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Home5504 Interesting News

5504 Interesting News

The One November 29, 2024
  • Vienna's social housing, lauded by progressives, pushes out the poor
  • Should investors just give up on stocks outside America?
  • Obituary: Richard Booth died on August 20th
  • Inna Solovyova studied both stagecraft and the Russian soul
  • Latin America
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Chinese firms are expanding in South-East Asia
  • Alex Salmond went from the fringes to the mainstream and back again
  • What would a rout do to the Tories?
  • Which country has the most Olympic medals?
  • Business
  • Two groups are least happy about Labour's budget
  • This week's cover
  • A region that seems unable to reach its potential
  • Myanmar's junta suffers startling defeats
  • The 50 Best Shows on Disney+ Right Now (November 2024)
  • Propane-powered heat pumps are greener
  • Blighty newsletter: The paradox of the House of Lords
  • How many Russian soldiers have died in Ukraine?
  • One way to turbocharge the Chinese economy
  • Can the IMF solve the poor world's debt crisis?
  • Vladimir Putin's spies are plotting global chaos
  • A weakened Narendra Modi subsidises jobs and doles out pork
  • Joe Biden lifts sanctions on Venezuela, but not without conditions
  • The world's most, and least, democratic countries in 2022
  • Crypto cowboys have found paradise in Paraguay
  • A new study finds that 47,000 Russian combatants have died in Ukraine
  • Obituary: Mikis Theodorakis wrote the theme tune of "Zorba the Greek"
  • How the pandemic has upended the lives of working parents
  • Tracking the Ukraine war: where is the latest fighting?
  • Are Canadian cities better than America's?
  • Business
  • When central banks become one-stop policy shops
  • From Taylor Swift to Star Trek, niche cruises are on the rise
  • The bid to make Florida's most famous city a tech hub
  • Business
  • China's last boomtowns show rapid growth is still possible
  • Ex-activist says FBI offered him deal to inform on fugitive arrested in Wales
  • Benjamin Zephaniah stayed angry all his life
  • KAL's cartoon
  • The 19 Best Thanksgiving TV Episodes, Ranked
  • Turkey wants the EU to regulate the döner kebab
  • Australia is trying to ruck China in Papua New Guinea
  • The next threat to commodity supplies will be El Niño
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • South-East Asia learns how to deal with China
  • Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers and Help for Nov. 30, #538
  • A battle is raging over the definition of open-source AI
  • The fight over meat-free meat pits Europe's traditionalists against foodie innovators
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • China and Russia have chilling plans for the Arctic
  • A rare Brexit dividend for British farmers
  • European Gas Prices Trade Slightly Lower on Easing Supply Concerns
  • I Already Have 3 LG TVs, but Black Friday Deals Like These Make Me Want More
  • This Black Friday Meta Quest deal includes a free $75 gift card when you buy the Quest 3S
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • CrowdStrike Raises Outlook, Post Higher Revenue Amid Swing to Loss
  • Politics
  • Paris's stunning vision for the Olympics wins a gold medal
  • A wave of international rule-making threatens Caribbean tax havens
  • India's economic policy will not make it rich
  • Electing top judges has been a disaster in Bolivia
  • How cheap drones are transforming warfare in Ukraine
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Anonymous tipsters, angry at Russia, help detect sanctions-busters
  • What China's graduates really think about their job prospects
  • Can Mytheresa make luxury e-commerce a success?
  • South-East Asia is in the grip of a record-breaking heatwave
  • How much do Palestinians pay to get out of Gaza?
  • Best Black Friday AirPods Deals: AirPods Pro 2 on Sale for $154, and More
  • Britons vote according to feelings of economic security
  • Scientific publishers are producing more papers than ever
  • We're hiring a senior India correspondent
  • The war for AI talent is heating up
  • Ron Galella, the original paparazzo, died on April 30th, aged 91
  • Worldwide covid-19 is causing a new form of collective trauma
  • Foreign judges are fed up with Hong Kong's political environment
  • Study of ChatGPT citations makes dismal reading for publishers
  • How to get kicked out of China's Communist Party
  • Germany's government is barely holding together
  • Nawaz Sharif returns to Pakistan, again
  • We Need a New Right to Repair for Artificial Intelligence
  • Andrés Manuel López Obrador has reduced poverty in Mexico
  • Can whisky conquer Chinese palates?
  • Join Us for the WIRED Big Interview Event
  • Swimming's ruling on transgender women continues a trend
  • As the Nikkei 225 hits record highs, Japan's young start investing
  • America is less dominant in defence spending than you might think
  • An animated documentary tells the story of Amin, an Afghan refugee
  • Renewi Shares Hit Two-Year High on Macquarie Bid
  • How Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva would govern Brazil
  • Delivery Hero's Talabat IPO Priced at Top of Range
  • Buy Now Before Tariffs Hit, Retailers Are Telling Shoppers
  • The world faces its worst trade wars since the 1930s
  • American stocks are consuming global markets
  • Digital nomads are a force for good in Latin America
  • Can a new crew of European commissioners revive the continent?
