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#William Shawcross
spiritundaunted · 4 months
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Bertie & Elizabeth
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She had given the Duke of York what he had always longed for, a happy family life. As his wife, she had dedicated herself to him… She had given him confidence and social grace…The King always talked of his family as ‘We Four’. But, within ‘We Four’, ‘We Two’ were closest of all.
Those closest to Elizabeth saw more clearly than the world at large that it was a relationship of mutual dependence. It had become commonplace to say that, without her, the King could never have become ‘the great and gallant King he proved to be’, as a friend in later life observed. ‘But perhaps what is not widely known is the fact of her great reliance on him, on his wisdom, his integrity, his courage…’
Doris Vyner {Elizabeth’s close friend since childhood} …understood how desperately she had needed the King and she commented that without him her ‘mainspring’ had gone. Indeed Doris pointed out to mutual friends whom she trusted that although everyone thought that the Queen had energized the King and kept him up to his work, in fact the opposite was true.  The initiatives almost all came from the King - he had had to make the decisions. Now she was quite lost without him.”
from Queen Elizabeth, The Queen Mother, by William Shawcross
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ulysses-posts · 1 year
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A Brief History of British Coronations 1902-1937: King George VI and Queen Elizabeth
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possil · 2 months
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APPEASMENT PAYS A PRICE
Fear In Parliament On Wednesday it came home to roost. What the public have known for years, Parliament has now experienced. We have witnessed the Speaker of the House breaking parliamentary convention because of security threats to MPs from Muslims. We cannot avoid the truth: MPs are in fear of Muslim mobs and are voting accordingly. The time for soft words is long gone and we must speak…
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I want to clarify that I’m not giving up hope that things will work out in some capacity. I still want to believe that the little web show that could will find a place that will let it finish its story.
This show is so freakin popular, not only in the states but also in Japan, who not only dubbed the series but even made their own anime for it.
This show is so popular that it got a two movie crossover with the Justice League.
WB may not care about legacy or passion or creativity but they do care about money. And while I’m just some faceless voice on the internet I’d like to think WB are at least smart enough to see that RWBY is profitable. It can make them money.
My preference would be for them to also keep the writers, VAs, and music team the same. That would realistically be my most ideal scenario.
Will we get it? I don’t know. But I’m not about to doom and gloom a situation when there’s still a shot, you know.
“Blind optimism isn’t great, but no optimism means we’ve already lost. We need hope. We need to take risks.”
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n1blakelover · 1 year
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there’s just something so beautiful about blake and yang’s confession where it made even non-shippers shed tears during their confession scene. the amount of people who have said they weren’t big bumbleby shippers or just non-shippers in general and still cried a bit during this scene really just shows how phenomenal of a job crwby did for this moment. its so so so beautiful and the music and animation and script and voice acting and just every single thing about it pulls at the heart strings whether you’re a big bumbleby shipper or not, and i think that’s so beautiful
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marcmarcmomarc · 4 months
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RWBY Spanish dub
Minor Characters from RWBY Chibi
Floyd
EN: Kerry Shawcross
LA: Raúl Aldana
Mike
EN: William Ball
LA: Carlos Segundo
Marty
EN: Joe Nicolosi
LA: Carlo Vázquez
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for-valour · 1 year
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Happy centenary wedding anniversary to Bertie and Elizabeth! 100 years ago today (m. 26/04/1923).
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'…I do love you Bertie, & I feel certain that I shall more & more.'
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'You know how I love her & will always take care of her [...] to me, she is everything.'
Excerpts from The Queen Mother: The Official Biography by William Shawcross.
Photos, top: Prince Albert, Duke of York (later George VI) and Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon on their wedding day, April 26th, 1923. Prince Albert is wearing the full dress uniform of the Royal Air Force with the rank of group captain. Elizabeth's dress, typically 1920s Medieval Revival in style, was crafted with ivory-coloured chiffon moire, pearls, and silver thread. The intention was for the dress to coordinate with a gift of Flanders lace from Queen Mary. Elizabeth also opted to break with the tradition of wearing a tiara, and instead chose a headdress of leaves. Credit: Bassano Ltd.
