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2309 Interesting News

  • Ben Wallace says he is out of the race for NATO's top job
  • Politics
  • America's missing doctors
  • The trouble with reality in fiction
  • Gloria Allen ran a charm school for young trans women
  • AI will change American elections, but not in the obvious way
  • No, really. Rishi Sunak is a right-winger
  • South-East Asia is in the grip of a record-breaking heatwave
  • Chinese art students scrawled Communist graffiti in London's Brick Lane
  • Vladimir Putin says the world's energy infrastructure is "at risk"
  • The costs of Russia's war are about to hit home
  • Why has Vietnam banned the "Barbie" film?
  • India's property market is ready for take-off
  • America's courts weigh in on how firms resolve liability claims
  • The trials of Muhammad Yunus
  • After 50 years, the Residents are still on the road
  • Tesla sued by federal agency for racial harassment at California factory
  • Thich Nhat Hanh believed that Buddhism should be a force for change
  • Photos of the Week: Andean Bear, Burial Chamber, Secret Heart
  • A higher global oil price will help Russia pay for its war
  • iOS 17 Makes It Easy to Share AirTags. Here's How - CNET
  • Six Months Ago Elon Musk Called for a Pause on AI. Instead Development Sped Up
  • Abir Mukherjee adds a twist to his winning crime formula
  • Angry parents challenge how California schools handle gender identity
  • Finding aliens means studying new sorts of planet
  • Ranajit Guha revolutionised the study of India's past
  • EY sets up six-way race to lead firm after break-up failure
  • The White House chief of staff says it's on House Republicans to avert a shutdown
  • Donald Triplett was autism's "Case 1"
  • At last, Xi Jinping calls Volodymyr Zelensky
  • The 'Bristle Reaction' Is a Common Intimacy Killer in Relationships
  • 'The Mosquitoes Are Winning'
  • "Making Nice" is a gratifying satire of the internet age
  • What broken ferries reveal about Scotland's government
  • The case for a third-party campaign in 2024 is actuarial, not ideological
  • Why China wants to be a risk
  • What will Indonesia look like after Jokowi leaves?
  • Golf is the best video game ever – I just need to figure out why | Dominik Diamond
  • A new gravitational-wave detection has excited astronomers
  • This week's cover
  • Has the European Central Bank become too powerful?
  • How oceans became new technological battlefields
  • Wall Street on Edge After Worst Month of the Year
  • The ChatGPT App Can Now Talk to You—and Look Into Your Life
  • Accounting for flood risk would lower American house prices by $187bn
  • Sir Paul McCartney's memoir aims to affirm his status as a writer
  • Europe, not America, is now Ukraine's largest backer
  • Who is the most important person in your company?
  • Why Europe's asylum policy desperately needs rebooting
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • How will politicians escape enormous public debts?
  • Chinese Spies Infected Dozens of Networks With Thumb Drive Malware
  • US Justice Department Urged to Investigate Gunshot Detector Purchases
  • Why Britain's government would be wrong to cut HS2
  • India's scandal-hit Adani Group forges on
  • Hey Zuck, Get Those Robots out of My Social Feed
  • 'Canada has a dark history with Nazis': political scandal prompts reckoning
  • America and Iran try to step back from the brink over nukes
  • Why logistics are too important to be left to the generals
  • A slew of scandals puts Singapore's government on the back foot
  • New technology could cement Indonesia's dominance of vital nickel
  • America returns to containment to deal with Russia and China
  • A new study asks whether racehorses have hit their genetic peak
  • Technology is deepening civilian involvement in war
  • Britain's Labour Party takes lessons from Joe Biden
  • Apple's Latest China Challenge: A New Rule That Could Shrink Its App Store
  • Politics
  • World of WearableArt 2023
  • SoundThinking, Maker of ShotSpotter, Is Buying Parts of PredPol Creator Geolitica
  • Battlefield lessons
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • US and UK Mount Aggressive Crackdown on Trickbot and Conti Ransomware Gangs
  • Two new books assess the geopolitical lessons of covid-19
  • Desmond Tutu believed that truth was the best weapon
  • Tina Turner turned a tough life into splendour
  • Satellite data show Ukraine's forces are testing Russia's defences
  • "Bonsoir l'Europe!" How languages affect Eurovision scores
  • The Cloud Is a Prison. Can the Local-First Software Movement Set Us Free?
