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trumps popularity in the UK
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Oct 4, 2017 10:44:42   #
permafrost Loc: Minnesota
 
Is Donald Trump popular in the UK?

Let me put it this way. In the UK, the word ‘trump’ means to fart.

Culturally in the UK, ostentatious displays of wealth are sn****red at because it’s assumed that the person showing off is overcompensating for something like small g*****ls.

‘Stealth wealth’ is respectable, like that shown by Srichand Parmanand Hinduja, who is more than 7 times richer than Donald Trump – anything else is seen as the preserve of the crass ‘nouveau riche’ (the French also find this pitiful and we borrowed their term for it) who aren’t aware of the social convention because they’re a newbie.

The UK respects education, and is home to some of the world’s top universities such as Oxford and Cambridge.

It is also home to Jermyn Street where gentlemen go to have a suit properly cut. The tie must rest lightly on the buckle of one’s belt (if a belt is worn, which is not ideal), and the trousers should break once halfway down the laced part of the shoe.

Finally, f**e tans are the source of much amusement, with the very definition of tacky hilarity being a chap called David Dickinson, an antiques expert who we all take the piss out of but he seems to enjoy the attention.

Let’s put that all together shall we?

From the UK’s perspective, the US has elected a permatanned halfwit called Freddie Fartpants, who lives in a golden tower due to his diminished manhood and looks like he found his suit in a dumpster. At 71 years old he can’t correctly tie a tie, which is a sk**l required by British schoolchildren from the age of 12. His trousers are poorly cut despite using the same expensive tailor as his predecessor, so one suspects the tailor is signalling to the world at large ‘this is a man who doesn’t know any better’.

His education is so poor that he’s a foreign policy disaster. Yesterday he invented an African country that doesn’t exist, and today North Korea has announced it’s stepping up development of its nuclear ballistic missile system in response to Trump’s inept posturing, but he does something dumb literally every day. The UK won’t share intelligence with the US anymore because the President might tell the wrong people or live tweet sensitive information, let alone read a book so he’s less inept. He is proposing a wall to prevent people entering the country, but since Obama dramatically reduced people entering on foot, today most people come in by airplane which is likely to have a cruising altitude which is higher than the wall by some 29,980 feet.

He is, in short, a poor man’s idea of a rich man, a dumb person’s idea of a smart person. As ridiculous as he is to us, he has in under one year increased the threat of a nuclear strike on US soil, and no amount of retaliation will detoxify your land. He is a figure of mockery not just in the UK but worldwide, which contrasts sharply with the deep respect earned by his predecessor.

Reply
Oct 4, 2017 10:55:02   #
Weewillynobeerspilly Loc: North central Texas
 
permafrost wrote:
Is Donald Trump popular in the UK?

Let me put it this way. In the UK, the word ‘trump’ means to fart.

Culturally in the UK, ostentatious displays of wealth are sn****red at because it’s assumed that the person showing off is overcompensating for something like small g*****ls.

‘Stealth wealth’ is respectable, like that shown by Srichand Parmanand Hinduja, who is more than 7 times richer than Donald Trump – anything else is seen as the preserve of the crass ‘nouveau riche’ (the French also find this pitiful and we borrowed their term for it) who aren’t aware of the social convention because they’re a newbie.

The UK respects education, and is home to some of the world’s top universities such as Oxford and Cambridge.

It is also home to Jermyn Street where gentlemen go to have a suit properly cut. The tie must rest lightly on the buckle of one’s belt (if a belt is worn, which is not ideal), and the trousers should break once halfway down the laced part of the shoe.

Finally, f**e tans are the source of much amusement, with the very definition of tacky hilarity being a chap called David Dickinson, an antiques expert who we all take the piss out of but he seems to enjoy the attention.

Let’s put that all together shall we?