Centre and bottom: Prince Albert and Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon during their honeymoon, April 26th to May 7th 1923. After the wedding breakfast at Buckingham Palace, the newlyweds rode in an open landau (a four-wheeled carriage) to Waterloo Station. From there they travelled by train to Polesden Lacey in Surrey, which had been lent to them by the Honourable Mrs Greville. Sources: Royal Collections Trust, The National Trust.
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tiny-librarian · 1 year
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To an unusual degree, George VI shared his wartime responsibilities with Elizabeth. An “unprecedented” feature of the lunches Winston Churchill had with the King at Buckingham Palace each Tuesday “was the presence of the Queen at these private conversations,” according to Elizabeth’s official biographer, William Shawcross. The mutually supportive trio met at Buckingham Palace in a dimly lit dining room with boarded-up windows, or in the “immense catacomb” of the Palace air raid shelter. George VI described many of these encounters in his diary. Elizabeth, who considered herself “very much a part of the team with the King,” said virtually nothing about them.
George VI and Elizabeth: The Marriage That Saved the Monarchy - Sally Bedell Smith
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deadpresidents · 1 year
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Tangentially presidential, but do you have recommendations for biographies of Clarence Thomas and/or Henry Kissinger?
I don't have any suggestions for books about Thomas, but I can recommend a bunch on Kissinger. I think it's especially important to read different books about Kissinger to get a more balanced viewpoint because many books about him tend to be slanted in one direction or the other -- more so than most historical figures, in my opinion. He just tends to inspire particularly strong opinions, so here are a few books on him that I've found interesting:
•The Inevitability of Tragedy: Henry Kissinger and His World (BOOK | KINDLE) by Barry Gewen •Kissinger (BOOK | KINDLE) by Walter Isaacson •Kissinger: 1923-1968: The Idealist (BOOK | KINDLE) by Niall Ferguson •Master of the Game: Henry Kissinger and the Art of Middle East Diplomacy (BOOK | KINDLE) by Martin Indyk •Kissinger's Shadow: The Long Reach of America's Most Controversial Statesman (BOOK | KINDLE) by Greg Grandin
There are also some really good dual biographies about Kissinger and Nixon and their foreign policy: •Nixon and Kissinger: Partners in Power (BOOK | KINDLE) by Robert Dallek •The Blood Telegram: Nixon, Kissinger, and a Forgotten Genocide (BOOK | KINDLE) by Gary J. Bass •The Price of Power: Kissinger in the Nixon White House (BOOK | KINDLE) by Seymour M. Hersh •Sideshow: Kissinger, Nixon, and the Destruction of Cambodia by William Shawcross
And I want to also mention these two books, which are heavier reads but really important studies about the international impact of the Nixon/Kissinger foreign policy (and a helpful reminder about American complicity in the overthrow and death of democratically-elected Chilean President Salvador Allende) : •Nixon, Kissinger, and Allende: U.S. Involvement in the 1973 Coup in Chile (BOOK | KINDLE) by Lubna Z. Qureshi •Nixon, Kissinger, and the Shah: The United States and Iran in the Cold War (BOOK | KINDLE) by Roham Alvandi
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neotaissong · 2 months
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FCK THA TORY FASCISTS
Socialism, anti-fascism, anti-abortion on Government Prevent list of terrorism warning signs (7 March 2024) The Guardian (YUCKKK, but had to post, forgive me)
A document from Prevent, the official scheme to stop radicalisation, includes believing in socialism, communism, anti-fascism and anti-abortion in a list of potential signs of ideologies leading to terrorism.
It comes as the Conservative government considers widening what it will consider to be extremism.
The document is part of online Prevent awareness training for those covered by the duty to inform if they suspect radicalisation. That includes teachers and youth workers.
The guidance was updated last year and published with little or no fanfare, after William Shawcross’s controversial government-ordered report on Prevent was released.
A former head of counter-terrorism said it risked damaging Prevent, and human rights groups said the government was playing political games under the guise of stopping terrorism.
In a section on the left wing it states: “Two broad ideologies: socialism and communism. Each are united by a set of grievance narratives which underline their cause.”
In a section on single-issue ideologies, the document reads: “Narratives are likely to come from those who seek to change a specific policy or practice, as opposed to replacing the whole economic, political or social system. Examples include animal rights, anti-abortion or anti-fascism. Single-issue narratives can be politically agnostic, meaning they may be neither right nor left aligned.”