  • Post-covid, American children are still missing far too much school
  • How science will be transformed by AI
  • India is testing America's friendship
  • TikTok is wading into South-East Asia's e-commerce wars
  • America's dumbest, wildest budget fight yet
  • The resumption of student-loan payments will hit American growth
  • Treasury Yields Retreat, Sending Stock Benchmarks Higher
  • How Vladimir Putin provokes—and complicates—the struggle against autocracy
  • African countries are fed up with being marginalised in global institutions
  • The making of America's Ivy League elite
  • Paris prosecutors probe deals between Bernard Arnault and Russian businessman
  • Reading the death certificate on Boris Johnson's political career
  • Studying broken chromosomes can illuminate neuroscience
  • England's Lionesses reach the World Cup final
  • Hungary is becoming more important to China
  • Too many people take too many pills
  • After First Setback, Second Pig Heart Transplant Provokes Cautious Optimism
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Italy's new government needs to make deep economic reforms
  • A pair of Indian and Russian probes approach the Moon
  • KAL's cartoon
  • SoundThinking, Maker of ShotSpotter, Is Buying Parts of PredPol Creator Geolitica
  • iPhone 15 Pro Owners Complain About Overheating Problems
  • Brazil bank's past slavery ties to be investigated in unprecedented inquiry
  • Western values are steadily diverging from the rest of the world's
  • This week's covers
  • Vladimir Zhirinovsky's highly methodical madness
  • What's an Influencer? The Complete WIRED Guide
  • As Britons grow more unhappy with Brexit, what happens next?
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The best albums of 2021
  • 8 Best Smartwatches (2023): Apple Watch, Wear OS, Hybrid Watches
  • India, an aspiring digital superpower, keeps shutting down the internet
  • Thursday Night Football: How to Watch, Stream Lions vs. Packers Tonight on Prime Video or Twitch - CNET
  • Business
  • Meal-Kit Maker Blue Apron to Be Sold
  • Blind optimism is the only bet for Britain's Tories
  • Jean-Jacques Savin wanted to defy old age
  • Why Europe is a magnet for more Americans
  • Can UBS make the most of finance's deal of the century?
  • Khalifa Haftar will use Libya's floods to deepen his control
  • Epic Games is laying off 16 percent of its workforce and selling Bandcamp
  • A new super-regulator takes aim at rampant corruption in Chinese finance
  • Evil Genius Sues Netflix Over Canceled Rebel Moon TTRPG
  • Ukraine's missile cemetery
  • The opposition looks set to win Thailand's election
  • Europe drastically cut its energy consumption this winter
  • Visualising India's record-breaking rainfall
  • Pressurised natural caves could offer a home from home on the Moon
  • Annual inflation of 114% is pushing Argentina to the right
  • Google Trial Spills Details on Deals With Apple, Samsung
  • How Palantir Became a Front-Runner for the UK's Multimillion-Dollar NHS Contract
  • Failing to reintegrate Iraq's Sunni rebels could prove costly
  • Joe Biden donates weapons to Taiwan, as he does to Ukraine
  • Fanatics and putschists are creating failed states in west Africa
  • A difficult new world
  • Ohio State University Researchers Are Using AI to Understand Changing Biodiversity
  • Phyllida Barlow had a lifetime of adventure making art
  • The Twisted Eye in the Sky Over Buenos Aires
  • One of the hardest parts of getting older? Pondering the 'me' in dementia | Larry F Slonaker
  • Why America's Supreme Court has ended affirmative action
  • Latin America's local governments too often fail their people
  • Brother Andrew secretly carried Bibles behind the Iron Curtain
  • From the archive: 'Mama Boko Haram': one woman's extraordinary mission to rescue 'her boys' from terrorism – podcast
  • How the Iraq war bent America's army out of shape
  • The Gruesome Story of How Neuralink's Monkeys Actually Died
  • Britain has a growing problem with dangerous dogs
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Z9 - PowerShell Script Analyzer
  • What Is Cyberwar? The Complete WIRED Guide
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • France rolls out the red carpet for Britain
  • China's latest attempt to rally the world against Western values
  • Shane Warne believed that cricket should always be fun
  • A clue to China's true covid-19 death toll
  • Surf - Escalate Your SSRF Vulnerabilities On Modern Cloud Environments
  • Peter Brook saw acting as an uncompromising search for truth
  • Video: How we studied the lessons of Ukraine
  • Singapore is the world leader in selling cultivated meat
  • Suicide rates for girls are rising. Are smartphones to blame?