From the UK’s perspective, the US has elected a permatanned halfwit called Freddie Fartpants, who lives in a golden tower due to his diminished manhood and looks like he found his suit in a dumpster. At 71 years old he can’t correctly tie a tie, which is a sk**l required by British schoolchildren from the age of 12. His trousers are poorly cut despite using the same expensive tailor as his predecessor, so one suspects the tailor is signalling to the world at large ‘this is a man who doesn’t know any better’.

His education is so poor that he’s a foreign policy disaster. Yesterday he invented an African country that doesn’t exist, and today North Korea has announced it’s stepping up development of its nuclear ballistic missile system in response to Trump’s inept posturing, but he does something dumb literally every day. The UK won’t share intelligence with the US anymore because the President might tell the wrong people or live tweet sensitive information, let alone read a book so he’s less inept. He is proposing a wall to prevent people entering the country, but since Obama dramatically reduced people entering on foot, today most people come in by airplane which is likely to have a cruising altitude which is higher than the wall by some 29,980 feet.

He is, in short, a poor man’s idea of a rich man, a dumb person’s idea of a smart person. As ridiculous as he is to us, he has in under one year increased the threat of a nuclear strike on US soil, and no amount of retaliation will detoxify your land. He is a figure of mockery not just in the UK but worldwide, which contrasts sharply with the deep respect earned by his predecessor.
Is Donald Trump popular in the UK? br br Let me p... (show quote)




Damn Perm......you have burned through all your American whining about Trump, now you have to go out of country to get a new snivel to run with.......sad, truly sad indeed.

Reply
Oct 4, 2017 11:01:41   #
missinglink Loc: Tralfamadore
 
Why would anyone care what the people of the U.K. think
of about nearly anything an in particular our President .



quote=permafrost]Is Donald Trump popular in the UK?

Let me put it this way. In the UK, the word ‘trump’ means to fart.

Culturally in the UK, ostentatious displays of wealth are sn****red at because it’s assumed that the person showing off is overcompensating for something like small g*****ls.

‘Stealth wealth’ is respectable, like that shown by Srichand Parmanand Hinduja, who is more than 7 times richer than Donald Trump – anything else is seen as the preserve of the crass ‘nouveau riche’ (the French also find this pitiful and we borrowed their term for it) who aren’t aware of the social convention because they’re a newbie.

The UK respects education, and is home to some of the world’s top universities such as Oxford and Cambridge.

It is also home to Jermyn Street where gentlemen go to have a suit properly cut. The tie must rest lightly on the buckle of one’s belt (if a belt is worn, which is not ideal), and the trousers should break once halfway down the laced part of the shoe.

Finally, f**e tans are the source of much amusement, with the very definition of tacky hilarity being a chap called David Dickinson, an antiques expert who we all take the piss out of but he seems to enjoy the attention.

Let’s put that all together shall we?

From the UK’s perspective, the US has elected a permatanned halfwit called Freddie Fartpants, who lives in a golden tower due to his diminished manhood and looks like he found his suit in a dumpster. At 71 years old he can’t correctly tie a tie, which is a sk**l required by British schoolchildren from the age of 12. His trousers are poorly cut despite using the same expensive tailor as his predecessor, so one suspects the tailor is signalling to the world at large ‘this is a man who doesn’t know any better’.

His education is so poor that he’s a foreign policy disaster. Yesterday he invented an African country that doesn’t exist, and today North Korea has announced it’s stepping up development of its nuclear ballistic missile system in response to Trump’s inept posturing, but he does something dumb literally every day. The UK won’t share intelligence with the US anymore because the President might tell the wrong people or live tweet sensitive information, let alone read a book so he’s less inept. He is proposing a wall to prevent people entering the country, but since Obama dramatically reduced people entering on foot, today most people come in by airplane which is likely to have a cruising altitude which is higher than the wall by some 29,980 feet.

