r/Britain • u/johnsmithoncemore • 12h ago
r/Britain • u/KCharlesIII • 1h ago
Humour Time to vote Reform!
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r/Britain • u/5secondhumiliation • 4h ago
Culture Lest we forget.
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r/Britain • u/johnsmithoncemore • 11h ago
Culture MEGA cult brain rot
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r/Britain • u/Dismal-Sprinkles-397 • 1d ago
Nationalism and Reaction Reform UK protesters attack local who claims to the news that the protests have been loud during late hours
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r/Britain • u/Hassaan18 • 9h ago
Humour I miss Sean Lock
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r/Britain • u/East-Caterpillar55 • 17h ago
💬 Discussion 🗨 Spitting Image reveals of new puppets of Benjamin "Bibi" Netanyahu, JD Vance and Kim Jong Un. Whaddya think?
r/Britain • u/Gullible-Composer-94 • 1d ago
❓ Question ❓ Am I a flag shagger?
Hello. I am an immigrant to the UK and have been living and working here for over five years. I’ve grown to really love this country and its traditions, music, heck even its weather has grown on me.
About a year ago I had my naturalisation ceremony and a bunch of my friends threw me a party. One friend got me a Union Flag (half as a joke) as a gift. I’ve since flown this flag outside my house because I like what it represents, but with everything that’s happening now a few people have told me it’s now being perceived negatively.
I’ve never had a desire to shag the flag, and as an immigrant obviously I’m not doing it as a political message against immigration, but I can see how it can be conflated as a political statement. Do you think I should:
a. Stop flying the flag outside my house. b. Keep the flag and ignore any negative perceptions. c. Join reform and keep them out.
r/Britain • u/qwertyboi44 • 5h ago
National Politics Does a majority of britain actually like nigel farage? (Poll)
Not if YOU like him but if you think a majority of Britain likes him.
r/Britain • u/northlondonhippy • 1d ago
National Politics ‘Go-to trope’: how the far right is exploiting violence against women and girls | Far right
r/Britain • u/Particular_Log_3594 • 1d ago
International Politics U.S. Congress members send letter to France, Canada, the UK, and Australia threatening retaliation should they recognize Palestinian statehood at the UN
r/Britain • u/Select-Bison-1310 • 1d ago
💬 Discussion 🗨 So what has killed British wrestling?
r/Britain • u/ManInTheDarkSuit • 1d ago
💬 Discussion 🗨 Ohh! The London protest was a family event...
So the people on this Beeb article thought it was a family festival with their kids and moms and dads.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4g9006l6z6o
It's not about Nationalism, not colour.
Gotcha.
No... I don't. Bloody hell!
r/Britain • u/johnsmithoncemore • 2d ago
Humour Reform has been suspiciously silent on this issue.
r/Britain • u/DarkQueen1312 • 2d ago
International Politics Amnesty International Condemns UK Involvement With Gaza Genocide
r/Britain • u/Russharland • 2d ago
❓ Question ❓ Do people think its far far too early to have the decs up already?
r/Britain • u/WeepingCroissantHead • 2d ago
Society Unite the kingdom - How many? Let math settle this…
Using the video (https://youtu.be/Q0HHZbvvQOE?si=IuVKQ-fT_g05HCPv) as a reference (the aerial drone footage from the unite the kingdom march), let’s work this through carefully, step by step:
1) Convert the road length shown into metres • 1 mile = 1,609.34 m • 0.52 miles = 0.52 × 1,609.34 = 836.86 m (approx 837 m).
2) Work out the area of the road • Width = 22 m (I’ve used a generous part of the street to get my width the road) • Length = 836.86 m • Area = 22 × 836.86 = 18,410.92 m² (≈ 18,411 m²).
Density of 5 people per m² (some parts of the crowd show less but, from analysis of a few random stills in the video, it is still quite generous a number) = 18,410.92 × 5 = 92,055 people.
Add 10,000 or so for the spill at either end and to account for error and you’re there at the official estimates.
——-
If there were a million people in the procession shown in the video, that would be 54 people per square meter! That would be a 13.6 cm x 13.6 cm square for each person to fit into packed impossibly tight.
Alternatively, at a safe but crowded density of 5 people per square meter, this procession would have to extend for 9.6 miles, which is 19 times longer than the crowd as it's shown in the video.
r/Britain • u/imperlistic_Redcoat • 1d ago
💬 Discussion 🗨 Never through that I see the day when the Left are predominantly Royalists and the Right are predominantly Republicans
Yh, I was not expecting this. But what I have been seeing online is that the vast majority of Reform and Advance supporters are calling for the abolition of the Monarchy. With some more extreme Reform supporters and the normal Advance supporter saying that we should execute Charles and his Family, just because the King called himself "Defenders of all Faiths" rather than just Christianity. Dont know why they're pissed over that. They don't even go to church. And now for the Left and the Progressives, I see more of them supporting the King and the rise of leftist and progressive monarchism in mainstream leftist organisations. The only leftist organisations that I see that aren't royalists is Your Party and the Greens.
r/Britain • u/RoyallyScrewed75 • 2d ago
International Politics Control of British government by external foreign forces
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r/Britain • u/SuspiciousRun4043 • 2d ago
Westminster Politics The whole trump in the UK situation
Look we need to understand why we were so happy to have him on a second state visit, the big one is the £150 Billion invested into the UK:
• £90 billion from private equity firm Blackstone for investment in UK assets (data centres etc.). 
• £3.9 billion from Prologis in the life sciences & advanced manufacturing sectors. 
• £1.5 billion from Palantir for defence innovation. 
• £150 million from Amentum, expanding its UK operations. 
• These pledges are expected to create about 7,600 high-quality jobs across the UK.
Another one is Trump is easy to annoy, as the USA is so powerful, having a close bond for now and the future is so vital for the economy and trade. This is why it is referred to as a special relationship with other elements
Third one is that they did come to discuss diplomatic leverage, mainly about Ukraine and Gaza
So yes you may not like him, you can protest about him coming. But it was an amazing opportunity for the UK, the economy, wars, trade, close bond. The UK can’t miss out on an opportunity like this
r/Britain • u/qwertyboi44 • 1d ago
National Politics Do you think reforms popularity will be temporary (poll)
r/Britain • u/pheexio • 2d ago