  • SMShell - Send Commands And Receive Responses Over SMS From Mobile Broadband Capable Computers
  • Albemarle to Pay Over $218 Million to Settle Bribery Investigation
  • Can Uber and Lyft ever make real money?
  • Why the EU will not seize Russian state assets to rebuild Ukraine
  • Why have Russia's armed forces been so ineffective in Ukraine?
  • A new study finds that 47,000 Russian combatants have died in Ukraine
  • South Korean literature is inspiring Japanese women
  • Risk of a US Government Shutdown Is Fueled by Very Online Republicans
  • The end of a remarkable era in Indian finance
  • Herders and farmers seek reasons for east Africa's drought
  • Why China is so keen to salvage shipwrecks in the South China Sea
  • America has a shortage of lab monkeys
  • Thousands of Ukrainian men are avoiding military service
  • Meet the world's most enduring product
  • Germany's rampant hard-right AfD puts other parties in a fix
  • They Were the NFL's Luckiest Team. Then They Lost Their Rabbit's Foot.
  • Evergrande's New Woes Signal Long Slog for China's Economy
  • How to avoid a common investment mistake
  • Idris Elba Is Ready to Talk About Crypto
  • Latin American cities are becoming far nicer for poorer inhabitants
  • Latin America could become this century's commodity superpower
  • The Banality of Bad-Faith Science
  • A year after Iran was shaken by protests, zealots have tightened their grip
  • A new exhibition shows the visual debt Disney owes to European art
  • Reproduction without sex is more common than scientists thought
  • The Hollywood Foreign Press Association does penance for its sins
  • Weather tracker: South Africa floods kill at least 11 people
  • Risk of a US Government Shutdown Is Fueled by Very Online Republicans
  • The Supreme Court blocks Joe Biden's student-debt-relief plan
  • How Russian prisoners of war see Putin's invasion
  • If Venezuela's elections were fair, this would be the front-runner
  • After banning cinema for decades, Saudi Arabia is making movies
  • An American soldier has deserted to North Korea
  • How an amateur football league in China took off
  • Rebuilding Ukraine will require money, but also tough reforms
  • Ocean-surface temperatures are breaking records
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The EU is finally rebooting the enlargement machine
  • Who will succeed Shia Islam's top man?
  • F.W. de Klerk had to abandon what his ancestors had believed in
  • South Korea's opposition leader narrowly avoids arrest
  • KAL's cartoon
  • How India is using digital technology to project power
  • Can Jordan fall in love with Saudi Arabia?
