22 he/him

Joined October 2016
90 Photos and videos
millzy retweeted
What time tomorrow is Starmer going to say something like: “Let me be clear, these results are a wake up call, the people want more racism and god help me I will deliver more racism”
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An England football fan attempts to keep his beer chilled in a fountain in London's Trafalgar Square (2001)
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millzy retweeted
new imodium slogan just dropped
Another arsehole blocked
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millzy retweeted
A clearer video show Israeli soldiers shooting two young Palestinian men at point-blank range after they surrendered near the Jenin refugee camp, following a military raid in the northern occupied West Bank. No official information issued so far about their condition.
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millzy retweeted
Wonderful tribute to Mao Zedong 👏 👏 👏
Chelsea fans held up a poignant tifo banner at Stamford Bridge ahead of Remembrance Sunday. 🙏
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millzy retweeted
Super Hans: People like Col​dplay and voted for the Nazis. You can't trust people, Jeremy.
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millzy retweeted
Super Hans: Exactly. I've been down enough bloody city-b​oy chain pubs with their logos in the foam and disinfectant in the lager, air freshener in the mayo. Nah, I wanna run a place that makes a difference.
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millzy retweeted
Mark: [In a high-pitched v​oice] Can I have my Blackberry back?
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26 Oct 2025
literally mark corrigan
25 Oct 2025
Socially anxious guy at strip club: Dude I think this stripper hates me
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millzy retweeted
23 Oct 2025
woke park rangers
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millzy retweeted
amazing that every political party in the UK is just the Landlords for More Transphobia uniparty
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millzy retweeted
5 Aug 2025
Very disingenuous of yougov to frame arriving via irregular means as somehow being different from 'seeking asylum via the correct legal process'. It is protected by the refugee convention to arrive via irregular means to claim asylum
5 Aug 2025
Replying to @YouGov
Likewise, negativity towards migrants is primarily directed towards illegal migrants, those coming to claim benefits, and small boat arrivals - a minority of those who support requiring large numbers of migrants to leave say this extend to those in the UK legally looking for work or foreign students yougov.co.uk/politics/articl…
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millzy retweeted
20 Jul 2025
It is peak New Labour to pledge to halve something there should be none of, and expect to be thanked for it.
20 Jul 2025
Labour will halve sewage pollution by water companies by the end of the decade. bbc.com/news/articles/c4g8m8…
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millzy retweeted
18 Jul 2025
spanish galleon let through? another keir starmer failure smh
The Spanish galleon Andalucia is making her way into Bristol
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10 Jul 2025
d.o.k - spiteful (millzy refix) by millzy on #SoundCloud on.soundcloud.com/36wy9d12JV…

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millzy retweeted
To be clear, the UK's current welfare regime has twice been found to be in breach of human rights obligations. The current reforms are murderous and despicable but let's be clear they are a worsening of an already despicably murderous system
BREAKING - legal opinion for @EquityUK suggests disability benefit reforms breach international human rights obligations @Dis_PPL_Protest #TakingthePiP @LabourOutlook @LabourHub @LabourList MPs should oppose these cuts and demand a rethink
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millzy retweeted
2 Jul 2025
One thing that needs to be excised from public discourse is the received wisdom that 'welfare reform is necessary'. The welfare bill is not 'ballooning', it's been between 10-12% of gdp for 30 odd years. We have one of the most miserly welfare states in Europe.
1 Jul 2025
My monologue from today’s The Times at One with Andrew Neil on @TimesRadio Keir Starmer’s government has become the master of maximum pain for minimum gain. That’s what it achieved with the winter fuel allowance — squandering shedloads of political capital for very modest savings — and it’s now repeating the exercise with its half-hearted attempts at welfare reform.  The case for radical welfare reform is strong. But it was never made by Labour in opposition, which did no policy work on it.  It turned to it in power to save money and meet Rachel Reeves’s fiscal rules rather roll out an over-arching grand strategy. As a result it’s in a mess.  Welfare reform was meant to save £5 billion by the end of the decade, a modest enough target given total welfare spending is in the hundreds of billions.  But even that pittance has gone. To buy off Labour rebels, on whom welfare reform was sprung, half the savings are already gone. Add in the cost of the U-turn over the winter fuel allowance and just about all the £5 billion saving has been wiped out.  So Chancellor Reeves will have to find £5 billion from elsewhere to make her sums add up which makes tax rises — already on the cards — in her autumn Budget, if she’s still at the Treasury, pretty much a dead cert.  So widespread unpopularity in the country and a massive rebellion in its own ranks — and for what? No savings. And, more important, no chance now of serious welfare reform.  We currently spend £330 billion a year on welfare, including state pensions. That’s 10% of our GDP and a quarter of total government spending. Within that total we devote £75 billion to sickness and disability related benefits — categories that are rising fast as several thousand new recipients join up every day.  By 2030 total welfare spending is projected to be around £380 billion — a nominal rise of £50 billion, with sickness and disability related benefits accounting for almost £100 billion of that.  Labour promised the fastest growing economy in the G7. Instead it is building on a grim inheritance from the Tories: the biggest proportion of those of working age ‘on the sick’ or on disability allowance in the G7.  After this week’s demeaning retreat, Labour is unlikely to do much about this between now and the end of the decade.  On the basis that ‘only Nixon could go to China’ so it was thought Labour was best placed to pursue sensible welfare reform. That is now off the agenda.  To be sure there are powerful forces pushing up welfare spending — an ageing population, that expensive triple lock on pensions, that voracious rise in health and disability benefits for those of working age.   But we are no longer generating the wealth to anything like the degree required to pay for the inexorable rise in welfare spending.  Indeed there is a populist cry across the political spectrum for the sort of policies — a wealth tax, more regulation, more state intervention, more state investment — that are proven wealth destroyers.  A country hooked on welfare — and dead set economic policies that will not create the wealth to pay for it.  If ever there was a definition of a country in economic decline that’s it. A decline Labour will not reverse —  and to which the parties in opposition also have precious few answers.
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29 Jun 2025
RT @sensiblehuman96: 'Death to the IDF' is a symbolic phrase. It is the death of an entity, an occupying force. This shouldn't be a controv…
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