He is, in short, a poor man’s idea of a rich man, a dumb person’s idea of a smart person. As ridiculous as he is to us, he has in under one year increased the threat of a nuclear strike on US soil, and no amount of retaliation will detoxify your land. He is a figure of mockery not just in the UK but worldwide, which contrasts sharply with the deep respect earned by his predecessor.[/quote]

Reply
 
 
Oct 4, 2017 11:12:58   #
S. Maturin
 
permafrost wrote:
Is Donald Trump popular in the UK?

Let me put it this way. In the UK, the word ‘trump’ means to fart.

Culturally in the UK, ostentatious displays of wealth are sn****red at because it’s assumed that the person showing off is overcompensating for something like small g*****ls.

‘Stealth wealth’ is respectable, like that shown by Srichand Parmanand Hinduja, who is more than 7 times richer than Donald Trump – anything else is seen as the preserve of the crass ‘nouveau riche’ (the French also find this pitiful and we borrowed their term for it) who aren’t aware of the social convention because they’re a newbie.

The UK respects education, and is home to some of the world’s top universities such as Oxford and Cambridge.

It is also home to Jermyn Street where gentlemen go to have a suit properly cut. The tie must rest lightly on the buckle of one’s belt (if a belt is worn, which is not ideal), and the trousers should break once halfway down the laced part of the shoe.

Finally, f**e tans are the source of much amusement, with the very definition of tacky hilarity being a chap called David Dickinson, an antiques expert who we all take the piss out of but he seems to enjoy the attention.

Let’s put that all together shall we?

From the UK’s perspective, the US has elected a permatanned halfwit called Freddie Fartpants, who lives in a golden tower due to his diminished manhood and looks like he found his suit in a dumpster. At 71 years old he can’t correctly tie a tie, which is a sk**l required by British schoolchildren from the age of 12. His trousers are poorly cut despite using the same expensive tailor as his predecessor, so one suspects the tailor is signalling to the world at large ‘this is a man who doesn’t know any better’.

His education is so poor that he’s a foreign policy disaster. Yesterday he invented an African country that doesn’t exist, and today North Korea has announced it’s stepping up development of its nuclear ballistic missile system in response to Trump’s inept posturing, but he does something dumb literally every day. The UK won’t share intelligence with the US anymore because the President might tell the wrong people or live tweet sensitive information, let alone read a book so he’s less inept. He is proposing a wall to prevent people entering the country, but since Obama dramatically reduced people entering on foot, today most people come in by airplane which is likely to have a cruising altitude which is higher than the wall by some 29,980 feet.

He is, in short, a poor man’s idea of a rich man, a dumb person’s idea of a smart person. As ridiculous as he is to us, he has in under one year increased the threat of a nuclear strike on US soil, and no amount of retaliation will detoxify your land. He is a figure of mockery not just in the UK but worldwide, which contrasts sharply with the deep respect earned by his predecessor.
Is Donald Trump popular in the UK? br br Let me p... (show quote)


How popular was Washington in the UK (GB)?

The UK, like all the rest of the world became accustomed to kicking a spineless poser- Barack HUSSEIN Obama- about for eight years, naturally a real alpha male will set them all on edge and whining like our democrat socialists.

Reply
Oct 4, 2017 11:17:25   #
Michael Rich Loc: Lapine Oregon
 
The United Kingdom will fall to the mohammedist demons...being a nation that has long been infiltrated with anti- white radical progressive jihadist's ..so is crotch watching, a required class at Oxford and Cambridge...along with flatulence analysis as a major??...yep they sound amazingly intelligent and we'll rounded as any..

Reply
Oct 4, 2017 11:21:00   #
S. Maturin
 
byronglimish wrote:
The United Kingdom will fall to the mohammedist demons...being a nation that has long been infiltrated with anti- white radical progressive jihadist's ..so is crotch watching, a required class at Oxford and Cambridge...along with flatulence analysis as a major??...yep they sound amazingly intelligent and we'll rounded as any..


