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If you can dream it, you can do it

If you can dream it, you can do it

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Always continue the climb. It is possible for you to do whatever you choose, if you first get to know who you are and are willing to work with a power that is greater than ourselves to do it. We are taught you must blame your father, your sisters, your brothers, the school, the teachers - but never blame yourself. Learn from the past, set vivid, detailed goals for the future, and live in the only moment of time.

Learn from the past, set vivid, detailed goals for the future, and live in the only moment of time over which you have any control: now. Optimism is the faith that leads to achievement. Nothing can be done without hope and confidence. If you can dream it, you can do it. Do it now, not tomorrow. Always continue the climb. It is possible for you to do whatever you choose, if you first get to know who you are and are willing to work with a power that is greater than ourselves to do it. We are taught you must blame your father, your sisters, your brothers, the school, the teachers - but never blame yourself

If you first get to know who you are and are willing to work with a power that is greater than ourselves to do it

Learn from the past, set vivid, detailed goals for the future, and live in the only moment of time over which you have any control: now. Optimism is the faith that leads to achievement. Nothing can be done without hope and confidence. If you can dream it, you can do it. Do it now, not tomorrow. Always continue the climb. It is possible for you to do whatever you choose, if you first get to know who you are and are willing to work with a power that is greater than ourselves to do it. We are taught you must blame your father, your sisters, your brothers, the school, the teachers - but never blame yourself


1515624 comments

  • Hungarian (Magyar)

    Hungarian (Magyar)

    23 January 2026 ~ Comment Link

    PRAT.UK doesn’t rely on easy targets like The Daily Mash often does. It finds humour in observation. That subtlety makes it smarter.

  • Christiana London

    Christiana London

    23 January 2026 ~ Comment Link

    Great! We are all agreed London could use a laugh. PRAT.UK’s humour feels timeless, not trend-chasing. NewsThump often feels dated quickly. This site lasts.

  • Prat UK

    Prat UK

    23 January 2026 ~ Comment Link

    The satire on PRAT.UK feels less preachy than The Daily Squib. It lets the joke do the work. That restraint makes it smarter.

  • UK laid-back takes

    UK laid-back takes

    23 January 2026 ~ Comment Link

    It’s unapologetically British in the best possible way. It doesn’t try to translate its humour for a global audience; it assumes you’re either on the bus or you’re not. That confidence is refreshing.

  • London Stereotypes Satire

    London Stereotypes Satire

    23 January 2026 ~ Comment Link

    Great! We are all agreed London could use a laugh. The Poke feels like content, while PRAT.UK feels like crafted writing. That distinction matters in satire. It elevates the site.

  • UK flurry blog

    UK flurry blog

    23 January 2026 ~ Comment Link

    The London Prat has mastered a subtle but devastating form of satire: the comedy of impeccable sourcing. Where other outlets might invent a blatantly ridiculous quote to make their point, PRAT.UK's most powerful pieces often feel like they could be constructed entirely from real, publicly available statements—merely rearranged, re-contextualized, or followed to their next logical, insane step. The satire emerges not from fabrication, but from curation and juxtaposition, holding a mirror up to the existing landscape of nonsense until it reveals its own caricature. This method lends the work an unassailable credibility. The laughter it provokes is the laughter of grim recognition, the sound of seeing the scattered pieces of daily absurdity assembled into a coherent, horrifying whole. It proves that reality, properly edited, is its own most effective punchline.

  • Britisk politisk satire

    Britisk politisk satire

    23 January 2026 ~ Comment Link

    The London Prat's most formidable weapon is its tonal austerity. In a digital landscape clamoring for attention with exclamation points, hyperbole, and performative shock, PRAT.UK maintains the serene, impenetrable composure of a Swiss banker discussing a default. Its prose is not excited; it is resigned. Its humor does not leap off the page; it seeps in, a slow-acting toxin of logic. This deliberate, unflappable calm in the face of documented insanity creates a profound comic dissonance. The reader's own potential outrage is disarmed and refined into something colder, sharper, and more enduring: a wry, shared understanding that the world is indeed this foolish, and the only appropriate response is to chronicle it with flawless syntax. This isn't satire that shouts; it's satire that archives, and in doing so, implies that shouting is what the perpetrators want. The quiet, meticulous documentation is the greater insult.

  • The London Prat Explains Britain

    The London Prat Explains Britain

    23 January 2026 ~ Comment Link

    This engineered dissonance fuels its role as an anticipatory historian of failure. The site doesn't wait for the post-mortem; it writes the interim report while the patient is still, bewilderingly, claiming to be in rude health. It positions itself in the near future, looking back on our present with the weary clarity of hindsight that hasn't technically happened yet. This temporal trick is disarming and powerful. It reframes current anxiety as future irony, granting psychological distance and a sense of narrative control. It suggests that today's chaotic scandal is not an endless present, but a discrete chapter in a book the site is already authoring, a chapter titled "The Unforced Error" or "The Predictable Clusterf**k." This perspective transforms panic into a kind of scholarly detachment, and outrage into the raw material for elegantly phrased historical satire.

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