2025: Report 🔴 LIVE updates: aje.news/q9qy6y?update=46482…
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David Thomson retweeted
"The UN is a cautious institution." Its listing of Israel for its systematic use of sexual violence "was not made on a whim." Now the task is to hold Israeli officials accountable. International justice is needed to end the domestic impunity. trib.al/4KpJOpB
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David Thomson retweeted
Gut wrenching to see four young people jailed for direct action against an arms supplier to Israel. Years in prison for protesting to save lives in Gaza, with 'terrorism' used despite no jury convicting them of it. A truly dangerous attack on the right to protest.
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David Thomson retweeted
New footage obtained by B’Tselem uncovers the moments when the Abu Haikal family was shot. Seven-month-old Sam Abu Haikal was killed in the shooting, and both his parents were injured. The footage clearly shows that the Israeli soldier fired at the car as it was slowing to a stop. The car was far from the soldiers and posed no danger to them whatsoever. Moments later, in another video obtained by B’Tselem, seven-month-old Sam’s father, Fahed, is seen just after his son was shot. Fahed is holding baby Sam in his arms, trying to stop the bleeding from his head with his hands, while Sam’s mother, Daniyah, who was also injured by the gunfire while holding her son, is seen sitting on the ground, next to the car. Last Friday, 5 June, an Israeli soldier fired at a Palestinian family driving home from a family visit, as they sat in their car in the Tel Rumeidah neighborhood in Hebron. The family was shot as the car was slowing to a stop at the soldier’s command. Sam, a seven‑month‑old baby who was in his mother’s arms in the back seat, was struck in the head and pronounced dead shortly afterward. Sam’s parents were also injured by the gunfire; his mother is still in the hospital. After the shooting, the soldier who fired and another soldier who was with him left the scene without checking the car or offering any assistance to the critically wounded baby or to his mother. In the past two and a half years, Israel has killed tens of thousands of children in Gaza and the West Bank. The immunity it gets from the international community has led to a reality where, under Israeli rule, Palestinian lives are entirely disposable – even a seven‑month‑old baby.
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David Thomson retweeted
Our reaction: woefully insufficient, and will barely move the dial on Israeli annexation and apartheid. We need far more. The barest minimum would be: Ban settlement trade, ban arms trade with Israel, suspend the UK-Israel Trade Agreement.
The UK and partners are sanctioning networks enabling settler violence in the West Bank. We are also advising British businesses against economic activity in illegal settlements.
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David Thomson retweeted
Systematic violence and human rights violations are not exceptions to Israel's apartheid regime and occupation, they are integral to it. Israel is using unbridled violence in all the territories under its control, as well as in Lebanon and Iran. Since October 2023, this policy has escalated: In Gaza: tens of thousands of Palestinians killed, millions forcibly displaced, entire neighborhoods and infrastructure systematically destroyed In the West Bank: about 1,082 Palestinians killed, including 239 children and teenagers; 61 communities with at least 4,161 members forcibly displaced and another 15 partially so, with at least 454 members displaced In Israeli prisons: thousands of Palestinians subjected to systemic torture, violence and humiliation, in inhumane conditions Under Israel's apartheid regime, Palestinian lives are treated as expendable and millions across the Middle East are at risk.
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David Thomson retweeted
Today is #WorldOceansDay 🌊 We hope you will join us in prayer as we celebrate and seek justice for God's creation🙏 🌊 🦭 🐙 🐚 🐬 🐡 🪸 🐳
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David Thomson retweeted
Andy Burnham says he "can't judge" if the Israeli military's crimes in Gaza are a genocide. The experts already have. A UN commission, the International Association of Genocide Scholars, and leading rights orgs all agree: it's genocide. Andy, why won't you call it what it is?