Neil Basu, a former police head of counter-terrorism, said: “That is far too nebulous, and there is no qualification. It might lead to unforeseen consequences such as overwhelming the system and bringing the system into disrepute.
“The reputation of Prevent is still very fragile. It makes the haystack unnecessarily bigger in which you are trying to find the needle.”
Those completing the online course get a certificate to say they have awareness of Prevent.
The government commissioned a review of Prevent by Shawcross, whose appointment led to a boycott of the review because of his alleged anti-Muslim and rightwing views.
The guidance for those covered by the Prevent duty was updated afterwards in July 2023.
The document details the main two ideologies driving the terrorist threat to the UK: Islamism, which makes up the bulk of the caseload, and the extreme right wing, which makes up about 20-30% of the caseloads, according to counter-terrorism sources.
A Home Office spokesperson said: “Prevent deals with all forms of radicalisation and it is important that this is effectively communicated within our training products so that frontline professionals are equipped to take the appropriate action.
“All training products are regularly updated to ensure they are reflecting the latest threat picture.”
Jacob Smith, from Rights and Security International, a human rights advocacy group, said: “For years, we have expressed concern about how the government’s broad concept of ‘extremism’ could be open to politicised abuses. It appears that this concern has now been realised through a blatant distinction between how the government wants to treat people on the ‘left’ versus people on the ‘right’ under Prevent.
“Our concern is only heightened by government rhetoric during the past few days that appears to be targeting British Muslims and protesters for Palestinian rights. If ‘extremism’ can mean anything the government wants it to mean, that’s a clear problem for democracy.”
Ilyas Nagdee, from Amnesty International, said: “This is yet another crackdown from the UK government to stifle freedom of expression – including political speech and activism – using the blunt instrument that is Prevent.
“Prevent is brazenly being used here to target political expression as it has long been criticised of doing. The government should not be in the business of rolling out training and guidance on what they deem acceptable or unacceptable political ideologies and forms of activism.”
Other official training documents for Prevent state that “under the Prevent duty” those covered by it must “support” anyone at risk of radicalisation.
It says: “It’s not your responsibility to risk assess the level of radicalisation,” and urges providing “as much context as possible before it’s shared with the police”.
Other official material says details that should be provided to the authorities about anyone being referred to Prevent should include name, religion, social media name, ethnicity, nationality, main language, immigration or asylum status, and any additional family details. It also says data that can be shared can include, neurodivergence, mental health, details about emotional health and cultural factors.
It also asks any referral includes details of the “ideology of concern … provide details of the ideology which may be contributing to making the person susceptible to radicalisation”.
“This training is designed to make sure that when you share a concern that a person may be being radicalised into terrorism: it’s informed; it’s with good intention; the response to that concern is considered, and proportionate.”
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mysweetmurderina · 20 days
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SERIAL KILLER INFORMATION MASTERLIST
A
RODNEY ALCALA SUMMARY
B
VELMA BARFIELD SUMMARY
MARY BELL SUMMARY
DAVID BERKOWITZ SUMMARY
WILLIAM BONIN SUMMARY
IAN BRADY SUMMARY
JERRY BRUDOS SUMMARY
TED BUNDY SUMMARY
C
RICHARD CHASE SUMMARY
ANDREI CHIKATILO SUMMARY
DEAN CORLL SUMMARY
D
JEFFREY DAHMER SUMMARY
E
F
LONNIE DAVID FRANKLIN JR SUMMARY
G
JOHN WAYNE GACY SUMMARY
ED GEIN SUMMARY
H
MYRA HINDLEY SUMMARY
H.H. HOLMES SUMMARY
I
J
K
PATRICK KEARNEY SUMMARY
ED KEMPER SUMMARY
RANDY KRAFT SUMMARY
L
PEDRO LOPEZ SUMMARY
M
PATRICK MACKAY SUMMARY
CHARLES MANSON SUMMARY
IVAN MILAT SUMMARY
N
DENNIS NILSEN SUMMARY
O
P
CARL PANZRAM SUMMARY
STEPHEN PORT SUMMARY
DOROTHEEA PUENTE SUMMARY
Q
R
DENNIS RADER SUMMARY
RICHARD RAMIREZ SUMMARY
GARY RIDGWAY SUMMARY
S
ARTHUR SHAWCROSS SUMMARY
HAROLD SHIPMAN SUMMARY
PETER SUTCLIFFE SUMMARY
T
U
V
W
WAYNE WILLIAMS SUMMARY
AILEEN WUORNOS SUMMARY
X
Y
Z
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1812-story · 1 year
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"I've got you, brother"
Griffith Shawcross, Conde de Lannair
Sir Levi Holroyd
William Hayes, Visconde Bedwyn
