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    What a day! The Reds secured a tenth League Cup with a dramatic extra time win over Chelsea at Wembley to keep us on course for a glorious end to the Jurgen Klopp era.
     
    A true captain's goal from Virg averted the drama of a shoot out, following another topsy turvy final in which fortune favoured the brave. However, it was the Reds Academy graduates rising to the occasion against the billion dolla blues that will live long in the memory.
     
    Chris Smith is joined by Julian Richards, Paul Natton and TLW Editor Dave Usher to celebrate a win that sits proudly amidst the pantheon of our all-time great final triumphs.
     
     

  • Andy Robertson has given Conor Bradley a major tick of approval as the young Northern Irishman fits in seamlessly into the Liverpool starting line-up.
     
    A revelation at League One outfit Bolton Wanderers last season, Bradley has shown that he is not overawed in the big step up in quality, playing in front of packed stadiums and filling the role of a World Class talent in Trent-Alexander-Arnold.
     

     
    Today against Chelsea is the kind of fixture that any Footballer dreams of, a Cup final at Wembley Stadium, let alone an academy graduate that will be making his 17th senior appearance for his club.
     
    The usual discussion after the closure of recent transfer windows revolved around the lack of a back-up for Alexander-Arnold who would keep him on his toes and possibly be the catalyst for a full-time midfield role shift for the 25 year-old.
     
    Jurgen Klopp implemented the inverted role at the tail end of last season for the England international which has had its successes but also put added pressure on  the Reds defence at times.
     
    A misfortune in terms of a lingering knee ligament injury for Alexander-Arnold has allowed Bradley to build confidence and the 20 year old has been one of the most and impressive  players in the last month as Liverpool aim to keep their pole position atop the Premier League table.
     
    One teammate  who has been watching on with a level of pride is Robertson, a player who is never shy in handing out advice to the next generation of talent.
     
    Like everyone who has watched Bradley this season, he is impressed with every facet of his game as the Echo reported.
     

     
    “For now, Conor has shown he can do it at the highest level. He's got a lot of hype around him but now it's shown he can do it every single week. Before every game he plays and during training, that's what I say to him - it's all good being the new kid on the block and things like that, but with that comes expectation. And he's dealt with that unbelievably well.
     
    “His consistency so far has been top class and he has got to keep going like that. That's what makes you a really, really good player, when you can do it week in, week out in every single game. That's what I'm trying to drill home with him, because the skill he has, the ability to play football, the athleticism is there to be seen. But he has got to prove he can be consistent."
     
    And Robertson believes that Bradley is far from content with his progress to date.
     
    “He is a hard worker, he is a good lad, he listens to all the other lads and takes everything in his stride. He is the perfect young player, always in the gym working hard and working hard on the training ground. I believe he will have an unbelievable career, but from my experience it's about getting the consistency. That's the key message I give him."
     

     
    As a veteran of the Jurgen Klopp era, Robertson is well placed to assess where this squad is placed and is generally excited about those who are coming through the ranks, and that was highlighted on Wednesday evening against Luton.
     
    “With what's happened over the last couple of weeks, all of a sudden  (someone like) Conor has become one of the more experienced lads in the squad  "That's how quickly it can change.
     
    “Harvey was making his 100th appearance for the club against Luton on Wednesday, and he has become one of the more experienced players because on the bench there wasn't many appearances between the young lads. We have lost a lot of players but we have to go with the excitement of the young lads.
     
    "The lads who came on against Luton looked excited, and it reminded me of when I came on for my debut. You have no fear and are just happy to be there, and you can use that to your advantage, and that's what we are going to have to do."
     
     

  • Monday Feb 19:
     
    Klopp said something to the press on Friday in amongst all the Alonso stuff that I thought was a little odd. I didn't include it last week because there wasn't really anything to say about it, it was probably nothing. It was about Mbappe and the quote was 'Obviously, I'm not involved in that, but I can tell you I'd be surprised if all the top clubs were,' Klopp said. 'The top clubs I know, for most of them it will be tricky. Wages, signing-on fee.'
     
    The reason I thought it was odd is because the market will set the price. If Mbappe is a free agent he has to sign for someone and if nobody is willing to pay him what he's on at PSG then he has to either sign a new deal there or take the best offer out there. I expected him to rule us out, but why was he talking about how tricky it will be for the other big clubs?
     
