A Palestinian militant in the âGaza Metroâ. Ashraf Amra/Anadolu Agency/Getty |
The hidden fortress under Gaza |
Analysts sometimes speak of âtwo Gazasâ, says David Ignatius in The Washington Post: âthe visible one above ground and a vast network of tunnels belowâ. This honeycomb of underground passages, known as the Gaza âMetroâ, will present a formidable challenge if Israel invades the strip. Hamas uses the tunnels to store rockets, artillery, ammunition and other war supplies â and to launch surprise attacks on Israel via passages that stretch under the border wall. Many of the 200-odd hostages taken by the terrorist group will also be hidden underground, along with their guards.
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Bedouin smugglers built the first tunnels in the area after Israel and Egypt demarcated the border in 1981, says The Economist. Hamas took up the tactic two decades later, and by 2014, the tunnelling operation included 900 full-time staff across a network spanning 500km â âmore than 10 times the length of Gaza itselfâ. Iran and North Korea are thought to have helped with the engineering; funding was raised by pitching the tunnelling projects as âcommercial investment schemes, complete with contracts drafted by lawyersâ. Locating and destroying the tunnels will be extremely difficult, to say nothing of fighting within them. The Israel Defence Forces have an elite unit called Samur (Hebrew for âweaselâ) which specialises in the practice, and operates remote-controlled robots that can look for booby traps underground. But flushing out the Gaza Metro will be âthe work of yearsâ, not weeks or months.
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Notting Hill (1999): not much diversity for W11 |
Villain
Richard Curtis, whose films about posh, floppy-haired lovebirds would be no good today. The romcom writer, interviewed by his daughter at the Cheltenham Literary Festival, admitted that he was âstupid and wrongâ for making such un-diverse films. Hang on, says Michael Deacon in The Daily Telegraph: if he had included a diverse range of characters, liberals would âthunderâ that he could never understand their âlived experienceâ. He canât win. The only way men like him can avoid being trashed by angry progressives is by ânever writing anything at allâ.
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Hero
Dr Gianluca Grimalda, for refusing to budge on his environmental beliefs. The Italian social scientist needed to travel from Germany to Papua New Guinea for a research trip â and rather than take several carbon-guzzling planes, made the 14,000-mile journey via âfive trains, nine buses, two ferries, two taxis, one shared car, one police convoy and, when there were no other options, two flightsâ, says The New York Times. The schlep took 35 days, and when he proposed coming back a similar way, his thinktank employers gave him the sack.
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Villain
London, which is seemingly more perilous for bicycles than everywhere else in the world. Geordie Stewart spent 430 days cycling 22,500 miles around the globe, only for his bike, named Dorothy, to be stolen outside a west London pub on his return home. It âsurvived temperatures of -45C in Kazakhstanâ, says Sarah Vine in the Daily Mail, âbut no one is safe from Britainâs street crimeâ. |
Hero
Rod Stewart, for refusing multiple million-dollar offers to perform in Saudi Arabia and Qatar. The spiky-haired star says he used his âmoral compassâ to skip countries where women and the LGBT community have âextremely limited choicesâ. Gary Lineker and David Beckham, who have both worked in Qatar, âclearly couldnât find theirsâ, says columnist Amanda Platell. |
Villain Britain, according to Owen Jones, for being responsible for Hamasâs homophobia. The Guardian columnist posted on X (formerly Twitter) that âit wasnât actually Hamas who introduced the law banning homosexuality in Gaza. Guess who it was? The British Empire.â Multiple users pointed out that an imperial law from 1936 probably could have been changed by now, if Gazaâs bloodthirsty Islamist rulers had any interest in gay rights.
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Are you upskilling? Some 85% of Brits consider themselves lifelong learners, according to YouGov research. And whether youâre renovating your kitchen (Real Homes), getting into woodwork (Wood), diversifying your financial investments (MoneyWeek), or trying to cook up a storm (BBC Good Food), Readly has you covered, with full access to over 7,000 digital magazines and dailies. Not only can you read the entire portfolio with one monthly fee, you can also share your account on up to five devices. In an exclusive and time-limited offer, The Knowledge readers can try Readly for free for three months â click here.
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THE COUNTRY HOUSE This Grade II* listed medieval hall sits on six acres of land in a peaceful corner of rural Hertfordshire. The six-bedroom home has a large open hallway and a spacious dining room, while the garden includes a heated summer house and extensive views of the surrounding countryside. Period features have been retained throughout, including exposed beams and timbers, an impressive stone fireplace, and the remains of a moat. Hitchin is a 10-minute drive, with trains to London Kingâs Cross in 36 minutes. ÂŁ2m.