Aiden Gillingham, Duque de Barclay
By @robinsu
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the-monkey-ruler · 8 months
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RWBY (2013) 红白黑黄
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Director: Monty Oum Screenwriters: Monty Oum / Miles Luna / Kerry Shawcross Starring: Lindsay Jones, Kara Eberly, Barbara Dunkelman, Alan Zeck, Miles Luna, Samantha Ireland, Neath Oum, Aaron Dismuke Shannon McCormick / Vic Mignona / Jessica Nigri / Jason Rose / Katie Newville / Michael Jones / Jen Brown / William Orendorff / Elizabeth Maxwell / Uri Lowenthal / Jane Taylor / Christopher Sabat / Dawn Michelle Bennett / Jason Librecht / Melissa Sternberg / Christina Valenzuela / Kerry Shawcross / Christopher Wehkamp / Jason Douglas / Lucy Christian / Amber Lee Conners / Kent Williams / Monty Overwood / Cherami Lee / Wang Shihao / Tara Platt / Dave Fennoy Genre: Animation Official website: https://roosterteeth.com/series/rwby Country/Region of Manufacture: United States Language: English Date: 2013-07-18 (USA) Number of seasons: 9 Episodes: 116 Single episode length: 4–28 minutes IMDb: tt3066242 Type: Appropriation
Summary:
The story takes place in the fictional world of Remnant, composed of four kingdoms (Vale, Mistral, Atlas and Vacuo), that are invaded by malevolent monsters known as the "Creatures of Grimm".[23] Prior to the events of the series, the world was overseen by two opposing deities, the God of Light and the God of Darkness. Humanity was obliterated by the gods, due to the actions of Salem, a vengeful woman cursed with immortality for trying to manipulate them into reviving her beloved Ozma. Ozma was subsequently reincarnated by the Gods to guide a new human race toward harmony and after succeeding, summon the gods back for judgement using four relics, the Staff of Creation, the Sword of Destruction, the Crown of Choice and the Lamp of Knowledge, leading to an endless conflict between him and Salem. The discovery of the element, Dust, triggered a technological and industrial revolution for humanity. The deity brothers themselves were born in the Ever After, a world that is the setting of the fairy tale The Girl Who Fell Through the World. They were created by the world's Great Tree to help it make the Ever After, with their first creations being the Curious Cat and the Jabberwalker, the brothers' differences and arguments forced the Tree to send them out of the Ever After, where they could create and experiment until they understand the true nature of balance, eventually leading to the creation of Remnant. The Curious Cat wished to leave the Ever After with Alyx, the main character of the story, and learn why their creators left, but she decided to stay behind and make up for the damage she had caused, breaking the Cat's heart and driving them to insanity who killed Alyx, with her brother Lewis returning to Remnant and telling the story as he wished it had happen.
In the present day, having formed a cabal to guard their world's secrets, one of Ozma's incarnations, Ozpin, establishes academies in the four kingdoms of Remnant to train Huntsmen and Huntresses against the Grimm, with each academies concealing one of the relics. The series focuses on four girls attending Beacon Academy in the kingdom of Vale: Ruby Rose, Weiss Schnee, Blake Belladonna and Yang Xiao Long. Together, they form Team RWBY ("ruby").[17][24] With their friends Jaune Arc, Nora Valkyrie, Pyrrha Nikos and Lie Ren forming their own team, JNPR ("juniper"). Ruby becomes the team leader and promises her friends to keep running their team. Blake reveals herself as a cat Faunus (a human possessing animal traits) and resigns from working with the White Fang organization. Cinder Fall, Roman Torchwick along with his assistant Neopolitan and the White Fang led by Adam Taurus, invade Beacon Academy. Roman is killed in the chaos. Yang loses her arm after seeing a conflict between Blake and Adam. Cinder becomes the Fall Maiden, and kills Ozpin and Pyrrha. Ruby defeats Cinder with her Silver eyes, forcing her and her minions to retreat.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RWBY
Link: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLmG8k4VrS1ZinWM23I0zx8YeZQRM3HoDj
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if-you-fan-a-fire · 3 years
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“EX-GUARD REYNOLDS SENTENCED TO JAIL,” Daily British Whig (Kingston). January 5, 1921. Page 2. ---- For Six Weeks for Carrying Out Letters From Prisoners. ---- Everton Reynolds, ex-guard at the Portsmouth penitentiary, found guilty of having carried out letters from the penitentiary for convicts, was sentenced by Magistrate Farrell, on Wednesday morning, to six weeks in Jail. He had his preliminary trial week ago, when Magistrate Farrell found him guilty on two charges of Daring carried letters.
