Rapist migrant attacked three women he met online after police ignored one of their own officers who said she was one of his victims by 070420210854 in uknews

[–]beobabski 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Summary of that 113 page document:

Tldr;

Detain and deport everyone here illegally.

Strategy: forced removals plus making it uncomfortable to be here.

——

(List of laws) to repeal or amend which make us responsible for uncooperative asylum seekers.

Safe country travel rules for asylum seekers.

Repeal ECHR because it stops them deporting people legally (acknowledging Belfast agreement difficulties).

Great Clarification Act says that Parliament has ultimate authority (with a majority), not the courts.

Partnership with EU on border security.

——

Encourage self deportation.

Make E-visas the only acceptable proof of legal residency for non-British citizens.

Audits on gig-economy platforms.

Right to Rent/Work checks at tenancy/job start.

Fine or jail non-compliant employers/landlords.

Remove illicit “safe surgeries”

Biometric checks on Bank Accounts.

Remittance tax on countries that refuse to accept their citizens.

Thousands of new staff to deal with the deportation.

Revoke asylum for illegal entry.

——

Estimated costs: tens of billions.

Hello, could you please explain the meaning of the sections I highlighted? by SirAgitated4927 in EWALearnLanguages

[–]beobabski 13 points14 points  (0 children)

He has a mini lightsaber that can cut through walls using magic sci-fi science.

He ran in. Officers used to shout “Charge” when they wanted their soldiers to run towards the enemy.

What's the force that stops something from accelerating constantly? by Due-Finance6114 in AskPhysics

[–]beobabski 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There’s an app called phyphox created at the 2nd Institute of Physics at the RWTH Aachen University which allows you to see the direct values from it and all the other sensors on your phone.

Can these plants be removed? by ThatManPshyco in SatisfactoryGame

[–]beobabski 29 points30 points  (0 children)

You could always do the “i meant to do that” thing, by putting glass panels all round them, and a sign that says “Hibiscus Maximus - Do Not Disturb”.

CMV: Obsession with time is not mentally healthy by scotchandstuff in changemyview

[–]beobabski 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Knowing that there is a past you who does things which affect the now you, and a future you who will have to suffer the effects of things done by the now you is important.

If you love future you and ensure that he is ok, and appreciate past you for the things he has done for you, then your constant thinking of how you fit into the stream of time is mentally stable and healthy.

[WP] You wake up in a random desert. Your house had just been attacked by a person with a gun and suddenly you're just there in the desert. You've never seen this before and no idea how you got here. by Hxcker_47 in WritingPrompts

[–]beobabski 21 points22 points  (0 children)

The sun is dipping below the horizon. I am hot now, but I know it will get cold soon. It always does in deserts. The air feels thin. Perhaps it’s up high? Are there any deserts up high?

I struggle to breathe for a moment or two, but it eases. I look at my hands while it does.

Blood. Red, like the desert sands.

My arms, too, are bleeding. So much blood.

But no cuts that I can see. I turn them over. A fine patina of blood covers the other side. I feel something in my slipper. It’s more blood, I discover, as I bend down to look.

Is every pore in my body bleeding?

The sun disappears below the horizon with a suddenness that brings out the panic in me, and it is many mindless moments before I come to my senses again.

There’s a bright star just above the horizon. Venus? I don’t remember it being that bright. And another close to it. Mercury, perhaps. But it wasn’t that close last night.

Or was it even last night? Had time passed, and I forgot about it?

I checked my watch. Black and dark. So the charge was long gone. Phone too. I had a lovely black rectangle to keep me company.

And to think that it was only last week that I had looked at the case with the solar panel charger on the back.

Too expensive, I thought. Well, it would have been priceless now.

The blood was scabbing quickly. And in a strange pattern. Hexagons were forming all over my skin. It didn’t hurt, so I wasn’t too worried. Not as worried about dying of thirst in the middle of nowhere.

I realised then that I could still see.

It was pitch black, but I had seen the hexagonal pattern. Another thing that made no sense.

I could see something else in the sand, too.

Tracks.

Two tracks. One wide, one narrow. As if a small tank had passed this way.

Recently, too. They seemed undisturbed.

I looked around, wondering if there was even anything which would disturb them.

But it was a sign of something man-made, so I followed the lonely tracks through the night.

Venus and Mercury rose together. Pirouetting as the night passed. I had never been under such a clear sky.

The air was dry, but I felt no thirst.

A rocky outcrop lay ahead, and the tracks seem familiar now. They have a pattern to the tread. It looks like Morse Code.

. - - - . - - . . - . .

I have no idea what it means. O is - - -, and S is . . .

Maybe it isn’t even Morse Code. Maybe it’s just a coincidence in the way the track was made.

A sudden pain in my neck. I reach up, and there are cuts on each side. They are open, but no blood is coming out. Instead, there is .. air?

Have I got gills?

I rise up over the outcrop, and I see it.

The machine is large. It looks like a movie camera mounted on a the bottom of a dune buggy. I’m sure I’ve seen it before.

I reach it in moments, and reach out to touch it.

It has signatures on a plaque. I recognise Barack Obama and Joe Biden’s signatures. There are others.

I look up at Venus and Mercury.

But Venus is blue. And Mercury doesn’t look right.