    Then over the weekend I saw a report that Mbappe's people met with City before the announcement was made that he was leaving PSG. Is Klopp putting this out there so people will question how the fuck City can afford it, especially when they already have Haaland on close to a million quid a week (most of it off the books of course). You can bet your life's savings that meeting with Mbappe centred around some sort of ambassadorial role in Abu Dhabi while he makes 200k a week from City.
     
    The media are so culpable in this shit though. They'll report that City are the only English club that can afford him but they won't tell you how they can afford it. A club with no world wide fanbase to speak of, that has empty seats every home game (despite the books showing that they are selling out), that is already paying incredible amounts of money to its players, yet they can match what PSG have been paying Mbappe. And fucking nobody in the media says its dodgy because "they've got rich owners".
     
    Here's the thing though; it doesn't matter how rich your owners are. That's got nothing to do with how much a club is allowed to spend. Jeff Bezos could buy Luton Town but they wouldn't be able to sign Mbappe and pay him £1m a week, so how come no-one questions how City can afford it? You don't need to see the books to know they're cheating, you just have to look at the players and manager they have and the fact that they are able to attract and keep them when they aren't a big club. It's cheating in plain sight and it's still happening now despite the narrative that they've somehow now "gone legit". 
     
    I don't think Mbappe is going there but that isn't the point. The fact it's even seen as normal for them to be in there offends me greatly. He's going to Real Madrid though, it's an open secret and Konate even mentioned it on Saturday when he was asked about it. He just laughed and said "everyone knows where he's going".
     
    Nike probably won't be happy about him joining an adidas team though....
     


    Speaking of dumb, I see Gary Neville is now saying United will finish top four. Interesting that, he must think either us or Arsenal are dropping out because it was only a few weeks back he was telling us that Spurs were going to challenge City for the title. Honestly, this tit is king of the terrible takes yet is still seen as a serious pundit. Actually that's unfair, he's not the king, he's the prince of the terrible takes. That dope Rio is the king. Neville is wrong so often though I might start keeping track of all the stuff he says just for a laugh. You'd think he'd have learned to hold back after embarrassing himself last summer saying Klopp would happily take United's midfield over the new one he'd assembled. Soft get.

    Meanwhile, reports in Portugal suggest Jota will miss two months but he will be back before the end of the season. It isn't confirmed but it seemed quite reliable. Mixed feelings if this is true. It's good that his season isn't over but fucking hell, he's going to miss some of our most important games and it's proper shit for him and us as he's been in great form.
     
    I don't really see it as us having a front three anymore, we've got five and when we have all of them and we're able to use all five to rotate and make substitutions, we look damn near unbeatable as few teams can live with that firepower. As long as Nunez isn't injured we've still got four and that's good, but we're down to the bare bones in midfield at the moment. Trent, Dom, Thiago, Stef and Curtis all out, leaving us with just Endo, Macca, Grav and Harvey. I think McConnell is going to feature over the next week or so because we can't keep putting the same lads out there every game.

  • Mauricio Pochettino has looked to gain a psychological blow ahead of the Carabao Cup final by aiming to play the ‘officials ‘card’ and hoping the occasion is not decided by emotion.
     
    The Chelsea manager is still clearly aggrieved by what he feels were wrong decisions as his team were convincingly beaten by Liverpool last month.
     
    With Jurgen Klopp moving on at the end of the season, there has been a lot of articles written about the legacy of the German and what it will mean for Liverpool moving forward.
     
    Pochettino was at pains to explain that this is in no way a criticism of Klopp, but more so decisions be judged fairly for both sides as ESPN reported.
     
    " I think what we need to be sure is we are going to compete and be fair in every single decision. I think when we play against Liverpool in Liverpool, I think too many decisions that ... not one key decision was for us.
     
    Two penalties were not given. Duels, 50-50, always for another colour. Always red. I want to be treated in a fair way. Of course, we are going to celebrate -- I am the first, I am going to say Liverpool is amazing, Klopp is one of the best coaches in the world.
     
    "But I think after my last experience playing there, I think what I want in Wembley is to go there and no one feels the pressure. To play a game at the same level and the best will win, not to feel the pressure, people around or, you know? You understand what I mean.
     
    Pochettino seemingly on a roll at this stage and channeling his inner Jose Mourinho kept emphasizing his point and was heading into somewhat dangerous territory.
     

     
    “It is nice. Liverpool is an amazing club. I love Klopp and the way that he is, is amazing. But of course, it is his last season here, you go to compete in the same way, both teams and to give or see the things for both clubs in the same way."
     
    It was then that the Argentinian was asked whether there is a wide spread view among the Football community that people wanted Liverpool to win because of the German, something he was quick to refute.
     
