गुरुवार, 30 अप्रैल 2020
Covid-19 effect: Reliance Industries to cut pay, defer bonuses for hydrocarbon biz staff
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Rishi Kapoor: A ‘lovely lover’ who was destined to be a star
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India to roll out scheme to woo MNCs to relocate from China
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RIL’s Q4 net profits down 37.2%; misses estimates to carve out O2C business
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Why extending lockdown could be catastrophic
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Coronavirus crisis: India simply can’t afford another lockdown extension
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Focus should be to improve self-reliance in mineral production: PM Modi
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Australia plots return of sport as spread of coronavirus slows
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Most of U.S. House urges more diplomacy at U.N. to renew Iran arms embargo: sources
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Coronavirus: Armed protesters enter Michigan statehouse
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Nigerian drummer Tony Allen dies aged 79
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Coronavirus: 'We go hungry so we can feed our children'
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Ramadan and Coronavirus: Breaking my fast on Zoom
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Quiz of the Week: On UFOs, lockdown loosening and more
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Coronavirus: What it's like to be shielding in your twenties
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Nordic Islands seen in their 'surreal light'
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Coronavirus: When your child's in intensive care with Covid-19
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Coronavirus: Three continents, four lives, one day
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Coronavirus: 'Many said goodbye to loved ones in an ambulance'
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How The Assistant exposes Hollywood's abuse silence
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The worldwide race to make solar power more efficient
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‘Justice not charity’ - the blind marchers who made history
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Lockdown homeschooling: The parents who have forgotten what they learned at school
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बुधवार, 29 अप्रैल 2020
Irish government talks may drift into June: Fianna Fail leader
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Coronavirus kills 70 veterans at Massachusetts care home
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Irrfan Khan: The Bollywood star loved by Hollywood
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Coronavirus: Searching for truth behind Spain's care home tragedy
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Coronavirus: Japan's low testing rate raises questions
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Training AI 'to translate mum's phone messages'
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Staging a 'socially distanced' boxing match
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Coronavirus: Why the fashion industry faces an 'existential crisis'
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Coronavirus: Why so many US nurses are out of work
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How will airlines get flying again?
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Coronavirus R0: Is this the crucial number?
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Will thermal cameras help to end the lockdown?
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Coronavirus: Madrid's balcony cinema screens films for people in lockdown
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'We'll starve to death if this continues'
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In pictures: Iranian embassy siege in London
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An unlikely coronavirus hotspot in forgotten US corner
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Coronavirus: How does contact tracing work and is my data safe?
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Boris Johnson, Carrie Symonds, and a baby in a very exclusive club
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Coronavirus: Searching for truth behind Spain's care home tragedy
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Coronavirus: Japan's low testing rate raises questions
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How will airlines get flying again?
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Coronavirus: Why the fashion industry faces an 'existential crisis'
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Despite Unleashing COVID-19, Expert Predicts China Could Emerge from Pandemic with Even Stronger Hold on Other Nations
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मंगलवार, 28 अप्रैल 2020
Bill Gates Dismisses Chinese Coronavirus Coverup: ‘It’s Not Even Time for That Discussion’
Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates called allegations that China cost the world valuable time by covering up the origins of the Wuhan coronavirus a “distraction” in an interview Sunday, adding that “China did a lot of things right at the beginning.”Speaking to CNN’s Fareed Zakaria on Sunday, Gates pushed back on criticism of Beijing’s initial response, saying “I don’t think that’s a timely thing, because it doesn’t affect how we act today.”“It’s not time to talk about that, this is the time to take the great science we have, the fact that we’re in this together, fix testing, treatments, and get that vaccine, and minimize the trillions of dollars and many things that you can’t even dimensionalize in economic terms that are awful, about the situation that we’re in,” Gates stated. “So that’s a distraction, I think there’s a lot of incorrect and unfair things said, but it’s not even time for that discussion.”> The challenges of fighting Covid-19 in developing countries, how China and the WHO have handled this crisis, and what to make of wild coronavirus conspiracy theories. Pt. 3 of my GPS interview w/ @BillGates: pic.twitter.com/QJJuAR52SM> > -- Fareed Zakaria (@FareedZakaria) April 26, 2020A detailed timeline of Beijing’s response to the virus’s origins in Wuhan shows that the government gagged the spread of information about the virus for weeks after it had first been noticed, with health officials being warned privately of “a major public health event” nearly a week before the public was alerted to the threat.U.S. intelligence believes that China purposefully misled the global community on the extent of its coronavirus outbreak, with one study finding that the government could have prevented 95 percent of coronavirus infections if it had acted sooner to stem the initial outbreak. Last week, the head of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention admitted to state media that the government “knew there must be human-to-human transmission” of the novel virus, despite his organization saying January 15 that “the risk of sustained human-to-human transmission is low.”When asked about the World Health Organization’s culpability on Sunday, Gates said “basically no,” pushing back on President Trump’s claim that the organization is “very China-centric.”“In the retrospective, we’ll see things the WHO could have done better, just like every actor in this whole picture, but the WHO has a strong connection with one country. That country is the United States,” Gates stated. He went on to call the WHO a “phenomenal organization that we’re more dependent on today, to drive things, than we ever have been.”
