tenebrisnox

joined 1 year ago
[–] tenebrisnox 31 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Great timing. The (supposed) tax cuts will pay for the electricity bosses’ new porsches.

[–] tenebrisnox 2 points 1 year ago

found the PinePhone somewhat usable

[–] tenebrisnox 6 points 1 year ago

I’ve just read that and can’t see anything badly written. Where was the bad writing? (Or is it just their views you don’t agree with?)

[–] tenebrisnox 4 points 1 year ago

“The Riddle of Genius.” Ho ho ho.

[–] tenebrisnox 1 points 1 year ago

Sorry, I posted a reply to your comment in the main feed rather than to you. Back to school for me!

[–] tenebrisnox 13 points 1 year ago (2 children)

so crushingly dull that it destroys any natural curiosity that kids have

You are right. Children have a much earlier start to school in the UK compared to other countries. This cuts short the time of their “play-based” development. By Year 1 (about 5-6) children in UK primary schools are sat at desks and taught in quite bizarre ways. From Reception (ages 4-5) they are tested continuously to a point where UK children are the most tested children in the Western World. Other, more successful countries (educationally and economically) don’t do this. We have a weird, damaging obsession with testing children and placing them into hierarchies in this country. When testing becomes the purpose and goal of an education system it is, as you say “so crushingly dull”.

[–] tenebrisnox 5 points 1 year ago

Perhaps more people need to know who owns these companies and how ownership affects their operations.

My local company is 40% owned by JP Morgan and other hedge funds are involved in ownership. My understanding is that this is similar across many utility companies. Instead of service being their primary concern, it is the generation of revenue.

The catastrophic role of hedge funds in the UK cannot be overstated.

[–] tenebrisnox 1 points 1 year ago

Is there a neighbouring utility that isn’t also in similar trouble, though?

[–] tenebrisnox 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Who is Olivia? Was Olivia’s complaint that she heard the two men discussing this? Not that it was done to her?

[–] tenebrisnox 2 points 1 year ago

I’m not an expert on Sainsburys, really. We just used to shop there. Most of it is self-checkout but they do have 3 or 4 tills with checkout workers down at one end. I guess you could walk through there. Also there’s a security guard who I guess could let you out.

I only put up with it once - about 3 weeks ago - and haven’t been there since. We’ve done our family shopping there for 15+ years.

[–] tenebrisnox 1 points 1 year ago

I don't know. There's always a queue because the scanner wasn't reading the receipts properly and wlll only accept the receipt scanned once. We had to be helped through by a shopworker who checked we had paid. It was super-frustrating to wait and the gates were too strong to push through. We've just stopped going to Sainsbury's now and just use our nearest Aldi.

[–] tenebrisnox 41 points 1 year ago (19 children)

Our local big Sainsbury's supermarket has installed airport-style barriers everywhere and you now have to queue and scan your receipt to get out.

As a kid, I always wanted to live in some science fiction futuristic society. I never thought that I'd actually grow up to live somewhere where I had to scan to get out a supermarket only to be under threat of attack by ravaging killer dogs.

view more: ‹ prev next ›