    “No. I don't say people want that, it is not to be part of the celebration. I would never say that, another part involved in the game, they want Liverpool to win.
     
    "But the most important is to go and compete with the same view from different parts because we need to talk.
     

     
    “They were better than us of course but the first decision after five minutes, that was a clear penalty. In the second half, that was penalty on Nkunku. After you see the VAR that interfered in many situations and it is different or maybe similar and gives a penalty, why not?
     
    "We are Chelsea, we need to go there, we need to compete with the same tools and of course, if they are better, well done, congratulate them. But, being fair in every single decision.
     
    "The pressure is not about delivering the job for Klopp, no. The pressure is not to be part of the ... you know? I cannot talk more."
     
    Maybe Mauricio hasn’t seen enough of Liverpool in his absence from English Football in the last few years.
     
    The last thing Klopp or anyone associated with the club will be expecting is any favourable emotion coming their way from officials.
     
    To the contrary, they more than anyone will be counting the days until Klopp's departure, such has been the fractious relationship.
     
    Fair to say the Cup final won’t be decided by decisions, moreso acts of individual quality just like it was at Anfield at the end of January.
     
     

  • Jurgen Klopp is not yet in the frame of mind to think too much about his impending departure at Liverpool, saying that there are a couple of more chapters to write on a fantastic journey.
     
    Tomorrow afternoon at Wembley Stadium Liverpool resume their domestic cup final rivalry with Chelsea two years on from a couple of thrilling encounters which the Reds came out on top.
     
    There will be quite a few stars that have either moved on, or will be missing through injury from those two showcase fixtures and when it comes to the West London outfit, a different manager too.
     
    This will also be the last Carabao Cup final that Klopp will be involved in, although he hopes it is not the last trip to Wembley with the Reds still in the FA Cup.
     
    Speaking in his pre-match press conference, Klopp said that his mind is truly focussed on what lies ahead at Liverpool and not direction his future career will head in as the Mirror reported
     

    .
    “We wrote and we are still writing a wonderful book and when I leave we close that book and put it on the shelf and then someone else will write a wonderful book. There is space for some (more) chapters.
     
    “I am not there and writing the resumé already. Not at all. I am 100 percent in trying to create a few special memories on top of what we have done. We will see what is possible but the basis we created so far … come on, 60 Premier League points is an extraordinary amount of points with all the things that have gone on but we all know it should be 61 or 63. we all know that.”  (Klopp reminding the ensembled media he has not forgotten the farce that happened against Tottenham at the end of September.)
     
    While Liverpool produced an outstanding display to dismantle Chelsea at Anfield last month, the manager knows all too well that this is a completely different occasion.
     
    “Chelsea are a different animal since we (last) played them. They are much more stable. They have had very good results since then. There is no favourite in this final.”
     
    Klopp knows the while the team will be missing some key members, the Reds fans will be in full voice to push them over the line.
     
    “The red part of Wembley should be rocking. This team deserves it, this team deserves each push. These boys will throw their heart and soul on the pitch and the more we can give them the better it is.”
     
    “We have had to prove a few points … that you can miss X, Y, Z players but still win games.”
     
     

  • Liverpool clearly learnt from a difficult 2022/23 season in which they failed to win anything, and also finished outside the top four, missing out on Champions League football. Playing on Thursdays in the Europa League is definitely a constant reminder of Liverpool’s unachieved dreams last season. Also, it is a constant reminder of the work ahead to correct last season’s deficiencies.
     
    There were a number of top signings in the summer and it has all worked well for the Reds, who are deservedly leading the race for the 2023/24 Premier League title. They are also in the League Cup final. Where they are set to meet Chelsea, and still have a chance in the FA Cup. It could actually end with Liverpool winning four trophies. That remains a distant target and as of now, Jurgen Klopp will be justified to feel his team can go for Premier League glory in the face of a tight title race that also has Arsenal and Manchester City while from a distance, Tottenham Hotspur are looking to challenge.
     
    Strong contenders 
     
    While they don’t rate the highest across most betting sites, Liverpool remain strong contenders. Slip ups against Arsenal this season (a 1-1 draw at home and 3-1 loss away in London) not only slowed down their momentum but returned the Gunners into title contention. That’s aside from Manchester City’s own title challenge. With the league title race narrowing down to three teams, this is the best time to place a long-term bet on Liverpool to win the 2023/24 title.
     