  • Why southern Europeans will soon be the longest-lived people in the world
  • Obituary: Agnès Varda died on March 29th
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • A surprise new twist in Putin's currency wars
  • As the French hard right triumphs in EU elections, Macron calls snap vote
  • What the Chevron ruling means for the next US president
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The perils of appeasing a warlike Russia
  • How the Chinese state aims to calm the property market
  • Forget The PS5 And Xbox, This Powerful Acer Nitro V Gaming Laptop Is at a Record Low Price
  • Best Noise-Canceling Headphones for 2024
  • Regulators have private markets in their sights
  • Moving weapons around Europe fast is crucial for deterring Russia
  • Ten charts reveal Narendra Modi's actual record in office
  • Just how bad is it in Gaza?
  • The ICJ delivers a stinging rebuke to Israel over the war in Gaza
  • Mourid Barghouti died on February 14th
  • Have McKinsey and its consulting rivals got too big?
  • New technology can keep whales safe from speeding ships
  • India's startups pray for a Hindu super-app
  • How scared is China of Donald Trump's return?
  • Afghans are suffering. Don't expect any tears from the Taliban
  • Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, died on April 9th
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Can Donald Trump's Iron Dome plan keep America safe?
  • Black Friday Is the Day to Buy TVs. I Found These Deals From Sony, LG, Amazon and More
  • Why Kamala Harris has the advantage in debating Donald Trump
  • A row between Turkey and Greece over gas is raising tension in the eastern Mediterranean
  • Ukraine's war has created millions of broken families
  • Obituary: Judith Krantz died on June 22nd
  • Lebanon faces its worst crisis since the end of the civil war
  • Latin America's single mothers are being left behind
  • Can churches fix America's affordable-housing crunch?
  • Paul Alexander lived longer than anyone in an iron lung
  • Should euthanasia be allowed for those with mental illnesses?
  • Gaza is on the brink of a man-made famine
  • Trudeau Goes to Mar-a-Lago to See Trump Amid Tariff Concerns
  • A lot can be done to adapt farming to near-term climate change
  • Where British MPs should look before the vote on assisted dying
  • Pokémon Cards Are Back—No Binders Needed
  • How deep is Britain's fiscal "black hole"?
  • Carbon-dioxide removal needs more attention
  • Hsiao Bi-khim is Taiwan's cat warrior
  • Government action to hold down energy bills will save lives in Europe
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • This week's covers
  • Business
  • This week's covers
  • Russia's brutal mercenaries probably won't matter much in Ukraine
  • Catherine Hamlin died on March 18th
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • How Asia's wild west shakes up the modern world
  • Which will grow faster: India or Indonesia?
  • India's civil society is under attack
  • The one thing Israelis agree on: rescuing the hostages
  • Kung fu gives Africans their kicks
  • KAL's cartoon
  • The PS5 DualSense Controller With Haptic Feedback Is On Sale, Now At A Record Low Price For Black Friday
  • Chile's crisis is not over yet
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Floods in Nigeria's north-east are aggravating a humanitarian crisis
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Two new books explore the impact of accelerating technology
  • Sinn Féin takes narrow lead in Ireland general election exit poll
  • China is backing opposing sides in Myanmar's civil war
  • Checks and Balance newsletter: Choosing party candidates
  • Intel Gets Up to $7.9 Billion Award for U.S. Chip-Plant Construction
  • The weekly cartoon
  • Think Tesla is in trouble? Pity even more its wannabe EV rivals
  • Why so many Chinese graduates cannot find work
  • Phone Maker Xiaomi Made the Car That Apple Couldn't
  • India's difficult business environment is improving
  • Americans are fretting over their body odour
  • This week's covers
  • What's next for Britain and the EU?
  • Ditch Your Screens to End the Global Friendship Recession
  • Ian Hamilton masterminded one of the most daring heists of the last century
  • Most electric-car batteries could soon be made by recycling old ones
  • New industrial policies will make the world more unequal
  • Expensive energy may have killed more Europeans than covid-19 last winter
  • How to send a cake from New Jersey to Accra
  • Why Volodymyr Zelensky may welcome Donald Trump's victory
  • The mysterious middlemen helping Russia's war machine
  • What a takeover offer for 7-Eleven says about business in Japan
  • A new book celebrates Annie Leibovitz's fashion photography
  • China has become a scientific superpower
  • Autherine Lucy was an unlikely pioneer
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Elon Musk is causing problems for the Royal Society
  • Higher fees won't help Britain's beleaguered universities much
  • Are British voters as clueless as Labour's intelligentsia thinks?
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • Philanthropy in Asia is becoming more professional
  • Why fear is sweeping markets everywhere
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Do children in England talk too little?
  • The bunkers on Beirut's golf course are in the crosshairs
  • Haiti's transitional government must take office amid gang warfare
  • The Israel-Iran standoff in maps
  • YouTube in Africa offers a new kind of news
  • What role might Trump give Robert F. Kennedy junior?