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Trump ‘can't imagine why’ there are increased reports of people misusing disinfectants
Summer sowing in Gujarat surges 140%
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Axis Bank sets aside Rs 3,000 crore for COVID-19 impact
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India’s only UV lamp makers flooded with orders amid Coronavirus outbreak
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TLTRO 2.0 needs to be open-ended and on-tap with change in structure
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पहली बार वुहान की लैब ने दावे किए खारिज, कहा- हमारे पास वायरस बनाने की क्षमता नहीं
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टेस्ट किट बनाने के मामले में मई 2020 तक आत्मनिर्भर हो जाएगा देश: डॉ. हर्षवर्धन
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Nova Scotia gunman killed 9 of his 22 victims by setting fire to their houses, police say
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Pompeo says U.S. 'concerned' over south Yemen separatist self-rule declaration
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Coronavirus: 98-year-old doctor working through the lockdown
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Refugee camp image wins food photo contest
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Coronavirus: Lockdown on a deserted Australian Island
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The trees that survived the bombing of Hiroshima
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Coronavirus: This is what reopening in US looks like
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Coronavirus: 'My cafe's going bust before it's even opened'
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Coronavirus: Wild animals enjoy freedom of a quieter world
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'I wanted doors I could slam': Growing up in a see-through house
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Coronavirus: Two million Bangladesh jobs 'at risk' as clothes orders dry up
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The Valentine's Day snake puzzle
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India coronavirus: The man giving dignified burial to Covid-19 victims
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Coronavirus: Transgender people 'extremely vulnerable' during lockdown
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सोमवार, 27 अप्रैल 2020
A couple returning to New Zealand from overseas documented each day of their government-enforced coronavirus quarantine, which included a 4-star hotel, daily supervised walks, and gourmet meals
Trump abandons 'enemy' media briefings -- then comes right back
President Donald Trump was so angry at the media, and so sore from ridicule over his suggestion that coronavirus patients be injected with disinfectant, that he abandoned his daily briefing Monday. In a confusing series of announcements, the White House scheduled a press conference with Trump for Monday afternoon. In the end, Trump held forth in the Rose Garden.