    For bettors, this could go even better if merged with some of the top bonuses and promotions that exist across the different bookmakers for new users. Betvictor, for example, has some of the highest percentage welcome bonuses and easy options to quickly withdraw winnings. An analysis of some of the top ranked bookies shows Betvictor is a reliable betting option according to this review on Cheekypunter. This can go well with staking on Liverpool winning some silverware this season, as the Reds look to banish last season’s failures. 
     
    Challenged City
     
    Liverpool have already challenged Manchester City’s dominance in English football, winning the Premier League title in 2020. The Reds have another incentive to do the same this season. Stopping City from winning four straight league titles will be one motivation but the biggest will definitely be to give the perfect sendoff package to crowd favorite Jurgen Klopp, who has already stated this will be his final season at the club.
     
    Klopp will first of all want to do it for himself but his players with whom he has enjoyed a great relationship, will want to gift him the title. The fans at Anfield have also been supportive and in terms of goodwill, Liverpool have it all to go for glory. While the management goes in search of the next manager, there will be little doubt that Klopp will have the support he needs to deliver one more league title at the Kop. 

  • For the second time this season Man City were unable to beat Chelsea. The last time they met was 4-4 but this wasn’t as dramatic. Chelsea probably should have won as they took City to the cleaners on the counter attack several times but only made it pay once, when Sterling send Walker for the Manchester Evening News and curled one in against his former club.
     
    He sort of celebrated but also sort of didn’t. The gaps in behind City were begging to be exploited and Sterling and Jackson got in behind regularly, with Palmer pulling the strings behind them. He was fucking ridiculous and it’s genuinely hard to comprehend why City would let him go. I know I’ve referenced this before, but seriously, what’s gone on there? Local lad, came through the Academy, is clearly fucking brilliant but they sold him to a fellow “Sly Six” club. It has to be some kind of FFP dodge as you just don’t do that. It’d be like us suddenly deciding to sell Curtis to Spurs. It’s weird.
     
    Anyway, he was the best player on the pitch but he was booed by City fans. They booed James Milner though so that says it all. Sterling almost made it 2-0 but was denied by the boot of Ederson. Had that gone in City were not coming back and it was the pivotal moment in the game.
     
    City had created some good chances but the blowfish was uncharacteristically wasteful. Not for the first time this season Rodri came to their rescue when he equalised with seven minutes left. Thankfully they didn’t spawn a late winner, despite them trying to cry in a penalty appeal when a loose ball landed on the hand of Colwill. Never a pen in a million years.
     
    Chelsea were good value for the point but City took in the good grace we’ve come to expect. Guardiola throwing wobblers on the touchline at every decision they didn’t get and then Rodri going on TV afterwards to complain about the ref and VAR giving “so many” big decisions against them. Then that petulant cunt Haaland shoved the camera away at the end. The camera man should have fucking launched the camera into his stupid bloated fucking face, the cheeky ugly cunt.
     
    Absolute fucking cunts. Entitled cunts. So used to getting their own way they convince themselves they should get every decision and when they don’t they stamp their oil soaked cheating feet. I despise everything about these cunts. A million times more than I’ve ever hated United. Guardiola is somehow an even bigger cunt than Ferguson ever was, as impossible as that would have been to believe at one point.
     
    What were they kicking off about after this? The absolute nonsense penalty shout against Colwill and an even worse shout when Walker fouled Sterling and tried to claim a penalty for himself. That was one of the most egregious bits of cheating I’ve seen all season. Not so much that he tried to buy the penalty by initiating contact, but the way they all reacted when Andy Madley wasn’t fooled and correctly gave the free-kick to Chelsea.
     
    They’re the fucking worst. I hate every single one of them. Every player. The manager. Every coach. Every cunt in the press office. The owners. The board. The tea lady. The kit man. The bus driver. The sad cunt DJ who introduces the players to the couple of dozen forty something single mums hanging around hoping Kyle Walker might ask if he can sniff their knickers…. basically everyone and everything connected with them. The worst thing to ever happen to football in this country. CUNTS.

  • I wonder how many more players we need to lose before it actually becomes a problem? You can make a convincing argument that only two of the eleven that thrashed Luton would make it into Klopp’s preferred line up when he has a full squad to choose from.
     
