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Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country - Politics - Nairaland

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Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by Kingsnairaland(m): 2:50pm On Jan 05, 2023
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/01/04/nobody-wants-confront-truth-britain-becoming-poor-country/?fbclid=IwAR1PWEzlwy884qSb4Vi5c5NNhBP0hva63eyFr588ONqgJMTJwCd4u-14K_A


When will we finally wake up, and jolt out of our debilitating stupor? Britain as we know it faces an existential crisis. Crippled by scores of pathologies, from an imploding health service to sliding real wages, our status as one of the wealthiest, most civilised countries in the world is at risk for the first time since the Industrial Revolution.

We are gradually going the way of Argentina, once one of richest nations, and until the 1960s more prosperous than many European powers, but now an impoverished, unstable basket-case. We are likely to soon see a new generation of young, ambitious British people seek their fortunes abroad.

On current trends, we will be overtaken in terms of GDP per capita by Poland in a dozen years. It is no excuse to point out that France, Italy and many others will suffer the same fate in roughly the same timeframe (which is why the EU Rejoiners are missing the point), or that most other European countries are facing their very own health crises, or that Germany’s energy conundrum is even greater than ours.

The sorry truth is that Britain’s fall from grace has been more extreme, more sudden, less explicable and far less forgivable. We should be doing so much better, especially after Brexit.

In the 1980s and 1990s, unlike our European neighbours, we had successfully started to reverse our managed decline, and yet today all of those gains have been squandered. Our growth rate, pushed down by absurd monetary polices and ever higher taxes and red tape, is now roughly tracking the Eurozone’s pathetic performance, a disastrous deterioration.

Unlike that of America, our economy hasn’t recovered from the financial crisis: 2008 was our annus horribilis, and we have severely underperformed ever since. Our failure has not only been statistical: our economic culture has also decayed, with a collapse in service standards, a blunting of our entrepreneurial zeal and the demise of the hard-work ethos that was the hallmark of our Anglo-American exceptionalism. Covid has turbocharged this trend: nothing gets done, we have grown lazy, and everything appears broken. We have adopted an ersatz European social democracy with none of the upsides and all of the downsides. Brexit was an attempt at forcing the establishment to tackle our decline, but so far political parties and the Blob have acted as a cartel to maintain the status quo.

Our most obvious, urgent crisis is the implosion of the NHS. Even though its resources have increased – both in cash and frontline staffing hours – its output has fallen. Thousands are dying, and hundreds of thousands are suffering: its performance is a catastrophe that disgraces Britain. If you are skilled and educated, why live in a country that cannot even provide its citizens with a decent level of healthcare? Why is it still taboo to call for the NHS to be scrapped, and replaced by a better system? If our politics were working properly, the NHS’s chief executive and the bosses of numerous trusts would have been sacked, and we would be in the middle of a national debate about building a new health system fit for the 21st century. We would be discussing charging people who can afford it, and moving towards a German or Swiss-style social insurance model. Instead, the discourse is stuck in its usual hysterical rut, with the Tories minimising the scale of the problem and Labour pretending that even more money is the only solution.

While the NHS is the most obvious symptom of our national decline, immigration, law and order and our energy policy are also deeply broken. With virtually no growth, what is left of our military prowess and geopolitical influence will wither as the welfare state gobbles up an ever greater share of GDP. An insane refusal to allow the construction of the sorts of private homes that make a good life possible, combined with artificially cheap loans, has alienated millions. Labour will only make these problems worse: it has no useful solutions, just more failed tax, spend, class war and woke nostrums.

It is in this context that Rishi Sunak’s new year speech should be assessed. His decision to set out his vision for the country is welcome. Unlike much of the establishment, which veers between delusion about the magnitude of our challenges and a strange resignation that our national failure is inevitable, Sunak is keen to reverse our descent into oblivion. He wants to tackle the “creeping acceptance of a narrative of decline”.