  • How Do You Get to Artificial General Intelligence? Think Lighter
  • China's aggression brings Japan and the Philippines closer
  • The Great American Microchip Mobilization
  • A Northern Irish experiment in recycling
  • Climate Change: The Complete WIRED Guide
  • Russia-Ukraine Standoff Over POWs Leaves Thousands Stuck in 'Gray Zone'
  • After pushing its economy to the brink, Egypt gets a bail-out
  • Recent special elections bode well for Democrats
  • How the Trump campaign has become more professional
  • Peng Ming-min fought for the idea of "one China and one Formosa"
  • Why Texas Republicans are souring on crypto
  • The 49 Best Shows on Netflix Right Now (November 2024)
  • Elderly populations mean more government spending
  • Why China banned international adoptions
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Hard-right populists are pushing their way into the mainstream
  • Two new books assess the geopolitical lessons of covid-19
  • Comb-Over No More: Why Men's Hair Transplants Are Flourishing
  • Personal Data Collection: The Complete WIRED Guide
  • The Bay of Bengal should be an economic superpower
  • Mike Sadler guided the first SAS raiders through the North African desert
  • KAL's cartoon
  • In drought-stricken Europe, leaky pipes are worsening the problem
  • After Northvolt's failure, who will make Europe's EV batteries?
  • Babysitting duties are stressing China's grandparents
  • Despite flaws, South Africa's democracy is stronger than its neighbours'
  • Shabana Mahmood, Britain's new Lord Chancellor
  • Machines might not take your job. But they could make it worse
  • A Science Breakthrough Too Good to Be True? It Probably Isn't
  • Chinese weapons are taking over in Africa
  • Rohingya refugees return to the sea
  • Why Iran is hard to intimidate
  • The ticking bomb under Canada's constitution
  • Economically, covid-19 has hit hard-up urbanites hardest
  • European Parliament elections tracker: results and guide to the vote
  • Can anything spark Europe's economy back to life?
  • Firms are exploring sodium batteries as an alternative to lithium
  • Brazil's next president will face a big, tricky in-tray
  • Why Joe Biden won't go
  • Israel bombs the Hamas military mastermind behind the October 7th attack
  • Obituary: Bob Hawke died on May 16th
  • Has Sequoia Capital outgrown its business model?
  • The Mounties take on Modi. Who will win?
  • The race to be Latin America's next top development banker
  • What happens if Ukraine loses?
  • Chinese netizens wonder if their economy is in "garbage time"
  • Damn-Vulnerable-Drone - An Intentionally Vulnerable Drone Hacking Simulator Based On The Popular ArduPilot/MAVLink Architecture, Providing A Realistic Environment For Hands-On Drone Hacking
  • Israel is pushing into southern Gaza as the clock ticks down
  • Ten charts compare Joe Biden's record with Donald Trump's
  • Canadian news organizations sue OpenAI for ChatGPT copyright infringement
  • An anatomy of hard times in the city
  • Researchers are figuring out how large language models work
  • China is sending escapers back to North Korea
  • Lessons in capitalism from Whole Foods and Trader Joe's
  • India's startup scene is picking up speed again
  • Why it's so hard to tell which climate policies actually work
  • In Crimea, Ukraine is beating Russia
  • My F1 critics don't have a title-winning mentality, claims Max Verstappen
  • Gretchen Whitmer would like to be America's first woman president
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Yann Nury's Recipe for a Simple Baked Potato, With a Luxurious Twist
  • Abandoning Ukraine means 'infinitely higher' long-term security costs, MI6 chief says
  • How to build a global business empire in the 21st century
  • Bankers have reason to hope Trump triumphs
  • Elon Musk's Starship reaches orbit on its third attempt
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The meaning of Donald Trump's Supreme Court victory
  • America's allies brace for brinkmanship, deals—and betrayal
  • Covid-19 spurs national plans to give citizens digital identities
  • Hurricane Milton exposes the dangers of Florida's development boom
  • The Belt and Road, as seen from China
  • The Qatar World Cup shows how football is changing
  • Delays on Italy's spruced-up trains have got worse
  • South Africa election poll tracker, results and guide to the parties
  • Bitcoin ETFs are off to a bad start. Will things improve?
  • Andrew Tate's 'Educational Platform' Was Hacked
  • Who owns your genes?
  • Politics
  • The AirFish is a fast ferry that will fly above the waves
  • A reformer wanting a nuclear deal with America wins Iran's election
  • Gene-editing drugs are moving from lab to clinic at lightning speed
  • ABBA return—and pretend no time has passed—with "Voyage"
  • Film-makers are finding horror, not comfort, in the natural world
  • The world is bracing for Donald Trump's possible return
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The European Union will badly miss Angela Merkel
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Has Twitter (now X) become more right-wing?
  • Global shipping costs are returning to pre-pandemic levels
  • Almost one billion doses of covid-19 vaccines have been produced
  • Yes sir: a bizarre initiation ritual for Indonesia's cabinet
  • Hamas's pick of Yahya Sinwar as leader makes a ceasefire less likely
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • When will China's GDP overtake America's?
  • In Xi Jinping's China, central planners rule
  • This week's covers
  • The threat of Hizbullah can be seen from space
  • Humiliated by Azerbaijan, Armenia tacks towards the West
  • Ranajit Guha revolutionised the study of India's past
  • The rival influences of the United States and China
  • How Humor Can Help You Get through Hard Times
  • Female soldiers are changing how armed forces work
  • An unusual museum in China is dedicated to Vinegar Joe
  • The mystery surrounding China's missing defence minister
  • The clues in Kamala Harris's championing of reproductive rights
  • Can the Palestinian Authority be beefed up?
