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LET'S
FACE IT - Britain was built on slave trading. That was
physically enslaving people, who were kidnapped and sold
like animals; horses, cattle, donkeys. The electorate being
the donkeys, for allowing themselves to be lied to by
politicians who have no real understanding of what the
nation is, its strengths and weaknesses. Selling off
national assets like water and electricity (electrocity) to
foreign investors, who naturally, milk their customers, and
funnel profits overseas, turning a plum into a prune. That
explains why it is that British politicians think they can
go on whipping their constituents, raiding their savings,
raising taxes - and all to support public sector workers and
the golden pensions. When in reality, that is a gravy train,
that is unsustainable.
WHITE
PAPER THESIS: FROM BORROWING - TO - BUILDING A BETTER
BRITAIN
A Strategic Framework for Fiscal Reform, Productive Incentives, and Cultural Renewal in the United Kingdom.
Executive Summary
The United Kingdom faces a structural imbalance: a bloated administrative sector, unsustainable borrowing, and a housing crisis that undermines both economic productivity and creative potential. This white paper proposes a radical reorientation of national priorities—cutting bureaucratic waste, empowering productive workers, banning executive housing developments, and investing in renewable energy and the Orange Economy.
By leveraging AI to streamline public services, redirecting funds to grassroots innovation, and enforcing equitable housing policies, the UK can transition from a borrower to a builder—aligned with the
United Nations Sustainable Development Goals and poised to become a net lender on the global stage.
This isn’t just about trimming fat—it’s about redefining the purpose of government: from a bloated administrator to a lean enabler of innovation, equity, and global relevance. The UK has the talent, the legacy, and the creative firepower. It just needs to stop borrowing against its future and start building it.

LACKING
VISION? - Rachel Reeves is tackling debt by borrowing more,
so creating more debt, which requires more tax raids. And so
on.
She
will never balance the books with such policies. Any
chancellor needs to understand where and what the problems
are in the nation of shirkers and freeloaders, that the UK
has become. Most especially in the public sector, where they
do not produce anything, but instead, prey on productive
members of society, like leaches, sucking the life blood out
of creatives and innovators, with yet more red tape, then
red tape on red tape - to justify their non-performance and
build their part.
All,
to satiate the appetite of lenders and landlords, who then
take their profits overseas. So, draining the UK's economy.
Wake up Rachel! Vampire
politics is not the way. Please stop sucking the life
blood from those people who trusted you to heal the gaping
wound that is the UK.
Problem Statement
a) UK borrowing exceeds £2.5
trillion, with rising interest payments and pension liabilities
b) Public sector employment is disproportionately weighted toward administrative roles, with low productivity impact
c) Affordable housing supply is critically low, while executive homes proliferate
d) Profits from high-rent housing are siphoned off by private landlords, not reinvested in public infrastructure or innovation
e) Tax burdens on SMEs and producers are rising, stifling entrepreneurship and local manufacturing
Strategic Goals
f) Reduce national borrowing by cutting administrative overhead and pension liabilities
g) Rebalance the workforce toward productive sectors: builders, farmers, engineers, creatives
h) Ban executive housing developments in areas with affordable housing deficits
i) Redirect housing profits into local infrastructure, renewable energy, and creative exports
j) Leverage AI to automate public sector functions and reduce staffing costs
k) Empower the Orange Economy as a strategic export sector
POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS
1. Public Sector Reform
Deploy AI for administrative tasks: licensing, benefits, tax processing,
with easy to access fault and complaint reporting
Cap administrative spending at 20% of GDP
Introduce performance-based retention and retraining programs
Transition pension schemes to contribution-based models with AI-managed forecasting
2. Housing Equity Mandate & Compulsory Purchase
Requirement
- Ban new executive housing developments in regions with <35% affordable housing stock
- Enforce a minimum 50% affordable housing quota in all new developments
- Introduce a “Rent Reinvestment Levy” on high-rent properties, earmarked for local infrastructure and innovation funds
-
Subsidize Modular Innovation: Grants for UK-based flatpack manufacturers.
- Streamline Planning Approval: Fast-track modular projects with pre-approved designs.
- Create Modular Zones: Designate areas for rapid deployment of flatpack housing.
- Tie CPOs to Housing Targets: Require councils to use CPOs if affordable quotas aren’t met.
Proven Self & Quick Build Models
BoKlok (IKEA + Skanska): Already piloted in the UK, offering homes under £200,000.
