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8/31/20

The Netherlands: Dutch police arrest over 20 people after overnight rioting in The Hague

Police in the Netherlands have arrested more than 20 people after the second night of riots in The Hague.

Police say that rioters on rooftops and in the streets caused "serious nuisance" and threw eggs, stones and "heavy fireworks" at officers.

There were no immediate reports of injuries but windows on two police vehicles were severely damaged. A garbage container was also set on fire.

 Read more at:
Dutch police arrest over 20 people after overnight rioting in The Hague | Euronews

European Equities Set for Biggest August Gain Since 2009-by jan-Patrick Barnert

European shares closed lower on Monday in the last session of the month, while trading volume was thin as U.K. markets were closed for a public holiday.

Read more at: https://www.bloombergquint.com/markets/european-equities-start-the-week-with-gains-suez-surges
Copyright © BloombergQuint
European shares closed lower on Monday in the last session of the month, while trading volume was thin as U.K. markets were closed for a public holiday.

Read more at: https://www.bloombergquint.com/markets/european-equities-start-the-week-with-gains-suez-surges
Copyright © BloombergQuint
European Equities Set for Biggest August Gain Since 2009 -

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European Equities Set for Biggest August Gain Since 2009

Middle East: After S-400, Turkey Looks At Russian Su-35, Su-57 Jets; Is It The End Of NATO?

As reported earlier by Eurasian Times, since 2018, the two NATO allies have been at loggerheads as the US has been pressurizing the Turkish government to cancel the purchases of S-400 systems from Russia. However, Turkey has stood its ground and received its first delivery of the first S-400 batch in July last year and has placed a second order with Russia. 

Now, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been showing increasing interest in the Sukhoi Su-57 fighter jet. Su-57 fighter jet is designed to have supercruise, supermaneuverability, stealth, and advanced avionics to overcome the prior generation fighter aircraft as well as ground and naval defenses.

Read more at: 
After S-400, Turkey Looks At Russian Su-35, Su-57 Jets; Is It The End Of NATO?

Sex offenders: Germany unveils plan to crackdown on child sex offenders

Germany's Justice Ministry has proposed a bill introducing a new crime of "sexualized violence against children" and tougher penalties for sex offenders.

The reason for the new term would be to "clearly describe the injustice of the acts" of sex abuse against children, said Justice Minister Christine Lambrecht, who presented the bill.

Read more at:
Germany unveils plan to crackdown on child sex offenders | News | DW | 31.08.2020

Netherlands: COVID-19 Entry Requirements Travelers Need To Know

The Netherlands is one of the most visited countries in the world  receiving over 17 million annual visitors prior to the pandemic.

The country is now looking to revitalize its tourism sector after being decimated by the coronavirus.

Below,  see link below ,are all the latest COVID-19 entry requirements for the Netherlands and everything you need to know before booking your trip. 

Note EU-Digest: Arriving after 6 pm at Schiphol airport means you can not use or go to the Coronavirus test center, because it is closed from 6pm to 8am. Also wearing face masks, which is obligatory in Public transport, is not required in stores, shops, supermarkets, and restaurants. One local Albert Heijn supermarket we visited  did not even have sanitary disinfectants dispensers, or wipes available for the shoppers entering the supermarket. All by all it seems the Dutch do not have a solid well defined Coronavirus protection system in place.
    

USA: Where did Trumpism come from? – by Sheri Berman

In November the United States will hold its most critical election in generations. The presidency of Donald Trump has revealed and intensified deep problems in American society and democracy. Should Trump and the Republican party emerge victorious, the damage done may well become irreparable.

Understanding how the richest and most powerful country on earth became associated with dysfunction and decline is a crucial task for anyone who cares about the US or the future of democracy. Generally, explanations fall into two camps.

The first is ‘bottom-up’ and focuses on structural economic trends. This approach emphasises how the rising inequality, declining mobility, increasing precarity and growing divergence between dynamic metropolitan and declining rural regions generated by capitalist development over the past decades has changed the preferences and priorities of citizens, leading to dissatisfaction with democracy and support for right-wing populism.

Read more at: Where did Trumpism come from? – Sheri Berman

8/30/20

China-US relations: Trump’s China Sanctions Fail Russian History Test-by Clara Ferreira Marques

The U.S. is deploying its economic weaponry as never before, using unilateral sanctions to punish China for the erosion of Hong Kong's autonomy and its treatment of Uighur minorities in the country's northwest. Western experience with Russia suggests Washington's efforts to force a change of behavior are unlikely to succeed, even if the measures remain in place for years.

Washington blacklisted a powerful Chinese conglomerate and officials over human rights abuses in Xinjiang at the end of July, just as President Donald Trump suggested he would ban popular Chinese-owned video app TikTok. In early August, weeks after Beijing imposed a national security law on Hong Kong, the White House took the most dramatic step of all, targeting the territory’s leader, Carrie Lam, and a handful of others. The Hong Kong Autonomy Act passed by the U.S. in July may expand that group, and target their bankers, too.

The U.S. sanctions machinery has generally been targeted at smaller, rogue states. Not always, though. Russia has been under progressively tougher measures since 2014, following the annexation of Crimea and the downing of a passenger aircraft over Ukraine. The Russian economy, before punitive action, was twice the size of all others under U.S. sanctions combined. Targeting the world’s second-largest economy represents another step up. Still, experience offers some hints of what can be expected.

Read more at:
Trump’s China Sanctions Fail Russian History Test

US Presidential Election - Poll: Biden’s lead over Trump shrinks to 6 points after the RNC — his smallest margin in months

The presidential race between Joe Biden and Donald Trump has tightened after this week’s Republican National Convention, according to a new Yahoo News-YouGov poll, with Biden’s lead shrinking to 6 points — his smallest margin in nearly two months.

