Britain spends millions on NHS care for migrants at hotels while Britons "wait over 18 months for vital treatments." Thats correct! Taxpayers are spending millions of pounds for asylum seekers to receive "at home" medical assessments inside hotels whilst millions of British patients face extensive NHS waiting times.
It all started in 1799 - William Pitt the Younger* was a reforming prime minister who was determined to do what he could to rationalise the British system of taxation. However, in 1793, when Britain found itself at war with revolutionary France, enormous expenditures on the army and navy required unprecedented borrowing and increased taxation.
After the conclusion of World War II, reparations became a significant topic of discussion among the Allied powers. The devastation caused by the war necessitated a comprehensive approach to rebuilding, and reparations were seen as a means to address the damages inflicted during the conflict. This article explores the reparations that Britain received from Germany following the war.
In the aftermath of World War II, Britain faced significant challenges, including housing shortages, urban overcrowding, and the need for economic revitalisation. To address these issues, the British government initiated the New Towns Movement to create planned communities to alleviate pressure on existing urban areas.
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer suggests that the UK should reimpose "COVID-style" lockdown restrictions to prevent rioting. Starmer believes that measures similar to those taken during the pandemic should be employed to control the current unrest.
The authorities in the United Kingdom (UK) are seeking to pursue those who criticise their mass migration policies, which have led to increased violence across Great Britain.
The UK government is facing increasing pressure to address the issue of unemployment, as data reveals that 9.4 million Britons are neither employed nor actively seeking work. This accounts for over a fifth of the working-age population and includes a near-record number of individuals on long-term sickness leave.
This speech, given by the British Conservative MP Enoch Powell in Nov 1968, was a response to his earlier "Rivers of Blood" speech (20 April 1968) in Birmingham. New Commonwealth immigrants from the West Indies, India, and Pakistan had been allowed to enter and settle freely in the UK.