HebHomes: Architect-designed timber kit homes with over 400 builds across the UK.
Karmod & SIPHouse: Offer modular homes from £45,000–£60,000 for 60–80m² units.
https://www.hebhomes.com/prices
https://karmod.co.uk/product/scandinavian-flat-pack-houses
Key Legal Mechanisms
2.1 Land Value Cap for Compulsory Purchase
Statutory Cap: Land designated for affordable housing in a Local Plan shall be subject to compulsory purchase at no more than 200% of its existing use value (e.g. agricultural land).
No Hope Value Clause: Compensation must exclude any uplift in value arising from the prospect of planning permission or future development.
Green Belt Equivalence: Green belt land shall be treated as agricultural land for valuation purposes when designated for affordable housing.
2.2 Trigger Mechanism for Compulsory Purchase
Failure to Deliver Clause: If a local authority fails to meet its affordable housing targets for two consecutive years, it shall be legally required to:
Identify underused or hoarded land within its jurisdiction
Initiate compulsory purchase proceedings for designated sites
Prioritize modular or rapid-build housing solutions on acquired land
2.3 Speculation Deterrence Measures
Land Banking Penalty: Land held undeveloped for more than 3 years after planning designation shall be subject to:
A Vacant Land Levy (e.g. 5% annual tax on undeveloped land value)
Forfeiture of uplift rights if CPO is triggered
Land left undeveloped after 5 years, shall lose any grants of planning consent, this clause being applied retrospectively, as with changes in road fund license, for previously zero rated vehicles. This clause being applied to land that was green belt.
2.4 Transparency and Accountability
Public Register of Designated Land: Councils must publish a live register of all land designated for affordable housing, including ownership, planning status, and development timelines.
Annual Housing Delivery Audit: Independent audit of each council’s delivery against targets, with powers to recommend intervention.
2.5 Ministerial Oversight and Escalation
Secretary of State Powers: Where councils fail to act, the Secretary of State may:
Direct Homes England or a regional development corporation to exercise CPO powers
Withhold infrastructure funding until compliance is demonstrated
2.6
Supporting Precedents & Momentum
The Levelling-Up and Regeneration Act 2023 already allows councils to exclude “hope value” from CPO compensation in certain cases.
The Housing, Communities and Local Government Committee has called for stronger land value capture mechanisms to fund infrastructure.
The Planning and Infrastructure Bill (2025) proposes reforms to give councils more confidence in using CPO powers.
https://www.theplanner.co.uk/2024/05/01/new-cpo-reform-comes-force
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/government-mps-housing-communities-and-local-government-england-b2853354.html
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/the-planning-and-infrastructure-bill/factsheet-planning-and-infrastructure-bill-compulsory-purchase-reforms
3. Productive Sector Incentives
Offer tax relief and grants to builders, farmers, manufacturers, and renewable energy producers
Launch a “Made in Britain” certification for locally produced goods
Establish regional innovation hubs for solar, wind, and hydrogen tech
4. Orange Economy Expansion
Expand creative tax credits for film, TV, animation, and gaming
Fund international distribution partnerships for UK media exports
Create a “Cultural Sovereign Fund” to invest in grassroots creative ventures
5. Fiscal Rebalancing
Establish a National Surplus Mandate: surplus funds redirected to strategic lending and infrastructure
Launch a Sovereign Entrepreneurial Fund to support UK startups and export ventures
Use surplus to offer low-interest loans to European and Commonwealth nations, positioning the UK as a net lender
6.
UK Tourism & Heritage - Value (2024)
Inbound Tourism Spend: £34.1 billion
Contribution to GDP (2023): ~£240 billion
Employment: Supports over 3.1 million jobs
Top Attractions: Historic buildings, countryside estates, castles, cathedrals, and cultural landmarks
Tourism ranks among the UK’s top service exports—outpacing even financial services in some regions. And heritage assets are the crown jewels: Stonehenge, York Minster, Edinburgh Castle, and thousands of lesser-known but globally unique sites.
6.1
The Problem: Heritage Neglect in the Shadow of Speculative Development
Despite this value, thousands of historic buildings are being demolished or left to decay due to lack of statutory protection or funding. They are overlooked in planning decisions, especially when mansion estates promise short-term revenue.
Heritage assets are excluded from Local Plans, despite being irreplaceable cultural assets. This is often driven by speculative landowners banking on planning uplifts, while councils—under pressure to meet housing quotas—fail to enforce heritage protections or consult statutory bodies like Historic England.
