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“Go Take the Oil”: Donald Trump's Explosive Message to the UK Sends Shockwaves Through Britain

The message lands like a geopolitical shockwave, not merely as rhetoric but as a signal of a hardening posture that could redefine one of the world’s most historically durable alliances. If interpreted as more than bluster, it suggests a United States increasingly willing to transactionalize security guarantees and energy stability, long considered pillars of its relationship with the United Kingdom. The implication is stark: loyalty is no longer assumed currency, and access to critical global supply routes like the Strait of Hormuz may no longer be quietly underwritten by American power. View this post on Instagram A post shared by ALL ANGLES UK (@all_angles_uk) For the United Kingdom, the consequences would be immediate and deeply uncomfortable. The UK is heavily reliant on global energy markets, and any disruption to Gulf flows, especially through a chokepoint as vital as Hormuz, would send energy prices surging. Households would feel it first through rising fue...

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Institutional Betrayal: Why the Met Needs External Intervention Now


By Dadrian Latchman | Crime Watch

When whistleblowers speak, they do so not for glory—but for justice. Yet within the Metropolitan Police, those who dare to expose the rot are met not with reform, but retaliation. Issy Vine, a former 999 call-handler, reported vile, discriminatory behaviour from a colleague—comments about rape victims, racist slurs, and mocking references to murdered women like Sarah Everard. The colleague was sacked, then reinstated. Vine was ignored, sidelined, and eventually forced out. Her story is not an isolated case—it’s a symptom of a force that protects abusers and punishes truth-tellers.

The Casey Review declared the Met “institutionally misogynistic, racist, and homophobic.” Yet despite this damning verdict, the silence persists. Witnesses to misconduct are being silenced. Whistleblowers are driven out. Victims are failed. And the public is fed empty promises of “doing better.” But how can we trust a force that shields predators and gaslights those who speak out?

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Over 1,000 women have reported being harmed by serving Met officers in recent years—and that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Behind closed doors, the culture remains toxic, unchecked, and deeply dangerous.  This is not just a crisis of conduct—it’s a crisis of accountability. When you can’t turn to the police, who do you turn to? The Met has shown it cannot police itself. Internal mechanisms like the IOPC have failed.

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The time for softly-worded pledges is over. We need external intervention. A statutory public inquiry, with legal powers to compel evidence and protect witnesses, is the bare minimum. The public deserves transparency. Survivors deserve justice. Whistleblowers deserve protection—not punishment. 

So we ask: what is the Met hiding? Why the secrecy? What horrors lie beneath the surface that they don’t want us to see? The culture of silence must be shattered. The truth must be dragged into the light. And those who’ve been harmed—whether victims, whistleblowers, or betrayed colleagues—must finally be heard. ALL ANGLES UK stands with Issy Vine and every voice the Met tried to silence. Enough is enough.

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