I fear, however, that his approach suffers from a lack of urgency, a gradualism that will be his downfall. One of Sunak’s core beliefs is that there are no quick fixes; another is that if everything is a priority then nothing is. He must also realise that the Tory party is a dysfunctional coalition and the majority he has inherited is chimerical.

The result is a limited, self-consciously “realistic” plan in two-parts: short-term, he proposes five pledges; longer-term, he wants to rebuild a more conservative Britain around education, the family and innovation. The first three of Sunak’s pledges – to halve inflation, to grow the economy and cut the national debt – are largely meaningless, though it is good finally to see the Prime Minister taking responsibility for price rises.

The reduction in inflation amounts to what economists are already predicting, and Sunak didn’t announce any policies that would impact growth or debt this year. He might reform welfare to encourage work: let’s hope he has the appetite for some genuine tough love. He doesn’t want to shake-up the NHS but does want to use more private hospitals, which is highly positive. We shall see what he achieves on small boats.

His longer-term aspirations make sense, but the danger is that he won’t be in power to implement them. Many of the Government’s semi-socialist policies militate against the innovation Sunak hopes will boost GDP. His paean to the family was wonderful, but there was a disconnect between the immensity of the issue and the modesty of his proposed solutions. Better, more widespread mathematical knowledge would be excellent, but so would lower taxes, deregulation and massive health and welfare reform.

The Prime Minister is taking the proverbial pea shooter to a nuclear battlefield. He risks failing to rise to the scale of the challenge: Britain requires shock therapy, not gentle reforms.

4 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by Betscoreodds: 2:53pm On Jan 05, 2023
I don't want to hear this just send more money and weapons to Ukraine

You said the war will continue to the last Ukraine man.

11 Likes 1 Share

Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by omonnakoda: 2:54pm On Jan 05, 2023
One man's opinion

Emphasis on. OPINION

5 Likes

Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by Solofresh2: 2:55pm On Jan 05, 2023
It is a gradual process.And by the time the finally fall,another poor nation will rise cool

8 Likes

Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by Kingsnairaland(m): 2:56pm On Jan 05, 2023
No wonder they ran away from Afghanistan and went to drink Ukraine blood hoping to steal Ukraine's wealth from mother Russia.

9 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by FarahAideed: 2:56pm On Jan 05, 2023
Never liked the UK , everywhere reeks of struggle

18 Likes 1 Share

Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by Creamcrest(m): 2:57pm On Jan 05, 2023
Not only poor but also filled with lots of allahu Akbar head slamming terrorist migrants.

7 Likes

Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by MrAdam: 2:57pm On Jan 05, 2023
Well, well, well!

1 Like

Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by RZArecta(m): 2:58pm On Jan 05, 2023
Imagine Britain with Nigeria's natural resources shocked
Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by Robnectar(m): 3:00pm On Jan 05, 2023
Solofresh2:
It is a gradual process.And by the time the finally fall,another poor nation will rise cool

Yes with time,... cool
Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by VeryWickedSimp: 3:03pm On Jan 05, 2023
That's why they opened their gates to Nigerians. grin

10 Likes

Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by Obc1234(m): 3:11pm On Jan 05, 2023
The worst mistake of Britain is brexit

9 Likes

Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by BloomingDale(f): 3:15pm On Jan 05, 2023
VeryWickedSimp:
That's why they opened their gates to Nigerians. grin
They need the Nigerian slaves to take over the struggle for them, while they relax and get rich off them. Did you not hear about the complaints from Nigerian doctors that are overworked and underpaid?

16 Likes 1 Share

Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by bjdon: 3:22pm On Jan 05, 2023
The same crappie was said in the 70's. The UK will prosper, its a dynamic country.

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by VeryWickedSimp: 3:33pm On Jan 05, 2023
BloomingDale:

They need the Nigerian slaves to take over the struggle for them, while they relax and get rich off them. Did you not hear about the complaints from Nigerian doctors that are overworked and underpaid?