  • Biden Issues a Blistering Attack on Trump
  • This week in The Economist
  • "Scaling People" is a textbook piece of management writing
  • Politics
  • China isn't the only country giving out goodies in Asia
  • Narendra Modi is rebuilding New Delhi
  • Why America and Europe fret about China turning inwards
  • Aboriginal Australians may at last be given a say in their own affairs
  • El Salvador's authoritarian president is becoming a regional role model
  • Expensive energy may have killed more Europeans than covid-19 last winter
  • To bury its dead, Ukraine is having to dig up victims of past wars
  • Lighthouse lights are losing their sweep
  • Business
  • Marcos says the Philippines will defend its waters against Chinese aggression
  • Vaping among schoolchildren has become a moral panic in Britain
  • Castlevania: Nocturne Is a Slick, Smart Successor
  • This week's covers
  • America aims for nuclear-power renaissance
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • "Trading Places" and the challenge of troubling art of the past
  • The 22 Best Movies on Hulu This Week
  • This week's covers
  • The New York Public Library mines its archive of 56m objects
  • The Kurds' dreams of independence look farther off than ever
  • SoundThinking, Maker of ShotSpotter, Is Buying Parts of PredPol Creator Geolitica
  • How Mexico has become the "enemy" of America's Republicans
  • Everything about carmaking is changing at once
  • Bolivia is on the brink of an economic crisis
  • How popular is Joe Biden?
  • Europe's economy looks to be heading for trouble
  • Narendra Modi is the world's most popular leader
  • Ukraine's spymaster has got under the Kremlin's skin
  • Mario Terán was the man sent to kill Che Guevara
  • The strange success of the Tories' schools policy
  • Britons love country fairs. Why?
  • The women's Euros are selling out stadiums
  • Young Phillies fan gifted helmet after irate Bryce Harper flips on umpire
  • Federal agency sues Tesla for racial discrimination of Black workers
  • Americans are moving to places besieged by extreme heat
  • Meta's metaverse is getting an AI makeover
  • Will the auto workers' strike jeopardise Joe Biden's manufacturing boom?
  • Kyriakos Mitsotakis returns to the Greek prime minister's office
  • Sunday brunch is the new Friday night
  • The world's deadliest war last year wasn't in Ukraine
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Streaming TV Is Entering Its Jock Phase
  • The week in wildlife – in pictures
  • Do tips make for better service?
  • Why Asia's super-app companies are stuck in a rut
  • A Belgian company wants to create woolly-mammoth burgers
  • What shipwrecked insects reveal about life at sea in the 17th century
  • Ukraine's latest weapons in its war with Russia: 3D-printed bombs
  • War crimes in Tigray may be covered up or forgotten
  • What does China want from Latin America and the Caribbean?
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • Germany's new national security strategy is strong on goals, less so on means
  • Is Ukraine's offensive stalling?
  • Senegal's President Macky Sall says he won't stand for a third term
  • The Animated TV Show You Never See
  • One year after Dobbs, America's pro-life movement is in flux
  • Britain's doctors are on strike, again
  • Communist Party members must study Xi Jinping's thinking
  • Could digital-payments systems help unseat the dollar?
  • Japan's ageing society is finding creative ways to dispose of its dead
  • A famous brand of Chinese sweets reinvents itself again
  • The path ahead for China's Belt and Road Initiative
  • Charting Ukraine's soaring exports to the EU
  • Ibrahim Mahama and the art of resurrection
  • Meet America's most profitable law firm
  • Pedro Sanchez struggles to form a new government in Spain
  • Ukraine's counter-offensive is speeding up
  • Stellar Explosion From 180 Years Ago Comes Alive in New Timelapse
  • How China trains its journalists to report "correctly"
  • An old health insurance scheme in China may have saved millions
  • Jay Pasachoff travelled the world to catch the Moon eclipsing the Sun
  • The Meta AI Chatbot Is Mark Zuckerberg's Answer to ChatGPT
  • Hey Zuck, Get Those Robots out of My Social Feed
  • Life and death in a Christmas tree
  • The AI-Powered, Totally Autonomous Future of War Is Here
  • Our model suggests that global deaths remain 5% above pre-covid forecasts
  • Russia is resorting to desperate measures to recruit soldiers
  • U.S. Stocks Open Higher After Inflation Data As S&P 500 Heads For September Loss
  • Eight Ways to Banish Misery
  • I feel sickened with myself for shouting at my child. Please help | Ask Annalisa Barbieri
  • Should you send your children to private school?