A young man arrested for "boot- legging, pleaded guilty, and was fined $800 and costs, and in addition to this, to spend a month in jail.
Still another remand was made in the case of John Hilyard and Edward Stokes, charged with assaulting and robbing William Shawcross. This time the trial was set for Friday.
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mariacallous · 1 year
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William Shawcross’s review of Prevent has been a long time coming. It was not only four years, but also four prime ministers ago that Theresa May’s government committed to an independent review. That had been championed by former counter-terror reviewer Lord Anderson as a way to defuse the polarised debates about the role of Prevent, and encourage more focus on the evidence of what worked in tackling extremism. But the Shawcross review will disappoint those hopes. It is already reheating and repolarising the debate around Prevent, engaging in a stale tug-of-war about which threats from extremism really matter.
The review concludes that Prevent’s definition of Islamist ideology has been “too narrow”, while the parameters of extreme right views have been “too broad”. Shawcross argues that “the most lethal threat in the last 20 years has come from Islamism, and this threat continues”. Pitting the two against each other in this way risks simply relitigating old arguments, as though efforts to contain one of these threats necessarily undermines the other. Brendan Cox, whose wife Jo Cox MP was murdered by a far-right terrorist, tells me that he has little doubt that Islamist-inspired terrorism is currently the most serious threat. “The question is whether in five or 10 years that will still be the case. Are increasing far-right referrals a sign of a growing problem or a temporary issue? Will the ‘incel’ movement become a bigger thing? We don’t know all the answers,” he says. It undermines legitimacy and trust if choices about which threat really matters sound like a fixed ideological position, rather than a response to the shifting intelligence.
And crucially, messengers matter. Shawcross was bound to be a polarising choice. He had vocally defended the detention of suspected al-Qaida militants at Guantánamo Bay, and the torture technique of waterboarding as a necessary response to urgent terror threats. Many critics of the Prevent programme, including Amnesty International and the Muslim Council of Britain, cited Shawcross’s description a decade ago of Europe’s relationship with Islam “as among the greatest, most terrifying problems of our time” as a reason they could not engage with the review. Shawcross attributed his fear to the combination of “all European countries [having] vastly, very quickly growing Islamic populations” and “frighteningly large numbers of … young men turning to radical Islamism”.
Shawcross has not responded directly to the controversy, though his letter introducing himself to Prevent practitioners emphasised that he recognised the vital importance of differentiating Islam from Islamism. The review seeks to observe the boundary, though his earlier comments had badly blurred it. He does insist on the importance of naming the problem as Islamism, and views alternative language such as “faith-based terrorism” as unhelpfully euphemistic. Shawcross offers footnotes naming and shaming Muslims he would like to see excommunicated from any engagement with Prevent. But this would exacerbate a more significant problem – that the government already has a widespread non-engagement policy of ever-shrinking circles of civic Muslim engagement, that is so much narrower than with any other major faith group.
Because Prevent sits on the boundary of hard-edged enforcement and preventive, pre-criminal intervention, alienating those who could carry out the latter creates real problems. “A serious attempt to wrestle with these trade-offs is greatly needed. Sadly this review does not provide it,” says Harvey Redgrave of the criminal justice consultancy Crest. Yet Crest’s research also constructively challenges the political perception that polarisation about Prevent is inevitable. Indeed, Muslim attitudes face parallel caricatures on both right and left. If the right underestimates the breadth of commitment within the community to challenge extremism, the left significantly exaggerates the idea of Prevent as a “toxic brand”. The research demonstrates that most Muslims have never heard of Prevent, that there is broad support in principle for its goals, and challenges as to whether government engages fairly across communities and threats are generally constructive.