Dem neva see anything yet.
After resurrecting their economy for them, those visas will be revoked and 80% of them will be deported back to Naija.

8 Likes

Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by PDJT: 3:33pm On Jan 05, 2023
-“Socialism is the shortest distance between prosperity and poverty.” - Robert Higgs.

-Several generations of welfare state dependency and encouragement of depravity.

-If you breakup the family (the atom of a society), what are you going to replace it with?

3 Likes

Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by NimrodEndOfDays(m): 3:38pm On Jan 05, 2023
It would be my greatest joy if the UK crumbles and gets destroyed. They think they can steal people's resources forever .They should beg the Fulani to employ them in NNPC cheesy

7 Likes 1 Share

Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by Kingsnairaland(m): 6:12pm On Jan 05, 2023
Ukraine live briefing: Putin orders 36-hour unilateral cease-fire in Ukraine for Orthodox Christmas
Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by gidgiddy: 6:26pm On Jan 05, 2023
RZArecta:
Imagine Britain with Nigeria's natural resources shocked

Natural resources is not what makes a country rich

3 Likes

Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by omonnakoda: 6:33pm On Jan 05, 2023
gidgiddy:


Natural resources is not what makes a country rich
it helps
The US is one of the resource richest countries on earth.
Russia is too and along with Brazil and Indonesia are among top 10 GDP in PPP terms

2 Likes

Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by ImperialYoruba: 6:49pm On Jan 05, 2023
Kingsnairaland:
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/01/04/nobody-wants-confront-truth-britain-becoming-poor-country/?fbclid=IwAR1PWEzlwy884qSb4Vi5c5NNhBP0hva63eyFr588ONqgJMTJwCd4u-14K_A


When will we finally wake up, and jolt out of our debilitating stupor? Britain as we know it faces an existential crisis. Crippled by scores of pathologies, from an imploding health service to sliding real wages, our status as one of the wealthiest, most civilised countries in the world is at risk for the first time since the Industrial Revolution.

We are gradually going the way of Argentina, once one of richest nations, and until the 1960s more prosperous than many European powers, but now an impoverished, unstable basket-case. We are likely to soon see a new generation of young, ambitious British people seek their fortunes abroad.

On current trends, we will be overtaken in terms of GDP per capita by Poland in a dozen years. It is no excuse to point out that France, Italy and many others will suffer the same fate in roughly the same timeframe (which is why the EU Rejoiners are missing the point), or that most other European countries are facing their very own health crises, or that Germany’s energy conundrum is even greater than ours.

The sorry truth is that Britain’s fall from grace has been more extreme, more sudden, less explicable and far less forgivable. We should be doing so much better, especially after Brexit.

In the 1980s and 1990s, unlike our European neighbours, we had successfully started to reverse our managed decline, and yet today all of those gains have been squandered. Our growth rate, pushed down by absurd monetary polices and ever higher taxes and red tape, is now roughly tracking the Eurozone’s pathetic performance, a disastrous deterioration.

Unlike that of America, our economy hasn’t recovered from the financial crisis: 2008 was our annus horribilis, and we have severely underperformed ever since. Our failure has not only been statistical: our economic culture has also decayed, with a collapse in service standards, a blunting of our entrepreneurial zeal and the demise of the hard-work ethos that was the hallmark of our Anglo-American exceptionalism. Covid has turbocharged this trend: nothing gets done, we have grown lazy, and everything appears broken. We have adopted an ersatz European social democracy with none of the upsides and all of the downsides. Brexit was an attempt at forcing the establishment to tackle our decline, but so far political parties and the Blob have acted as a cartel to maintain the status quo.

