cman6

joined 2 years ago
[–] cman6@lemmy.world 7 points 4 days ago

What a day to be alive! A person called StinkyFingerItchyBum has just taught me about mirepoix. I'm disgusted, enlightened, and grateful. Thank you!

[–] cman6@lemmy.world 8 points 1 month ago

I'm not a big YouTuber but I do follow a few accounts. I'm going to contact them and let them know about the possibility of Peertube.tv.

Hopefully they won't see it as much more effort to upload their content to two places, but we'll see!

[–] cman6@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

Ah happy days. I've not heard PMPO in so long!

[–] cman6@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago

On my phone it failed instantly! "Secure connection failed" apparently.

Different providers for broadband and phone

[–] cman6@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago (2 children)

I can't connect FWIW

[–] cman6@lemmy.world 3 points 2 months ago

What? Which pub is that? Best I've seen is around £5.50 for a guest ale

[–] cman6@lemmy.world 9 points 2 months ago

Back when your email address and username were: 583947690@compuserve.com

Good times!

[–] cman6@lemmy.world 9 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Here's a flavour of the first 5 minutes:

First lady he interviews, ok, she doesn't like illegal immigrants. You can get onboard with that generally.

"Islam should be banned"... oh dear.

And then all the muslims and foreigners should fuck off - JFC!
And then it gets worse!

[–] cman6@lemmy.world 3 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Here's a full list of what rights will be granted to renters:
https://www.rightmove.co.uk/guides/renter/renters-rights-bill-tenants/

Having been a tenant and having been a landlord I think this is excellent news. Everything listed seems completely reasonable!

With some luck it will reduce/prevent the number of shameful landlords out there.

[–] cman6@lemmy.world 4 points 7 months ago

Top tip: Provided you've not received a PCN from the council... do not pay, and do not contact the company EVER, not even to contest the PCN.

These parking charges are a civil matter, not criminal, and essentially the parking operator is claiming you broke a contract with them, which you had agreed to when you parked your car.

If you refuse to pay they can take you to court but are unlikely to, and they can only claim the reasonable damages of you breaking the contract.

You will likely receive threatening letters from the parking operator up until you actually go to court.

Any threats of bailiffs is total BS. Only the court can send bailiffs and only if you don't pay what the court has demanded.

As the article says, these companies make their money by people paying uncontested fines.

(IANAL)

[–] cman6@lemmy.world 9 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Same story here.

Teachers want to teach but what they're asked to achieve is impossible without working 60-70 hour weeks.

And when people talk about all the holiday they receive: all the teachers I know use that time to crash, become ill, recover, and then they're back to work.

[–] cman6@lemmy.world 4 points 9 months ago

I'm not advocating for @Flax at all here, but I think it's generally accepted that someone called Jesus (there were a LOT of people named Jesus back in the day) did exist and was something of a teacher.

Son of god though?... no

 

JPMorgan Chase was named the biggest fossil fuel financier in the world, having increased its financing from $38.9bn in 2022 to $40.8bn in 2023.

It ranked among the worst banks in terms of financing to companies involved in fossil fuel expansion. It was also one of the biggest financiers of: racked oil and gas; Amazon oil and gas; and methane gas power.

Barclays was labelled the number one fossil fuel funder in Europe, lending $24.5bn in 2023 up from $16.58bn in 2022.

It was singled out for financing what the report describes as 'deadly' coal power plants in the United States, despite high profile climate commitments.

 

Imprisoned Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny has been removed from the penal colony where he was serving his sentence and his whereabouts are unknown, his spokeswoman has said.

Mr Navalny's aides were expecting him to be moved to a stricter regime jail, after his prison sentence was extended. They say his disappearance is linked to recent announcements about elections.

On Friday, Russian President Vladimir Putin declared his intention to stand for re-election next March.

Mr Navalny's associates said earlier on Monday they had had no news of him for six days.

He had been absent from several recent court appearances, which he has in the past attended by video link. Prison authorities blamed the absences on technical problems at the colony.

His aide Leonid Volkov said this was "0% coincidence and 100% direct manual political control from the Kremlin".

"It's not a secret for Putin who his main opponent is in these 'elections'," he said.

"And he wants to make it so that Navalny's voice is not heard. So each one of us must become the voice of Navalny."