If we did not have a programme attempting what Prevent aims to do, there would be calls to invent it. But a central question for prevention is what actually works. This review, often rather journalistic in tone, provides disappointingly little evidence about that. Shawcross reports that he visited six of the 79 Prevent-funded civil society organisations. He reviews 15 civic projects, which strengthens his feeling that too few are directly challenging Islamism. He writes that the behavioural insights team(also known as the “nudge unit”) had referenced an overarching review of the impacts of certain projects, but reports that nobody at the Home Office can find it for him. The fragmentary evidence base long predates the Shawcross review, but he makes only the sketchiest contribution to filling the void.
Home secretary Suella Braverman will use the Shawcross review to redefine what constitutes counter-extremism (which might sometimes, ironically, undermine prevention). “Prevent is a security service, not a social service,” she told the Commons. But the Sunak administration will have neither the time nor the bandwidth for a sustained reform agenda before an election. Shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper told the Commons that the Shawcross review had been a missed opportunity to build a broader consensus for reform. The next government may need to repeat the exercise. As Brendan Cox suggests: “Next time we review it, let’s please make sure it’s independent.”
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marcmarcmomarc · 4 months
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RWBY: The Holiday Special
Taking place after the series, we get a look at what the holiday season is like on Remnant.
Starring the voices of:
Lindsay Jones as Ruby Rose
Kara Eberle as Weiss Schnee
Arryn Zech as Blake Belladonna
Barbara Dunkelman as Yang Xiao Long
Cast:
Dawn M. Bennett as Elm Ederne
Jen Brown as Pyrrha Nikos
Sena Bryer as May Marigold
Ashley Burns as Coco Adel
Burnie Burns as Taiyang Xiao Long
Tiana Camacho as Glynda Goodwitch
Cam Clarke as Bartholomew Oobleck
Colleen Clinkenbeard as Jinn
Amber Lee Connors as Vernal
Aaron Dismuke as Oscar Pine
Michele Everheart as Fiona Thyme
Dave Fennoy as Dr. Pietro Polendina
Gavin Free as Scarlet David
Caitlin Glass as Willow Schnee
Anna Hullum as Raven Branwen
Samantha Ireland as Nora Valkyrie
Michael Jones as Sun Wukong
Mick Lauer as Marrow Amin
Morgan Lauré as Summer Rose
Cherami Leigh as Ilia Amitola
Marissa Lenti as Joanna Greenleaf
Jason Liebrecht as Qrow Branwen
Yuri Lowenthal as Mercury Black
Miles Luna as Jaune Arc
Joe MacDonald as Yatsuhashi Daichi
Aaron Marquis as Nolan Porfirio
Penny Layne Matthews as Zwei
Elizabeth Maxwell as Winter Schnee
Shannon McCormick as Professor Ozpin
Taylor McNee as Penny Polendina
Lani Minella as Rowena Sunnybrook
Max Mittelman as Fox Alistair
Katie Newville as Emerald Sustrai
Jessica Nigri as Cinder Fall
William Orendorff as Hazel Rainart
Josh Ornelas as Sage Ayana
Neath Oum as Lie Ren
Tara Platt as Kali Belladonna
Anairis Quiñones as Harriet Bree
Jason Rose as James Ironwood
Anthony Sardinha as Peter Port
Kerry Shawcross as Neptune Vasilias
Keith Silverstein as Professor Theodore
Melissa Sternenberg as Maria Calavera
Valentine Stokes as Ambrosius
Karen Strassmann as Gretchen Rainart
J. Michael Tatum as Klein Sieben