  • Nigeria's new president acts fast
  • The Best Episode of Lower Decks Season 4 Yet Defies All Your Expectations
  • Guatemala's election produces a pleasant surprise
  • Analogue's limited edition Pockets are delightful and frustrating
  • Mexico's government has attacked the country's electoral watchdog
  • Meme stocks are back from the dead
  • John Kerry: Energy transition is the 'new industrial revolution'
  • Companies Find a Fundraising Sweet Spot With Convertible Bonds
  • FAA Sets 21 Tasks for Bezos's Blue Origin Before New Shepard Can Fly Again
  • Israel's constitutional chaos is far from over
  • Can tech tackle the global crisis of depression and anxiety?
  • Niger spoils Macron's plan for an African reset
  • China's tolerance for public oversight is limited
  • Do abortion-related benefits help American firms recruit?
  • Disneyland Movie From David Gordon Green Is on Hold for Now
  • Meet the world's new arms dealers
  • Pervez Musharraf was one of Pakistan's better dictators
  • Inside the Race to Stop a Deadly Viral Outbreak in India
  • The energy transition will be expensive
  • A chunk of asteroid is coming to Earth
  • Turkey has given up promoting political Islam abroad
  • Honda forms largest EV partner network in the US despite not yet selling an EV in the country
  • An Epic Fight Over What Really Killed the Dinosaurs
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Newfangled coins and mercenaries may have brought about democracy
  • Want a 6% CD From JPMorgan Chase? You Need to Have $5 Million
  • Can Europe's power grid cope with the green transition?
  • Castlevania: Nocturne's Opening Explores the Bloody Belmont Legacy
  • Has e-commerce peaked?
  • The pandemic has accelerated a global decline in the rule of law
  • California cracks down on carbon
  • Why the fires in Hawaii have been so bad
  • To show that it can follow global rules, China built its own multilateral institution
  • 5 Reasons to Use a VPN - CNET
  • Glaciers on volcanoes could serve as early-warning systems
  • Why foreign dignitaries wear red when meeting Xi Jinping
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The GOP's New Obsession With Attacking Mexico
  • Why it is a bad idea for managers to attempt to engineer office friendships
  • This week's covers
  • Have a complaint about CVS? So do pharmacists: Many just walked out
  • Federal shutdown could disrupt patient care at safety-net clinics across U.S.
  • UEFA Opens a Door to Russia's Return in Soccer, and Faces a Backlash
  • The plucky firms that are beating big tech
  • China's persecution of Uyghurs extends to those it once favoured
  • A ruling over ownership of the Benin bronzes may delay their return
  • Roman Ratushny believed in a better, purer Ukraine
  • Pelé, king of the beautiful game
  • As Lula takes over, Brazil's economic prospects are looking up
  • Data from satellites suggest violence has surged in much of Sudan
  • Insects could help turn beer waste into beef
  • Should rich countries pay for climate damage in poor ones?
  • Swimming's ruling on transgender women continues a trend
  • Why wretched Lebanese are fleeing across the sea
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Barry Humphries, creator and manager of Dame Edna Everage, died on April 22nd, aged 89
  • Cambodia's autocrat is fixing his succession
  • Hong Kongers are bracing for an even wider clampdown on dissent
  • Judge upholds $18 minimum pay for NYC delivery workers
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • It was hard for any viewer to look away from Sidney Poitier
  • The Belt and Road, as seen from China
  • The uncertain future of Greeks in Turkey
  • In North Carolina a jilted husband can sue his wife's lover
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Since Brexit, Britain's union has grown increasingly European
  • Most children in poor countries are being failed by their schools
  • Relax, Apple's FineWoven iPhone 15 Case Is Perfectly Fine
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Argentina could get its first libertarian president
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Labour's cabinet would be Britain's most state-educated since 1945
  • 'Monkey Christ' opera makes a hero of woman who botched Spanish fresco
  • Russia's friends are a motley—and shrinking—crew
  • America says it will send long-range missiles to Ukraine
  • TikTok Employees Say Executive Moves to U.S. Show China Parent's Role
  • How to fix India's decrepit cities
  • Gradually, the besieged city of Bakhmut is being abandoned by everyone
  • The four women who shook up philosophy
  • Israel launches its biggest raid on the West Bank in over 20 years
  • Snoop Dogg's a Dungeon Master and All of Meta's Other AI Announcements
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Lina Khan Once Went Big Against Amazon. As FTC Chair, She Changed Tack.