For more than a decade, Mr Navalny sought to expose corruption at the heart of Russian power. His video investigations have received tens of millions of views online.

A charismatic campaigner, he seemed to be the only Russian opposition leader capable of mobilising people in large numbers across Russia to take part in anti-government protests.

But in 2020, he was poisoned in Siberia by what Western laboratories later confirmed to be a nerve agent.

A later report by the investigative outlet Bellingcat and Russian news site The Insider implicated several agents of Russia's internal security service, the FSB, in the attack.

After recovering from the attack, Mr Navalny returned to Russia in 2021 despite warnings that he could face arrest. He was immediately arrested upon arrival at an airport in Moscow.

 

Far-right groups and football hooligans are preparing to descend on London on Armistice Day as hundreds of thousands of pro-Palestine protesters march through the capital.

The Palestinian Solidarity Campaign (PSC), said it will march alongside activists for the fourth successive weekend as it calls on Israel to agree to a ceasefire after its bombardment of Gaza.

Remembrance events are taking place across the Saturday and Sunday, which has led to home secretary Suella Braverman urging the Met Police to ban the march.

The coalition of groups, which includes the PSC, Stop the War and the Muslim Association of Britain, insisted they will press ahead with the demonstration calling for an immediate ceasefire.

The planned route does not go near the Cenotaph on Saturday.

Now English Defence League founder Tommy Robinson has spoken out against the demo, saying: “British men are mobilising for Saturday to be in London” to “show our Government and show our police and show Hamas and everyone sitting around the world saying ‘Britain has fallen’ that there is a resistance”.

A call to arms has also been issued on social media by the Democratic Football Lads Alliance, a right-wing organisation that uses football fan networks to spread Islamophobic hate.

A post on the group’s Facebook page says: “Vets have reached out and asked for our support due to the threat from the far-left and pro-Palestinian supporters to disrupt the Remembrance Day parade.

“We are calling on all football lads up and down the country to join us in standing shoulder to shoulder with our veterans that fought for our freedom.”

Robinson, real name Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, a convicted fraudster, joined the British National Party (BNP) in the mid-2000s.

 

Rishi Sunak has said he will hold the Met Police chief "accountable" over a pro-Palestinian march set to take place this Saturday, on Armistice Day.

The prime minister has criticised the timing of the demonstration in London as "provocative and disrespectful".

Organisers insist their march will not go near commemorations and accuse the government of manufacturing a row.

Protests have been held in London, and other cities globally, each Saturday since the Israel-Gaza war began.

Ben Jamal, of the Palestinian Solidarity Campaign which is behind the march, said he believed the government was manufacturing a row and using the Armistice Day angle to try to "delegitimise" them.

"There's something particularly askew with an argument that says a protest calling for a ceasefire is somehow inappropriate on Armistice Day," he told the BBC.

Home Secretary Suella Braverman has accused the police of being more lax on left-wing protests than those organised by nationalists or right-wing activists.

The home secretary has voiced her opposition to pro-Palestinian protests in the past, calling them "hate marches" in an interview with Sky News.

Protest organiser Chris Nineham, from the Stop the War Coalition, said: "We do everything we can as stewards to make sure there is nothing antisemitic or calling for violence in our demonstrations. For us, this isn't about religion, it isn't about race."

The demonstration on 11 November is due to begin at 12:45, more than an hour after the traditional two-minute silence.

46
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by cman6@lemmy.world to c/nostupidquestions@lemmy.world
 

Hello and apologies if this doesn't fit the No Stupid Questions community exactly... I'm working on a research project in the UK, around food bank usage, and wondered if anyone who uses a food bank would be prepared to answer a few questions...

  1. Are you able to get enough food, toiletries, items from your local food bank?
  2. Do you have any allergies or illness that makes it harder to use a food bank? ie. they never have any gluten free bread, or everything contains too much sugar
  3. Do you care about branded foods versus non branded?
  4. Are there items you can never find or are in very short supply at your local food bank?
  5. How were you referred to the food bank?

The research project we are working on is looking into all aspects of food banks from someone deciding to donate, to storing the donations, to people receiving them, and seeing if there is some way to improve what is being donated and/or the quantities.

Any help answering these questions would be really helpful 🙂

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