Our most obvious, urgent crisis is the implosion of the NHS. Even though its resources have increased – both in cash and frontline staffing hours – its output has fallen. Thousands are dying, and hundreds of thousands are suffering: its performance is a catastrophe that disgraces Britain. If you are skilled and educated, why live in a country that cannot even provide its citizens with a decent level of healthcare? Why is it still taboo to call for the NHS to be scrapped, and replaced by a better system? If our politics were working properly, the NHS’s chief executive and the bosses of numerous trusts would have been sacked, and we would be in the middle of a national debate about building a new health system fit for the 21st century. We would be discussing charging people who can afford it, and moving towards a German or Swiss-style social insurance model. Instead, the discourse is stuck in its usual hysterical rut, with the Tories minimising the scale of the problem and Labour pretending that even more money is the only solution.

While the NHS is the most obvious symptom of our national decline, immigration, law and order and our energy policy are also deeply broken. With virtually no growth, what is left of our military prowess and geopolitical influence will wither as the welfare state gobbles up an ever greater share of GDP. An insane refusal to allow the construction of the sorts of private homes that make a good life possible, combined with artificially cheap loans, has alienated millions. Labour will only make these problems worse: it has no useful solutions, just more failed tax, spend, class war and woke nostrums.

It is in this context that Rishi Sunak’s new year speech should be assessed. His decision to set out his vision for the country is welcome. Unlike much of the establishment, which veers between delusion about the magnitude of our challenges and a strange resignation that our national failure is inevitable, Sunak is keen to reverse our descent into oblivion. He wants to tackle the “creeping acceptance of a narrative of decline”.

I fear, however, that his approach suffers from a lack of urgency, a gradualism that will be his downfall. One of Sunak’s core beliefs is that there are no quick fixes; another is that if everything is a priority then nothing is. He must also realise that the Tory party is a dysfunctional coalition and the majority he has inherited is chimerical.

The result is a limited, self-consciously “realistic” plan in two-parts: short-term, he proposes five pledges; longer-term, he wants to rebuild a more conservative Britain around education, the family and innovation. The first three of Sunak’s pledges – to halve inflation, to grow the economy and cut the national debt – are largely meaningless, though it is good finally to see the Prime Minister taking responsibility for price rises.

The reduction in inflation amounts to what economists are already predicting, and Sunak didn’t announce any policies that would impact growth or debt this year. He might reform welfare to encourage work: let’s hope he has the appetite for some genuine tough love. He doesn’t want to shake-up the NHS but does want to use more private hospitals, which is highly positive. We shall see what he achieves on small boats.

His longer-term aspirations make sense, but the danger is that he won’t be in power to implement them. Many of the Government’s semi-socialist policies militate against the innovation Sunak hopes will boost GDP. His paean to the family was wonderful, but there was a disconnect between the immensity of the issue and the modesty of his proposed solutions. Better, more widespread mathematical knowledge would be excellent, but so would lower taxes, deregulation and massive health and welfare reform.

The Prime Minister is taking the proverbial pea shooter to a nuclear battlefield. He risks failing to rise to the scale of the challenge: Britain requires shock therapy, not gentle reforms.

Your royalty spent centuries raiding and stealing from others to line their pockets and treasury. You taught citizens of those countries to loot and deprive their people. Now no loot is left to steal.

Oga, tell your royalty to open their pockets and estates for national recovery.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by ElSudani: 6:56pm On Jan 05, 2023
Kingsnairaland:
No wonder they ran away from Afghanistan and went to drink Ukraine blood hoping to steal Ukraine's wealth from mother Russia.

Mother Russia! These black folks are something else. Your mother Russia did not give any notice before they ran away from the same Afghanistan.

1 Like

Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by Kingsnairaland(m): 7:24pm On Jan 05, 2023
ElSudani:


Mother Russia! These black folks are something else. Your mother Russia did not give any notice before they ran away from the same Afghanistan.

