Aliexpress listings can have multiple different items, and the price displayed in the search results will be that of the first of those (in your case, probably just an antenna) rather than the actual item you searched for or even the item image shown on the results page.
Not just the first, seems like the cheapest. I did a quick search and one result listed the second object's price, which was some permanent adapter board. But it's hard to fix such a thing. For example what if you really did want to buy another antenna for the device? Ok so maybe you require the listed price be the maximum. But what about like a raspberry pi kit where maybe you don't want the case or high capacity sd card or RAM, which could bring down the cost dramatically.
Especially when there is strong incentive to work around any such fix. Individual sellers do it deliberately often to make their listings appear more attractive, if this is "fixed" they'll find another way to be deceptive about the price that appears in searches, bitch & moan, or (much less likely) actually leave in favour of another marketplace, or some mix of the above. It is one of the reasons I simply ignore such places (others including delivery times and reliability: will I actually get the right thing that I think I'm ordering, or anything at all?) - yes, there might be genuine bargains to be had, but if you count the time and effort to find them amongst the deliberately deceptive listings, and the other concerns, I've found that I'm better off not bothering.
It isn't just on marketplace type sites like AliExpress, Amazon, and such, it is also often done on individual sales pages in order to game shopping search engines like google's, though it is more common, to the point of being ubiquitous, on Ali and their ilk.
One answer is that the individual products should be there own listing in the search so if I'm searching for the whole thing it is easy to see the price of that, same if I just want an individual part or add-on. If showing the lowest price, make sure any image is of that list price item not the more expensive one most likely being searched for. But that requires the sellers to properly file the listing details, and good luck enforcing that when they have competitive incentive not to.
There is also the issue of very similar items: the same thing in different materials/colours/etc (things like 3D printer filament) where the price might vary. In that case perhaps an answer is to display a range on the search results ("from £x to £y") though that becomes a new problem to solve when the user selects to order by price.
There is also the foreign policy based on threats and insults, increasing reports of hostile border experiences, reductions in non-tourist visas, US economic policy reducing consumer confidence globally leading to fewer people committing to inter-continental travel, and the fact that some people simply prefer not to visit countries whose domestic policies they disagree with.
I missed that too, but it turns out I need ot veery rarely. For when I do, I have a userscript that injects the GTranslate widget into the page. It's basically the same, albeit with uglier button. I don't think it's available as an extension since it by definition injects external scripts into a page, but it's available as a userscript for *-Monkey.
The "bunch of assets" that the crown effectively surrendered in return for financial dependence on parliament is the Crown Estate, currently worth GBP 8.1 billion (USD 13.6 billion).
They also pay tax: "In 1992, The Queen volunteered to pay income tax and capital gains tax, and since 1993 her personal income has been taxable as for any other taxpayer. The Queen has always been subject to Value Added Tax and pays local rates on a voluntary basis." I also assume that she does minimal tax avoidance.
Go get to know real homeless people, we are not talking about homelessness here. Though I think the OP is taking it a bit far, I think it would be fine to do it for a week or something if you opened up a huge opportunity for you.
You can be house-full and yet still homeless. Dwellings are becoming more and more just that, it seems. Not a "home". Not a Fortress of Solitude, if you will.
So why keep up the charade if you're out of the weather anyway?