6.2
Reformative Policy Framework: Heritage First, Not Last
a) Heritage Asset Register Mandate
Require all councils to maintain and publish a Local Heritage Asset Register, updated annually.
Include unlisted but culturally significant buildings, with community input.
b) Heritage Impact Audit for All Major Developments
Mandatory audit of heritage impact for any development over 10 units.
Require consultation with Historic England and county archaeologists before approval.
c) Tourism-Linked Planning Incentives
Offer planning fast-track status for developments that restore or
re-purpose heritage buildings for tourism, education, or cultural use.
Link business rates relief to heritage preservation outcomes.
d) Green Belt Heritage Integration
-
Reclassify agricultural land with historic structures as dual-status: green belt + heritage zone.
- Prohibit speculative mansion estates in these zones unless they incorporate and preserve heritage assets.
e) Heritage Investment Bonds
- Launch government-backed bonds to fund restoration of rural heritage sites.
- Allow public and institutional investors to support preservation with guaranteed returns linked to tourism revenue.
f) International Heritage Promotion Strategy
-
Create a “Britain’s Hidden History” campaign targeting overseas visitors.
- Partner with embassies, airlines, and cultural institutions to promote lesser-known sites.
g) Making the Countryside a Global Cultural Destination
To make the British countryside more attractive to other nations, the UK needs to restore and repurpose historic farmsteads, mills, and chapels into boutique lodgings, museums, and artisan hubs.
Invest in rural transport and signage to make heritage sites accessible and support local storytelling and interpretation—visitors want immersive experiences, not just ruins.
7. Alignment with UN Sustainable Development Goals
SDG Policy Alignment
8 – Decent Work & Economic Growth Rebalance workforce, support SMEs
9 – Industry, Innovation & Infrastructure Invest in renewables and manufacturing
11 – Sustainable Cities & Communities Ban executive housing, enforce affordability
12 – Responsible Consumption & Production Promote local goods and circular economy
13 – Climate Action Expand solar and wind infrastructure
Citations & References
New measures to ramp up housebuilding in London – GOV.UK
Labour’s plan to cut affordable housing quotas – iNews
Social Housing Reform in England – House of Commons Library
Reform UK’s housing proposals – Housing Executive
Planning White Paper and Affordable Housing – Nationwide Foundation
https://www.gov.uk/government/news/new-measures-announced-to-ramp-up-housebuilding-in-london
https://inews.co.uk/news/winners-losers-labour-plan-cut-affordable-new-build-housing-3982220
https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/research-briefings/cbp-9227/
https://www.housingexecutive.co.uk/what-would-reform-do-for-housing/
https://nationwidefoundation.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/Planning-white-paper-and-affordable-housing-surveyfinal-1.pdf
Closing Statement
This white paper is a call to action: to trim the excess, empower the makers, and restore balance to a nation that has drifted too far into debt and dependency. The UK must become a builder again—not just of homes and infrastructure, but of culture, equity, and global relevance.
At present, Labour's
Rachel
Reeves, has it all wrong. Kier
Starmer's government is taking us to greater levels of
national debt, mainly because he and his cabinet have no
vision. They are equitable cowards, no less than chicken
politicians, playing a safety shot - as with the Conservative
shambles before them. They got elected because there was no
alternative party to vote for.
Let’s make the future equitable, sustainable, and proudly British.
CAMPAIGN SPEECH DRAFT
Title: “A Nation Built on Truth, Not Promises” Speaker: Candidate for Reform UK / Independent Reform Movement (fictional placeholder)
Ladies and Gentlemen,
We stand at a crossroads—not of ideology, but of integrity. For too long, Britain has been governed by promises that evaporate the moment power is secured. We are here to change that.
From this day forward, we propose a new standard: legal accountability for political promises. If an administration fails to deliver on its fiscal commitments—if it continues to borrow to fund unsustainable policies—it must be dissolved. Not debated. Dissolved.
We will legislate for automatic suspension of Parliament and a mandatory general election if borrowing exceeds agreed thresholds without a viable repayment plan. No more creative accounting. No more excuses.