One more reason the UKers and all europe, actually,loved Barack HUSSEIN Obama- he was positively fixated upon gonads and g****r confusion.

Reply
Oct 4, 2017 11:28:33   #
Michael Rich Loc: Lapine Oregon
 
S. Maturin wrote:
One more reason the UKers and all europe, actually,loved Barack HUSSEIN Obama- he was positively fixated upon gonads and g****r confusion.


Agreed...

Reply
 
 
Oct 4, 2017 11:28:34   #
vernon
 
permafrost wrote:
Is Donald Trump popular in the UK?

Let me put it this way. In the UK, the word ‘trump’ means to fart.

Culturally in the UK, ostentatious displays of wealth are sn****red at because it’s assumed that the person showing off is overcompensating for something like small g*****ls.

‘Stealth wealth’ is respectable, like that shown by Srichand Parmanand Hinduja, who is more than 7 times richer than Donald Trump – anything else is seen as the preserve of the crass ‘nouveau riche’ (the French also find this pitiful and we borrowed their term for it) who aren’t aware of the social convention because they’re a newbie.

The UK respects education, and is home to some of the world’s top universities such as Oxford and Cambridge.

It is also home to Jermyn Street where gentlemen go to have a suit properly cut. The tie must rest lightly on the buckle of one’s belt (if a belt is worn, which is not ideal), and the trousers should break once halfway down the laced part of the shoe.

Finally, f**e tans are the source of much amusement, with the very definition of tacky hilarity being a chap called David Dickinson, an antiques expert who we all take the piss out of but he seems to enjoy the attention.

Let’s put that all together shall we?

From the UK’s perspective, the US has elected a permatanned halfwit called Freddie Fartpants, who lives in a golden tower due to his diminished manhood and looks like he found his suit in a dumpster. At 71 years old he can’t correctly tie a tie, which is a sk**l required by British schoolchildren from the age of 12. His trousers are poorly cut despite using the same expensive tailor as his predecessor, so one suspects the tailor is signalling to the world at large ‘this is a man who doesn’t know any bett
His education is so poor that he’s a foreign policy disaster. Yesterday he invented an African country that doesn’t exist, and today North Korea has announced it’s stepping up development of its nuclear ballistic missile system in response to Trump’s inept posturing, but he does something dumb literally every day. The UK won’t share intelligence with the US anymore because the President might tell the wrong people or live tweet sensitive information, let alone read a book so he’s less inept. He is proposing a wall to prevent people entering the country, but since Obama dramatically reduced people entering on foot, today most people come in by airplane which is likely to have a cruising altitude which is higher than the wall by some 29,980 feet.

He is, in short, a poor man’s idea of a rich man, a dumb person’s idea of a smart person. As ridiculous as he is to us, he has in under one year increased the threat of a nuclear strike on US soil, and no amount of retaliation will detoxify your land. He is a figure of mockery not just in the UK but worldwide, which contrasts sharply with the deep respect earned by his predecessor.
Is Donald Trump popular in the UK? br br Let me p... (show quote)


I'm not impressed with the uk but since you like them so much i will pay your passage one-way.

Reply
Oct 4, 2017 11:39:16   #
missinglink Loc: Tralfamadore
 
S. Maturin wrote:
One more reason the UKers and all europe, actually,loved Barack HUSSEIN Obama- he was positively fixated upon gonads and g****r confusion.



Reply
Oct 4, 2017 11:40:17   #
missinglink Loc: Tralfamadore
 
Ill pay for the upgrade to first class .

vernon wrote:
I'm not impressed with the uk but since you like them so much i will pay your passage one-way.

Reply
Oct 4, 2017 11:40:24   #
Carol Kelly
 
permafrost wrote:
Is Donald Trump popular in the UK?

Let me put it this way. In the UK, the word ‘trump’ means to fart.

Culturally in the UK, ostentatious displays of wealth are sn****red at because it’s assumed that the person showing off is overcompensating for something like small g*****ls.