  • Obituary: Sir Roger Scruton died on January 12th
  • Canadian media companies sue OpenAI in case potentially worth billions
  • A Nobel prize in physiology for mRNA vaccines
  • America's realtor racket is alive and kicking
  • YIMBY cities show how to build homes and contain rents
  • How to charge more
  • The global financial system is in danger of fragmenting
  • Amazon Black Friday deals drop the Echo Pop speaker down to only $18
  • Another war could break out on the Israel-Lebanon border
  • 'Inside the Kellyverse': how Paul Kelly's How to Make Gravy became a Christmas film
  • The people of Hong Kong are growing more tolerant
  • "You will always be 0% prepared": Ukraine's refugees on life far from home
  • A new type of jet engine could revive supersonic air travel
  • Key Western Counterterrorism Ally in Africa Cuts Military Ties With France
  • Blighty newsletter: Why Keir Starmer is underwhelming
  • U.K. Spy Chief Urges U.S. Not to Abandon Ukraine
  • Will services make the world rich?
  • Politics
  • Vivian Silver knew no good could ever come of war
  • An enormous—and unexpected—lump of granite has been found on the Moon
  • OPEC heavyweights are cheating on their targets
  • Paula Rego was a painter of rage, longing and loneliness
  • Alternative fund managers are increasingly mainstream
  • Italy's protected sectors need exposure to more competition
  • CloudBrute - Awesome Cloud Enumerator
  • This week's covers
  • What a second Trump presidency will bring
  • Corals are bleaching and dying earlier in the year than ever before
  • 2024 is a giant test of nerves for democracy
  • Vancouver pioneered liberal drug policies. Fentanyl destroyed them
  • After 12 years of blood, Assad's Syria rejoins the Arab League
  • London fashion week first of 'big four' to ban exotic animal skins
  • American veterans now receive absurdly generous benefits
  • Brian Niccol, Starbucks's new CEO, has a "messianic halo"
  • The end of oil, then and now
  • Politics
  • Julian Bream died on August 14th
  • Add December's New Sci-Fi, Fantasy, and Horror Books to Your Reading List
  • Americans' love affair with big cars is killing them
  • China seeks a world order that defers to states and their rulers
  • Ko Jimmy was determined to make Myanmar free
  • China needs foreign workers. So why won't it embrace immigration?
  • How gaga is MAHA?
  • The world divided
  • Why are Arab armed forces so ineffective?
  • Norway's Atlantic salmon risks going the way of the panda
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • A new TB vaccine could save 8.5m lives over the next quarter of a century
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • China unites America and Europe in alarm
  • The downfall of a Philippine mayor may be linked to Chinese gangs
  • Police use of facial recognition in Britain is spreading
  • Brexit is the only big legacy of the 2019-24 parliament
  • A court says Google is a monopolist. Now what?
  • Obituary: Alexei Leonov died on October 11th
  • Amazon Is Offering a Major Price Cut on Philips Hue Smart Light Bulbs for Black Friday (40% Off)
  • How the internet is changing the experience of coming out
  • Qatar's World Cup has seen the biggest upsets in recent history
  • Scientists have found a new kind of magnetic material
  • Ukraine's shock raid deep inside Russia rages on
  • Politics
  • Checks and Balance newsletter: Joe Biden must face the sad truth
  • UN peacekeeping is hamstrung by national rules for its troops
  • Catholic reformers want big changes to a church marred by sex abuse
  • South-East Asian Muslims are incensed by the war in Gaza
  • These are the world's most expensive cities
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Will America's government try to break up Google?
  • A Chinese opera star's ode to Russia—from a Ukrainian bomb site
  • Democrats struggle to limit the loss of black voters in Georgia
  • Dealers are selling war trophies to buy weapons for Ukraine
  • Latin America's left-wing experiment is a warning to the world
  • Climate change is slowing Earth's rotation
  • Putin's plan to dethrone the dollar
  • A dangerous dispute in the Horn of Africa
  • Governments are bigger than ever. They are also more useless
  • A copycat insurrection in Brazil, and its troubling aftermath
  • Could there be a US-Mexico trade war?
  • Why Japan needs more forceful defence
  • The damage done by Russia's hack of Germany's defence ministry
  • What would Robert F. Kennedy junior mean for American health?
  • Ukrainians are settling down in Britain. That creates a problem
  • Brexit makes no sense in a world dominated by Trump. Britain's place is back in the EU | Jonathan Freedland
  • Mexico's mighty diaspora punches below its weight in elections
  • China's government is badgering women to have babies
  • 12 Best Black Friday Sleep Deals for Sleep Lovers
  • KAL's cartoon
  • How Chinese is Shein?