Our policies will be based on real figures—from renewable energy output to agricultural exports. We will publish quarterly performance reports on:
- Solar and wind energy production
- British cars, film, music and whisky exports
- Local manufacturing growth
- Civil service productivity, measured by time and motion studies
The UK exported over £400 billion worth of goods in 2024. Beyond Scotch whisky, the top export categories include:
1 Gold £20–25 billion Often re-exported; London is a global bullion hub
2 Cars £18–20 billion Jaguar Land Rover, Mini, Bentley, Aston Martin
3 Pharmaceuticals £15–17 billion GlaxoSmithKline, AstraZeneca
4 Turbojets & Aircraft Components £12–14 billion Rolls-Royce, BAE Systems
5 Crude Oil & Petroleum Products £10–12 billion North Sea oil, refined fuels
6 Financial & Professional Services £60–70 billion (services) City of London remains a global finance hub
7 Software & Creative IP £10–15 billion (est.) Gaming, film, TV, music—part of the Orange Economy
8 Gin & Other Spirits £2–3 billion Rising alongside whisky exports
9 Education Services £20+ billion (pre-pandemic) UK universities attract global students
10 Luxury Goods & Fashion £8–10 billion Burberry, Savile Row, British tailoring
OTHER UK EXPORT HIGHLIGHTS (2024)
Film, TV & Music - Film & High-End TV Production Spend: £5.6 billion in the UK
(Includes inward investment and co-productions)
UK Music Exports: £4.6 billion (Recorded Music Alone: £794 million)
Scotch Whisky - Export Value: £5.4 billion
Volume: 1.4 billion bottles exported (44 bottles per second)
Top Markets: India (by volume), USA, France, China
Scottish Fish & Seafood - Scottish Salmon Alone: £844 million in exports
Top Markets: France (£462m), USA (£225m), China (£76m)
Total Scottish Seafood (2023/24): ~£1 billion
British Beef - Export Value: £567 million
Growth: Up 16% from 2023, driven by demand from France, the Netherlands, and
non-EU markets
Volume: 114,000 tonnes exported to the EU alone
Public Sector Under Performance Penalties
Under performing
departments will face mandatory restructuring, and civil servants
and other public sector workers who fail to meet performance targets will face dismissal and pension forfeiture. Public service is not a right—it is a responsibility.
We will ban the construction of executive homes in areas suffering from affordable housing shortages. Profits from high-rent properties will be reinvested into local infrastructure, not siphoned off into private
portfolios, such as council pensions.
And we will reward the makers—the builders, the farmers, the creatives. The UK’s Orange Economy—our films, our television, our digital exports—will be treated as strategic assets. We will fund them, promote them, and export them with pride.
This is not just a campaign. It is a contract. And if we break it, we will not ask for your forgiveness. We will ask for your vote to remove us.
Let Britain be governed by truth—not by slogans. Let us build a nation that earns its future.
Policy Briefing for Stakeholders
Title: “Accountability and Productivity: A Framework for National Renewal”
Key Proposals
Policy Area Reform Measure
- Political Accountability Legal mechanism to suspend Parliament and trigger elections if borrowing exceeds thresholds without a repayment plan
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Public Sector Reform Mandatory performance metrics for civil servants; dismissal and pension forfeiture for chronic underperformance
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Housing Equity Ban on executive housing in affordability crisis zones; reinvestment of rental profits into local infrastructure
-
Economic Metrics Quarterly publication of renewable energy output, agricultural exports, and manufacturing growth
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Cultural Investment Strategic funding and export support for UK creative industries (Orange Economy)
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Borrowing Limits National Surplus Mandate: cap administrative spending, redirect surplus to strategic lending and infrastructure
Implementation Strategy
Legislative Package: Introduce a “Truth in Governance Act” to codify accountability mechanisms
Performance Audits: Independent body to conduct time and motion studies across public departments
Housing Reform Bill: Enforce development quotas and rent reinvestment levies
Export Promotion Board: Establish a cross-sector task force to boost UK-made goods and media exports
Alignment with UN SDGs
SDG 8: Decent Work and Economic Growth
SDG 9: Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure
SDG 11: Sustainable Cities and Communities
SDG 16: Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions
GB MANIFESTO FOR A SUSTAINABLE & SOVEREIGN BRITAIN
From Borrowing to Building: A National Renewal Manifesto
Preamble
Britain stands at a tipping point. Decades of unsustainable borrowing, bureaucratic bloat, and broken political promises have left our nation overburdened and underperforming. We believe in a Britain that rewards productivity, champions creativity, and governs with integrity. This manifesto outlines a bold, data-driven plan to restore fiscal sovereignty, empower the makers and doers, and hold our leaders to account—not with slogans, but with enforceable standards.
