Joined January 2009
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Marcel 🇬🇧 retweeted
A Restore Britain Government will repeal Starmer's social media ban and let parents parent.
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Marcel 🇬🇧 retweeted
What could be more British than starting the week with a ban? 🇬🇧
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Marcel 🇬🇧 retweeted
The establishment attacks on Restore Britain are rapidly increasing, as expected. It is relentless. They are terrified. Owen Jones, Nigel Farage, Zack Polanski, the Daily Mail, Nadine Dorries, Michael Gove, endless faceless Labour MPs, the Guardian. The whole team. It will not work. Why? I am not in this for the money, the status, the popularity. I don’t care about any of that. I’ve got enough money. I don’t have to be doing any of this. If I cared what people in posh parts of London thought of me, I would not be doing this. Trust me. But I want to be really clear about my opinion on them. I do not give a shit what they think of me. I really don’t. I am doing this for one reason, and one reason only. To give the British people a democratic route out. It’s the only way. The last way. What we are doing is not going to be easy or straightforward, nobody has said otherwise. But it is necessary. We will not budge, backtrack or fold to establishment pressure. We are going to do what is needed to Restore Britain. If you want to vote for failed Conservatives, that’s your choice. There are now two options on the voting paper for that. Lucky us. But Restore Britain is offering a genuine alternative. Millions and millions of patriotic British men and women are taking it.
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We can all see where this is going..
The US government, citing national security authorities, has issued an export control directive to suspend all access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 by any foreign national, whether inside or outside the United States, including foreign national Anthropic employees. The net effect of this order is that we must abruptly disable Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for all our customers to ensure compliance. Access to all other Claude models is not affected. We apologize for this disruption to our customers. We believe this is a misunderstanding and are working to restore access as soon as possible. Read our full statement: anthropic.com/news/fable-myt…
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Marcel 🇬🇧 retweeted
Murderous migrants beheading innocent people in their home town is what’s making people angry, not “social media”!
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Forced to accept things you didn't vote for. Called a racist for disagreeing with anything. The government is stealing all your money. Shamed for not being happy about it. The state of 2026.
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Marcel 🇬🇧 retweeted
The people of Northern Ireland are unique. Frankly, they may be the only people left in the United Kingdom who still truly understand what it means to be British. Not as a slogan. Not as a flag for convenience. But as an identity forged through loyalty, sacrifice, resilience and history. That community bond matters. And to understand just how catastrophically the Government has handled this situation, consider this: Loyalists, Unionists and Nationalists are coming together. In Northern Ireland. That sentence alone should stop every official in Stormont & Whitehall dead in their tracks. Because when communities with such deep historic divisions find common cause, it tells you something profound. The public can see what the Government refuses to admit. This is not a “community tension” problem. It is a failure of leadership, border control and public safety.
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Marcel 🇬🇧 retweeted
Message to Starmer and the police: You have attacked those protesting. There would have been no protests if our borders had been enforced. That evil man would not have been in the country and a British citizen would not be in hospital with life threatening injuries. The fault lies with government.
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Sick of the news already this morning. Depressing 😠
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How can you not get behind this?
Starting and running a business in Britain in 2026 - let’s go through it, step by step… You've got a good idea. You've worked hard, saved some money, and decided to take a risk. A big decision. Let's say you want to open a coffee shop - nothing overly extravagant. Surely this is possible, right? Available unit on a local high street, you see a gap in the market. A simple ambition to build something. Create jobs. Generate wealth. Contribute to your local community. Maybe even build a better future for your family. Exactly the sort of person politicians claim they admire. Unfortunately, you've chosen the wrong country to do it in. Britain. 2026. Labour. Bugger. The first thing you discover is that absolutely nothing is straightforward. You register the business. Not impossible, but hardly simple. The foreign vape shop owners manage it, so why not you? Done. In fairness, not the most challenging part of this story... Then comes the bank account - you’d think opening a business account would be a routine matter. Instead, you're treated like a criminal. You want to sell coffee, not arms. The banks are simply out of control in this country. Just like the lawyers, but that’s a different story. Legitimate entrepreneurs should not be waiting weeks while faceless compliance departments shuffle paperwork between themselves and refuse to answer questions - slash it all back and let people just get on with it. Eventually you get through that hurdle and secure the premises. Perfect location. Lots of footfall. Not a total dump. It