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Protesters in Brooklyn demonstrate against police violence towards black women. Erik McGregor/LightRocket/Getty |
How âself-indulgent ninniesâ ruined their own cause |
If you find progressive hypocrisy âentertainingly irritatingâ, says James Marriott in The Times, youâll enjoy Frederik deBoerâs new book, How Elites Ate the Social Justice Movement. He writes about Race2Dinner, an American organisation that charges rich white women upwards of $5,000 to sit through a dinner party being hectored for âfailing to interrogate their white privilegeâ. He is enjoyably irritated by the ceaseless updating of progressive jargon: âethnic minorityâ became âpeople of colourâ, which became âBipocâ, which became âpeople of the global majorityâ, and so on. He notes that the phrase âI see what you meanâ is now considered ableist âbecause some people canât seeâ, and that a department at the University of Southern California banned the word âfieldâ in case it offends the descendants of slaves (who worked in fields).
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As deBoer concludes, this kind of âactivismâ is more about educated people wanting to feel good about themselves than it is about changing the world. So itâs hard to know âquite how annoyed to beâ about this stuff. Hypocrisy and smugness are âancient features of human natureâ, not inventions of the past two decades, and complaining about progressive nonsense always risks sounding like youâre writing a letter to the Telegraph âover your fifth sherryâ. But thatâs why deBoer is so satisfying to read â heâs a Marxist, so his attacks have the moral urgency of a man who fears that the ârighteous aims of his movement are being derailed by self-indulgent ninniesâ. As, indeed, they are.
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How Elites Ate the Social Justice Movement by Fredrik deBoer is available to buy here. |
After six years of construction, Londonâs most expensive hotel suite is finally open, says Claire Wrathall in the FT. The four-bedroom, 16,000 square-foot penthouse at Claridgeâs will set you back around ÂŁ60,000 a night â and when I checked in, a week after Leonardo DiCaprio had passed through, I got a chance to see what you get for your money. The dĂ©cor, designed by âa specialist in superyacht interiorsâ, includes a dining table âinset with a disc of malachiteâ; a giant onyx fireplace; a bathroom with a âlacquered silver-leaf ceilingâ; a glass piano pavilion housing a ÂŁ120,000 Steinway Model B on the terrace; and no fewer than 75 Damien Hirst artworks. The hotel expects the super-luxe suite to be occupied for only 30-40% of the year. âBut for the few who are able to stay here, it is a special, if surreal place.â Book here.
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An ATACMS missile being launched |
The long-range missile turning the tide in Ukraine
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With the worldâs attention on Gaza, says Hamish de Bretton-Gordon in The Daily Telegraph, we may be overlooking âone of the most significant developments in the nearly two years of war in Ukraineâ. A few weeks ago, the US government confirmed that it would supply Kyiv with the âArmy Tactical Missile Systemâ, or ATACMS â a form of long-range precision artillery. This high-tech kit, which can hit targets up to 300km away with âpinpoint accuracyâ, is now in use on the battlefield: Ukrainian special forces said this week they had destroyed several aircraft at two Russian-held airfields deep inside occupied territory. Russiaâs military bloggers called it âone of the most serious blows of all timeâ to the countryâs air force.
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âThis could change the course of the war.â Russia will have to move its âkey air assetsâ way behind the front lines, potentially placing its attack helicopters out of range entirely. Even the command posts will have to be moved back, rendering the âuntrained, poorly armed and underfedâ conscripts more isolated â and more likely to refuse orders â than ever. All this could âtake the brakes off the counter-offensiveâ. If Ukraineâs tanks arenât under threat from the air, they may be able to âbreak through the remaining Russian lines, and steam into Crimeaâ.
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Evening fun in the Netflix series Bridgerton |
âAnybody in bed before midnight is a scoundrelâ
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âModern nightlife was invented in London around 1700,â says Dan Hitchens in The Spectator. Before then, festivities were held by daylight and the night was a âfearful, all-consumingâ endurance test, to be got through ideally without âfalling off a bridge or being stabbedâ. But by the end of the 17th century, aristocrats had decided they âpreferred to party after darkâ. The trend was rapidly commercialised: a new kind of conspicuous consumer descended on pleasure gardens like Vauxhall and Ranelagh (in Chelsea), to âeat, drink, stroll and listen to music by the many-coloured light of thousands of oil lampsâ. By the 1780s, foreign visitors reported admiringly that âOxford Streetâs shops kept the lights blazing until 10pmâ.
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It became a mark of status to stay up long into the night, and soon people were vying to be âfashionably lateâ. âThe present folly is late hours,â wrote Horace Walpole in 1777. âEverybody tries to be particular by being too late, and as everybody tries it, nobody is so. It is now the fashion to go to Ranelagh two hours after it is âoverâ.â One of the most joyful scenes in Boswellâs Life of Johnson is the great lexicographer being woken at 3am by men banging on his door. He opens it âwarily, poker in handâ, only to discover two young friends who have been out roistering. âYou dogs,â says Johnson, with a wry grin. âIâll have a frisk with you.â And they sally forth to Covent Garden. For Johnson, that icon of Georgian London, sleep was the enemy. âWhoever thinks of going to bed before 12 oâclock,â he declared, âis a scoundrel.â
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âThe greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance; it is the illusion of knowledge.â
Stephen Hawking |
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