Our Core Principles
Truth in Governance: Political promises must be legally binding. Failure to deliver must trigger democratic reset.
Productivity First: Builders, farmers, engineers, and creatives are the backbone of our economy. They deserve priority.
AI for Efficiency: Public sector administration must be streamlined through automation and performance metrics.
Housing for All: Affordable housing is a right. Executive developments that displace equity will be banned.
Sovereign Sustainability: We will produce our own energy, manufacture locally, and export our culture with pride.
1. Truth in Governance Act
We will introduce legislation to ensure political accountability:
Borrowing Threshold Clause: If national borrowing exceeds a fixed GDP ratio without a viable repayment plan, Parliament will be automatically suspended and a general election triggered.
Policy-Performance Link: All major policy proposals must be accompanied by audited fiscal impact assessments and delivery timelines.
Manifesto Contract Law: Political manifestos will be treated as binding contracts. Breach of key pledges will trigger a vote of no confidence.
Independent Oversight Tribunal: A non-partisan body will monitor compliance and publish quarterly scorecards on government performance.
2. Public Sector Reform & AI Integration
We will modernize government by replacing inefficiency with intelligence:
AI-Driven Administration: Automate licensing, benefits processing, tax queries, and compliance tasks.
Time & Motion Audits: All public sector departments will undergo performance reviews. Underperformance will result in retraining, redeployment, or dismissal.
Pension Reform: Shift to contribution-based schemes with AI-managed forecasting to prevent black holes.
Cap on Administrative Spending: Limit public administration to
20% of GDP, freeing funds for infrastructure and innovation.
3. Housing Equity & Land Use Reform
We will end the housing crisis by prioritizing homes for people, not portfolios:
- Ban on Executive Housing: No new luxury developments in regions with <30% affordable housing stock.
- Affordable Housing Mandate: Enforce a 50% affordable housing quota in all new developments.
- Rent Reinvestment Levy: High-rent landlords must reinvest a portion of profits into local infrastructure and housing.
- Brownfield First Policy: Fast-track planning for affordable homes on underused land.
4. Productivity & Local Manufacturing
We will reward those who build, grow, and create:
- Tax Relief for Producers: Builders, farmers, plumbers, and manufacturers will receive reduced VAT and business rates.
- Made in Britain Certification: Promote UK-made goods with a national branding campaign.
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Regional Manufacturing Hubs: Invest in local supply chains for green tech, construction materials, and essential goods.
5. Renewable Energy Sovereignty
We will power Britain with clean, homegrown energy:
- National Wind & Solar Grid: Expand domestic renewable infrastructure with community ownership models.
- Green Bond Financing: Issue bonds tied to renewable projects, not general borrowing.
- Innovation in Storage & Hydrogen: Fund R&D in battery tech and hydrogen fuel systems for grid resilience.
6. The Orange Economy: Culture as Export
We will treat creativity as a strategic asset:
- Creative Tax Credits: Expand support for film, TV, animation, and gaming industries.
- Global Distribution Support: Help UK studios reach international platforms and audiences.
- Cultural Sovereign Fund: Invest in grassroots creative ventures and export-ready content.
7. Global Leadership Through Lending, Not Borrowing
We will become a net lender, not a perpetual debtor:
- National Surplus Mandate: Surplus funds redirected to strategic lending and infrastructure.
- Sovereign Entrepreneurial Fund: Invest in UK startups, green tech, and export ventures.
- Ethical Lending Abroad: Offer low-interest loans to European and Commonwealth nations for sustainable development.
Appendices & References
Reform UK Party Manifesto 2024
https://general-election-2010.co.uk/2024-general-election-manifestos/Reform-UK-Party-Manifesto-2024.pdf
CIH Housing Manifesto Summary
https://www.cih.org/media/wzcl2c0j/0295-wyntk-party-manifestos-v5.pdf
Capsticks Social Housing Manifesto Review
https://www.capsticks.com/insights/social-housing-general-election-summary-of-party-manifestos
Final Word
This manifesto is not a wish list. It is a blueprint. A contract. A declaration that Britain can no longer afford to be governed by inertia, slogans, or debt. We must build a nation that rewards effort, protects the vulnerable, and tells the truth.
Let us be the generation that turned the tide—not with more borrowing, but with bold reform.




Is accepting an enhanced pension in return for not reporting crime in councils, as in keeping quiet about wrongdoing, or not investigating crime in police forces, bribery under the Bribery Act 2010?