can work. Then reality arrives. The rent is eye-watering - contracts have clause after clause after clause. How can anybody understand it all? Insurance is through the roof. And before you've served a single coffee, the local authority is already getting its grubby hands on your money. Energy costs are so very painful... Business rates - one of the most destructive taxes in Britain. And for what? What do we get from that money? You are effectively punished for occupying premises and creating economic activity. For PAYING TAX. It is insane. A Restore Britain Government would abolish business rates entirely for small high street businesses. Pubs, cafes, bakeries. All of it. No business rates. Then come the inspections. Oh joy. The paperwork. The bureaucracy. The council gnomes. Nobody objects to basic standards. Of course cafes should be clean and safe. The problem is that too much of the system now exists to justify the existence of regulators rather than help businesses succeed. They are there to prove that their job needs to exist. So rules get put on rules, on top of more rules. It is endless. Many of the people enforcing these rules have never built a business, never employed anybody and never risked their own money. Never done anything. Work half weeks, with 30 days holiday a year. Fridays at home, of course. A profession filled with nit-picking gits. Restore Britain would conduct a full bonfire of unnecessary regulations and introduce a simple principle. Every regulation should have to justify its existence - if it doesn't prevent genuine harm, it goes. It will be glorious. We will tear it all down. But let’s say you get through this. You stumble on. The cafe opens, and goes well. People like it. It grows. The coffee is good. You need help. Another bureaucratic nightmare. PAYE. National Insurance. Pensions. Employment contracts. Holiday entitlement. Workplace policies. Health and safety obligations. The worst of all - HR. You look at it all, and just think what’s the point? Is it worth the risk? That is a disaster for our economy, and a disaster for youngsters looking for work. Restore Britain would slash back employer National Insurance, simplify employment law for small firms and create a framework that protects good employees without treating every employer as a potential criminal. The HR-ification of Britain will end. If I had to pick a 'profession' I hate the most, HR has to be number one. Employers will be able to sack employees for not doing the job properly. It doesn’t matter if they’re black, gay, Muslim or whatever else. This ‘protected characteristic’ nonsense will be stripped away. The only protected characteristic we’re interested in is competence. We will repeal The Equality Act 2010. This is key. This is where so much of the bullshit emanates from. But let’s say you don’t want to bother. Maybe bringing in contracting services could work. Wrong. IR35 - one of the most economically illiterate policies ever introduced by thick idiots in the civil service who have never created a job in their lives. Restore Britain would scrap IR35 entirely - if two consenting adults wish to enter a genuine contracting arrangement, the state should keep its nose out. Who does what, when and for who is between those two individuals. IR35 is the first thing to go. Burn it and bury it. But we do want apprenticeships. This is the way forward, and we would give companies tax breaks for developing and building local skills for young men and women. Crucial. I’ve been running an apprenticeship campaign in Great Yarmouth - looking to link local businesses with colleges. Progress made, but lots more to do. As your business grows, your accountant becomes indispensable. Not because your accounting is particularly complicated or he’s a good bloke, but because the tax system has become absurdly complex. I used to do my own returns. No chance now. Restore Britain would begin simplifying the tax code from top to bottom. Tax should be low, simple and transparent. That’s what Restore Britain stands for. Then comes one of the most notorious barriers in British business. The VAT threshold. You finally start making progress, and your turnover approaches the threshold. Looks good on the face of it, but it’s actually horrific news - cross the line and suddenly everything changes. VAT is applied. What are you supposed to do? Pass the cost on to customers? What are they going to do when the cost of their morning order shoots up? Many firms deliberately limit growth because crossing the threshold creates such a financial shock. That is insanity. Restore Britain would double the VAT threshold. Growth should be rewarded, and we would do exactly that. Somehow, you’re limping on and decide an expansion is needed - maybe a covered outdoor area let’s say. Add more seating. People like to eat outside. Surely this is straightforward? Planning. The worst people on the planet, whose sole aim is to destroy economic ambition, growth and hope. I detest them all so very much. Restore Britain would overhaul the system with a presumption in favour of economic development. If planners cannot make a decision within a fixed timeframe, approval should be automatic. We will not keep businesses waiting for months and months. It is simply unacceptable and unfair. Same for licences to stay open later, host music, even god forbid serve alcohol - the bureaucrat’s nightmare. We wouldn’t want people enjoying themselves, would we? Restore Britain would introduce another presumption backing small business activity unless there is a compelling reason to refuse it. If customers want to enjoy a drink later on with their friends, let’s make it happen - the burden should be on the regulator to justify their restrictions, not on the entrepreneur to justify growth. Again, let’s give them a time frame to object. If they can’t, it goes through. Job done. That is what Restore Britain will