    That doesn’t mean these lads are ‘reserves’ as it’s very much a squad game these days, but Alisson, Trent, Konate, Robertson, Jones, Szoboszlai, Nunez, Salah and Jota are all probably starting if they’re available. They weren’t available though (or in the case of Konate and Robbo they were being rested for the weekend) and yet I thought that starting eleven still looked good. Not great, and you wouldn’t want to be playing that eleven every week, but it’s a sign of how strong the squad is that we can be without all of those players (I haven’t even mentioned Thiago, Bajcetic or Doak either) and still field a line up that didn’t have any glaring weaknesses.
     
    Going into the game I was a little concerned simply because Luton never get battered and they’re in every game they play. If they lose, it’s usually by the odd goal and they normally score. If they scored in this one, would we have the firepower to get the win? That was the worry I had, but even though we went in at the break a goal down that worry had gone based on how the first half went.
     
    I couldn’t believe how open it was. Right from the first couple of minutes we were getting in behind them and it’s not at all what I expected. I thought Luton would be deep and compact and force us to try and play through them, but they seemed to just go man for man all over the park and although we went in a goal down, it felt like a game we should have been leading by two or three.
     
    It started early on. We’d already forced a couple corners in the first minute or two and then Diaz ran clean through from a ball over the top by Kelleher. I’m not sure how Luton allowed that as it’s the kind of chance you’d never expect to get against a side at the bottom, because they usually play a deep low block and won’t allow anything in behind.
     
    Yet Kelleher plays a ball over their high line and Diaz runs clear. He should score, it’s an easy chance really. One of the easiest chance you can get when running through on goal as it’s a bouncing ball and the keeper is coming out. Knocking it over him and getting it up and down is so easy and I couldn’t understand what Diaz was even thinking. He hesitated and as soon as he did that the chance was gone.
     
    I’ve watched it back and I think the problem is his first touch didn’t get it out of his feet and he never really got his body in position to just lob the ball over the keeper. And once he hesitated, that was that.

  • Luton Town were caught in a second half whirlwind as the Reds overcame a half time deficit to blow away the plucky Hatters. Goals from Van Dijk, Gakpo, Diaz and Elliott completed a terrific turnaround that Jurgen Klopp compared to *checks notes* erm, the win over Barcelona.
     
    TLW Editor Dave Usher is joined by Paul Natton and Dan Thomas to look back on a great night at Anfield and look forward to what will be a great afternoon at Wembley on Sunday.
     
     

  • Jurgen Klopp says his squad are a major believer in the power of positivity and were focused on who was playing rather than those who were absent through injury as Liverpool produced a outstanding second half display to overwhelm Luton 4-1 at Anfield on Wednesday night.
     
    Already without Alisson, Dominik Szoboszlai and Trent Alexander-Arnold before the weekend, the Reds then lost Curtis Jones and Diogo Jota to injuries that will see them miss weeks and possibly months of action.
     
    And with the Carabao Cup final against Chelsea on Sunday, no risks were taken with Mo Salah, Darwin Nunez and Ibrahima Konate, the latter being a unused substitute while the two forwards were given the night off to rest any slight niggles they may have had.
     
    It meant the front three had an unfamiliar look to normal with Harvey Elliott linking up with Cody Gakpo and Luis Diaz.
     

     
    In a further example of Liverpool’s depth being tested, this starting lineup had an average age of 25 years and 68 days - the club's youngest since February 2018 while Liverpool's bench had five players aged 19 or under, with 16-year-old midfielder Trey Nyoni among the substitutes.
     
    Not surprisingly, it took a period of time to gel and Liverpool as a whole looked far from themselves in a very scratchy first 45 minutes where the visitors led through Chiedozie Ogbene.
     
    Klopp has been known throughout his tenure for his ability to truly inspire his players at the half time interval  by keeping positive and thinking that they can turn around any deficit if they believe.
     

     
    This was the sixth time during this campaign that they have turned a deficit into all three points.
     
    Speaking after the win which restored Liverpool’s four point gap over Man City, Klopp cited an iconic victory which saw those memories personally flooding back (per the Official site.)
     
    “I will mention this game quite a few times, to be honest. I promised my team a few months ago probably I will never mention or use the Barcelona game [in 2019] again as an example – and I used it today again, so I broke my promise. Just because before the game it was kind of similar: many players missing, stuff like this. If the team that played that night against Barcelona would have stuck to the knowledge of who was missing.
     

     
    “This team (on that night) ignored the fact who was missing and I want us to ignore the fact [of] who is missing. That’s difficult because the public got the knowledge of the whole amount of players missing only tonight.
     
    “It’s like, ‘Oh…’ I needed a few minutes to process it when I got all the news but from the moment on when you know how you can deal with it, how you can sort it for this game now, it feels really good.
     
