|
Tesseraction posted:Gonna start a myth that Brenda is trans. (The "real" Bess supposedly died in a house that's now a pub & used to be my local) e: in 1564, Elizabeth I had allegedly been dead for 30-something years Borrovan fucked around with this message at 15:28 on May 12, 2020 |
# ? May 12, 2020 15:24 |
|
|
# ? May 25, 2024 08:06 |
|
I have a "real" name that's on my passport and birth certificate, way too hard for white people to say, at this point I think of myself in my anglicized nickname. Some of my bills I accidentally put down that nickname and it never came to anything, they opened the account and I realised when the bills started arriving. Including my electric bill, which could surely be used as "ID". Is that the point where it would hit fraud? This country is stupid.
|
# ? May 12, 2020 15:32 |
|
bornbytheriver posted:Why would you have some queen related art work behind you? Stupid cock. It reminds him of Money. Have a craven idol my son found in the wild the other day. https://imgur.com/gallery/NcVZJtZ
|
# ? May 12, 2020 15:43 |
|
Brendan Rodgers posted:I have a "real" name that's on my passport and birth certificate, way too hard for white people to say, at this point I think of myself in my anglicized nickname. Some of my bills I accidentally put down that nickname and it never came to anything, they opened the account and I realised when the bills started arriving. Including my electric bill, which could surely be used as "ID". Is that the point where it would hit fraud? This country is stupid. No. As long as you're not trying to pretend you are another person in order to gain access to their finances, you're not defrauding anyone if you manage to get yourself known by a different name. A deed poll is just a formalised way of doing what you snuck into via the electric company.
|
# ? May 12, 2020 15:45 |
|
It's illegal to use a legal name.
|
# ? May 12, 2020 15:46 |
|
Actually gently caress the keffiyeh, this is what UKMT should be wearing: https://twitter.com/dasharez0ne/status/1252018893331152896
|
# ? May 12, 2020 15:47 |
|
thespaceinvader posted:No. Oh wow so that's basically "official" when I present the electric bill? I've accidentally changed my name?
|
# ? May 12, 2020 15:53 |
|
Goddamnit, that’s what I should of been doing during my furlough, finally putting my “builders yard guillotene” design down on paper. Damnit.
|
# ? May 12, 2020 15:53 |
|
Brendan Rodgers posted:Oh wow so that's basically "official" when I present the electric bill? I've accidentally changed my name? You don’t have an “official” name in the uk it’s whatever people call you by.
|
# ? May 12, 2020 15:54 |
|
Buy a scrubby plot of land in Scotland and start getting called Lord too
|
# ? May 12, 2020 15:56 |
|
Drone_Fragger posted:You don’t have an “official” name in the uk it’s whatever people call you by.
|
# ? May 12, 2020 15:56 |
|
BTW out of morbid curiosity I had a look at Wings Over Scotland to see how old Stu is finding Twitter jail and holy poo poo that site is so much worse than even I was expecting, and I was expecting bad.
|
# ? May 12, 2020 16:03 |
|
Comrade Fakename posted:BTW out of morbid curiosity I had a look at Wings Over Scotland to see how old Stu is finding Twitter jail and holy poo poo that site is so much worse than even I was expecting, and I was expecting bad. he reposted an obvious joke tweet from a stirling uni student playing into the conspiracy nonsense that resulted in the uni getting angry phone calls and the student in question getting threats
|
# ? May 12, 2020 16:08 |
|
Drone_Fragger posted:You don’t have an “official” name in the uk it’s whatever people call you by. Don't forget it's illegal to use a legal name.