‘Stealth wealth’ is respectable, like that shown by Srichand Parmanand Hinduja, who is more than 7 times richer than Donald Trump – anything else is seen as the preserve of the crass ‘nouveau riche’ (the French also find this pitiful and we borrowed their term for it) who aren’t aware of the social convention because they’re a newbie.

The UK respects education, and is home to some of the world’s top universities such as Oxford and Cambridge.

It is also home to Jermyn Street where gentlemen go to have a suit properly cut. The tie must rest lightly on the buckle of one’s belt (if a belt is worn, which is not ideal), and the trousers should break once halfway down the laced part of the shoe.

Finally, f**e tans are the source of much amusement, with the very definition of tacky hilarity being a chap called David Dickinson, an antiques expert who we all take the piss out of but he seems to enjoy the attention.

Let’s put that all together shall we?

From the UK’s perspective, the US has elected a permatanned halfwit called Freddie Fartpants, who lives in a golden tower due to his diminished manhood and looks like he found his suit in a dumpster. At 71 years old he can’t correctly tie a tie, which is a sk**l required by British schoolchildren from the age of 12. His trousers are poorly cut despite using the same expensive tailor as his predecessor, so one suspects the tailor is signalling to the world at large ‘this is a man who doesn’t know any better’.

His education is so poor that he’s a foreign policy disaster. Yesterday he invented an African country that doesn’t exist, and today North Korea has announced it’s stepping up development of its nuclear ballistic missile system in response to Trump’s inept posturing, but he does something dumb literally every day. The UK won’t share intelligence with the US anymore because the President might tell the wrong people or live tweet sensitive information, let alone read a book so he’s less inept. He is proposing a wall to prevent people entering the country, but since Obama dramatically reduced people entering on foot, today most people come in by airplane which is likely to have a cruising altitude which is higher than the wall by some 29,980 feet.

He is, in short, a poor man’s idea of a rich man, a dumb person’s idea of a smart person. As ridiculous as he is to us, he has in under one year increased the threat of a nuclear strike on US soil, and no amount of retaliation will detoxify your land. He is a figure of mockery not just in the UK but worldwide, which contrasts sharply with the deep respect earned by his predecessor.
Is Donald Trump popular in the UK? br br Let me p... (show quote)


I spent three years of my adult life living with the British and your little pitiful rant has nothing to do with reality. The majority of the British people, not the Muslim takeover, would be happy with a leader even half as strong as Trump. I believe you have "Trump" confused with frump. The Queen told William and Kate not to invite Michelle OBAMA to their wedding because she detested her. They held her (or his) spouse with the same disdain. You should just thaw and disappear.

Reply
 
 
Oct 4, 2017 11:41:47   #
Carol Kelly
 
S. Maturin wrote:
How popular was Washington in the UK (GB)?

The UK, like all the rest of the world became accustomed to kicking a spineless poser- Barack HUSSEIN Obama- about for eight years, naturally a real alpha male will set them all on edge and whining like our democrat socialists.


You just said it like it is.

Reply
Oct 4, 2017 11:44:02   #
Carol Kelly
 
missinglink wrote:
Why would anyone care what the people of the U.K. think
of about nearly anything an in particular our President .



quote=permafrost]Is Donald Trump popular in the UK?

Let me put it this way. In the UK, the word ‘trump’ means to fart.

Culturally in the UK, ostentatious displays of wealth are sn****red at because it’s assumed that the person showing off is overcompensating for something like small g*****ls.

‘Stealth wealth’ is respectable, like that shown by Srichand Parmanand Hinduja, who is more than 7 times richer than Donald Trump – anything else is seen as the preserve of the crass ‘nouveau riche’ (the French also find this pitiful and we borrowed their term for it) who aren’t aware of the social convention because they’re a newbie.

The UK respects education, and is home to some of the world’s top universities such as Oxford and Cambridge.

