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Wanderers Ways. Neil Thompson 1961-2021

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Showing most liked content on 13/05/21 in all areas

  1. It is them and us though. We don’t need a referendum to tell us that the vast majority of people in the UK believe a jab should be given to everyone except the medically exempt. Its tough shit time. Get jabbed or risk suffocating to death on Minerva Road you selfish cunts.
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  2. True, but Sterling has time to improve. Give him a break.
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  3. No you have to pick a side and blame them completely mate. It’s the way it works on here
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  4. Who’s bitching & moaning? just pointing out the deteriorating situation in Bolton, I don’t live in Bolton and why would I want to join a task force (paid for by Bolton residents no doubt) to persuade folk who up until now have steadfastly refused to have the vaccination that might save them and their families life. If they want to get dead, it’s their choice.
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  5. Why should you never wear Ukrainian underpants? Because Chernobyl fall out
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  6. It might just be me but I do not think there is much chance of the people on here resolving the issue, but if it helps at all I worked with load of Israelis on a project about 3 years ago and one of the women was absolutely stunning looking, so I would support her side. I think the historic issues might be a good bit deeper than I have got to.
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  7. In the annuls of music history, Oasis will always be regarded far more as musical pioneers and trend setters than Blur, Radiohead or Coldplay. By the way Cannibal Corpse, along with Napalm Death, Cancer, Hellbastard, S. O. B. and Lawnmower Deth were pioneers of thrash/death metal
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  8. I'm definitely left of centre, but these are knuckle-dragging rapists. I don't care where they come from or what culture they have or which made up fairy story book they follow Rapists/paedos etc are filthy scum regardless of ethnicity.
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  9. Because some feel the Israeli state is propped up by the west (specifically America) for political expedience in domestic politics and that its a subjugation of a suppressed people who were illegally turfed out of their homeland. Then wrap up toxification of global media with a pro Israeli narrative. So, those whose politics are more to the left, feel Palestinian's don't have a voice and whose rights are crushed from all sides by a more powerful direct arrgessor which is backed by the world's most powerful countries.
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  10. Antisemitism is the simple answer
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  11. It’s the way it is sadly. Pakistani does something wrong it’s an Asian. Pakistani does something good he’s a Pakistani.
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  12. No mate as you know my views on this have been consistent since day 1 on this. The denial of the issue pisses me off especially when it is branded all Asians .
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  13. I'll be 65 this year. No way am I going to rock up at A&E with covid... I am not going to lose my life to a fkkin microbe and that is why I wear masks, sanitise and always call out anyone who do not follow the rules... I gave the sales bloke a royal bollocking and walked out of "Carpet Right " yesterday because he was serving someone without a mask, at least he has now been informed he is a cunt. That is what these retarded and lazy selfish bastards need to get their heads around, I saw a lot of rule breaking outside our own football ground publicised on you tube including our own players... get a grip is what I say. Hit the bastards hard... volcanoes, fines, gaols, stocks, the rack, the lot. Round the low life dodgers and slackers up and put them through a mass vaccine sheep dip. Tell them a hot sterilising poker up the arse is the alternative.
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  14. Me too. I think he just needs more games under his belt. He's going to improve if he stays with us. The lads got pace, control, skill, tracks back and is fouled loads... the opposition can't handle him.
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  15. You can have flexible plans that allow you to manage stuff. https://www.moneyadviceservice.org.uk/en/articles/self-invested-personal-pensions
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  16. Boot the vermin out the league. They can reform as a 3rd splinter club after FCUM and Salford. Bury Reds maybe
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  17. Mrs worked last night at BRH 12 patients with covid in Over half of them under 30 None vaccinated Think this speaks volumes for the reasons they're their. imo
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  18. Lockdowns are to protect the NHS. Hospitalisations are at zero, as are deaths.
