@fakehistoryhunt "Mr. De la Rue" - Do you mind me asking, is he anything to do with the company that prints all the bank notes? Or is that just some weird coincidence in the name?
@slxthkween Just to add to all the other posts, my grandmother had her first child (my father) when she was 21 and her last child when she was 41.
Although, to be fair, my youngest uncle was only 35 when my grandmother (his mother) died at the age of 76.
@alex_ikigai@EricTopol@grok I can't speak to the other studies, but certainly in Wales (and the rest of the UK) it was not uncommon at all for children back then to get chicken pox.
@MarkMcLaugh1in@q_ueering@ScottishSun He would need to get a part-time post doctoral research position (in addition to being an MSP). He may qualify under the Global Talent visa then.
His chances of doing that? No idea.
Even then he would be a part-time MSP & part-time researcher.
Is that fair on the electorate?
@PR0TUS@Gumdrop844@escapefrommelos UK national parks have no entry fees at all (but there are car park charges etc).
As to museums; national musuems in the UK are all free but many local museums charge an entrance fee.
Other countries charge. Eg Louvre in Paris, €22 for Europeans, €32 for non-Europeans.
@RonColeman The UK has had this since 1983 it doesn't cause problems here. Prior to 1983 it was birth citizenship like the USA.
From 1983 onwards, at least one parent must either be a citizen or have the British equivalent of your Green Card (Indefinite Leave to Remain).
@syed82560@interesting_aIl The father is Welsh and the mother is Chinese. They live in the Chinese city of Fuxin.
They are on Youtube, Instagram etc and also Chinese social media sites. Search for 'The Fisher-Zhangs in China'
@spence1773@QcWynter The workplace regs don't apply to school children (but they will apply for teachers). It's the School Premises Regs 2012 that apply.
@BevJacksonAuth But that doesn't mean that it won't appear in the actual 2031 census. From the article:
An ONS spokesman said the new question on gender identity 'is not due to be finalised in time to be incorporated into the test questionnaire'.
So they're still thinking about it for 2031
@AndrewWilsonLM@michaeljknowles They certainly are in countries like Nigeria. Typically, around 45 churches are attacked every year since 2020, with thousands of deaths every year.
@SamaHoole The same thing happened in Japan between 1948 and 1995. Average height for 18 yo boys went from 160.6cm to 170cm, an increase of 10.6cm (4.2 inches)
@AudreySuffolk Agreed, but the issue is that this is often only selectively allowed.
Christian preachers have regularly been arrested or stopped by the police from speaking in public.
https://t.co/dScp0UTXUL