|
# ? May 12, 2020 16:08 |
|
The Question IRL posted:So, funny thing about that Marie Antionette quote... Jedit posted:I've actually heard that what Marie Antoinette said was more in the spirit of "then why do they not eat brioche?" Not dismissive, just failing to understand that there was a problem. It's Tuesday afternoon, it's lockdown, our bosses can't see us skivving, so are you all ready to learn some motherfucking poo poo about goddamn eighteenth-century literature and its relationship to popular culture through history Yeah you are. So, "let them eat cake." The phrase first appears (in print) in 1782. Marie Antoinette is 28. The French Revolution is still a few years off, but she's queen, so it's a plausble connection. However, the book it first appears in, Confessions by Jean-Jacques Rousseau, was written c1765-70, and Rousseau himself died in 1778. Marie Antoinette was born in 1755 and became queen of France in 1770. While it's not impossible that the phrase as first published relates to her, it's vanishingly unlikely. But that's not really the interesting thing. The context of the phrase is important here. The Confessions is a kind of philosophical autobiography, by one of the most famous, most widely read, and influential writers of the Eighteenth Century (and beyond). It's maybe hard to get a handle on this, because figures like Rousseau (and Hume, and Voltaire) don't really exist now, but his influence on popular culture was huge, because he wrote and was read across multiple fields. It's worth knowing that he wrote a very popular novel (Julie, or the New Heloise), a very popular treatise on education (Emile, or On Education) and some of the most important political tracts in modern thought (the arguably anti-Enlightenment Discourse on the Origin and Basis of Inequality Among Men and The Social Contract, the source, incidentally, of another much-quoted phrase; "Man is born free but everywhere he is in chains"). Not for nothing was he asked by the Corsican government to write their constitution (he never finished it). The Confessions tied directly to Augustine in its title, but also in the sense that it promises to recount not just A Life (in the Boswellian sense), but something more racy, intimate and profound. He was an eccentric celebrity, he dressed in a strange way, he had a scandalous private life, his ideas were both much admired and deeply controversial to the point of being criminal. When he came to England to escape persecution in the 1760s he was treated (and mistreated) by a gawping, gossiping public and press. He was also cripplingly paranoid and delusional. He was discussed publicly in the press and privately between many of the most famous names of the Eighteenth Century. Voltaire loathed him. Hume loved him, despite disagreeing with almost everything he wrote, organising his trip to England, arranging for a home, arranging for a Government pension, being a friend... right up until Rousseau turned against him, as he appears to have done to most people in his life. The point though, is that what Rousseau wrote down, people read. They read it vociferously and passionately - he provoked emotion and interest like few other authors, particularly amongst female readers. You could even argue that he was the formative author of Romanticism. So what does this have to do with cake, or brioche? Well, the quote in full, in his autobiography, goes like this: quote:At length I remembered the last resort of a great princess who, when told that the peasants had no bread, replied: "Then let them eat brioches." No. Jean-Jacques has the munchies: quote:Surrounded by stealable little objects I did not even look at, I fixed my eye instead on a certain nice little white wine from Arbois.... I took the opportunity to avail myself from time to time of a few bottles for leisurely consumption in private. Unfortunately, I have never been able to drink without eating at the same time. But how was I to procure bread? .... At length I remembered the last resort of a great princess who, when told that the peasants had no bread, replied: "Then let them eat brioches." I bought brioches. But what a business I had getting them! So "let them eat cake" has nothing to do with Revolution, or aloof aristocracy, or linguistic confusion. It's about the lack of late night kebab shops in France circa 1750. So why is this phrase so associated with Marie Antoinette? That's difficult to say. But, as noted, Rousseau was phenomenally popular for much of the Eighteenth and early Nineteenth centuries. This is a phrase that many people would have come across just by reading his work. That he uses it in this proverbial way (whether this usage pre-dated him or not) is likely to have been similarly influential, so the context gets easily dropped and it becomes remembered as a thing that "a great princess" has said. Marie Antoinette, being the most famous and arguably notorious great princess in the age of Rousseau readers, becomes a natural object for the phrase to attach to. As Rousseau passes out of fashion (relatively speaking, since he is still well read as eighteenth century authors go) fewer people read his work, but the the story with Marie Antoinette is a simple and intuitvely grasped parable about inequality and how those fuckers don't understand, linked to a named person who is part of the historical canon. It's easy to remember, easy to relate and easy to retell, which I suspect is why 250 years later it still resonates. Niric fucked around with this message at 16:37 on May 12, 2020 |
# ? May 12, 2020 16:33 |
|
https://twitter.com/BBCNews/status/1260224319742980097 The BBC acknowledged people have died, a massive turnaround.
|
# ? May 12, 2020 16:37 |
|
Gonzo McFee posted:https://twitter.com/BBCNews/status/1260224319742980097 "because of" and not "with"
|
# ? May 12, 2020 16:41 |
|
Niric posted:Jean-Jacques Rousseau Great effortpost, enjoyed every moment. Isn't he the dude that essentially gives really scathing criticisms of heirarchy, personal freedom, how electing a government every 5 years basically makes you a slave, is basically an anarchist and then at the last second goes 'actually no liberalism will save us'?