1 Like

Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by ThinkSmarter: 8:14pm On Jan 05, 2023
How many "Made in England" Clothes, Electronics, machines, equipments, vehicles, tools or iT firms are in the mkt?
America took the glory of their Western cousins.
England, France, Italy , Germany and Portugal greatest achievements are their leading pioneer in civilising other parts of the world.

5 Likes

Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by Panda7: 8:19pm On Jan 05, 2023
but they are playing football internationally atleast that is what they are known for?
Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by StaffofOrayan(m): 8:37pm On Jan 05, 2023
The only viable option for Europe is recolonization,
But first, we have to "invite" them in, and the easiest way is through supporting conflict in West Africa, and these religious nutheads are always available to play into their hands

1 Like

Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by Kingsnairaland(m): 7:27am On Jan 06, 2023
A News
Russian President Vladimir #Putin said that #Russia was ready for a dialogue on #Ukraine, but that Kyiv must fulfil the previously announced requirements and take into account "new #territorial #realities".
http://anws/0b547b?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=facebook

Putin tells Erdoğan: Ukraine must accept loss of territories for there to be dialogue
anews.com.tr
Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by joyandfaith: 7:30am On Jan 06, 2023
Kingsnairaland:
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/01/04/nobody-wants-confront-truth-britain-becoming-poor-country/?fbclid=IwAR1PWEzlwy884qSb4Vi5c5NNhBP0hva63eyFr588ONqgJMTJwCd4u-14K_A


When will we finally wake up, and jolt out of our debilitating stupor? Britain as we know it faces an existential crisis. Crippled by scores of pathologies, from an imploding health service to sliding real wages, our status as one of the wealthiest, most civilised countries in the world is at risk for the first time since the Industrial Revolution.

We are gradually going the way of Argentina, once one of richest nations, and until the 1960s more prosperous than many European powers, but now an impoverished, unstable basket-case. We are likely to soon see a new generation of young, ambitious British people seek their fortunes abroad.

On current trends, we will be overtaken in terms of GDP per capita by Poland in a dozen years. It is no excuse to point out that France, Italy and many others will suffer the same fate in roughly the same timeframe (which is why the EU Rejoiners are missing the point), or that most other European countries are facing their very own health crises, or that Germany’s energy conundrum is even greater than ours.

The sorry truth is that Britain’s fall from grace has been more extreme, more sudden, less explicable and far less forgivable. We should be doing so much better, especially after Brexit.

In the 1980s and 1990s, unlike our European neighbours, we had successfully started to reverse our managed decline, and yet today all of those gains have been squandered. Our growth rate, pushed down by absurd monetary polices and ever higher taxes and red tape, is now roughly tracking the Eurozone’s pathetic performance, a disastrous deterioration.

Unlike that of America, our economy hasn’t recovered from the financial crisis: 2008 was our annus horribilis, and we have severely underperformed ever since. Our failure has not only been statistical: our economic culture has also decayed, with a collapse in service standards, a blunting of our entrepreneurial zeal and the demise of the hard-work ethos that was the hallmark of our Anglo-American exceptionalism. Covid has turbocharged this trend: nothing gets done, we have grown lazy, and everything appears broken. We have adopted an ersatz European social democracy with none of the upsides and all of the downsides. Brexit was an attempt at forcing the establishment to tackle our decline, but so far political parties and the Blob have acted as a cartel to maintain the status quo.

Our most obvious, urgent crisis is the implosion of the NHS. Even though its resources have increased – both in cash and frontline staffing hours – its output has fallen. Thousands are dying, and hundreds of thousands are suffering: its performance is a catastrophe that disgraces Britain. If you are skilled and educated, why live in a country that cannot even provide its citizens with a decent level of healthcare? Why is it still taboo to call for the NHS to be scrapped, and replaced by a better system? If our politics were working properly, the NHS’s chief executive and the bosses of numerous trusts would have been sacked, and we would be in the middle of a national debate about building a new health system fit for the 21st century. We would be discussing charging people who can afford it, and moving towards a German or Swiss-style social insurance model. Instead, the discourse is stuck in its usual hysterical rut, with the Tories minimising the scale of the problem and Labour pretending that even more money is the only solution.