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Kim Jong-un's train spotted at North Korea coastal resort amid conflicting rumours over health
A special train believed to belong to Kim Jong-un, the North Korean leader, was spotted this week at a coastal resort, boosting speculation that he may be staying there while being treated for reported health problems. Satellite images reviewed by the Washington-based North Korea monitoring project 38 North, appeared to show that a train similar to Kim’s was parked in the so-called “leadership station” – reserved for the use of the Kim family - in Wonsan, on the east coast, on April 21 and 23. The report comes amid wildly varying rumours that Kim, said to be 36, recently had cardiovascular surgery and was either recovering or possibly in “grave danger.” Worst case scenarios have been played down this week by the South Korean government – who noted no unusual activity in North Korea - and Donald Trump, the US president. China has dispatched a team to North Korea including medical experts to advise on Kim, three people familiar with the situation told Reuters. “The train’s presence does not prove the whereabouts of the North Korean leader or indicate anything about his health but it does lend weight to reports that Kim is staying at an elite area on the country’s eastern coast,” 38 North said on Saturday. The group revealed that the luxury Wonsan complex includes nine large guesthouses, a protected port, shooting range, recreation building and a covered dock that is believed to be used for Kim’s mega yacht. A nearby small runway had been converted into a horse-riding track to match Kim’s latest hobby. If confirmed, the ability of Kim to travel around the country on his train might suggest that he is recuperating from illness rather than in a life-threatening condition. Dong-a-Ilbo, a South Korean newspaper, cited a US official in Washington saying the leader had been seen walking around in Wonsan. "There is a lot we don't know about Kim Jong-un, but the one thing we do know is that he is dangerously overweight and unhealthy," said Richard McGregor, senior fellow with Australian think tank the Lowy Institute. "The Chinese would have been keen to send in a medical team, if for no other reason than to gather intelligence. "The North Koreans are very suspicious of China and they are often as much in the dark on elite leadership developments as anyone else." Kim’s location and health condition has been the subject of heated speculation since he failed to show up at events to celebrate the anniversary of the birthday of North Korean founding father, and his grandfather - Kim Il-sung on April 15. Since he came to power in 2011, Kim has not missed the celebration of the Day of the Sun, one of the most important national holidays of the year. Rumours he had missed the event for health reasons were kicked off by The Daily NK, a new site founded by South Korean human rights and democracy activists, which cited an anonymous source as saying that Kim had undergone a “cardiovascular surgical procedure” on April 12 and was mostly recovered. This was followed by a more alarming claim by an unnamed US official who told CNN that the US was “monitoring intelligence” that the North Korean leader was in “grave danger” following a surgery. President Trump later accused CNN of making the report up, but Robert O’Brien, the US national security adviser, confirmed that Washington is "keeping a close eye" on reports regarding Kim’s health.
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Joe Manganiello looks like a completely different person without his beard — no, seriously
Mitch McConnell's state bankruptcy idea may be 'dumb' but it isn't stupid
If Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) manages to block aid to state and local governments in the next coronavirus relief bill, one result would be longer and deeper financial pain for the U.S., The Washington Post reports. And McConnell's idea that states should be allowed to declare bankruptcy makes no sense and would hurt everyone, Josh Barro explains at New York. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) described McConnell's bankruptcy idea as "one of the really dumb ideas of all time."State and local governments employ 13 percent of the U.S. workforce. "Without emergency relief as their revenues crater, state and local governments will not be able to run key programs like unemployment insurance, social services, housing assistance, and small business outreach needed to protect people and businesses in this crisis," tweeted Amy Liu, director of the Brookings Metropolitan Policy Program. An unidentified local government budget expert told the Post: "If you want to send the country into an extended depression, sending state and local governments into bankruptcy is a great way to do it."But "state bankruptcy is not some passing fancy," writes David Frum at The Atlantic. "Republicans have been advancing the idea for more than a decade." And McConnell is trying to use this fiscal crisis — states are projected to lose at least 25 percent of their revenue even as health care, welfare, and unemployment costs shoot up — to make it a reality while he still can.McConnell doesn't represent Kentucky so much as "the richest people in bigger, richer blue states who find it more economical to invest in less expensive small-state races," Frum writes. These wealthy donors want to gut pension funds and enact other fiscal policies anathema to voters in their states. "A federal bankruptcy process for state finances could thus enable wealthy individuals and interest groups in rich states to leverage their clout in the anti-majoritarian federal system to reverse political defeats in the more majoritarian political systems of big, rich states like California, New York, and Illinois," Frum explains. "McConnell gets it. Now you do, too." If not, read more at The Atlantic.More stories from theweek.com Everybody Loves Raymond creator highlights the people who stand behind Trump, literally and awkwardly American optimism is becoming a problem Texas governor says some nonessential businesses can reopen on Friday
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Use Coronavirus crisis to push reforms: PM Modi tells CMs
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Franklin Templeton AMC is to blame for poor investment choices, not Coronavirus
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Coronavirus: One big weekly shop back in fashion, says Tesco
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Coronavirus: Councils vying for emergency virus cash
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Coronavirus: Hardship payment for dairy farmers considered
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Ethereal image of Cosmos flowers wins photo competition
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Coronavirus: Families foster pets during outbreak
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Coronavirus: What Trump voters think of his handling of crisis
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Coronavirus: Florida pastor continues in-person services
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Coronavirus immunity: Can you catch it twice?