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David Thomson retweeted
Today is World Environment Day 🌍 A day designed to mark the need for global climate action to protect our planet. We hope you join us as we pray for creation 🙏
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David Thomson retweeted
WORLD BICYCLE DAY 🚲 Today, we're celebrating #WorldBicycleDay by spotlighting our wonderful partner in Uganda, FABIO! youtu.be/vll2hbu_ibQ 📷 All Footage Supplied by FABIO
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David Thomson retweeted
It's that time again... Superintendents' Conference in Blackpool is underway and we'd love to see you! If you're in Blackpool for Supers, be sure to pay the All We Can stall a visit! You won't be disappointed 💛 The team can't wait to see you 💛👋
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David Thomson retweeted
Statement from Bishop Dr. Imad Haddad on the Israeli Detainment of Natalie Abudayyeh This morning a beloved youth from our church community, Natalie Abuddayeh, was taken at gunpoint by Israeli forces from her student apartment in Birzeit alongside three other women. We are deeply shocked and horrified by this news, as well as by the news that her family does not yet know where she has been taken. Natalie is a member of Evangelical Lutheran Church of the Reformation in Beit Jala, a graduate of Talitha Kumi Lutheran School, and a Media and Journalism student at Birzeit University. As Bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan and the Holy Land, I unequivocally call for Natalie’s immediate release. The entire ELCJHL stands in solidarity with the Abudayyeh family and the Beit Jala and Birzeit communities, and we join them in earnest prayer for Natalie’s safety and freedom. We are incredibly disturbed by the reality that Natalie now joins the thousands of Palestinians in Israeli detention without charge or trial. Palestinian civilians, including women and children, suffer deep injustice in Israeli military detention and are often held for months or years with no explanation. We call on our friends, partners, and siblings in Christ around the world to advocate for Natalie’s freedom using whatever channels are available to them, and to demand an end to this unjust and unequal system of detainment and detention that paralyzes and destroys Palestinian communities. Bishop Dr. Imad Haddad Bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan and the Holy Land
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David Thomson retweeted
🎉 Today marks the start of Volunteers' Week! 💛 We want to take a moment to say a huge THANK YOU to everyone who gives their time and effort to All We Can, whether big or small! 🙌 We are so grateful for your support. You are a vital part of All We Can’s story!
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David Thomson retweeted
Yes. And that means committing to these arguments and a plan now. It's time to hold our nerve and stand for what's right. Our country is in crisis and it's time to end Rip off Britain.
Whether it is Tony Blair’s interventions, the bond market’s reaction or privatised utilities warning of doom, the pattern is the same. When anyone suggests progressive change, those with wealth and power push back. Whether the figure in question is @AndyBurnhamGM or @ZackPolanski, progressives need to understand what we are up against, and how to defeat it. Very often, I find, science fiction names what politics struggles to. In James SA Corey’s series of novels the Expanse, the violent dystopian streets of Baltimore are given a name for what happens when the old order breaks down faster than people can describe it: the Churn. It is the brutal reorganisation of power, when familiar rules collapse and those who survive are the ones who read the signs early. Britain is in one now. In fact, two churns are happening at once. The first is electoral. May’s local elections were a rupture with the past. Labour lost roughly 1,100 councillors. Reform won 1,257 seats and 10 councils. The Greens won Hackney and Lewisham. In Makerfield, the parliamentary constituency where Andy Burnham is seeking a route back to the Commons, Reform took every council ward. The progressive vote has fragmented and Reform has captured a large part of the anger. The container in which transformative politics could once be argued for and delivered – a dependable Labourmajority in the Commons – is visibly crumbling. The second churn is deeper. Burnham named it when he said Britain had been “on the wrong course for 40 years”. That was a diagnosis of the political economy that has governed Britain since the late 1970s: financialisation, privatisation, hollowed-out public services and the transfer of wealth and power away from workers, communities and the public realm. This is why the events of recent weeks matter. Burnham needs a state that is able to pay for big-ticket, social-democratic projects: council homes, clean energy, public transport, water, skills and resilience. Those things cannot be wished into being. They require public investment at scale. That is where Rachel Reeves’s fiscal rules become more than an accounting device. In plain English, they are self-imposed limits on borrowing. They are political choices, not laws of nature. But they matter because they set the boundaries of what Labour says it can afford. They matter for Burnham’s possible project for the country, because the current rules would inhibit the kind of public investment that a new settlement with the British people would require. Yet he cannot simply announce he will tear them up. Governments borrow by selling gilts. If investors believe a government will borrow recklessly, they demand higher interest rates to lend to it. That raises the cost of all government borrowing and squeezes the money available for everything else. This is the discipline every Labour politician now feels. Three weeks