While the NHS is the most obvious symptom of our national decline, immigration, law and order and our energy policy are also deeply broken. With virtually no growth, what is left of our military prowess and geopolitical influence will wither as the welfare state gobbles up an ever greater share of GDP. An insane refusal to allow the construction of the sorts of private homes that make a good life possible, combined with artificially cheap loans, has alienated millions. Labour will only make these problems worse: it has no useful solutions, just more failed tax, spend, class war and woke nostrums.

It is in this context that Rishi Sunak’s new year speech should be assessed. His decision to set out his vision for the country is welcome. Unlike much of the establishment, which veers between delusion about the magnitude of our challenges and a strange resignation that our national failure is inevitable, Sunak is keen to reverse our descent into oblivion. He wants to tackle the “creeping acceptance of a narrative of decline”.

I fear, however, that his approach suffers from a lack of urgency, a gradualism that will be his downfall. One of Sunak’s core beliefs is that there are no quick fixes; another is that if everything is a priority then nothing is. He must also realise that the Tory party is a dysfunctional coalition and the majority he has inherited is chimerical.

The result is a limited, self-consciously “realistic” plan in two-parts: short-term, he proposes five pledges; longer-term, he wants to rebuild a more conservative Britain around education, the family and innovation. The first three of Sunak’s pledges – to halve inflation, to grow the economy and cut the national debt – are largely meaningless, though it is good finally to see the Prime Minister taking responsibility for price rises.

The reduction in inflation amounts to what economists are already predicting, and Sunak didn’t announce any policies that would impact growth or debt this year. He might reform welfare to encourage work: let’s hope he has the appetite for some genuine tough love. He doesn’t want to shake-up the NHS but does want to use more private hospitals, which is highly positive. We shall see what he achieves on small boats.

His longer-term aspirations make sense, but the danger is that he won’t be in power to implement them. Many of the Government’s semi-socialist policies militate against the innovation Sunak hopes will boost GDP. His paean to the family was wonderful, but there was a disconnect between the immensity of the issue and the modesty of his proposed solutions. Better, more widespread mathematical knowledge would be excellent, but so would lower taxes, deregulation and massive health and welfare reform.

The Prime Minister is taking the proverbial pea shooter to a nuclear battlefield. He risks failing to rise to the scale of the challenge: Britain requires shock therapy, not gentle reforms.
Worry about Nigeria. In liberal countries citizens are free to speak up. It has been helping them.
Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by joyandfaith: 7:32am On Jan 06, 2023
Kingsnairaland:
A News
Russian President Vladimir #Putin said that #Russia was ready for a dialogue on #Ukraine, but that Kyiv must fulfil the previously announced requirements and take into account "new #territorial #realities".
http://anws/0b547b?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=facebook

Putin tells Erdoğan: Ukraine must accept loss of territories for there to be dialogue
anews.com.tr

And you think ukraine would agree? War that last more than 5 years.

1 Like

Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by joyandfaith: 7:33am On Jan 06, 2023
Kingsnairaland:
No wonder they ran away from Afghanistan and went to drink Ukraine blood hoping to steal Ukraine's wealth from mother Russia.

And Russia is in Ukraine to steal her wealth.
Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by Kingsnairaland(m): 8:17am On Jan 06, 2023
joyandfaith:


And you think ukraine would agree? War that last more than 5 years.
When they agree or if they agree are you going to acknowledge that Russia is stronger than nato lol. Just answer yes or no.
Re: Nobody Wants To Confront The Truth: Britain Is Becoming A Poor Country by Kingsnairaland(m): 8:18am On Jan 06, 2023
joyandfaith:


And Russia is in Ukraine to steal her wealth.
protecting your brother wealth is not stealing it.

1 Like

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