deliver. Then there are card payments. Every coffee, sandwich, bottle of water. People just are not using cash. So a small slice disappears off everything, but that turns into thousands. Restore Britain would review payment processing fees and increase competition in the sector. We must reduce the cost of doing business. This is vital. We come to HMRC. I hate these people so much. It’s far quicker for a benefits claimant to get hold of the DWP than it is for small business owners to speak to HMRC. How mad is that? Restore Britain would introduce meaningful accountability when HMRC gets things wrong, or simply doesn’t pick up the phone. Let’s link senior leadership pay to response times. That will get them jumping. When you pay the tax, and sign it all off? The anger I feel when I think about where that money goes is not a positive experience. Funding hotel fry ups for Afghan men who have broken into our country. Restore Britain would indiscriminately deport the illegals, as you know, but this is a post about starting a business… Back to HMRC. They whack me with tax inspection after tax inspection. I wonder why… Awful people. If I ever get a sniff of power, I will tear that place apart limb by limb. Then comes the final insult. The salt in the wound. The knife in the back. You want to pay yourself. You've worked sixteen-hour days, seven days a week. You've risked everything. You've missed weekends, holidays and family events. You have carried all the risk. The wife or husband is constantly pissed off because the phone doesn’t stop ringing. Now perhaps you'd like some reward. Let’s look at what’s left... Corporation tax takes a slice. Dividend tax takes another. Student loan repayments take more. National Insurance takes more. Income tax takes more. What’s left? By the end of it, government has its sticky fingers in your pocket at every stage. Restore Britain would establish the lowest corporation tax rate in Europe. We would increase dividend allowances. Slash NI. Cut back income tax. Scrap interest on student loans. In short - reward your hard work. Entrepreneurs all over Britain are asking this question... Why not take a comfortable public sector job, collect the salary, enjoy the pension, work from home, avoid the stress and leave somebody else to create the wealth? Why bother? What's the point? If enough ambitious people think that, the economy stops functioning. We become even more reliant on the fat, bloated, squid like state. Politicians in Westminster DO NOT understand what they are doing to businesses in Britain. I listen to them talk about business and my ears bleed - you do not understand just how thick some of these people are. However bad you imagine, double it. You’re half way there. It is time for a different sort of politics, a different type of politician. Restore Britain will make Britain the easiest country in Europe to start, grow and succeed with your own business. To our cafe owner, wondering if all the endless bullshit is worth it? My message is this… Keep going. It will get better. Britain needs you. There is good news - there is finally a political party on your side. Restore Britain.
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Marcel 🇬🇧 retweeted
I think a lot of people have woken up to the conclusion that the only way to burn off the woke mind virus is to actually not care about racism or about being racist at all. Pretty soon, if it’s not already happening, anyone crying about racism will met with the default response: “So what?” Do you really want white people checking out like this? Because this is the predictable, exhausted endpoint of weaponizing race for power. Believe me when I say that we will all come to miss the days when the word ‘racism’ actually meant something, back when white people still cared about not being called racist. Gen Z guys are already there. Once that word is completely drained of any real meaning or moral weight, we’ll all rue the day we let it happen.
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Marcel 🇬🇧 retweeted
They are just ceremonial bricks
‘Police are getting bricks thrown at their heads!’ ‘I don’t think they are mate’
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Marcel 🇬🇧 retweeted
the Henry Nowak murder sounds like a completely outrageous parody of the british criminal justice system. it's hard to believe it's real. - native Britons can't legally carry a breadknife - for some reason Sikhs get a special carveout and can carry "religious use" knives of any length. even over 50 cm - 18 year old boy Henry Nowak is walking home peacefully, is fatally stabbed by Vickrum Digwa with his "ceremonial" kirpan - Digwa claims to the police that he was racially abused and the responding police immediately believe him and shackle the dying Nowak, ignoring Digwa and his co-conspirators - Nowak informs the officers that he has been stabbed and the officer says "You've been stabbed? Whereabouts? I don't think you have, mate." - the officers do not check on his condition, cuffing him roughly as he bleeds out. as they read him his rights, he dies. - Digwa's mother, Kiran Kaur arrives at the scene and takes the knife with her, attempting to conceal it - Digwa's brother Gurpreet Digwa made the 999 call and attempted to concoct a defense for his brother, claiming he had been the victim of a racial attack - Despite the "life sentence" the court meted out, Digwa will be eligible for parole at age 43 - there have been no consequences whatsoever for the police officers that shackled Nowak and left him to drown in his own blood while his killers watched. none of the officers have even been named each fact is more radicalizing than the last.
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Marcel 🇬🇧 retweeted
We need prosecutions for what happened to Henry Nowak.
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Solar progress (what a difference a year can make).
