Delaware is where a lot of the Ukraine PrivatBank money laundering ended up being spent.
Delaware is where a lot of the Ukraine PrivatBank money laundering ended up being spent.
I, for one, wish the Greens would turn to violence over more of their issues.
Car pollution fucks you up, too, probably more so. And before you say “people need cars to get places”, nicotine (and caffeine) fuelled the industrial revolution - nicotine makes your brain work faster, which can make people more productive.
Yes in your own house, but not in your garden or with your windows open, because that’s too close to me!
You sound ridiculous.
While you’re generally right about triage, it’s absolutely believable that she could have been prioritised by Palestinian staff over patients with a similar level of urgency, in spite of them waiting longer. However she definitely shouldn’t go around saying that - it reflects badly on the staff.
Apparently it’s more than just wording, it requires the employer to give a valid reason for refusing.
FYI archive.md and all those others are not affiliated with archive.org, run by Internet Archive.
Yeah but those archive sites are a bit dodgy, they poison DNS requests and it cannot be resolved with many privacy-focused DNS providers.
archive.md, archive.ph, archive.today should not be confused with archive.org, aka The Way Back Machine, run by Internet Archive. The former are basically impersonating them (although they do at least get around paywalls better).
This makes me want to sing the Tetris theme.
but Rwanda can only take about 150 people a year
Don’t forget the vulnerable refugees that the UK will be taking from Rwanda, per Article 19 of the agreement.
It’s more than that in the UK, unfortunately. Suella Braverman’s father ran British concentration camps in Kenya, she’s trying to restart the family business (funded entirely by the taxpayer), the reason they haven’t been processing people is simply so they have enough occupants for their new camps.
Currently Network Rail owns and operates (nearly) all the railways, signals and ticket offices. Not sure about stations. Train companies rent rail stock, but they pay a high price for this and subsequently pass that onto the consumer, while maintaining that it’s necessary to charge expensive fares because their costs are so high.
The government owns Network Rail. The government will take over the rail companies, and this will probably end up staggered as different companies have different contract dates. The rail stock itself will probably remain under the same ownership with more or less the same ridiculous rental charges.
So all in all this probably won’t make that much difference.
Exactly. The rolling stock is where all the money goes, meanwhile the public-facing train companies you buy tickets from (who rent rolling stock) operate at or near a loss. This way the train companies can negotiate better contracts with local governments - “Look, we’re barely making any money, we have to charge ludicrously high fares for piss poor service!”
“Promises”.
It’s actually embarrassing how cheap it is to buy a politician these days
From what I’ve seen they primarily launder bribes as donations through the party. You speak with a senior MP, one who is on the party payroll and takes a salary from the party, you make a donation to the party, the party writes favourable legislation, the MP gets a cut of “bonus” from the bribe donation.
The main reason GB news exists is to funnel clean money to these gobshites.
The main reason the Tory party exists is to funnel money to politicians. Donate to a politician on the party payrole, have some favourable law written for you, then that politician gets a nice bonus at the end of the year.
Seems like they’re selectively picking their crime stats, starting from the minimal crime that occurred during the lockdowns rather than crime before then.
The UK is on the same track Italy started on 30 years ago, only we’re going to speed run it.
A single party has been responsible, but the next party is wringing their hands at the opportunity of doing most of the same while claiming they’re better.
Datacentres are indeed shooting up all over the place at an astonishing rate. I know, I’m involved in them. However I don’t think they need such protection from the government - the companies building them already have enough money (and the datacentres themselves make a ton of money) that they don’t really need handouts.