Ellis Fairclough (@e_fairclough) 's Twitter Profile
Ellis Fairclough

@e_fairclough

30, From Formby, Merseyside, Living in Cardiff. Web Developer. ellisfairclough.com

ID: 240785089

linkhttp://www.ellisfairclough.com calendar_today20-01-2011 18:54:02

1,1K Tweet

414 Followers

808 Following

BBC Archive (@bbcarchive) 's Twitter Profile Photo

How do you live with yourself, after killing another man? What would you have done in WWI? Visit bbc.co.uk/armisticeday to discover more.

Ellis Fairclough (@e_fairclough) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Never just assume what people have been through, being homeless doesnt make you any less of a human with real feelings and real problems, it can happen to anybody.

Simon Hughes (@simon_hughes__) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Football supporters are betraying their own backgrounds, their shared histories and current struggles when they mock the poverty of other places. Can it please stop? independent.co.uk/sport/football…

Spindogs (@spindogs) 's Twitter Profile Photo

🗣Calling all graduate Web Developers! We’re looking to add a new member to our team, follow the link to apply❗️ spindogs.co.uk/careers/ #webdevelopment #graduate #CardiffJobs #webdeveloper

🗣Calling all graduate Web Developers! We’re looking to add a new member to our team, follow the link to apply❗️
spindogs.co.uk/careers/
#webdevelopment #graduate #CardiffJobs #webdeveloper
Channel 4 Dispatches (@c4dispatches) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"We try not to eat a lot in one day, even though most of us are really hungry." Almost 1 in 3 children in the UK are now growing up poor, like Cameron and his two sisters whose family rely on a food bank to help fill the fridge.

Dylan Curran (@iamdylancurran) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Want to freak yourself out? I'm gonna show just how much of your information the likes of Facebook and Google store about you without you even realising it

James O'Brien (@mrjamesob) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Dropping bombs on a country but voting against allowing refugee children fleeing the conflict to come here. That’s got to be worse than running through a wheat field.