  • TSMC walks a geopolitical tightrope
  • Israel's use of AI in Gaza is coming under closer scrutiny
  • Parents in Britain are getting more government-funded child care
  • Israel's ultra-Orthodox still won't fight, invoking scripture
  • Hispanic men helped propel Donald Trump back to the White House
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • AI's Future and Nvidia's Fortunes Ride on the Race to Pack More Chips Into One Place
  • A new class struggle is brewing in China
  • A 40-year-old nuclear-fusion experiment bows out in style
  • Germany's fractious coalition falls apart—and how!
  • India's Supreme Court refuses to recognise same-sex marriage
  • America's election and Israel's wars reach a crescendo—together
  • The best, and worst, places to live in the Americas
  • A Chinese dispute with the Philippines is a test of America
  • This week's cover
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Six charts help to explain 2024's freakish temperatures
  • Gordon Moore's law was the spur that drove the digital revolution
  • "Making Nice" is a gratifying satire of the internet age
  • Is America's economy heading for a consumer crunch?
  • The plight of Brazil's indigenous groups worsens
  • In the Philippines a decades-long conflict nears its endgame
  • The world's least liveable cities are starting to improve
  • Ishiba Shigeru will become Japan's next prime minister
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Business
  • Some good news about America's fertility problem
  • The growing global movement to restrain house prices
  • How much cash should be removed from the financial system?
  • European millionaires seek a safe harbour from populism
  • Rural white voters in Wisconsin could decide America's election
  • The high-tech race to improve weather forecasting
  • How Ukraine is using AI to fight Russia
  • Why Donald Trump has moved ahead in our election forecast
  • China's missing foreign minister loses his job
  • Would America dare to bring down a Chinese bank?
  • Freeze-dried chromosomes can survive for thousands of years
  • North Korea's hackers are after intel, not just crypto
  • Which cities have the worst overtourism problem?
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Britain's prison service is caught in a doom loop
  • Apple is right not to rush headlong into generative AI
  • Women's football is becoming bigger and better
  • Blighty newsletter: Labour is demolishing the Tories' pet projects
  • Can António Costa make a success of the world's hardest political gig?
  • Brazil's biggest drug gang has gone global
  • The failing ANC is rejected by over half of South Africa
  • Britain's party manifestos lack detail but leave clues
  • America's trustbusters wage war on Apple
  • The lessons of Africa's tax revolts
  • A Russian missile hits a children's hospital in central Kyiv
  • The Republicans' policy platform previews the coming campaign
  • A nationalist effort to rebrand the Chinese dragon
  • Googling Is for Old People. That's a Problem for Google.
  • India tightens the screws on online dissent
  • Politics
  • Israel's truce with Hamas is drawing to a close
  • Sacking Tucker Carlson has put a dent in Fox News's ratings
  • How a tide of tech money is transforming charity
  • Climate change casts a shadow over Britain's biggest food export
  • The covid-19 pandemic will be over by the end of 2021, says Bill Gates
  • Obituary: Paul Volcker died on December 8th
  • Business
  • Vladimir Putin says the world's energy infrastructure is "at risk"
  • New research exposes the role of women in America's slave trade
  • Obituary: Andrew Marshall died on March 26th
  • China's leaders face miserable economic-growth figures
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • 2023 looks set to be a watershed year for the climate
  • The UAE is using a wealth fund to gain diplomatic sway
  • US Senate elections: live results
  • Naval drills in the Indian Ocean give bite to the anti-China "Quad"
  • Voters won't thank Kamala Harris for the state of the economy
  • Adolfo Kaminsky saved thousands of Jews by changing their identities
  • Two elections will attract national interest
  • Justin Schmidt made a lifetime study of insects that attack us
  • How Kristi Noem missed her shot to be vice-president
  • The fight to dethrone the dollar
  • Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer fight for a poundshop presidency
  • Sergei Shoigu's sacking points to yet more attrition in Ukraine
  • Starry new productions show "Macbeth" is the tragedy for our times
  • A flexible patch could help people with voice disorders talk
  • Why the stockmarket is disappearing
  • How to fix Britain's barmy VAT regime
  • Life under the Taliban has hit rock bottom
  • How to harvest moisture from the atmosphere
  • Wind turbines are friendlier to birds than oil-and-gas drilling
  • Going green could bring huge benefits for India's economy
  • A new way to predict ship-killing rogue waves
  • Daniel Ellsberg leaked the Pentagon Papers to try to stop the Vietnam war
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • How successful is egg-freezing at preserving fertility?
  • Four charts that highlight this summer's freakish temperatures
  • Winston Churchill's urinal shows Britain's hang-up with heritage
  • Vast amounts of the world's shipping sails unseen
  • From hypersonic missiles to undersea drones, the PLA is making leaps
  • What police commissioners tell you about the British election
  • The number of American students in China is going up again
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • This week's cover
  • Ginni Thomas, battle-hardened conservative and bugaboo of Democrats
  • Israel has bloodied Hizbullah but is stuck in a war of attrition
  • 5 Best Black Friday Dyson Deals on Cordless Stick Vacuums
  • China is writing the world's technology rules
  • This week's covers
  • Obituary: Sydney Brenner died on April 5th
  • Why economic warfare nearly always misses its target
  • America's growing profits are under threat
  • British lawmakers push forward a divisive bill to legalize assisted dying
  • Why Iranian dissidents love Cyrus, an ancient Persian king
  • The trouble with Elon Musk's robotaxi dream
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • Business
  • Five charts that show why the BJP expects to win India's election
  • India throws another opposition leader in jail as elections loom
  • The bungee-jumping, sandal-clad right-wingers of British politics
  • Can satellite cities help solve Africa's urbanisation challenges?