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  19. Not putting India on the red list soon enough. Another fuck up
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  20. Just read this to get myself up to speed. They really are backward fuckers. https://concit.org/on-hijabs-rape-and-shariah-law/
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  21. Well known character Stan, I'm sure he knocked about with the Walkden lads for a few years
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  22. If folk can’t behave as a town/area then no choice but to lockdown. Yes it punishes the masses because of a minority but there’s no choice. Before you know it it spreads and we all suffer. shut them pubs Boris
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  23. I'm sure he's on the list.
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  24. Some SAGE member has said next weeks easing should be delayed bore off think some folk get off on all this
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  25. They’ll recognise the cockney accents
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  26. most are like that ive seen they dont give a fuck
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  27. If that’s true I’d be a big fan of us pioneering going back to 2 year kits
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  28. But they may wear false beards and glasses. The police may not recognise them.
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  29. As long as the players we do are sign are here to win games rather than pick up a pay cheque which had been the case for a decade until recently, i'm happy to trust IE
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  30. Perhaps it would have been better if they hadn't got carried away with trying to undermine the PM on false premises in the first place. They clearly got a bit giddy and carried away with their liberal prejudices. Just a little bit like they did when they were cheerfully beating everybody around the head with Project Fear. People have seen through the BBC. If we want to read stuff that will know will turn out to be wholly wrong we'll buy the Guardian and read the likes of Monbiot, Jones and Toynbee. The state broadcaster should be better than that.
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  32. Scott - tip for you pal, always look on the runway for ice.
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  33. And Jewlian Darby is the president of the Israeli Whites Fan Club.
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  34. I posted the article because it was about an apology by the BBC for broadcasting misleading information. You won’t find it on the BBC news though.
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  35. BWFC friendly bar it is though; FV bought it and got Remi Moses in to do it up as a football pub. It now has "Shalom Britain" over the front door to welcome us in.
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  36. Remind me again ...weren't we all supposed to be in poverty having left the EU? As Britain booms again, let us scrub ‘despite Brexit’ from the lexicon By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, Business Editor, The Telegraph By early next year the UK is set to close the entire economic gap with the eurozone that has built up since the Brexit referendum. Britain’s coiled-spring recovery is now an economic fact, and it looks even stronger than the most giddy optimists had dared to hope. Barring any upset from Covid variants or a bond rout, the British economy will be the G7 star this year. That is not in itself surprising. Part of this is a mechanical V-shaped rebound from last year’s exaggerated statistical dip. But what may surprise some is the real possibility that the UK will grow faster than a slowing China in 2022 as Rishi Sunak’s “super deduction” on plant and machinery investment unlocks a treasure of excess corporate savings. It may also outgrow Joe Biden’s America, despite his fiscal trillions and a compliant Federal Reserve. That would crown the first authentic year of Brexit – without pandemic distortions – fundamentally changing global perceptions of Britain’s post-EU reinvention. The 2.1pc jump in GDP in March blew away consensus. It silences persistent talk that the UK has gained little from early vaccination and is still essentially moving in economic lockstep with Europe. Blockbuster growth of 5pc (20pc-plus annualised) is on the cards for this quarter. The pace is so torrid that Capital Economics thinks the UK may regain its pre-pandemic level of output by late summer, with little or no permanent scarring. Investec has pencilled in the sorpasso for September, saying growth could “easily exceed” 8pc this year. If so, the UK will cross its pre-Covid line long before the eurozone, and a year ahead of the Club Med bloc. On a nominal GDP basis, it has already matched Germany and overtaken France, Italy, and Spain. This is a remarkable turn of fortunes given that the OECD, IMF, and other voices of the global establishment were predicting something close to perma-slump for these benighted isles in 2021 and 2022. The OECD forecast in December that the UK would be the economic basket case among developed states this year (along with Argentina), limping into 2022 with output still 6.4pc below pre-Covid levels. It is