|
# ? May 12, 2020 16:41 |
|
Niric posted:It's Tuesday afternoon, it's lockdown, our bosses can't see us skivving, so are you all ready to learn some motherfucking poo poo about goddamn eighteenth-century literature and its relationship to popular culture through history Yeah you are. Cool post. That was enlightening.
|
# ? May 12, 2020 16:42 |
|
Niric posted:It's maybe hard to get a handle on this, because figures like Rousseau (and Hume, and Voltaire) don't really exist now, but his influence on popular culture was huge ... Guavanaut posted:All involved with Jimmy Savile too. This is a very good read though. It does sound like he's reflecting something that was well known (at least among a certain group of readers of l'histoire) as a thing that was said by a person in a different context to beer snacks. e: Miftan posted:Great effortpost, enjoyed every moment. Isn't he the dude that essentially gives really scathing criticisms of heirarchy, personal freedom, how electing a government every 5 years basically makes you a slave, is basically an anarchist and then at the last second goes 'actually no liberalism will save us'? That gives him an excuse that modern Liberals don't have. Guavanaut fucked around with this message at 16:48 on May 12, 2020 |
# ? May 12, 2020 16:45 |
|
https://twitter.com/jburnmurdoch/status/1260233393838620675?s=21 We handled this worse than Spain by all metrics, but Italy is still a mystery because their excess death data is now extremely out of date.
|
# ? May 12, 2020 16:51 |
|
https://twitter.com/EHRC/status/1260210162809409541
|
# ? May 12, 2020 16:52 |
|
Fumble posted:It reminds him of Money. I would never clutter my already limited overpriced dog house of a space with queen, captain tom, etc.
|
# ? May 12, 2020 16:57 |
|
... that doesn't make the slightest bit of sense, does it? Like, an abusive organisation has said it is investigating the abuse, and that's enough?
|
# ? May 12, 2020 16:57 |
|
Comrade Fakename posted:BTW out of morbid curiosity I had a look at Wings Over Scotland to see how old Stu is finding Twitter jail and holy poo poo that site is so much worse than even I was expecting, and I was expecting bad. it did at least bring my attention to this, objectively a Great Tweet on scottish politics. strange Wings posted it on his Constant Normal One Blog as if it was self-evidently bad. it's almost as if there's something... about this person... he is uncomfortable with.... https://twitter.com/YesWithDex/status/1259190483961745409 Niric posted:It's Tuesday afternoon, it's lockdown, our bosses can't see us skivving, so are you all ready to learn some motherfucking poo poo about goddamn eighteenth-century literature and its relationship to popular culture through history Yeah you are. So it's a bit like if in a hundred years everyone thinks Boris Johnson said "Some of you may die, but that is a sacrifice I'm willing to make" after all the memes of it
|
# ? May 12, 2020 16:57 |
|
thespaceinvader posted:... The EHRC is brazenly corrupt and also refused to investigate Windrush
|
# ? May 12, 2020 16:58 |
|
Miftan posted:Great effortpost, enjoyed every moment. Isn't he the dude that essentially gives really scathing criticisms of heirarchy, personal freedom, how electing a government every 5 years basically makes you a slave, is basically an anarchist and then at the last second goes 'actually no liberalism will save us'? Big influence on Robespierre.
|
# ? May 12, 2020 17:02 |
|
Gonzo McFee posted:The EHRC is brazenly corrupt and also refused to investigate Windrush Can't believe an organisation founded by Trevor Phillips wouldn't give a poo poo about islamophobia
|
# ? May 12, 2020 17:13 |
|
Jesus christ Reminder that Monopoly was created by a woman as a criticism of capitalism, and the concept was then stolen and sold by a man. Ratjaculation fucked around with this message at 17:18 on May 12, 2020 |
# ? May 12, 2020 17:14 |
|
Miftan posted:Great effortpost, enjoyed every moment. Isn't he the dude that essentially gives really scathing criticisms of heirarchy, personal freedom, how electing a government every 5 years basically makes you a slave, is basically an anarchist and then at the last second goes 'actually no liberalism will save us'? Short answer: yes. Better answer: yes and no Proper answer: Rousseau is...idiosyncratic, and linking him to any coherent and consistent school of thought (besides "...was an influence on," which will cover a wide range) - or even trying to make his own body of work coherent and consistent - might not be the best approach. He's an amazing writer, and I think he's still very readable, but he's also a contrarian and controversialist, somehow both cynical and naive. You could probably make the (very unfair) argument that he's a prototype of a certain kind of ranty author who becomes massively popular by telling people that society is bad, actually (but not for the reasons you think). Even in the eighteenth century a lot of people admired him for his prose rather than any particularly powerful argument (Hume again). He's interesting as hell, but (or maybe because) he's not rigorous Niric fucked around with this message at 17:27 on May 12, 2020 |
# ? May 12, 2020 17:23 |
|
Didn't he also have a really offputting relationship with an underaged girl as well? Or is that another French philosopher?