  • An all-out strike brings Hollywood to a halt
  • KaliPackergeManager - Kali Packerge Manager
  • Classifying Heat Waves Will Help People Better Understand Their Dangers
  • West Ham's Hawa Cissoko: 'Some people are just racist and find every opportunity to be racist'
  • What Is Quantum Computing? The Complete WIRED Guide
  • DorXNG - Next Generation DorX. Built By Dorks, For Dorks
  • Why the Communist Party fears gay rights
  • Hudson Valley Weekend Trips: Where to Find the Region's Best New Restaurants, Hotels and Kombucha Sorbet
  • Douglas Lenat trained computers to think the old-fashioned way
  • Doctor Who Is Regenerating Its Behind-the-Scenes Show
  • Top financial regulator seeks global clampdown on hedge fund borrowing
  • Meet the Peruvian indigenous singer inspired by K-pop
  • Imran Khan loses his battle with Pakistan's army
  • Car firms are trying out new ways to sell mobility
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Bombing Kills at Least 52 at a Religious Gathering in Pakistan
  • The Secret of How Cells Make 'Dark Oxygen' Without Light
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The best memes of 2021
  • Romance (as a category) is far from dead
  • Concerns of corruption mar Zimbabwe's chaotic election
  • Politics
  • What America's bike-share schemes tell you about venture capital
  • China's rulers play the law-and-order card, and lose
  • Satellite Images Show the Devastating Cost of Sudan's Aerial War
  • Turkey is still just a democracy, but it is not certain to remain that way
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • How real is America's chipmaking renaissance?
  • Business
  • Colonies of bacteria could save the Pentagon billions
  • How the mutiny in Russia will shape the battlefield in Ukraine
  • Man City v Inter Milan is the most lopsided final in Champions League history
  • Dianne Feinstein, longest serving woman in the Senate, has died at 90
  • Best Android VPN for 2023 - CNET
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Why Ukraine needs American cluster bombs
  • This week's cover
  • Why so much of the world won't stand up to Russia
  • Superbatteries will transform the performance of EVs
  • Amazon has Hollywood's worst shows but its best business model
  • The old bank/card model is still entrenched in the rich world
  • China's economy is on course for a "double dip"
  • China is exerting greater power across Asia—and beyond
  • Does the tank have a future?
  • Turkey faces a crucial election this summer
  • The death of Pope Benedict removes a problem for liberal Catholics
  • "The Harder They Fall" offers a new take on the Old West
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Chinese nationalists are annoyed about colonial-era place names
  • Moniorg - Tool That Leverages Crt.Sh Website To Monitor Domains Of A Target
  • Confessions of a Viral AI Writer
  • Can a $12 phone get 300m illiterate Indians online?
  • A fight over dangerous dogs in Britain
  • America's pandemic savings are running out
  • Joe Biden should run against the Ivy League
  • Meta Unveils New Mixed Reality Headset in Push for Traction on Metaverse
  • German builders are on the brink of collapse
  • America accuses South Africa of sending arms to Russia
  • China has chilling plans for governing Taiwan
  • Britons should watch GB News, carefully
  • Myanmar's conflict is dividing South-East Asia
  • In just 100 days Nigeria's new president has made bold reforms
  • The G20 summit will be a resounding success for India
  • NASA's OSIRIS-REx Is About to Bring Asteroid Pieces Back to Earth
  • The Weirdos Living Inside Our Phones
  • How to understand the woeful state of Britain's water utilities
  • Japan's porn industry comes out of the shadows
  • Pharma's big push for a new generation of obesity drugs
  • Grimes on Living Forever, Dying on Mars, and Giving Elon Musk Ideas for His Best (Worst) Tweets
  • Why are politics in West Bengal so violent?
