apis

joined 2 years ago
[–] apis@beehaw.org 1 points 5 hours ago

Peculiar blend of uber-bland and brothel.

[–] apis@beehaw.org 1 points 5 hours ago

Two rooms which can be turned into one big space by opening interconnecting double-doors?

Or one huge room with an obvious place to put up a partition wall?

[–] apis@beehaw.org 1 points 5 hours ago

Now you're living with someone who dreams of being a risky fart, the kitchen counter has won a war of attrition against your left hip bone, and you will never be free of the heady aroma of Lynx & gamer rinsed in a little stagnant water, and you cannot begin the day without a slug of cheap whiskey.

[–] apis@beehaw.org 1 points 5 hours ago

At Towerburn!

[–] apis@beehaw.org 3 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Then both of you are old enough to remember those creepy Monchhichi dolls which were everywhere, that these new dolls look like descendants of.

[–] apis@beehaw.org 4 points 6 days ago (1 children)

Idk, politicians seem dirt cheap!

[–] apis@beehaw.org 6 points 6 days ago (3 children)

One wonders what, exactly, these fetid ghouls deployed to get their rancid snot-encrusted whinging acted upon.

[–] apis@beehaw.org 8 points 1 week ago

AWS can fuck right off.

If the UK decides to put any funding toward AI, it must be publicly owned & run, with Amazon's grubby, grasping paws barred from any access to it or to any part of our grid.

[–] apis@beehaw.org 2 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Yay, boobies & locks!!

Do you think the HRT could be making the feelings you describe in your first comment more intense? Female puberty is often a tumultuous time emotionally until the brain acclimatises, even as it brings great relief and many satisfying changes, and fluctuating levels at any time can have a similar effect.

Be gentle to yourself, and try to do things you find comforting.

[–] apis@beehaw.org 3 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

The method by which the Crown assents to petitions is via signing bills which the elected government of the day and the House of Lords have voted to bring into law.

In theory, the Crown could refuse to do so, or attempt to bypass Parliament by issuing a royal decree. In practice they'd find such efforts ignored at best, more likely their constitutional role far further curtailed (thence leading to a rapid diminution of their ceremonial duties and privileges, if not outright abolition).

The situations under which the Crown could flex their power and have a reasonable chance of survival are extreme. Even here, they'd de facto be acting in tandem with the populace to defend against a coup and preserve (or restore) Parliament as the source of law within a representative democracy. Whether or not they'd do so in a very clear cut scenario is moot; in the dense fug of populism as a cover to usher in authoritarianism, absolutely not, let alone the drear realities of a clumsily formed electoral system chafing and fraying in a complex world. Against that, neglecting to intervene in defence of the realm from clear attack could also prove fatal to the Crown, albeit far less hazardous to the monarch themselves & their family, having greater opportunity to go into exile beforehand.

Either way, they'd have to be confident that a large majority of the Armed Services, Police and other key institutions, all members of which swear an oath of loyalty to the Crown, were up for obeying orders issued by the Crown against a hostile takeover of democratic institutions.

Whether as a temporary measure to defend the nation in an emergency, or any other cause including those which are malign, a monarch acting as a supreme leader would likely have to use a good deal of their personal wealth to fund their activities. In this they can quite easily outspend many actors.

Broadly, it may be more effective for the Crown or the monarch in their own right to discreetly support an array of resistance groups, than wield regnal power with overt grandeur in the face of grubby onslaught. Meantime... we all best be glad that is vanishingly unlikely that the current monarch or his heir would decide to avail of a severe crisis as an opportunity to seize absolute power.

[–] apis@beehaw.org 4 points 1 week ago

To add to replies confirming he actually sounds this way, his sister seems to have a similar issue, albeit less marked.

[–] apis@beehaw.org 3 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

From voice messages between them in the days after the felling, having something they did become a news item may have had some allure.

Though why they'd want that so badly, and why they'd opt for destroying an ancient sycamore & damaging part of Hadrian's wall to obtain such attention is another matter.

Land wasn't theirs, they didn't live near it nor on land which people cross to visit the tree. They didn't take the wood. Nothing has emerged to suggest they did it on behalf of someone else.

The pair went out on a stormy winter night, making a special trip to fell the tree, and leaving shortly after. Despite the darkness & lashing rain, one made a very grainy video recording of the other felling the tree with a chainsaw.

So far, they are pleading not guilty, so it'll be interesting to see whether they raise a defence or merely introduce doubts about the reliability of the evidence brought against them.

Idk, I feel it could have been an induction ritual for some group they hope(d) to join, or flagging up their willingness to conduct sabotage operations for hire, but more likely an unfortunate dissociation from reality caused by viewing the world and their own lives through the distorting lens of social media.

Attending the hearing yesterday, one had his face & hair entirely concealed as he passed press photographers waiting outside, which doesn't fit with a craving for fame. The only footage presented by the news of the other man was taken at a court appearance for an unrelated matter a few weeks ago - it isn't clear whether he somehow escaped their attention yesterday, or simply hadn't attended.

 

When I go to the login page, my username and password are autofilled, but clicking the login button produces no response.

If I delete the contents of both autofill boxes and then give permission to my device's request to fill the username and password, the login button works as it should.

Tried clearing cache and cookies with no Beehaw or Lemmy pages open. Removing login details from saved passwords and entering them manually works, but only as a onetime thing. Saw a suggestion that a shorter password might work but bit wary of this without further guidance.

It wouldn't be super noticeable, but am getting logged out several times a session when browsing via phone.

~~EDIT: May have just created a duplicate of this question, as this post wasn't showing up from my profile or from the community. The second one isn't showing, but could appear soon! Apologies for that.~~

FURTHER EDIT: discovered that when I get logged out, if I open a new tab to Beehaw, I'll be logged in on that tab without. This is so easy that it doesn't count as awkward, and my settings make it very obvious visually whether am logged in or not.

 

Keep encountering a minor bug on Firefox, but unsure where to report it.

Cheers.

view more: next ›