|
# ? May 12, 2020 17:24 |
|
thespaceinvader posted:... Like Labour's independent investigation into the traitor leaks. wtf do words even mean
|
# ? May 12, 2020 17:27 |
|
https://twitter.com/inthesedeserts/status/1260235038756667393?s=20 https://twitter.com/dismalplaces/status/1260238468745232390?s=20
|
# ? May 12, 2020 17:27 |
|
Ron has no regrets. https://twitter.com/DickKingSmith/status/1260242545654759424
|
# ? May 12, 2020 17:32 |
|
Niric posted:You could probably make the (very unfair) argument that he's a prototype of a certain kind of ranty author who becomes by telling people that society is bad, actually (but not for the reasons you think).
|
# ? May 12, 2020 17:33 |
|
using the name and portrait of a dead philosopher is also a major red flag
|
# ? May 12, 2020 18:14 |
|
Hi thread, sorry for the relatively inane question but nowhere else on SA to really ask this: am I right in my interpretation of OFGEM guidelines that if I agreed a fixed energy tariff in January and suddenly my supplier comes back now claiming I am £400 in debit because the direct debit for the fixed tariff isn't covering the bill, they have broken the guidelines by not immediately informing me the rate they were billing me at is higher than the agreed tariff? Smashed my credit rating by over 100 points.
|
# ? May 12, 2020 18:34 |
|
The direct debit is calculated over the year, so once we are into summer proper a lot of that debt will be reduced, because your payments will be more than usage. So you aren't really in debt, and i'm pretty sure they can't call it in. If they do try you might consider a complaint, but you will need to complain to them first. Ofgem won't do anything until you have been through their complaints procedure. While the complaint is pending they shouldn't go to a debt collector, and if you make a token payment of £50 it might keep them off your back. Your credit rating shouldn't have been affected because that debt doesn't really exist yet, nearly all customers are in debt at the end of winter by design. Also make sure that the bill had the right meter numbers, and the right meter readings. If it doesn't you can tell em that the bill is incorrect and they need to issue a new one. Which can take months
|
# ? May 12, 2020 18:48 |
|
Bacon Terrorist posted:Hi thread, sorry for the relatively inane question but nowhere else on SA to really ask this: am I right in my interpretation of OFGEM guidelines that if I agreed a fixed energy tariff in January and suddenly my supplier comes back now claiming I am £400 in debit because the direct debit for the fixed tariff isn't covering the bill, they have broken the guidelines by not immediately informing me the rate they were billing me at is higher than the agreed tariff? Smashed my credit rating by over 100 points. Do you take your own meter readings? Can you calculate what you have used since January using the tariff you are supposed to be on (and don't forget the VAT and standing charges)? Then you can check what you do owe v what you have paid and get them to increase the DD or increase it yourself if you have online account management? When I moved in to my flat, I took over the bills from completion of purchase but didn't actually move in for about a month so had practically zero usage for a month - just the fridge and a few lights when I was moving stuff in. They set my DD at £24 pm, heading in to winter, after checking my usage for a month, I upped my DD to £60pm and then in March paid an extra £62 to zero my account. Now I am running with the £60pm DD to build up a surplus before next winter - I'm closely monitoring my usage and it'll dropped to about £40pm now and probably stay like that through summer.
|
# ? May 12, 2020 18:58 |
|
|
# ? May 25, 2024 08:06 |
|
Thanks for the replies. We supply the meter readings via emailed photographs. We do have online account management which is how we noticed the debit. To be honest the need to raise the direct debit to address the shortfall is fine, we can afford that. It is more the dramatic hit on the credit score which has caused my anger, but think I need to challenge them on that.
|
# ? May 12, 2020 19:23 |