  • Green-lit or greenlighted? Gaslighted or gaslit?
  • A 16-year-old boy was arrested in England over the felling of an iconic tree
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Six Months Ago Elon Musk Called for a Pause on AI. Instead Development Sped Up
  • How covid-19 spurred governments to snoop on sewage
  • The lethal negligence of politicians in Morocco and Libya
  • "Sound of Freedom": how to make a fortune with a mediocre movie
  • Gauri Gill wins Prix Pictet award – in pictures
  • ChatGPT Isn't Stuck in 2021 Anymore, Can Browse Web for Recent Answers - CNET
  • Why is China blocking graphite exports to Sweden?
  • On the 50th anniversary of "Ways of Seeing" and "G."
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Britain hands Microsoft's Activision deal an extra life
  • China controls the supply of crucial war minerals
  • Epic Games Is Selling Bandcamp and Having Not-So-Epic Layoffs
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • North Korea's hackers are after intel, not just crypto
  • Jiang Zemin oversaw a wave of economic change, but not much political reform
  • Deterring would-be putschists in Africa is getting harder
  • Russians have emigrated in huge numbers since the war in Ukraine
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Foreign airlines in Nigeria are frustrated by the blocking of their funds
  • Rising Gasoline Costs Pushed Up Consumer Spending, Inflation
  • Bad Bunny, a superstar rapper, is good business
  • Moviemaking and gamemaking are converging
  • Space Force Taps SpaceX for $70 Million Starshield Contract
  • KAL's cartoon
  • New research helps explain why China's low birth rates are stuck
  • Truckmaker Hino hauls in 49,900% return with Japan property deal
  • A Canadian lake could mark the start of humanity's geological epoch
  • It is time to divert Taiwan's trade and investment from China
  • The Rebel Drone Maker of Myanmar
  • Can FTX Be Revived—Without Sam Bankman-Fried?
  • The rise of the self-pitying MP
  • HSBC executive to leave after criticising UK's stance on China
  • Swiss glaciers lose 10% of their volume in two years
  • Britain's smaller cities desperately need better transport
  • Pain and pride around a vital American highway
  • Hunter Biden's woes, and a new impeachment saga, will go on and on
  • British inflation may not be as sticky as thought
  • 'We are just getting started': the plastic-eating bacteria that could change the world
  • Political turmoil is tearing Peru apart
  • Unhinged Conspiracies, AI Doppelgangers, and the Fractured Reality of Naomi Klein
  • What next for Wagner's African empire?
  • Jacqueline Gold freed women to shamelessly enjoy themselves
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Alexander Lukashenko is the clearest beneficiary of Wagner's mutiny
  • Politics
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Bob Dole believed in hard work, not words
  • Italy needs more migrants, but has trouble admitting it
  • Dominant languages can spread even without coercion
  • Lebanon's government is squeezing out Syrian refugees
  • 'Difficult, time-consuming and painful': Nihiloxica on the 'hell' of touring the UK
  • A strike at Chevron shows a reinvigorated union movement
  • NATO did not give Volodymyr Zelensky everything he wanted
  • Museum Worker Sold Paintings and Put Forgeries in Their Place
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Discord is working to resolve a widespread outage caused by 'unusual traffic spikes'
  • A new book celebrates Annie Leibovitz's fashion photography
  • A Silver Lining From the Pandemic: A Surge in Start-Ups
  • Inside Ukraine's drone war against Putin
  • Europe's last finishing school targets anxious executives
  • How climate change will hit holidaymaking
  • Bowel cancer is rising among young people
  • In Xi Jinping's China, central planners rule
  • How well-connected Iranians import their goodies
  • She received chemo in two states. Why did it cost so much more in Alaska?
  • An inspiring, if frustrating, portrayal of the Williams sisters' coach and dad
  • The 33 Best Shows on Hulu Right Now
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Best Sports Streaming Service for 2023 - CNET
  • How high should Britain's interest rates go?