Cristina Vee as Robyn Hill
Howard Wang as Whitley Schnee
Caiti Ward as Velvet Scarlatina
Christopher Wehkamp as Clover Ebi
Casey Lee Williams as singing voice of Weiss Schnee & Neopolitan
Kent Williams as Ghira Belladonna
Todd Womack as Vine Zeki
Anne Yatco as Xanthe Rumpole
Additional Voices:
Orion Acaba as Harold Mulberry
César Altagracia as Crimson
Amalee as Ivy Thickety
Yssa Badiola as Ciel Soleil
Laura Bailey as Amber
William Ball as Saber Rodentia
Ryan Bartley as Arslan Altan
Eric Baudour as Forest
Brian Beacock as Roch Szalt
Dawn M. Bennett as An Ren
Laila Berzins as Starr Sanzang
Grace Bono as Nebula Violette
Jen Brown as Red Haired Woman & Lisa Lavender
Reba Buhr as Lily’s Younger Sister
Billy B. Burson III as Branwen Bandit 2
Paige Campbell as Dew Gayl
Bruce Carey as Captain
Dani Chambers as Iris Marilla
Clifford Chapin as Shay D. Mann
Luci Christian as Lil’ Miss Malachite & Fria
Greg Chun as Green
Lucella Wren Clary as Adrian Cotta-Arc
Alfred Coleman as Merchant
Kate Daigler as Atlas Soldier Officer
Adam Ellis as Cardin Winchester & Tukson
Dorothy Fahn as Slate
Melissa Fahn as Lily
Erin Fitzgerald as Rae Noire
Flynt Flossy as Flynt Coal
Jim Foronda as Russet Ka
Sandy Fox as Ariadne Guime
Scott Frerichs as Mata
Grant George as Ivori
Blaine Gibson as Brawnz Ni
Christopher Guerrero as Dudley & Blacksmith
Claire Hogan as Octavia Ember
Victoria Holden as Mata’s Mother
Xanthe Huynh as Claret Berbere
Chad James as Asher Mora & Councilman Sleet
Chris Kokkinos as Fenix Nemean, Spider Bodyguard 2, Branwen Bandit 1, & Crew Member 2
Anjali Kunapaneni as Cye Ayu
Skye Lafontaine as Olive Harper
Aleks Le as Nadir Shiko
Judy Alice Lee as Ruda Tilleroot
Mela Lee as Caroline Cordovin
Marissa Lenti as Oscar’s Aunt
Alex Mai as Dee
Joel Mann as Drunk Mann
Bryan Massey as Bertilak Celadon
Dustin Matthews as Drinking Buddy
Kyle McCarley as Sky Lark
Mike McFarland as Mayor
Daman Mills as Leonardo Lionheart
Ryan Mitchum as August Caspian
Cassandra Lee Morris as Kandi Floss
Kim Newman as Higanbana Waitress
Richard Norman as Fenix Atar
Brooke Olson as Mantle Child
Colleen O’Shaughnessey as Thumbelina Peach
Bryce Papenbrook as Russel Thrush
Jack Pattillo as Hei “Junior” Xiong
Paul St. Peter as Edward Caspian
Kyle Phillips as Nubuck Guards
Anairis Quiñones as Councilwoman Camilla
Eden Riegel as Elektra Fury
Sam Riegel as Finn Asturias
Jon Risinger as Bolin Hori
Cindy Robinson as Ann Greene
Patrick Rodriguez as Shopkeep & Cyril Ian
Kristi Rothrock as Zure Ayu
Andrew Russell as Kobalt
Ian Russell as Mossius Berbere
Alejandro Saab as Dove Bronzewing & Henry Marigold
Lindsay Seidel as May Zedong
Kerry Shawcross as Pyke Rite
Lindsay Sheppard as Saphron Cotta-Arc
Michael Sinterniklaas as Roy Stallion
Jamie Smith as Terra Cotta-Arc
Gus Sorola as Fiona’s Uncle
Laura Stahl as Roane Ashwood
Christine Stuckart as Grandmother
Kaiji Tang as Li Ren
Jenn K. Tidwell as Mother & Spider Bodyguard 1
Alexis Tipton as Bianca Prisma
Maggie Tominey as Miltia & Melanie Malachite
Meg Turney as Neon Katt
Natalie Van Sistine as Cerise Claire
Erin Winn as Reese Chloris
Kimberly Woods as Olive Gashley
Yunhao Xhong as Crew Member 1
Laura Yates as Arrastra Skye
Christian Young as Rhodes
Mylissa Zelechowski as Gwen Darcy
Molly Zhang as Mikado Lem
Derreck Ziegler as Matte Skye
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