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The Uber driver evicted from home and left to die of coronavirus
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TV in lockdown: How shows are coping without a studio audience
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Coronavirus: Why are people still flying into the UK? And other questions
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Coronavirus doctor's diary: 'We aren't diagnosing many cancers now'
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Coronavirus: 'I returned my suits and spent £100 on loungewear’
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Stressed firms look for better ways to source products
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Burgers, fries and coffee: New Zealanders rush for fast food as lockdown eases
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Trump says he has good idea how North Korea's Kim is doing; 'I hope he's fine'
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रविवार, 26 अप्रैल 2020
Mexico returns Central Americans, empties migrant centers
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Saudi Arabia bans flogging as a punishment after human rights activist dies in detention
Saudi Arabia has abolished flogging as a punishment, the state human rights commission said on Saturday hailing a "major step forward" in the reform programme launched by the king and his powerful son, days after a human rights activist died in custody. Court-ordered floggings in Saudi Arabia - sometimes extending to hundreds of lashes - have long drawn condemnation from human rights groups. But they say the headline legal reforms overseen by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman have brought no let-up in the conservative Islamic kingdom's crushing of dissent, including through the use of the death penalty. The state human rights commission said that the latest reform, which was reported by Saudi media including the pro-government Okaz newspaper, would ensure that no more convicts were sentenced to flogging. "This decision guarantees that convicts who would previously have been sentenced to the lash will from now on receive fines or prison terms instead," its chairman, Awad al-Awad, said.
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Fact check: Hospitals get paid more if patients listed as COVID-19, on ventilators
Nearly 150 total coronavirus cases confirmed on cruise ship in Japan
Nearly 150 cases of coronavirus infection have been confirmed among crew members of an Italian cruise ship docked in Japan after health authorities finished testing everyone on board, an official said on Saturday. The Nagasaki prefecture official said 57 more crew had tested positive, bringing the total infections on board the Costa Atlantica to 148, roughly one quarter of the vessel's 623 crew members. Authorities began testing after one crew member tested positive for the virus earlier this week.
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A pastor and protester clashed over coronavirus restrictions. One was arrested
America Can’t Face China Alone
You can’t beat something with nothing. But America seems determined to try.America’s attempt to integrate China into the global economy as a “responsible stakeholder” failed. China’s economy has become more statist, its political system more repressive, its foreign policy more bullying, its ambitions more outsized than they were 20 years ago. China did not challenge American leadership directly. It altered the character of international institutions from within.The multilateral institutions that comprise the American-led liberal international order have been decaying for some time. Coronavirus has accelerated the deterioration. NATO, the United Nations, the European Union, the World Trade Organization, the World Health Organization — they are unresponsive, unaccountable, divided, demoralized, defunct. The world is a more dangerous place.We are used to autocratic domination of the U.N. General Assembly and the secretariat’s various commissions. No one bats an eye when Russia or China vetoes a Security Council measure. Less publicized were the concessions made to China as part of the Paris Climate Accord. Or the fact that the World Trade Organization treats the world’s second-largest economy as a “developing” nation. But the way Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the director of the WHO, caviled and covered for Beijing as the coronavirus spread throughout the world is impossible to ignore. Drift, confusion, and chaos result.There are three options. The first is to work within the system to revitalize the existing structures. The second is to build alternative institutions. The third option is to do nothing.President Trump has tried a hybrid of options one and three. But with a twist. Where others might try a kind word or some quiet diplomacy to inspire reform and collaboration, he turns against the very institutions America created to force them to live up to their commitments. He browbeats NATO members into spending more on defense. He cheers for Brexit and supports the EU’s internal critics. He cripples the WTO’s arbitration mechanism and threatens to withdraw entirely. He suspends funding for the WHO.It’s the “America First” foreign policy Trump promised. And the results have been mixed. NAFTA was replaced. NATO budgets are up (for now). Mexico agreed to have asylum-seekers wait on its side of the border while their claims are adjudicated. China signed a “Phase