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Do we need to dance again? (2010s/20s)

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How much does the prime minister really affect the way society works?

Can two subsequent prime ministers destroy nearly everything internally and all the respect for their post so much that people turn their backs on them and starts to ignore politics”?

If they claim they are a “fighter not a quitter” would you believe them?

Boris Johnson entered office under the promise to “Get Brexit done” of which his two predecessors had failed to do.

Cameron had objected to the concept of Brexit and resigned and May was incapable of finalising a deal with the EU; as the deadline for the Brexit deal approached he needed to force action, the negotiations with the EU were stalling, the issues within how the Good Friday Agreement would be adapted were becoming a headache and within the Commons no deal proposed passed.

So he went to the queen.

Boris asked to prorogue parliament to place pressure on getting his deal through, closing parliament from September 9th to October 14th.

The prorogation counteracted a planned recess for party conference season which the MPs seemed likely to vote to abolish to focus on Brexit negotiations.

The Supreme Court of the UK found the prorogation illegal and unjustifiable and Parliament was able to resume its business on September 25, 2019.

Lizz Truss entered office after Johnson’s resignation under extreme scrutiny.

Would she be the prime minister to bring England back to its glory days? In short? No.


The fracking opposition vote was ceremonial and the government usually always lets the opposition win in a symbolic victory, but what does Truss do?

Makes it a vote of confidence in her premiership. Three hours pass its midday, the vote is no longer a confidence vote, another three hours pass it’s 3pm the vote is rapidly approaching, and it is a confidence vote once more.


This confusion came after her catastrophic “mini budget” in which £45bn in tax cuts were proposed, £70bn in borrowing, each of the 65,000 richest people in England were set to gain £10,000 a year and the pound plummeted to its lowest value over the past decade, senior officials were pulling MPs into rooms and yelling at them to back the party

Pure Chaos…. And how does the public respond? You know by this point

Pinkpanthress nominated for the Mercury Prize, Charlie XCX sweeping the Brits, Kaytranada, Tyler the creator, Steve Lacey, Jamiroquai returning for a new album, Chappel Roan bringing back the 80s synths, The Dare shooting to fame, BLACKPINK returning with a club song, Tame impala, Niko B emerging from the underground.


We’re seeing a dance music explosion like we have never seen which retrospectively should seem obvious to happen but with a growing far right led by Nigel Farage’s Reform Party, the cost of living crisis not fixing, a housing epidemic and 14 years of Conservative austerity gutting social services, people are ready to dance again.


The LGBTQ club is also seeing a return to needing safe havens, the High Court ruling that a woman is a biological issue erasing trans women’s existence even with gender certification certificates, LBTQ bars are popping up, Queer Sapphic reported that lesbian bars in the US dropped to 20 however 15 have opened in the last five years indicating a necessity for LGBTQ and especially queer female safe spaces.

The new clubbing image is all about two things. Connection and sweat.

Charlie XCX doing a boiler room set where everyone is packed like sardines, Tyler the creator encouraging his fans to “Move until they drop”, pinkpanthress including provocative noises on stateside, in an era so dominated by the internet are we finally seeing a return to true human connection through dance in the face of economic disparity and political instability?

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Managerless Blackfield & Langley thrashed as Colden Common hit ten

Taylor-James Greer

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Colden Common leapfrog into second as they produced a ruthless display
to thrash managerless Blackfield & Langley 10-0, piling further misery
on the Watersiders who arrived with only a starting XI and no
substitutes available.

The hosts needed just four minutes to open the scoring. Joao Ferreira
found Cal Archer outside the box, and the midfielder rifled a low
strike into the bottom corner beyond Ollie Bull.

Colden Common continued to dominate, with Charlie Hitchings and Sam
Woodward both threatening as Blackfield struggled to contain the early
pressure.

The second goal soon followed when Brad Lethbridge’s delivery found
defender Sam Middleton at the back post, where he finished sharply
from close range.

The Watersiders briefly threatened on the counter-attack when captain
Bradley Snelling raced through on goal, but James Egeland-Jensen stood
tall to deny him

The Stallions quickly punished that missed chance. Cam Stone’s cross
from the left found Ferreira inside the area, and his effort squeezed
through Bull’s legs to make it 3-0.

Woodward was then denied by an excellent leg save from Bull, while
Middleton saw a volley blocked after Ollie Riddell flicked on
Lethbridge’s corner.

Ferreira added a fourth despite strong appeals for offside from the
visitors, before Middleton missed the chance for another when he
headed wide at the back-post.

The fifth came through Woodward, who converted from close range.
Moments later, Stone won possession high up the pitch following a
loose pass from Josh Moody, allowing Ferreira to race clear and fire
home his hat-trick.

Archer then grabbed his second goal before half-time with a near-post
finish to complete a devastating opening 45 minutes and send Colden
Common into the break 7-0 ahead.

The hosts resumed in the same manner after the restart and added an
eighth goal within three minutes when Woodward’s effort took a
deflection on its way past Bull.

Archer thought he had completed his hat-trick, but the effort was
ruled out for handball. Woodward also had a strike disallowed for
offside, while former Watersider Hitchings saw another finish chalked
off after Middleton’s low drive ricocheted into his path.

Woodward continued to search for more goals but could not convert an
acrobatic attempt inside the area.

Blackfield did carve out a rare chance, as Cam Ross’s headed clearance
fell kindly for Charlie Luff outside the box, but his volley arrowed
wide of the post.

The ninth eventually arrived when Ben Sunley picked out Lethbridge,
who made no mistake from close range for his 19th league goal of the
season.