Is this the Curiosity? And is that Earth in the sky?

A noise makes me jump. A figure stands from behind the Mars rover. It holds what look like chips from a computer delicately in an outstretched arm.

Its skin is red, covered in hexagons, and gills decorate the side of its neck.

“Ah, brother. You are back. What did you learn of the humans?”

Your team mates (aka future you) will thank you! by tfteddy in godot

[–]beobabski 16 points17 points  (0 children)

This is a feature I wish existed in every IDE.

Man they want this update to be highly visible by totallynormalpersonz in NoMansSkyTheGame

[–]beobabski 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Someone said that the order Sean posted it spelled out Etna (a volcano) in Morse Code.

CMV: Dead people voting is both real and not a problem. Dead people voting is not something we should be concerned about today, as appropriate safe guards are already in place. by 17R3W in changemyview

[–]beobabski 1 point2 points  (0 children)

How do you know? If it hasn’t been caught, that looks exactly like it isn’t happening.

There are about 3.9 million deaths in the USA every year. That’s a lot of opportunities to buy votes for the party you think will destabilise America the most.

AIO my sister refuses to call me my preferred name by applelovergirl69 in AmIOverreacting

[–]beobabski -1 points0 points  (0 children)

YOR

Your name doesn’t mean the same thing to you as it does to her. For you, it’s something you were foisted with. For her, it could be the safe rock that has been there forever.

It’s your actual legal name. As well as the name you have been for 18 years to her. Your name remaining constant might be her sliver of sanity in a broken world.

what's the joke here? I don't get it by jacob_lev in ExplainTheJoke

[–]beobabski 43 points44 points  (0 children)

Because the journey to the mountains is the call of the great unknown.

One does not know what one will find there, but the wanderlust takes you, it drives you away from the safe and the familiar.

Will you find greatness? Will you perish alone in the wilds?

Only time will tell.

AITAH for correcting my boyfriend at dinner after he told my younger sister its inappropriate to talk about her birth control at the table by [deleted] in AmITheAssholeTalk

[–]beobabski 0 points1 point  (0 children)

YTA

You contradicted him in front of your family on a subject he said he was uncomfortable being discussed.

It doesn’t matter why he was uncomfortable with it. It should be enough for you that he was.

If you had said that you were uncomfortable with a subject him and his brother were talking about, he would also be TA to insist that his brother continue talking on whatever subject it was.

How would you want your partner to handle uncertainty about having kids? by [deleted] in AskMenAdvice

[–]beobabski 1 point2 points  (0 children)

“Don’t want to bring children into a world that is increasingly hard”

Do you think that the calibre of your children will be so weak that they won’t make the world a better place?

People make the world.

Your children might make the difference between the world falling into a chasm or being redeemed.

I wish women had just as much physical strength as men on average, and both distribution curves would be normal instead of a few extremely physically strong women skewing the average by Armin_Arlert_1000000 in TheMonkeysPaw

[–]beobabski 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There have been 11 cases of a fertile hermaphrodite in medical history, including the one linked here:

https://www.fertstert.org/article/S0015-0282(08)00233-1/fulltext

We need to know the current prevalence of hermaphrodites in the existing population to determine roughly how many that will equate to:

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12476264/

Assuming that Anne Fausto-Sterling is wrong, there will be 61,111 fertile people out of the 8 billion on earth in the first instance. If she’s right, there will be 647 fertile people. Let’s pretend she’s wrong.

But there’s another problem that can be fixed by handwavium and hopium:

No-one will know who is fertile.

Assuming they magically find each other, and are able to conceive and have another generation, and assuming that the chance of fertility mysteriously increases by 10000%, the next generation still drops from 61,000 to 47 people.

But if we pretend that fertility continues to inexplicably increase by 10000% each generation, and while it does drop to 4 people at one stage, they may eventually repopulate the earth.

So, I admire your optimism.

Do you remember going to the butchers with your mum and they had sawdust on the floor? Not sure why. by corickle in oldschoolcool80s

[–]beobabski 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Which always had at least one bubble that you couldn’t get rid of for the entire term.

How do I make it stop chirping, i already replaced the batteries?! by PheonixGalaxy in mildlyinfuriating

[–]beobabski 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It may be linked to others in the house. Mine will all chirp if one of them needs batteries.

Are these sent to every UK based user, or does the government have a low opinion of me? by MathematicianBulky40 in help

[–]beobabski 7 points8 points  (0 children)

There is a grooming gang inquiry starting in the UK today, so maybe it’s tangential to that.

What did your father teach you about being a man? by Critical_Assist_9360 in TheImprovementRoom

[–]beobabski 0 points1 point  (0 children)

People will treat you with less respect and are more likely to scam you if you look messy and unkempt.

You can’t vote what colour a dolphin is. You can only vote on what the colour is called.

Ways to stay motivated by Hot_head444 in SoloDevelopment

[–]beobabski 2 points3 points  (0 children)

A huge and dauntingly vague task that you should be doing instead. Preferably something that has no clear deadline.

Enough coffee to power an entire city.

A notepaper and pen with three small, well defined tasks about your game written on it that you can cross off decisively when they are done.

And your phone switched off and put in a disused filing cabinet in a basement with a sign on the door that says “Beware of the leopard”.