One” trade deal.But there’s a cost. Allies may accede to your demands, but resentment builds. The foundations of the alliance weaken. Unpredictability inspires fear and caution. If sustained for too long, though, it conveys irresoluteness and fecklessness. Adversaries begin to probe. They buzz flights and collapse the oil price, resume shelling U.S. troops and harassing U.S. naval vessels, begin tailing container ships in the South China Sea.The democracies look inward. NATO is silent, the EU split, America distracted and distressed. China exploited this strategic vacuum. It launched a global disinformation campaign falsely assigning responsibility for the pandemic to the United States. Its agents pushed scurrilous and panic-inducing messages to U.S. cellphones saying that President Trump was about to impose a national lockdown policed by the National Guard. Its diplomatic “Wolf Warriors“ enforce the party line whenever foreign governments challenge Beijing’s preferred narrative.Chinese propaganda used to amplify achievements and repress criticism. Now it attacks directly overseas enemies of the state. The strategy, writes Laura Rosenberger in Foreign Affairs, “aims not so much to promote a particular idea as to sow doubt, dissension, and disarray — including among Americans — in order to undermine public confidence in information and prevent any common understanding of facts from taking hold.” It’s working.China isn’t invincible. It is reaping the economic whirlwind of the coronavirus it hid from the world. None of its neighbors are thrilled about the growth of Chinese power. Its internal political situation may be unstable. But the speed with which it has used the pandemic for geopolitical advantage is extraordinary. Look at how it plays favorites with its distribution of pharmaceuticals and personal protective equipment, how it stepped into the breach with a new flow of cash for its friend Dr. Tedros. Confronting China’s rise requires “a common understanding of facts,” and partners with whom to share those facts in common. These days, America is lacking in both.By all means, punish the World Health Organization for collaborating with China. But also be prepared to stand up another mechanism to do the good work its founders intended. Go ahead, demand allies live up to their commitments. But also recognize that partnerships of like-minded nations were critical to success in the First Cold War. This is the time to build new institutions that reflect the realities of a 21st century that pits liberal democracies against an authoritarian surveillance state. For every moment that passes without American leadership brings us closer to a world where the sun never sets on the five golden stars.
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Saudi eases coronavirus curfews, keeps 24-hour curfew in Mecca
Saudi Arabia eased curfews on Sunday across the country but kept 24-hour lockdowns in place in the city of Mecca and neighbourhoods previously put in isolation to curb the spread of the new coronavirus, state news agency SPA said. Outside Mecca and lockdown areas, curfews will be eased between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. (0600-1400 GMT) until May 13.
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German Coronavirus Deaths Climb to 5,723 With 148 New Fatalities
(Bloomberg) -- The number of new coronavirus deaths and confirmed cases in Germany slowed, with fatalities dropping to the lowest in five days.Deaths rose by 148 to 5,723 in the 24 hours through Saturday morning, a smaller increase than Friday’s daily rise of 260, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. There were 1,416 new cases, bringing the total to 154,545, the fourth-highest in Europe.With Spain, Italy and France, the hardest-hit countries in Europe, reporting their fewest deaths in weeks, European governments are considering ways to ease confinement measures that have crushed their economies. Germany has been spared the much higher number of fatalities seen elsewhere in Europe and globally.“Testing is one of the keys to why we have been able to come through this crisis in relatively good shape until now,” German Health Minister Jens Spahn said Friday on broadcaster ZDF. “We tested very widely from the start and therefore had a very early picture of the development in Germany.”For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.comSubscribe now to stay ahead with the most trusted business news source.©2020 Bloomberg L.P.
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How to handle the below job recruiting situation with very slow responding recruiters?
Hey all I need some advice. I am interviewing at a big company. I did 2 phone interviews so far and it felt like they went well. But, the recruiters are SUPER slow and don't respond for long periods at a time and they make incompetent mistakes regularly like scheduling a phone interview at the wrong time. They also took forever to schedule my 2nd phone interview only after I repeated called and emailed them to remind them. Now, I am waiting to hear after the 2nd phone interview for the final round. But, it has been over 2 weeks and no response (the company said they try to respond within 3 business days). I have emailed them and called these recruiters repeatedly but no response. The company website has an application status tab that says my status is under consideration. Additionally, this is a highly competitive company and I don't want to sit and wait and risk losing it because of inaction.
