Israelâs military says it is expanding its ground operation into âall areasâ of Gaza. Its forces are pushing into the south of the Palestinian enclave, where more than a million people fled â on Israelâs advice â at the start of the war. The COP28 president has claimed there is âno scienceâ which shows that phasing out fossil fuels is needed to limit global warming to 1.5C, says The Guardian. Sultan Al Jaber, who also heads the United Arab Emiratesâs state oil company, told a virtual event that abandoning oil and gas entirely would âtake the world back into cavesâ. The UKâs only giant pandas are leaving for China today after 12 years in Scotland. Yang Guang and Tian Tian (pictured), who have been the star attractions at Edinburgh Zoo since their arrival in 2011, are heading home after the lease agreement to keep them ended. đŒđą
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Mark Sedwill at the Covid inquiry |
The Covid inquiry is doing nothing but harm |
Rather than treating the Covid inquiry as an âopportunity to learn lessonsâ, says Matthew Syed in The Sunday Times, organisers are subjecting those involved to a succession of âducking-stool inquisitionsâ by a slick KC looking for âgotcha moments that might play well on the TV newsâ. Whatâs most worrying is how this âdubious theatreâ will add to the already toxic culture of British politics. When we give in to the desire to scapegoat and punish politicians and their advisers, âthe ultimate victims are, invariably, usâ. Because the consequence of a blame culture, âas night follows dayâ, is that âfewer talented people go into politicsâ and innovative policymaking is replaced by defensive paralysis.
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Just look at the furore around Mark Sedwill who, as cabinet secretary in 2020, suggested that government arrange âchickenpox-style partiesâ to achieve herd immunity. This is âprecisely the kind of idea that should be aired during an emergencyâ, as part of a process of thrashing out possible solutions. Attacking him only makes talented people less likely to contribute innovative ideas to policy discussions, for fear of exactly the kind of inquisition officials are now facing. When we blame people for making complex judgments, âwhen we humiliate themâ, when we pretend it was obvious all along, âwe do not make government betterâ. We simply end up with âinferior politicians and sclerotic decision-makingâ by ensuring success in politics is about nothing more than âbuck-passing and arse-coveringâ.
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More than 1,000 photographers from 54 countries entered this yearâs Natural Landscape Photography Awards. Top images include a shot of lava at Fagradalsfjall volcano in Iceland; a golden sunrise illuminating the coastal mountains of British Columbia; mystical trees in a Caledonian forest in Scotland; sand dunes in the UAEâs Liwa Desert glimpsed through fog; and the ancient woods of Vancouver Island. See the full list here.
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In Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Roald Dahl warned that children shouldnât watch too much television, says The Times. âIt rots the senses in the head! It kills imagination dead!â It turns out he might be right. In a recent study, youngsters were either shown a short video clip or asked to read a passage from a story, and then asked to imagine different objects. The video-watchers were on average 7% slower than the readers. đșđ |
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Dusk on the Maasai Mara in Kenya. Getty |
Travel company Go2Africa has just unveiled what it claims is âthe worldâs most expensive safariâ, says Forbes: a 24-day trip costing just over $690,000 for a family of four. High-end holidaymakers will be whisked around six countries in southern and eastern Africa by private jet, taking in sights including Victoria Falls, Volcanoes National Park in Rwanda, and the white sands of the Seychelles. Highlights include hot air balloon rides, gorilla trekking and even a personal film crew to document the âjourney of a lifetimeâ. Book your spot, for a cool $172,545 per person, here.
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Javier Milei: a âblow-it-all-upâ mentality. Tomas Cuesta/Getty |
Anti-elite rage is reshaping the world |
I was one of the few pundits who thought in early 2016 that Donald Trump ânot only could, but probably wouldâ, win the election, says Andrew Sullivan on Substack. âIâm feeling the nausea again.â In the US, the UK, and other liberal democracies across the world, âthe mood is just ugly â a deep pessimism suffused with barely stifled furyâ. One factor is mass immigration, and the establishmentâs indifference to peopleâs concerns about it. Another is inflation. These problems are fueling a âblow-it-all-upâ mentality that is seeing insurgents turfing incumbents out of office. Thereâs Geert Wilders in the Netherlands and Javier Milei in Argentina. Sweden has lurched to the right; Germanyâs far-right AfD party is surging in the polls. All these movements have one thing in common: âcontempt for elitesâ.
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Thatâs why I find Joe Bidenâs re-election so hard to imagine. He is âthe incumbent of all incumbentsâ â a creature of Washington who first became a senator in 1972. His key argument is that Trump is âtoo big a risk to takeâ. But how is that argument working out? Impeachments and indictments have strengthened the Republican frontrunner, not weakened him. And voters across the world are ârushing towards the risky candidates, not away from themâ. Now, personally, Iâd never vote for Trump. But I understand the ârageâ people feel against progressive elites, with their âindifference to crimeâ, their hatred of Western civilisation, âtheir piety and certainty and smugnessâ. That rage is âdestroying incumbents the world overâ. Joseph Robinette Biden Jr doesnât seem like the one to buck the trend.
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This BBC report from 1977 investigates the âfastest-growing crazeâ among youngsters in the UK: skateboarding. The video shows whippersnappers whizzing around on Londonâs South Bank, an area which still serves as a skatepark today. The voiceover describes the US import as âa kind of cross between surf-riding and roller skating, and with no less potential for the individual to show off all his artistry and skill â or lack of itâ. Watch the whole clip here.
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ToupĂ©es are undergoing a renaissance among younger men, says Vice. Businesses in the UK and US are reporting a âsurge in interestâ for the humble hairpieces, and TikTok is full of videos of âmiraculousâ before-and-after transformations. One reason is that the quality of toupĂ©es has improved significantly. You can treat them âpretty much like normal hairâ: washing them, styling them, even swimming in them. Of course, âitâs fine to be baldâ. But itâs nice to have options, and the toupĂ©e âmight be as good as anyâ.
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Itâs an unexploded bomb which has been sitting in a Welsh coupleâs garden for more than 100 years. Owner Sian Edwards says she used to bang her trowel against it to remove soil while gardening, believing it to be a âdummyâ device with no charge. Last week, a police officer informed her he had spotted the bomb and would have to inform the Ministry of Defence. The following day, the bomb squad turned up, discovered it was âliveâ, took it to a nearby quarry, and blew it up. |
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âIf one cannot command attention by oneâs admirable qualities one can at least be a nuisance.â Crime writer Margery Allingham |
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Thatâs it. Youâre done. |
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