  • Falafel died on February 14th
  • Ebrahim Raisi was obsessed with the security of the people
  • Florida is the first state to reject an abortion-rights measure
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The envy of the world
  • Politics
  • The false promise of Indonesia's economy
  • Could the Greens become a force in British politics?
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The rebuilding of Berlin's Pergamon Museum is 40 years behind schedule
  • This week's cover
  • Surprising to See the Brand-New Apple Watch Series 10 at Its Lowest Price Yet for Black Friday
  • Xi Jinping is struggling to stamp out graft in the PLA
  • Young collectors are fuelling a boom in Basquiat-backed loans
  • This week's covers
  • Inside Elon Musk's Quest to Beat OpenAI at Its Own Game
  • The Glasgow summit left a huge hole in the world's plans to curb climate change
  • Iris Apfel became a fashion icon in her ninth decade
  • America's political paralysis is complicating its support for Ukraine
  • Why most people regret Brexit
  • Jack Jennings was one of the Allied POWs who built the Burma Railway
  • The Economist's agony uncle returns
  • Japan has a chequered record on climate change
  • Gustavo Petro, Colombia's left-wing president, is floundering
  • What is 5G? The Complete Guide to When, Why, and How
  • David Kirke believed safe sport repressed people's imaginations
  • Japan's economy is stronger than many realise
  • Why the Communist Party fears gay rights
  • The cyberwar in Ukraine is as crucial as the battle in the trenches
  • The war in Sudan, in maps and charts
  • KAL's cartoon
  • The favourite in Indonesia's presidential election has a sordid past
  • A new treatment for Alzheimer's offers hope—but raises questions, too
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  • How China, Russia and Iran are forging closer ties
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
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  • Britain is a home but not a haven for Hong Kongers
  • Why crypto mania is reaching new heights
  • Why a new art gallery in Bangalore is important for Indian science
  • A Wall Street state of mind has captured America
  • Gina Lollobrigida's ambition was her strength and her weakness
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Glenda Jackson left acting for politics—and then returned
  • Why do penguins struggle with modernist architecture?
  • Narendra Modi cuddles up to Vladimir Putin in Moscow
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  • Israel's ground assault hits Gaza's communication network
  • Pelé, king of the beautiful game
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  • Which languages take the longest to learn?
  • Kobe Bryant died on January 26th
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  • Obituary: Jonathan Miller died on November 27th
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  • The year everything (and nothing) changed in the Middle East
  • KAL's cartoon
  • The arrest warrant is a diplomatic disaster for Netanyahu
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  • Baby formulas now share some ingredients with breast milk
  • Donald Trump claims victory
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  • Pedro Sánchez clings to office at a cost to Spain's democracy
  • How Vladimir Putin provokes—and complicates—the struggle against autocracy
  • Citigroup, Wall Street's biggest loser, is at last on the up
  • Will Israel retaliate against Iran, or hold back?
  • The slow death of a Labour buzzword
  • Gary Gensler is the most controversial man in American finance
  • Brazil and Colombia are curbing destruction of Amazon rainforest
  • Lab-grown models of embryos increasingly resemble the real thing
  • The Supreme Court begins another contentious term
  • Britain's government wants bigger pension funds
  • The cautionary tale of Huy Fong's hot sauce
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  • The urgent need to reform political systems
  • Could an "October surprise" upset America's election?
  • Hurricane Helene was America's deadliest storm in nearly two decades
  • Angela who? Merkel's legacy looks increasingly terrible
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  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • What Indian business expects from Modi 3.0
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  • Xbox Black Friday deal: Get the Seagate 2TB expansion card for $200
  • China's persecution of Uyghurs extends to those it once favoured
  • Blighty newsletter: Can Labour fix the British state?
  • This week's covers
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  • Lessons in risk-taking from buccaneering BBVA
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  • The weekly cartoon
  • Calls to boycott the Beijing winter Olympics are growing stronger
  • You Can Still Get 6 Months Free From One of Our Favorite VPN Services with This Black Friday Deal
  • Javier Milei finally lugs key reforms through Argentina's Senate
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  • The Chinese scientist who sequenced covid is barred from his lab
  • Enthusiasm for regulation, often in areas like the climate, shows no sign of flagging
  • Can Narendra Modi complete India's state-building project?
  • Russia's bid to return to the Moon comes to an ignominious end
  • Life After Death: America's Cemeteries Are Rewilding
  • What a Japanese gold mine says about its approach to history
  • Politics
  • Obituary: Charles Van Doren died on April 9th
  • Guatemala's elite may try to scupper the presidential election
  • Who is supplying Russia's arms industry?