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Marcel 🇬🇧 retweeted
France Has the Banlieues. Britain Is Building Its Own. For the second consecutive year, Paris has erupted in violence following a PSG Champions League victory. Last year two people died, over 190 were injured and more than 500 were arrested across France with 264 vehicles burned. This year 780 people were detained, 57 police officers were injured and riots spread across 15 cities. Cars were set ablaze. Shops were looted. A group attempted to storm a police station in one of Paris's wealthiest arrondissements. The French interior minister described most of the celebrations as peaceful. He was not describing the same events everyone else was watching. This is not a football story. Football was the occasion. The violence is the story, and it has nothing to do with the score in Budapest. PSG was transformed after Qatar Investment Authority bought the club in 2012, turning it into a globally marketed brand with deep roots in the banlieues, the outer suburbs of Paris that ring the city like a wound that never heals. These are the zones urbaines sensibles, the French government's own designation for 751 areas of concentrated deprivation, parallel culture and social breakdown. France has been building these reservations for fifty years through mass immigration and deliberate non-integration. The people who live in them did not assimilate. They were never required to. The bill for that decision arrives every time France holds a public event. The pattern is not new and it is not accidental. The 2005 banlieue riots spread across France and lasted three weeks. The 2023 riots following the police shooting of Nahel Merzouk spread from Nanterre across every major French city within days. A criminal police officer sent to Nanterre during those uprisings said publicly that he no longer had the impression of being in France. PSG victories in 2025 and 2026 have produced the same geography of violence, the same communities, the same targets and the same response from the French state: riot police, tear gas, mass arrests and ministerial press conferences describing the situation as largely under control. Nobody compelled anyone to set fire to cars, loot shops, attack police officers or attempt to storm a police station. These are choices made by individuals who have concluded that the society around them owes them something and that violence is an acceptable means of claiming it. That conclusion was not inevitable. It was produced by decades of welfare dependency, cultural separatism, the deliberate rejection of French republican values and the political class's refusal to name what was happening until it was too late to reverse it. France is five to ten years ahead of Britain on this trajectory. The banlieues are what happens when mass immigration produces parallel communities with no integration, no shared civic culture and no meaningful stake in the host society. Britain has its own versions. Tower Hamlets. Parts of Birmingham, Bradford and Luton. The same architecture of parallel life, the same deliberate separation, the same political refusal to enforce integration or demand contribution. The violence in Paris is not a warning about what might happen. It is a preview of what will happen if the same trajectory continues. The French government will hold a celebration at the Champ de Mars today. Emmanuel Macron will host PSG at the Elysee Palace. Officials will talk about the importance of sport and national pride. Nobody in a position of power will say what the 780 arrests and 57 injured officers actually represent. The same silence that built the banlieues will manage the consequences of them. Until next time. "France is five to ten years ahead of Britain on this trajectory. The Banlieues are what happens when mass immigration produces parallel communities with no integration, no shared civic culture and no meaningful stake in the host society. Britain has its own versions."
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Marcel 🇬🇧 retweeted
Whilst I hate agreeing with Tony Blair, he’s right on this one. It isn’t just Labour though. Every political party with a chance of winning significant seat numbers has the same problem. They can’t put what needs to be done in a manifesto, because they’d be unelectable. They can’t say out loud what the real problems are, because the electoral arithmetic would destroy them. And that’s if they even know what the real problems are in the first place. It seems to me that they don’t have the people capable of delivering the meaningful change that would put the UK back on course. This much is likely becoming clear to a lot of us by now. I actually sympathise with the politicians in these parties. They’re inheriting an impossible set of circumstances, and for the most part, they don’t have the financial or economic understanding of what they’re facing (anyone who has read about the views of certain Labour MPs regarding the gilt markets will know what I’m talking about). In fairness, few people do. So we continue on this path of make-believe. Policy that sounds good and in line with the ideology of whichever electoral cohort fits best… and will deliver maximum seats. But won’t lead to the outcomes the country badly needs. It’s also why I believe the massive fiscal crisis I’ve been warning about is inevitable. I can’t see any change of approach other than how certain parties treat the various symptoms… rather than acknowledge the core issues and design the state around them. It requires an overhaul I don’t believe any of the parties are capable of delivering. We’ll get there eventually. But sadly, in my view, it will happen following a crisis, with the country kicking and screaming, rather than by design in an attempt to rebuild national resilience.
Labour has 'no coherent plan' for country, says Blair bbc.in/3PNTMGl
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Marcel 🇬🇧 retweeted
It’s sad to watch the slow structural decline of the UK as a global business hub - as yet another FTSE company looks certain to be acquired by a US firm.
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Marcel 🇬🇧 retweeted
Has Starmer even mentioned the poor English boy who was murdered at all?
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Marcel 🇬🇧 retweeted
Replying to @RupertLowe10
Rupert, having read it, I'm disappointed to see that you haven't considered the role Bitcoin mining can play in a Britain first energy security strategy. That said, I understand your team has written this paper for a particular audience, namely, Reform-adjacent Conservative voters who realise that net zero is a grift but are not ready for a conversation about Bitcoin. Even so, why has your team, whilst writing about national energy sovereignty, missed a massive strategic point that they really should have caught? It's glaringly obvious that Bitcoin mining can convert stranded energy into a bearer asset held outside the financial system, so it is, in their own framing, the cleanest possible expression of converting industrial energy into national capability. It even fits your kWh metric, because Bitcoin mining gives you a price floor under marginal generation.
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