I think he might have watched The Emperor’s New Groove.
I think he might have watched The Emperor’s New Groove.
Thank you for putting me on to where goes :)
Probability that this person is over 30?
It’s worth noting that most places without a “signature” style just use espresso as the base nowadays.
Because espresso is a much easier way to start (as it’s a small amount of coffee syrup, without the water).
And outside of speciality (pour-over/cold-brew), it’s the preferred extraction method.
Because there won’t be any more after you state-own it all, right?
Right?
ML summary:
Jas Athwal, the Labour Party MP for Ilford South, is a landlord with properties that tenants say have poor living conditions.
In the selection process for the Ilford South seat, Athwal won a higher percentage of votes from the party’s online “Anonyvoter” system compared to in-person votes, despite his opponent Sam Tarry winning more of the in-person votes.
There are concerns about a lack of transparency and potential for fraud in the Anonyvoter system, which has also been used in other Labour candidate selection processes with similar results favoring more centrist candidates.
Former Labour MPs Sam Tarry and Beth Winter have raised legal concerns about the use of Anonyvoter, and several Labour-affiliated unions have expressed doubts about the system.
That’s the gist to be honest.
RTB gives people the right after a certain amount of time, but lack of funding meant that councils weren’t able to replace the stock.
The discount is up to 70% too. So while each person who can exercise RTB gets an impressive leg up into the housing market, it’s contributed to even longer waiting lists for council housing.
It also creates a bit of an ethical dilemma if you are in council housing.
As if you start doing better financially, and are able to afford regular accommodation, you have an incentive to hold until you can RTB instead. (Though there are apparently now re-assessments at tenancy renewal time)
Really, the answer is way, way, way more council housing. But the money just isn’t available.
“All customer installs need to have firewalls disabled, and the widget needs to run as domain admin”
Continues until a big enough customer puts their foot down, at which point all the installation engineers get upset because they need to do something new.
Anything involving Myers–Briggs.
Probably whoever managed to get the contract 10 years ago, knowing full well the effort to change contractors is too massive to ever happen.
Apparently it’s not difficult to overcome the lock when you’re stationary. And once you’re moving, it doesn’t re-engage.
You can block or disrupt communications with LEO.
But you’d need the blessing of the country’s government to pump out that much interference continuously.
Not sure if they’ve fixed it this year, but going by the number of Limes that go past going “click-click-click-click”, I don’t think that many people are paying for them.
I wouldn’t lump Corbyn and Dahl together.
Dahl was a beloved children’s author, but he really did make some shit takes.
Finally, a local WEEE company gets to make a few hundred bucks selling off the glorified VOC sensors at the end.
The most expensive country on the med.
Friends had to replace a gas heater for their water radiator system and were told that there wasn’t a heat pump unit hot enough for the retrofit.
This generally means that they’d need to upgrade their radiators to accommodate a heat pump at normal temperatures.
This would be great news. Imho, council run buses are a great public good.
When you have a large town/city, it’s really important to have a way to get around that’s not expensive.
You only have to visit somewhere with a properly run network to see the difference.
Reading for example:
As a municipally owned bus service, the council says Reading Buses can invest an additional £3m a year in the bus network, around 12-15% of its annual turnover, because it does not pay out dividends to private shareholders.
Money from commuter services also subsidises smaller less well-used routes.
Edit: Another place it helps councils: Old people bus passes.
In June 2023 the LGA said there was a £452 million gap in the funding councils receive from government compared to the actual number of ENCTS journeys made in 2022. This meant that councils were having to plug the financial gap from their “own stretched budgets”, which was “completely unsustainable
So a LA owned bus company with lower fares means the council doesn’t end up making up the shortfall between what the government pays for free journeys and what the bus company decides to charge.