  • TikTok CEO Seeks Musk's Counsel on Incoming Trump Administration
  • Environments can affect language—just not how you think
  • A cautionary tale from the streets of San Francisco
  • Yes, That Viral LinkedIn Post You Read Was Probably AI-Generated
  • Loons and the Tory leadership battle in Britain
  • A net-zero world needs new markets and institutions
  • What is ADHD, how do you get a diagnosis and can you only treat it with drugs? All your questions, answered by experts
  • The sorry story of children in care in England
  • Why Japan Inc is no longer in thrall to America
  • Ashok - A OSINT Recon Tool, A.K.A Swiss Army Knife
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  • Returning the Amazon Rainforest to Its True Caretakers
  • Another comeback for China's street merchants
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  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • Politics
  • Finding aliens means studying new sorts of planet
  • The Caribbean is awash with illegal American guns
  • 'We've become an amusement park': the Alaskan town torn apart by cruise ship tourism
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  • Sources and acknowledgments
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  • On screen, Father Christmas cuts a mercurial figure
  • Business
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  • Battles over streaming break out for video games
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  • Democratic states are preparing for Donald Trump's return
  • The foreigners fighting and dying for Vladimir Putin
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  • Checks and Balance: The 50-year plan
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  • The weekly cartoon
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  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The urge to protect
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  • The Mexican Supreme Court does battle with AMLO
  • This week's covers
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  • Checks and Balance newsletter: How to forecast an election in an unpredictable America
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  • Economic data, commodities and markets
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  • Politics overshadows a conference to raise money for Ukraine
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  • Obituary: Jacques Chirac died on September 26th
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  • Trump Disavowed Project 2025 During the Campaign. Not Anymore.
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  • Weak commitments from the G20 cast a shadow over COP26's opening
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  • Economic data, commodities and markets
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  • Hard times for China's micro-industrialists
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  • France's new coalition yanks the country a step to the right
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  • Argentina's presidential election delivers a surprise result
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Some Australians are increasingly sceptical of AUKUS
  • AMLO's dangerous last blast threatens Mexico
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  • Republicans are favoured to win the Senate. What would they do?
  • Steven Spurrier died on March 9th
  • As mass testing ends, how will covid waves be tracked?
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  • Peru's president survives because she's not in charge
  • Many countries are seeing a revival of industrial policy
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  • Why Is It So Tricky to Show the Sun, Earth, and Moon in a Diagram?
  • Keir Starmer wants to reset relations between Britain and Europe
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The forgotten importance of the War of Jenkins' Ear
  • Hulu Black Friday streaming deals discount one year of the Disney+ Hulu bundle to only $36
  • Andrés Manuel López Obrador's mañaneras boost his presidency
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  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • War replaces disease as the world's most newsworthy subject
  • Foreign investors are rejecting Indian stocks
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  • Array Collective, a group from Belfast, wins the Turner prize
  • Energy & Utilities Roundup: Market Talk
  • The Van Gogh Museum showcases a rejected early masterpiece
  • Technology is deepening civilian involvement in war
  • This Website of Old YouTube Clips Feels Like a Gut Punch
  • Educational technology is coming of age during the pandemic
  • Why Yemen's Houthis are attacking ships in the Red Sea
  • This week's cover
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  • The invasion of Ukraine is not the first social media war, but it is the most viral
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  • How China uses UNESCO to rewrite history
  • How plundered Gaulish silver ended up in Roman coins
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  • Ceci n'est pas un divorce: why surging separatism won't break Belgium
  • Birubala Rabha fought to end the stigmatisation of women
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  • This week's covers
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  • The prospect of a Trump presidency looms over Mexico's elections
  • The threat of an Israeli attack is reviving Iranian nationalism
  • Israel's Supreme Court strikes back
  • What Breaking Up Google's Search Monopoly Could Do to AI
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  • The Xi-Putin partnership is not a marriage of convenience
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  • What makes Europe so liveable?
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  • A gigantic landslide shows the limit to how high mountains can grow
  • Bad ideas are back on the menu in the Middle East
  • Argentina clinch the World Cup after beating France on penalties
  • Moderation Is Not the Same Thing as Surrender
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  • What a Deadly Offensive in Syria Means for a Stalled Civil War
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  • After a dramatic week in Gaza, where does the war stand?
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  • Hong Kong Shares End Higher; Auto, Entertainment Stocks Lead Gains
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  • Frontline Formosa
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  • Blighty newsletter: Three (early) observations about Britain's new government
  • Joe Biden quits the race, at last. What's next?
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  • Microsoft at 50: An AI Giant. A Kinder Culture. And Still Hellbent on Domination
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  • The Labour Party's grand bargain with business
  • China tells bankers to be more patriotic
  • How much of a difference will Ukraine's new F-16s make?
  • Singapore's biggest money-laundering case has links to Chinese gamblers
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  • How to manage politics in the workplace
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  • An American rocket has a fine debut; not so the Moon lander on board
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
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  • Vera Putina claimed to be Vladimir Putin's real mother
  • America's crumbling trade initiative in Asia
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  • Joan Didion's radical curiosity
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  • Fathers are doing more child care in East Asia
  • A Sudanese gathering outside the country proposes a third way
  • Small climate projects cannot take the place of all large ones
  • Russia is attacking Ukraine's agricultural exports
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  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
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  • Measures to prevent the spread of covid-19 have also fended off flu
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  • Iran's supreme leader is terrified of people power
  • Yes, That Viral LinkedIn Post You Read Was Probably AI-Generated
  • Could life exist on one of Jupiter's moons?