So, I am thinking of reaching out to the hiring manager directly. I found his email by doing an online search. Should I email him? Or will he think its weird that I found his email address online? I could explain that I am unable to get a response from the recruits and given the COVID situation, I decided to reach out directly?
[link] [comments]
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Emerging models: Small firms giving up office space to save rent
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Coronavirus: 'I'm tattooing myself every day in lockdown, but I'm running out of space'
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Coronavirus: 'When will pandemic end?' and other questions from kids
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The boy who photographed La Belle Époque of France
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Coronavirus: The people inspired into making a difference
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Coronavirus: Should maternity and paternity leave be extended?
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Coronavirus: The US resistance to a continued lockdown
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Jack Ma: The billionaire trying to stop coronavirus (and fix China's reputation)
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Coronavirus: Is it too early to expand our 'social bubbles'?
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Coronavirus: A visual guide to the economic impact
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'He said it was the stupidest idea he had ever seen'
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'I feel like I don't count,' says man with MND
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Gruffalo artist Axel Sheffler: 'This was something I could do to help'
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Coronavirus: The struggle of living in lockdown with autism
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शनिवार, 25 अप्रैल 2020
दुनिया में कोरोना लील रहा करोड़ों रोजगार, भारत में 14 करोड़ ने गंवाया काम, यूएस में भी कोहराम
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हॉटस्पॉट : महज एक फीसदी मरीजों की हुई जांच, 11 गुना मिले संक्रमित
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Covid-19: उम्मीद की किरण...जल्द कोरोना संक्रमण से मुक्त हो सकते हैं 16 राज्य
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राहत भरी खबरः पहली व दूसरी स्टेज के कोरोना मरीजों पर आयुष परीक्षण शुरू
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Unprecedented virus lockdown as Muslims mark sombre Ramadan
Mosques stood empty and fast-breaking feasts were cancelled as Muslims around the world began marking Ramadan under coronavirus lockdown on Friday, while a pushback in some countries sparked fears of a surge in infections. Mecca's Grand Mosque, Islam's holiest site, was among those devoid of worshippers as the holy month got under way amid unprecedented bans on family gatherings and mass prayers. A stunning emptiness enveloped the sacred Kaaba -- a large cube-shaped structure in the Grand Mosque towards which Muslims around the world pray -- in the most potent sign of how the daytime fasting month will be a sombre affair across Muslim-majority nations.
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Michigan senator apologizes for wearing Confederate flag face mask
Dale Zorn initially defended his actions, saying it was part of ‘our history’, but eventually apologized after widespread outrageA Republican politician in Michigan has apologized after wearing a face mask that appeared to depict the Confederate flag, an image offensive to many Americans as a symbol of racism and slavery.Michigan state Senator Dale Zorn wore the mask during a Senate vote at the state capitol in Lansing on Friday. He initially defended his actions, saying his wife had made the mask and that it depicted the flag of Tennessee or Kentucky.“I told my wife it probably will raise some eyebrows, but it was not a Confederate flag,” Zorn told Lansing TV station WLNS on Friday.He went on to add: “Even if it was a Confederate flag, you know, we should be talking about teaching our national history in schools and that’s part of our national history and it’s something we can’t just throw away because it is part of our history.”When Zorn was asked what the meaning of the Confederate flag is, he replied “the Confederacy”.> This is Dale Zorn. He is an elected member of the Michigan Senate. He wore a Confederate Flag mask on the floor of the Michigan Senate. Then he tried to tell us he didn't. > > THIS IS MICHIGAN, NOT MISSISSIPPI! > > Get that trash outta here. pic.twitter.com/uTOaBzweTO> > — Bryan Newland (@RealBNewland) April 25, 2020In fact, displaying the Confederate flag, or other symbols of the slave-owning south during the American civil war, is usually seen as racist. While some advocates claim they are celebrating southern identity and heritage, it is widely seen as a racist symbol deeply offensive to black Americans. Nor is it just flags. There is an ongoing campaign to remove Confederate war statues from public display or rename streets and buildings which commemorate Confederate generals or politicians.After sparking widespread outrage, Zorn issued an apology on Saturday.“I’m sorry for my choice of pattern on the face mask I wore yesterday on the Senate floor. I did not intend to offend anyone; however, I realize that I did, and for that I am sorry. Those who know me best know that I do not support the things this pattern represents,” he wrote on Twitter. “My actions were an error in judgment for which there are no excuses and I will learn from this episode.”A spokesperson for Michigan’s senate majority leader, Republican Mike Shirkey, said that Shirkey “would not support or encourage any senator to display an insensitive symbol on the Senate floor”.The leader of the Democrats in the Michigan senate, Jim Ananich, said: “I’m just really disappointed to see him make a choice that is deeply hurtful to so many people. When he was called out for it, he didn’t seem to even understand or acknowledge what the problem was.”Zorn was in Lansing on Friday to vote on measures that would increase oversight of Michigan governor Gretchen Whitmer’s powers during the Covid-19 pandemic.Michigan is one of a number of states that have attracted protests against stay-at-home orders during the pandemic. Zorn said he supported bipartisan oversight of Whitmer’s actions.