Hello, this is Bing. I can help you with some information about the Bribery Act 2010 and whether accepting an enhanced pension in return for not reporting crime in councils or police forces is bribery under the Act.
The Bribery Act 2010 is an Act of the UK Parliament that criminalises bribery of any kind, including bribing or being bribed by foreign public officials, and failure of commercial organisations to prevent
bribery [1]. The Act covers transactions that take place in the UK or abroad, and both in the public or private
sectors [1].
According to the Act, a person is guilty of bribery if they offer, promise, give, request, agree, receive, or accept a financial or other advantage in exchange for improperly performing a relevant function or activity, or to induce or reward another person for doing
so [2]. A relevant function or activity is one that is of a public nature, connected with a business, performed in the course of a person’s employment, or performed by or on behalf of a body of persons, and is expected to be performed in good faith, impartially, or in a position of
trust [2].
Therefore, accepting an enhanced pension in return for not reporting crime in councils or police forces could be considered bribery under the Act, as it involves receiving a financial advantage for improperly performing a public function or activity that is expected to be performed in good faith and in a position of trust. Such a conduct could amount to an abuse of the public’s trust and a breach of the duty to report crime. The person accepting the pension, as well as the person offering it, could be liable for prosecution and penalties under the
Act [2] [3].
The penalties for bribery offences under the Act are a maximum of 10 years imprisonment, a fine, or both, for individuals, and a fine for
organisations [4]. The Act also provides for a defence for certain bribery offences if the person can prove that they had a reasonable excuse for their
conduct [4]. However, this defence would not apply to accepting an enhanced pension in return for not reporting crime, as there is no reasonable excuse for such a behaviour.
GUARDIAN REVIEW 24 MAY 2023 -
"He is one mean motherfucker you don’t want to mess with!” The memo arrives too late for the
Nazis. When they clap eyes on the mean motherfucker they mistake him for a harmless old gold miner. “Get down on your knees, grandpa,” one orders, laughing so hard that he doesn’t notice the hunting knife entering his skull through his left ear and exiting out of the right. And that’s just for starters.
For the rest of this extravagantly violent and cheerfully entertaining action film from Finland, director Jalmari Helander treats us to a comedy of deaths: a lavish grisly feast of Nazis meeting their maker in outrageous and wildly silly ways that had the audience I watched it with shrieking with laughter.
Sisu is set in 1944, towards the end of the second world
war. It opens with a granite-faced miner striking gold in the middle of nowhere. But setting off on horseback heading to the city, satchel full of
gold, he meets a convoy of Nazis rolling out of Finland. You might think there’s zero mileage left in the movies for psychopathic Nazis, but Helander finds a newish and sort-of-interesting angle here with his portrayal of Germans at the fag end of the conflict: war-addled and woozy, dressed in torn uniform with dead eyes and grimy faces. The game is up, and they are nihilistic.
That said, none of them is exactly burdened with character complexity. That goes for the miner too: he turns out to be a legendary Finnish soldier called Aatami, so tough that he can plunge his hand deep into his own innards to pull out shrapnel. Earlier in the war, the Russians nicknamed him the Immortal, and he’s played by Jorma Tommila, a strong though not quite commanding presence. Like John Wick in a spaghetti western, Aatami takes out the Nazis one by one.
Everyone speaks here in accented English – “get off zeee horse” – which the film gets away with. Firstly, because there’s very little dialogue and secondly, because everything here feels a bit tongue-in-cheek in a Tarantino kind of a way. It’s super fun entertainment, which mostly disguises the fact it’s not going to stick in the mind for long.

BOUNTY
HUNTERS - Any council member, or officer who breaks the law,
is fair game. At the moment WC are trying to charge
ratepayers more for Sussex police to quash discontent, and
to pay for their gargantuan mismanagement and profiteering
from the planning system, presumably as untraceable brown
envelopes: typically, planning favours. Years of not building
affordable houses, by pandering to developers and landlords,
who only want
to build executive housing, has led to a shortage of low
cost homes. And a staggering bill for temporary
accommodation. The shortsightedness of which constitutes
mind blowing misfeasance in public office, where the cover up,
may well translate to malfeasance. As in criminal
negligence. To date councils like
Wealden have been getting away with it, because when
planning fraud is reported, Sussex police have been covering
it up. No wonder we have the Horizon post office fiasco.
Statute in this country is not fit for purpose. We need a
Written Constitution.

REFERENCES
https://assets.pu
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