  • A global recession is not in prospect
  • Research into trans medicine has been manipulated
  • Will artificial intelligence transform school?
  • China's property crisis claims more victims: companies
  • New York Times Says OpenAI Erased Potential Lawsuit Evidence
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Three reasons why oil prices are remarkably stable
  • Taiwan wants to prove that it is serious about defence
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  • Fire TV Stick: Transform your old TV into a Smart TV for just $17 on Black Friday
  • Carbon emissions are dropping—fast—in Europe
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  • More women are getting onto corporate boards. Good
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  • A much-watched poll from Iowa points to a Harris landslide
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  • Republicans ramp up efforts to court Amish voters in Pennsylvania
  • After Shark Tank, Mark Cuban Just Wants to Break Shit—Especially the Prescription Drug Industry
  • Progress on the science of menstruation—at last
  • People are splurging like never before on their pets
  • Governments are finding new ways to squash free expression online
  • Nike and Adidas are losing their lead in running shoes
  • The Future of Online Privacy Hinges on Thousands of New Jersey Cops
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  • "Tariffers" v "traders": the new contest for Donald Trump's ear
  • OpenAI's new fundraising is shaking up Silicon Valley
  • Meet the French oil major that balances growth and greenery
  • Anger abounds as China raises its strikingly low retirement age
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  • The effects on Turkey of Syria's civil war
  • Emmanuel Macron faces heavy losses after a short campaign
  • Always a Girlboss, Never a Tradwife
  • Britain's government is mapping underground cable and pipes
  • Inside the secret oil trade that funds Iran's wars
  • The private-equity industry has a cash problem
  • Thailand's new government is handing out cash
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  • China's relationship with Africa is growing murkier
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Bolivia is on the brink of an economic crisis
  • Vietnam's new ruler: hardman, capitalist, hedonist
  • Black Friday Kindle deals slash $30 off the price of the 2024 Paperwhite
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  • How India's imports of Russian oil have lubricated global markets
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  • How Harry & David Gets 20,000 Tons of Pears to Doorsteps for the Holidays
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  • A bold plan to close the deadly Darién Gap unravels
  • Britain's unusual stance on Chinese electric vehicles
  • Non-white American parents are embracing AI faster than white ones
  • "Homeland economics" will make the world poorer
  • Scientists are learning why ultra-processed foods are bad for you
  • Britain's Labour Party has forgotten how to be nice
  • The fight over one of Britain's last steel plants
  • Takashima Ryosuke is Japan's youngest ever mayor
  • The pandemic may be leading to fewer babies in rich countries
  • A hard-right 28-year-old could soon be France's prime minister
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  • Should women's football have different rules from men's?
  • Why China takes young Tibetans from their families
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  • How China's delivery drivers quietly fight to improve their lot
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  • Your Friends Shape Your Microbiome—and So Do Their Friends
  • To save the Amazon, Lula must work out who owns it
  • Xi Jinping wants to be loved by the global south
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • AI models can improve corner-kick tactics
  • Imagine a Drug That Feels Like Tylenol and Works Like OxyContin
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  • Elinor Otto did not realise what giant strides she was making for women
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  • A new gonorrhoea drug was developed by a non-profit foundation
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  • S&P 500, Dow Notch Records to Cap Best Month of the Year
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  • Nayib Bukele shows how to dismantle a democracy and stay popular
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Vito Is First Pug to Win National Dog Show
  • Health-care reform is upending the lives of China's doctors
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  • Introducing El Boletín, our new weekly newsletter on Latin America
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  • Helen Fisher found out the science behind romance
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  • The Beginning of the End of Big Tech
  • After decades of decline, Poland's population seems to be increasing
  • The narcissism of minor differences, Labour Party edition
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  • As German industry declines, the Ruhr gives hope
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  • Verizon Promo Codes: $540 Off | December 2024
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  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The world's insatiable appetite for Canada's maple syrup
  • This week's covers
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  • Will Donald Trump now pardon the January 6th rioters?
  • Making nickel is a nightmare. Unless you are Indonesian
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  • KAL's cartoon
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  • Israel and Hizbullah strike a fragile deal to end their war
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  • Blighty newsletter: Three takeaways from Starmer's first conference speech as prime minister
  • Africa's surprising new age of rail
  • Microsoft at 50: An AI Giant. A Kinder Culture. And Still Hellbent on Domination
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  • The world is losing the fight against international gangs
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  • What does China's reopening mean for Latin America?
  • Italy starts outsourcing its migrant crisis to Albania
  • Iran's attack has left Israel in a difficult position
  • Politics
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  • India is turning into an SUV country
  • America's elite universities are bloated, complacent and illiberal
  • China unveils its new economic vision
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  • Congo brings back the death penalty
  • Retirement has become much longer across the rich world
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Britain's Labour government has declared war on NIMBYs
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  • Economic data, commodities and markets
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  • Black Friday VPN deals for 2024 include 70 percent off Proton VPN membership plans
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  • This week's cover
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