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Malaysia Sees 2.4 Billion Ringgit a Day of Losses From Lockdown
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Coronavirus: Ecuador 'victim' found alive in hospital mix-up
A 57-page memo urged GOP campaigns to blame China for the coronavirus pandemic and insist the term 'Chinese virus' isn't racist
Navy admiral advises reinstatement of fired carrier captain
The top Navy officer has recommended the reinstatement of the aircraft carrier captain fired for sending a fraught email to commanders pleading for faster action to protect his crew from a coronavirus outbreak, officials familiar with the investigation said Friday. Adm. Mike Gilday recommended that Navy Capt. Brett Crozier be returned to his ship, said the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the results of an investigation that have not yet been made public. If approved, his recommendation would end a drama that has rocked the Navy leadership, sent thousands of USS Theodore Roosevelt crew members ashore in Guam for quarantine and impacted the fleet across the Pacific, a region critical to America’s national security interests.
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In Albania, Ramadan under lockdown revives memories of communism
Stuck in their Tirana flat under a coronavirus lockdown, 81-year-old Osman Hoxha and his family quietly mark the start of Ramadan, recalling the communist era when practicing religion meant risking death. Like many parts of the world, mosques in Muslim-majority Albania are eerily empty while iftar supper tables have fewer chairs than normal as families shelter at home to curb the spread of the virus. For older generations, the intimate settings inevitably stir up memories of how they were forced to furtively keep their faith alive under the long and brutal reign of the late communist dictator Enver Hoxha, who outlawed religion.
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IMF to Recommend $3.4 Billion Emergency Funding for Nigeria
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Trump needs to 'run very close' for GOP to keep the Senate, Republican consultant warns
It's not shocking that some Republicans are concerned about President Trump's re-election chances next November — polling, while early, suggests he's in for a real fight against former Vice President Joe Biden, and the country's struggles caused by the coronavirus pandemic have cast even greater doubt. But some members of the GOP are also growing more wary of the party's ability to hang on to the Senate, The New York Times reports.Recent surveys showed Republican senators in Arizona, Colorado, North Carolina, and Maine are vulnerable. If those seats are lost and the other 96 remain steady, Democrats would gain control of the upper chamber. Republicans could gain a seat back in Alabama, the Times notes, though if Biden wins the presidency, the pendulum would again swing back to the Democrats.Because those seats are likely tied to Trump's own performance, he'll need to "run very close for us to keep the Senate," Charles Black Jr., a veteran Republican consultant, told the Times. "I've always thought we were favored to, but I can't say that now with all these cards up in the air," he said. Read more at The New York Times.More stories from theweek.com Cuomo says New York's coronavirus situation is back to where it was 21 days ago The president is unwell Trump wants praise for his coronavirus response. Here it is.
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Pelosi says Republicans reject science and governance
In a press conference on Friday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi criticized President Trump’s suggestion that disinfectant could be used to treat the coronavirus, and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s comments that bankruptcy could be an option for states and local governments trying to finance their response to the pandemic. Pelosi said it shows how “Republicans reject science and reject governance."
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