    “That’s what I wanted the boys to show and this is an example tonight, this is now their Barcelona, [it] was against Luton – a difficult situation, plenty of reasons to give up in moments, ‘Yeah, not tonight.’ And I saw only a super group fighting. If you don’t limit yourself with bad thoughts, you can fly. And that’s what the boys did."
     
    With the cup final clearly now in the forefront of his mind, Klopp is taking nothing for granted on the injury front.
     
    “Obviously for us there are now a lot of super-important games coming up, and we don’t know, we go day by day. I cannot say anything about it and I don’t know. But after Brentford I had no clue the situation would be like it was now. So, let’s see. There’s one phrase that stands: as long as we have 11, we will go for it. That’s all I can promise.”
     
     

  • If you are passionate about Britain and its culture, or you love famous British literary figures and musicians, such as Shakespeare, you could be thinking of traveling to or living in England, Scotland, or Wales. Before you do this, though, you might want to know more about how healthy Britain is compared to the US and their healthcare options.
     
    So, here is a guide that can tell you everything that you need to know about healthy living in Britain, including what they eat and whether they can get treatment for ongoing health conditions. 
     
    Is Britain Healthy? 
     
    Britain has a higher rate of chronic illness than other countries in Europe and one of the shortest life expectancies in Europe. One of the reasons for this could be that many people in Britain have sedentary lifestyles, smoke, and drink a lot of alcohol from a reasonably young age. Britain also has high rates of obesity compared to other countries in Europe due to diets that are filled with salt. Not only this, but a large number of people suffer from a mental health condition, which is not helped by long and stressful working hours, as well as a lot of screen time. 
     
    At the same time, though, Britons generally have access to a large number of parks and green spaces, with the countryside never more than an hour or so drive away, and there is much more of a walking culture in Britain compared to the States, where a lot of people drive everywhere. This is partially because British towns and cities tend to be more compact and have many pedestrianised areas. There are also regular health campaigns to get everyone moving and made aware of the health concerns plaguing Britain. 
     
    Does Britain Have Good Healthcare?
     
    The British healthcare system is vastly different from that of the USA because they have the National Health Service (NHS). The NHS allows anyone to receive free at point-of-service healthcare regardless of income or age and this is funded through tax and National Insurance contributions. The NHS can ensure that people can see a doctor whenever they need to, and they can sign up for an NHS dentist with subsidised costs, even though dental and eyecare does not come under the NHS banner.
     
    You do have to pay for prescriptions unless you have an exemption such as low income, a disability, or have had a serious health condition in the last five years. If you take a lot of medications, it is cheaper to take out a prepayment certificate and you either pay a monthly fee which is a little over the cost of one prescription, or pay for the whole year. Prescription costs are capped though, currently at £9.65 per item. 
     
    Although there are issues with the NHS, such as long waiting times and burned-out GPs, with a lack of appointments available in some areas, this universal healthcare means that everyone can get the diagnoses and treatment that they need to thrive. 
    However, if you are looking to get an alternative treatment, you will need to pay for this yourself. For instance, many acupuncture, massage and physical therapy centres across Britain can provide treatment for those for whom traditional options are not working or for those who do not want to take a lot of medication constantly. 
     
    Is Medical Cannabis Legal in Britain? 
     
    As well as traditional healthcare methods, which are provided by the NHS, medical cannabis is also legal in Britain. Although medical cannabis still needs to be researched to test its effectiveness for certain conditions, such as arthritis, many clinics offer this treatment to clients. Some clients have reported positive effects, although there are no guarantees. Medical cannabis might be able to help you with both mental and physical health conditions, including insomnia, stress, and IBS. Medical cannabis is available at medical cannabis clinic in the UK, where you will need to talk to a healthcare professional. 
     
    Although medical cannabis is legal in the UK, it is recommended that you carry your prescription around with you if you need to take your medicine anywhere – just in case you need to provide evidence to the police or other authorities. 
     
    What are British people’s diets like?
     
    Britain eats differently from the US, and British people tend to consume smaller portions, especially in restaurants, as well as less fast food. However, although most people eat staples such as potatoes and eggs, along with starchy foods that can be warming throughout the long winter months, there is a tendency in Britain to eat too much processed and sugary food, such as chocolate, and too few fruits and vegetables. In fact, in 2019, over 10% of respondents to a single survey suggested that they eat no healthy food at all. This unhealthy consumption of food could lead to increased rates of heart disease, strokes, and some types of cancer in the future. 

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