It is also home to Jermyn Street where gentlemen go to have a suit properly cut. The tie must rest lightly on the buckle of one’s belt (if a belt is worn, which is not ideal), and the trousers should break once halfway down the laced part of the shoe.

Finally, f**e tans are the source of much amusement, with the very definition of tacky hilarity being a chap called David Dickinson, an antiques expert who we all take the piss out of but he seems to enjoy the attention.

Let’s put that all together shall we?

From the UK’s perspective, the US has elected a permatanned halfwit called Freddie Fartpants, who lives in a golden tower due to his diminished manhood and looks like he found his suit in a dumpster. At 71 years old he can’t correctly tie a tie, which is a sk**l required by British schoolchildren from the age of 12. His trousers are poorly cut despite using the same expensive tailor as his predecessor, so one suspects the tailor is signalling to the world at large ‘this is a man who doesn’t know any better’.

His education is so poor that he’s a foreign policy disaster. Yesterday he invented an African country that doesn’t exist, and today North Korea has announced it’s stepping up development of its nuclear ballistic missile system in response to Trump’s inept posturing, but he does something dumb literally every day. The UK won’t share intelligence with the US anymore because the President might tell the wrong people or live tweet sensitive information, let alone read a book so he’s less inept. He is proposing a wall to prevent people entering the country, but since Obama dramatically reduced people entering on foot, today most people come in by airplane which is likely to have a cruising altitude which is higher than the wall by some 29,980 feet.

He is, in short, a poor man’s idea of a rich man, a dumb person’s idea of a smart person. As ridiculous as he is to us, he has in under one year increased the threat of a nuclear strike on US soil, and no amount of retaliation will detoxify your land. He is a figure of mockery not just in the UK but worldwide, which contrasts sharply with the deep respect earned by his predecessor.
Why would anyone care what the people of the U.K. ... (show quote)
[/quote]

Oh! HIS education is so poor! You need to be careful what you write because you are so out of the equation. Trump has an education that you envy.

Reply
Oct 4, 2017 11:57:36   #
padremike Loc: Phenix City, Al
 
permafrost wrote:
Is Donald Trump popular in the UK?

Let me put it this way. In the UK, the word ‘trump’ means to fart.

Culturally in the UK, ostentatious displays of wealth are sn****red at because it’s assumed that the person showing off is overcompensating for something like small g*****ls.

‘Stealth wealth’ is respectable, like that shown by Srichand Parmanand Hinduja, who is more than 7 times richer than Donald Trump – anything else is seen as the preserve of the crass ‘nouveau riche’ (the French also find this pitiful and we borrowed their term for it) who aren’t aware of the social convention because they’re a newbie.

The UK respects education, and is home to some of the world’s top universities such as Oxford and Cambridge.

It is also home to Jermyn Street where gentlemen go to have a suit properly cut. The tie must rest lightly on the buckle of one’s belt (if a belt is worn, which is not ideal), and the trousers should break once halfway down the laced part of the shoe.

Finally, f**e tans are the source of much amusement, with the very definition of tacky hilarity being a chap called David Dickinson, an antiques expert who we all take the piss out of but he seems to enjoy the attention.

Let’s put that all together shall we?

From the UK’s perspective, the US has elected a permatanned halfwit called Freddie Fartpants, who lives in a golden tower due to his diminished manhood and looks like he found his suit in a dumpster. At 71 years old he can’t correctly tie a tie, which is a sk**l required by British schoolchildren from the age of 12. His trousers are poorly cut despite using the same expensive tailor as his predecessor, so one suspects the tailor is signalling to the world at large ‘this is a man who doesn’t know any better’.