well known that British households have amassed £130bn of excess savings during Covid. We will find out soon how much of this is pent-up spending waiting to explode. But what is less known is that UK companies are sitting on a further £100bn, some 50pc above normal levels. “We think this is even more important,” said David Owen from Jefferies. “The super deduction has cut the effective marginal rate of corporation tax to zero. Companies have all this cash sitting on their balance sheets and it’s a no brainer for them to invest,” he said. The latest CBI survey shows that investment intentions are a whisker shy of thirty-year highs. The Bank of England thinks business spending on plant and digital technology will rise by 7pc this year and 13pc next year, matching the IT blitz during the dotcom boom in 1998. “It won’t be the Roaring Twenties but we are about to ride an investment wave. It’s a Covid story, a net-zero story, and a Brexit story, all coming together in a very optimistic way,” says Owen. The trade data for March showed that goods exports to the EU have largely regained their prior levels and are above flows last summer when the UK was still part of the single market. Even exports of fish and shellfish have returned to normal. “People were far too pessimistic about the magnitude of the hit. The idea that there was going to be a seismic fall in trade after Brexit was always rubbish. Companies adapt,” says Julian Jessop, a fellow at the Institute of Economic Affairs. This export rebound comes despite some harassment. The National Pig Association says 30pc of all UK consignments to the EU are being checked, far higher than for other third countries. Just 1pc of pig imports from New Zealand are checked. I will add British pork to my next shopping trip. We can start to separate teething problems from the structural effects of Brexit, and start to make a coherent judgement on where we stand. What is clear already is that British firms are learning to cope with customs red-tape – because they have little choice, and because the size of the EU market makes it worthwhile. The numbers complaining of UK border disruption have fallen to 7pc from 35pc in early February. What is equally clear is that EU firms have lost UK market share to global competitors. Imports from the rest of the world are growing twice as fast, and this divergence is likely to widen when Britain ends its unilateral waiver on customs clearance for EU goods and imposes reciprocal curbs. The EU’s decision to make cross-Channel trade more cumbersome than flows under other trade deals – as a penalty for refusing to remain a full regulatory satellite – has had one salient consequence so far: it has hurt small European exporters. There is much that can still go wrong for the UK. Simon Ward from Janus Henderson says the red-hot growth in the money supply risks a “major blow-out” in the balance of payments and ultimately a sterling upset. “What is concerning is that the UK’s money growth has overtaken other major areas. It’s crazy that they are still doing QE,” he says. His measure of broad money growth – non-financial M4 – topped 16pc earlier this year, the fastest pace since the Lawson credit boom in the late 1980s. This will catch fire if velocity returns to normal. The Bank of England has underestimated the strength of the rebound and is coming under increasingly ferocious criticism from monetarists. It will have to navigate a treacherous exit from over-stimulus. Any delay in tightening only makes it harder. Europe too will have its boom. But recovery will start later, due to third wave lockdowns in April. It will be less exuberant when it comes. Industrial bottlenecks will be a bigger relative headwind for the manufacturing hubs of Germany and Italy. Fiscal stimulus is greater than it was but is half-hearted compared to Bidenomics. The Commission’s Spring Forecast released on Wednesday said the eurozone would grow 4.3pc this year and 4.4pc next year, implying that most countries will not recoup their lost GDP before 2022. The Recovery Fund remains totemic in EU rhetoric but is proving smaller than headline figures suggest. Submissions so far amount to just €433bn, too little to move the macroeconomic needle for the bloc as a whole over a five-year period. Most countries have shunned the loan component, with the notable exception of Mario Draghi’s Italy. “It’s lacklustre,” said Bert Colijn from ING. My bet: by early next year the UK will have closed the entire economic gap with the eurozone that has built up since the Referendum shock in 2016; by the end of next year it will have regained its pre-pandemic trajectory, almost as if Covid had never happened. At that point the UK’s maligned economy will have overtaken the eurozone big four and established an outright lead of around 2pc of GDP. Can we then scrub the words “despite Brexit” from the journalistic lexicon?
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  37. Israel must be allowed to defend itself. the Iran-backed terrorists must be stopped.
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  38. I’d consumed 12 pints of Heineken by the time I watched it last night and can’t remember a single thing about it. Probably a blessing given some of the stuff I’ve read. Another series is nailed on with James Nesbit as the main man deffo.
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