If you have a blue tick you're paying for a free service. If you pay for a free service, and it isn't a charity then you're not some badass bro you're a bum.

Joined October 2012
3,313 Photos and videos
Richard MacDonald retweeted
People saying the song “Don’t Look Back in Anger” was sung as statement of gratuitous forgiveness for the Manchester Arena bombing, rather than as a popular, sentimental song identified with the city, is proof of the thesis that this website is Tumblr for rightwingers.
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How is this an acceptable level of service? What a stupid time gap.
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The annoying thing about pints being expensive nowdays is that 'I'll get you a pint' as a way of a semi-tokenistic gesture of thanks for a favour is actually a considerable outlay... basically its paying someone a fiver for their service.
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Richard MacDonald retweeted
Maak daarom graag even reclame voor dit prachtige hotel: Pão de Acúcar in Porto. De rest is namelijk ook fantastisch en de ligging ook
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Richard MacDonald retweeted
The next crossing is about 60 meteres away from this one. . Two pedestrian high-streets splay out together into a square with a road through the middle and the current crossing is highlighted in yellow. The entire thing should be pedestrianised
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How will this help pedestrians? Nice dark streets near where old warehouses have deep recessed doorways... that sounds very dangerous.
Streets near Everton stadium get new 'smart lights' bbc.in/4e7X0xI
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Trumpet: I am sad. Piano: Don't worry, it'll fade... Bass: You fellas take as long as you need. Chet Baker, Almost Blue youtube.com/watch?v=z4PKzz81…
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I've just travelled the entire of Route 66 and was warned on multiple occasions about 'spice' levels in food by servers. They were all nothing. NOTHING. (I like spice, but i'm not a hard-case). Apart from Trevor's Rustic Inn (San Bernadino) Screamin' Sauce which was very good.
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Richard MacDonald retweeted
The only thing more depressing than another decade and a half of extremely congested railways, is reading the comments and quote tweets blaming environmental protections (approx. 0.1% project cost), planning (permission granted nearly a decade ago), or saying we should scrap it.
🚨 NEW: The Government says HS2 is now set to cost up to £102.7bn The first trains from Birmingham to west London are expected between May 2036 and October 2039 Services from Euston to the North West and Scotland are expected between May 2040 and December 2043
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Richard MacDonald retweeted
Apr 22
Replying to @shivmalik
We were told do well in school, go to uni, get a job etc and you’ll be successful. We followed the plan but the goal posts were moved. We’re working harder and earning more than our parents, yet we’re still struggling to get by because costs have massively outpaced incomes.
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Richard MacDonald retweeted
I don’t understand the obsession with Guinness. It’s quite a boring beer. Can be good ‘in Ireland’ but even then it’s not that good. And at its worst it’s like drinking whipped cream with seven 2p coins in your mouth.
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Richard MacDonald retweeted
Replying to @TheNotoriousMMA
You're well used to shutting down Irish businesses.
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Richard MacDonald retweeted
“ventilatoren” german for fan but not that kind of fan
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Richard MacDonald retweeted
Ventilatoren! 😀
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Bertrand Russell who lived long enough to meet both William Gladstone and Paul McCartney.
Bertrand Russell was born in 1872. He remembered his grandfather (who had met Napoleon, introduced the Reform Bill of 1832, and served as Prime Minister) "quite well." In a remarkable interview, he reflected on the world of his youth: "The world where I was young was a solid world. A world where all kinds of things that have now disappeared were thought to be going to last forever." The British took naval supremacy not as a political reality but as a fact of nature. Germany wasn't feared — Bismarck was dismissed as "a rascal" and "a sort of uneducated farmer." The assumption was that Goethe and Schiller would eventually bring Germany back to civilisation. Bismarck himself compared Germany and England to an elephant and a whale — each formidable in its own element, no danger to each other. That was exactly how they felt. There was also a shared political assumption: that the entire world was gradually, inevitably moving toward parliamentary democracy. His grandmother once said cheerfully to the Russian ambassador: "Perhaps someday you will have a parliament in Russia." He replied: "God forbid." Russell notes, dryly, that a Russian ambassador today might give the same answer — "except for the first word." At home, life was shaped by Puritanical austerity. Family prayers at 8am. Half an hour of piano practice beforehand — which Russell hated. Eight servants, yet food of "the utmost simplicity." If apple tart appeared alongside rice pudding, the adults had the apple tart. Russell had the rice pudding. What Russell describes isn't just personal memoir. It's a civilisation that had mistaken its own moment for a permanent condition — that looked at the arrangements of the late 19th century and concluded: this is how things are, and how they will remain. They were wrong about almost everything.
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I see shopfronts are 'doing numbers' (do they still say that?) Here are some REAL ones i've worked on over the last few years. It's a lot of work with private owners and working with individual buildings rather than just a generic copy/paste approach helps maintain character.
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Richard MacDonald retweeted
So... the council listing Colette Goulding as an alternate for the committee was an error, and sitting with the public and not contributing counts towards her attendance record. TLDR: Goulding keeps her seat for another six months. That's £7,000 of councillor allowance...
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