His education is so poor that he’s a foreign policy disaster. Yesterday he invented an African country that doesn’t exist, and today North Korea has announced it’s stepping up development of its nuclear ballistic missile system in response to Trump’s inept posturing, but he does something dumb literally every day. The UK won’t share intelligence with the US anymore because the President might tell the wrong people or live tweet sensitive information, let alone read a book so he’s less inept. He is proposing a wall to prevent people entering the country, but since Obama dramatically reduced people entering on foot, today most people come in by airplane which is likely to have a cruising altitude which is higher than the wall by some 29,980 feet.

He is, in short, a poor man’s idea of a rich man, a dumb person’s idea of a smart person. As ridiculous as he is to us, he has in under one year increased the threat of a nuclear strike on US soil, and no amount of retaliation will detoxify your land. He is a figure of mockery not just in the UK but worldwide, which contrasts sharply with the deep respect earned by his predecessor.
Is Donald Trump popular in the UK? br br Let me p... (show quote)


With very few exceptions like Hillsdale College, we no longer have exceptional education institutions. They are, in fact, Marxist propaganda t***smission institutions churning out useless ideologues like yourself who aren't worth the powder to blow their t*****rous, secular perverted butts to kingdom come. Your sort of people are destroying America from the inside.

Reply
Oct 4, 2017 12:06:14   #
JFlorio Loc: Seminole Florida
 
UK? Who cares. This is the country that a major city elected a Muslim mayor who immediately banned what he deemed risque on public buses.This is the same country who's mentality is to fight Islamic extremists with candle light vigils. Why would we care what these sheeple think? I guess to other sheeple what they think is important.
permafrost wrote:
Is Donald Trump popular in the UK?

Let me put it this way. In the UK, the word ‘trump’ means to fart.

Culturally in the UK, ostentatious displays of wealth are sn****red at because it’s assumed that the person showing off is overcompensating for something like small g*****ls.

‘Stealth wealth’ is respectable, like that shown by Srichand Parmanand Hinduja, who is more than 7 times richer than Donald Trump – anything else is seen as the preserve of the crass ‘nouveau riche’ (the French also find this pitiful and we borrowed their term for it) who aren’t aware of the social convention because they’re a newbie.

The UK respects education, and is home to some of the world’s top universities such as Oxford and Cambridge.

It is also home to Jermyn Street where gentlemen go to have a suit properly cut. The tie must rest lightly on the buckle of one’s belt (if a belt is worn, which is not ideal), and the trousers should break once halfway down the laced part of the shoe.

Finally, f**e tans are the source of much amusement, with the very definition of tacky hilarity being a chap called David Dickinson, an antiques expert who we all take the piss out of but he seems to enjoy the attention.

Let’s put that all together shall we?

From the UK’s perspective, the US has elected a permatanned halfwit called Freddie Fartpants, who lives in a golden tower due to his diminished manhood and looks like he found his suit in a dumpster. At 71 years old he can’t correctly tie a tie, which is a sk**l required by British schoolchildren from the age of 12. His trousers are poorly cut despite using the same expensive tailor as his predecessor, so one suspects the tailor is signalling to the world at large ‘this is a man who doesn’t know any better’.

His education is so poor that he’s a foreign policy disaster. Yesterday he invented an African country that doesn’t exist, and today North Korea has announced it’s stepping up development of its nuclear ballistic missile system in response to Trump’s inept posturing, but he does something dumb literally every day. The UK won’t share intelligence with the US anymore because the President might tell the wrong people or live tweet sensitive information, let alone read a book so he’s less inept. He is proposing a wall to prevent people entering the country, but since Obama dramatically reduced people entering on foot, today most people come in by airplane which is likely to have a cruising altitude which is higher than the wall by some 29,980 feet.

He is, in short, a poor man’s idea of a rich man, a dumb person’s idea of a smart person. As ridiculous as he is to us, he has in under one year increased the threat of a nuclear strike on US soil, and no amount of retaliation will detoxify your land. He is a figure of mockery not just in the UK but worldwide, which contrasts sharply with the deep respect earned by his predecessor.
Is Donald Trump popular in the UK? br br Let me p... (show quote)

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