Colden Common were then forced to play the final ten minutes with ten
men after Sunley was injured with all five substitutions already used.

Even so, they still found time for a tenth. Owen Sims struck the post,
Alex Vine’s header was saved, but shortly afterwards he found the
target from close-range to complete the scoring.

Colden Common are back on the road as they take on Totton & Eling on
Thursday night at Miller Park, whilst Blackfield & Langley will face
The Millers two days earlier at Gang Warily Recreation Centre on
Tuesday night.

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Colden Common run riot before late wobble against Alresford

Taylor-James Greer

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The Stallions stormed into a four-goal lead in a ruthless first-half display in a 4-2 win over local rivals Alresford Town

The hosts thought they had struck inside the opening minute when Cam Stone managed to lob keeper Ben Barnard, only for the offside flag to cut short the celebrations.

They did not have to wait long. Just nine minutes in, Cal Archer threaded a pass into the path of Sam Woodward, who slid a low finish beyond Barnard to hand the Colden Common an early lead.

It should have been two soon after. Will Erdinc’s clever cut-back found Brad Lethbridge lurking, but the former Portsmouth midfielder could only guide his effort wide. Woodward then stung the palms of Barnard with a half-volley, while Owen Sims was foundinto acres of space on the right, only to see his dink drift off target.

Alresford briefly threatened Former Stallion Josh Bowerman capitalised on a loose back pass from Archer, racing through one-on-one, but James Egeland-Jensen stood tall to block and preserve the lead.

Colden Common punished the visitors as they struck twice in quick succession to take control. Joao Ferreira managed to curl home a composed finish after being picked out by Lethbridge, before rounding Barnard moments later to slot in his second. 

Sims nearly added a fourth before the break, his low corner falling to Stone on the edge of the box, but the midfielder dragged his effort wide.

Alresford thought they had a route back when skipper Tom Henderson finished off a swift counter-attack, only for the flag to once again but this time to deny them. Moments later, Colden Common were awarded a controversial penalty for handball, and Lethbridge stepped up to convert from the spot, sending Steve King’s side into the break with a 4-0 lead. 

It was one-way traffic after the restart. Sims continued to find space on the right and picked out Woodward, but the forward could not keep his effort on target. Lethbridge then saw a golden opportunity smothered by Barnard as the Stallions pushed for more.

An unmarked Henderson managed to head home Jack Welch’s delivery and pull one back for the Magpies. .

There was still time for more late drama. Matty Driver rattled the crossbar on his return, while a hopeful long ball forward from Barnard caused panic in the Colden Common defence. Henderson’s initial effort was blocked on the line by Sam Middleton, but Bowerman reacted quickest to force the ball home against his former club. 

Next up for Colden Common is the visit of mangerless Blackfield and Langley, whilst Alresford host Frimley Green.

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Winchester News Online

Mak Carney’s speech at the WEF is a damning contrast to Trump’s

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Mark Carney rises to address world leaders, businessmen and bankers at the World Economic Forum. 

As the Canadian Prime Minister, he has faced constant attack from the US President Donald Trump with Trump stating that “they should be grateful to us, Canada. Canada lives because of the United States”.

Internationally things are heating up, Trump’s America is involved in wars in Gaza, occupying Venezuela, threatening to disband NATO by forcefully taking Greenland, Iran is in civil unrest and America is threatening strikes, the war in Ukraine is still ongoing and trump seemingly wants Ukraine to surrender land as the ‘only viable option’ for peace. He references Vaclav Havel’s essay: ‘The power the powerless in which it is proposed that the only way to bring down an oppressive state and challenge it is for the people to stop believing in its lies and engaging with its systems using one such example of a greengrocer placing a sign in his window stating “workers unite” in soviet states. Not because he believes it but rather as compliance with the state and only when they defy the state by taking the sign out of the window will anything change. 

“We know that the rules based order is fading, the strong can do what they can and the weak must suffer” Trump has been throwing tariffs on any nation that challenges his perspective, since the end of WW2 Nato has served as a harbour for European and international powers for peace and prosperity and with potential attacks on Greenland the US is possibly going to bring an end to the alliance. His speech serves as a call to action for the middle powers and neighbours of larger powers (the UK, Canada, Mexico, lots of eastern Europe) to band together in a trade bloc against Russia China and the US in-order to demand more equality away from the three modern superpowers. 

The stance Mark Carney takes opposes the stance trump takes on public forums. His speech is careful, considered and most importantly, pragmatic. Carney isn’t directly placing the blame on any nation or asking specifically for help and partnership but rather is dog whistling to smaller nations that nothing will change unless we band together, speaking on global issues at a global forum; compare it to trump’s speech at the same forum and it’s like night and day. The first statement that leaves his mouth “I’ve come to this world economic forum with great news from America” and continues on a monologue about his perceived achievements on home soil, very little time is actually dedicated towards international issues at the WORLD economic forum. We see this in all of Trumps international appearances, you only have to harken back to his speech at the UN where he does the same tactic: speak on domestic issues at an international forum bringing the attention onto him rather than issues that actually matter. 

Carney and Trump’s speeches are direct mirrors of one-another; pragmatic and focused and rambling/egotistical people onlooking them can only hope that there are more world leaders upcoming with the stance of foreign policy that Mr Carney has. 

People find solidarity in groups and are more confident when they know people agree with them, so as protests rage on in the US over ICE and the killing of innocent civilians and Trump’s presidency you can only ask; are the greengrocers taking their signs out of the window?

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