ago, Burnham tested the boundary. He floated a defence carve-out: the idea that extra borrowing for defence could sit outside the fiscal rules, as Germany has done by using special funds to increase military spending. It was a narrow proposal but one that raised larger questions about how we finance what we deem to be important. What followed is what some call “market discipline”. From the period around Burnham’s Makerfield announcement onward, the pound came under pressure and gilt yields rose as markets priced political uncertainty. Private creditors warned against Thames Water being brought into public ownership. Then, last Monday, Burnham’s team told Bloomberg he would make no changes to Reeves’s fiscal rules if he became prime minister. The defence carve-out was ruled out too. I was not surprised by the retreat. Nor do I think it is useful to call it betrayal. Burnham cannot win a leadership contest if the markets are running against him before he has even started. But the retreat itself is the lesson. It illuminates what is standing in the way of a new social democracy. It is not simply “the markets”. It is the economic architecture Britain has built: Treasury rules, Bank of England decisions, pension fund structures and investor expectations combining to discipline any politics that threatens the settlement. What happened last week was a lesson in how power works. Burnham matters not because he is a saviour. Progressives have had enough of saviours. He matters because he has said aloud what Westminster still avoids: Britain’s crisis is rooted in the economic settlement itself. That settlement, what economists increasingly call rentier capitalism, is not abstract. It is a country where water bills rise while shareholders are rewarded, where housing wealth matters more than people having secure homes, and where democratic choices narrow whenever they threaten asset holders. Meanwhile, the state manages the fallout: crumbling infrastructure, higher costs and a cost of living crisis deepened by rentier extraction. That is why the reaction to Burnham’s comments on the fiscal rules is revealing. Chancellors rewrite fiscal rules all the time when it suits them. Gordon Brown had his golden rule. George Osborne had his surplus target. Philip Hammond revised the framework. Rishi Sunak changed it. Jeremy Hunt changed it. Reeves has changed it again. The question is not whether fiscal rules can change. They plainly can. The question is who gets to change them, and for what purpose? There are three fights progressives now have to pick. The first is fiscal. Democracy must regain the power to invest. Public investment is still constrained less by national need than by what ministers think the bond market, the Bank of England and the Treasury will tolerate. A real shift would start from need, not nerves. That means a Bank of England mandate that recognises a basic truth: inflation is not only caused by too much demand. It is also caused by too little capacity. When there are too few homes, rents rise. When public transport is weak, people are forced into expensive alternatives. When energy is costly and unreliable, bills rise. Investment is not the enemy of stability. Done properly, it is how stability is built. The second fight is ownership. Public goods should be built and owned in the public interest. Thames Water entering special administration is the obvious place to start. Regional public housing corporationscould build at scale on public land, financed by rental income rather than annual Whitehall grants. That is also why the language of “public control” – used increasingly by Andy Burnham – deserves scrutiny. Few want a return to top-down nationalisation. But franchising, as the Bee Network in Manchester demonstrates, is not public ownership. Private operators running Bee Network services made hundreds of millions in profit last year. The network is better than what came before – but it remains a private-profit, public-risk model. Control without ownership leaves the fundamental problem intact: the public absorbs the downside while shareholders take the gain. The third fight is constitutional. Proportional representation for Westminster, an elected second chamber and deeper devolution are not procedural tidying-up. They are conditions for progressive power in a fragmented country. The forces ranged against transformation do not need PR: they already have the City, the rightwing press, corporate lobbying, the Treasury worldview and the bond market. Progressive Britain has no equivalent machinery. PR is the glue that could allow a broad majority to govern together. Burnham was right: Britain has been on the wrong course for 40 years. But last week showed the harder truth. The old settlement will not politely bow out for its replacement. It will price the risk, police the boundaries and demand reassurance before the argument has even begun. The churn is far from over. * Clive Lewis is the Labour MP for Norwich South * Clive Lewis will be speaking about these issues and more with Andy Burnham at Change Now! Mobilising the Progressive Majority
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David Thomson retweeted
We're looking for keen beans to take part in the #LLHM for All We Can on 4th April 2027! If you're interested in running for All We Can, please register your interest before the end of Monday 1st June! Register interest by emailing us at info@allwecan.org.uk
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David Thomson retweeted
At least 72,803 Palestinians have been killed and 172,855 injured, many with life-altering wounds, since the beginning of Israel’s genocide in Gaza. 🔴 LIVE updates: aje.news/sslnch
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David Thomson retweeted
كل عام والأحبة المسلمين بخير. كل عام وشعبنا واهلنا بأمان. كل عام ونحن اقرب لعالم مليء بالحق والعدل.
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