  • Recep Tayyip Erdogan's relatives are becoming increasingly powerful
  • Nagorno Karabakh: Why a frozen conflict suddenly exploded
  • Autonomous vehicles are coming, but slowly
  • Climate change is harder on less educated people
  • Niger's putsch is bad for the country—and for the region
  • Can a viable industry emerge from the hydrogen shakeout?
  • How Russia is trying to win over the global south
  • 'Motherhood is a cult, to a degree': Anne Heltzel on her horror novel about parenthood
  • Trump Didn't Go to Michigan to Support Autoworkers
  • Only politics, not the law, can stop Donald Trump
  • Geert Mak takes stock of the past 20 years of European history
  • Scientists Have an Audacious Plan to Map the Ancient World Before It Disappears
  • America's school day starts too early. That's beginning to change
  • Politics
  • The Van Gogh Museum showcases a rejected early masterpiece
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  • America is lavishing attention on Pacific island states
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  • Riddle of Fire Puts a Fantasy Spin on a 1980s Kids Adventure Movie
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  • NATO is drafting new plans to defend Europe
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  • Why Xi Jinping is not another Chairman Mao
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  • Joe Biden attempts to defang the Chinese tiger
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  • Is Ukraine really interested in fighting corruption?
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  • In Japan, festivals are boldly taking art into the countryside
  • Latin America is in a mess. But it still has strengths
  • Does Islam smile on cryptocurrency?
  • Russian hackers are preparing for a new campaign in Ukraine
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  • Daniel Ellsberg leaked the Pentagon Papers to try to stop the Vietnam war
  • Spanish voters seem to hanker after stable centrist government
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  • Major European Airlines Express Interest in TAP Air Portugal
  • Who will be Iran's next leader?
  • Can AT&T and Verizon escape managed decline?
  • Anker Soundcore Liberty 4 NC Review: Masterful Budget Noise-Canceling Buds
  • Should Britain change its abortion laws?
  • Covid-19 has imperilled the hammams of north Africa and the Levant
  • Germany is becoming expert at defeating itself
  • Whoever runs Britain will struggle to get tough on China
  • High bond yields imperil America's financial stability
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  • Top US Spies Meet With Privacy Experts Over Surveillance 'Crown Jewel'
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  • Zelenskiy calls for Russia to lose UN security council veto power – video
  • The Mexican Supreme Court does battle with AMLO
  • Reddit Removes Ability to Shun Targeted Ads Based on Your Upvotes
  • Christopher Plummer's singing voice included in rerelease of Sound of Music soundtrack
  • Will Japan fight?
  • A Medieval French Skeleton Is Rewriting the History of Syphilis
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  • Squadron Leader Johnny Johnson longed to give Hitler a bloody nose
  • Jessamine Chan's gripping debut novel sends up modern parenting
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  • In America, school test results are still lagging behind pre-covid levels
  • Meet Matus Vallo, Bratislava's hipster mayor-architect
  • From social-media stars to the Mexican army, everyone wants to run an airline
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  • Netflix mails its final DVDs to subscribers
  • Dead Trees and a Mysterious Cosmic Explosion Reveal Bigger Quake Risk for Seattle
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  • The forgotten importance of the War of Jenkins' Ear
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  • Is Narendra Modi turning Bollywood against Muslims?
  • Dan Loeb's Hot Hand Goes Cold
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  • New York City is restricting Airbnb
  • A mercurial billionaire, Terry Gou, shakes up Taiwan's presidential race
  • Business leaders worry about the rise of the AfD
  • Saudi Arabia may accept normal relations with Israel
  • Donors are already mulling a Marshall Plan for Ukraine
  • Pasha Lee went from Ukrainian screen idol to volunteer
  • An ancient rice bowl complicates the story of civilisation in India
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  • The Wagner mutiny has left Putin dangerously exposed
  • The Philippines's once-proud Maoist insurgents are out of ammo
  • When China thought America might invade
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  • Ryder Cup 2023: Europe lead 4-0 against USA on day one – live
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