The convention appears to have boosted perceptions of Trump’s “strength” and convinced a small number of former Biden supporters to move toward the president. But the unrest in Kenosha, Wis., following the police shooting of Jacob Blake, a major talking point at the RNC, has not had a clear impact on voters’ choices — at least not yet.

For its latest Yahoo News survey, which was conducted from Aug. 27 to Aug. 28, YouGov recontacted respondents who participated in Yahoo News-YouGov poll one month earlier to gauge how the RNC and other events have affected their views.

The poll taken at the end of July showed Biden with a lead of a little less than 9 percentage points. In the new survey, those same registered voters give Biden an edge of just over 6 points (47 percent to 41 percent).

Read more at
New Yahoo News-YouGov Poll: Biden’s lead over Trump shrinks to 6 points after the RNC — his smallest margin in months

8/29/20

France - Tour de France: Late but still going: The strangest Tour de France sets off - By J. Leicester and S. Petrequin

Delayed but alive again and out on French roads, the strangest Tour de France ever set off Saturday in a bubble of anti-COVID protocols to try to keep the 176 riders virus-free for three weeks of racing through the country’s worsening epidemic.

Only after riders peeled off their face masks and pedaled off from the start in the Mediterranean city of Nice, serenaded by a uniformed band playing “La Marseillaise,” did the Tour begin to look like its old, pre-COVID self, immediately delivering thrills and spills as storms made the roads as slippy as ice. 

But with fans kept firmly at arm’s length, told by the government that it was best to stay home and watch the racing on television, the Tour lost much of its festive atmosphere. There was very little of the usual up-close communing between athletes and their adoring public that made the venerable 117-year-old rolling roadshow unique among sports events in more carefree times.

 Read more: 
Late but still going: The strangest Tour de France sets off

China - Netherlands Relations: Free trade and cooperation top Chinese FM Wang Yi's Netherlands visit

Chinese State Council and Foreign Minister Wang Yi on Tuesday called on the Netherlands to jointly defend multilateralism and free trade.Wang made the remarks during a meeting with Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte in The Hague.

Wang said China and the Netherlands enjoy a mutual bilateral relationship on the basis of mutual respect, mutual understanding, openness and mutual trust.

As the coronavirus pandemic is normalized in both countries, China is willing to work with the Dutch government to resume the flow of goods and people so as to make their contribution to global economic recovery.

Faced with the rising challenge of unilateralism, China would like to work the Dutch side to defend multilateralism and free trade and build a community with a shared future for mankind, he added.

Rutte said the Netherlands values the ties with China and is willing to expand cooperation in different areas.

He praised China's efforts in fighting against COVID-19, saying the Dutch side is willing to work with China in respective areas.

Read more at: 
Free trade and cooperation top Chinese FM Wang Yi's Netherlands visit - CGTN

USA: Is the United States on the brink of a revolution?

 Political scientists have historically been bad at foreseeing the most important developments. Few of us guessed the end of the Cold War; almost no one saw the Arab Spring coming.
In defence of my discipline, there is a reason for that.

Before a momentous event occurs, there are numerous possibilities and different ways events can unfold. After it happens, however, it will appear inevitable. And after it happens, we will be very good at explaining why it had to happen.

Very few of us are now predicting the socio-political situation in the United States, which now features an impeachment probe into President Donald Trump, will lead to an uprising.

But after years of teaching on protests, uprisings and revolutions, it seems to me the U.S. is currently showing all the signs political scientists and historians would identify in retrospect as conducive to a revolutionary uprising.

Read more at: 
Is the United States on the brink of a revolution?

Iran - Womens Lib.: Iranian women go online to break silence over sexual abuse

For 14 years, Sara Omatali kept her personal trauma under wraps, unable to speak out about the ordeal she suffered in Tehran in the summer of 2006. The former journalist, who now lives in the United States, was sexually assaulted while interviewing a prominent artist in the Iranian capital. A week ago, she finally decided to break her silence on Twitter.

Omatali is among dozens of Iranian women who have recently taken to social media to denounce the sexual harassment and abuse they suffered. Some have used the #MeToo hashtag, coined in the wake of the Harvey Weinstein scandal.

Read more: 
Iranian women go online to break silence over sexual abuse

Montenegro is heading the same way as Belarus. Not enough is being done to avoid disaster - by Steven Kay

As the situation in Belarus continues to deteriorate, Europe may soon have another electoral crisis at its periphery. In Montenegro, decades of the same man’s rule and widespread discontent is likely soon to be the for electoral fraud. The tiny Western Balkan nation – currently waiting for EU membership to be besto

The West must brace for the expected if they are to prevent another Belarus. With Lukashenko, the strategy of waiting to see how things played out has gone awry. Weak statements immediately following the results allowed the former collective farm manager to believe his position was tenable. It emboldened him to crush opposition, rather than resign himself to the logic of the situation. His contempt for his people – who allegedly voted for him in vast numbers – was chilling. As he dressed himself in combat gear and gave instructions to his police to shoot, the exposure of the depth of his electoral fraud was complete.

Read more at: 
Montenegro is heading the same way as Belarus. Not enough is being done to avoid disaster ǀ View | Euronews

8/28/20

European Cancer statistics: The Netherlands has the third highest incidences of cancer in Europe after Ireland and Denmark

The Netherlands has relatively more cancer cases than any other country in Europe apart from Ireland and Denmark, with colon, melanoma and breast cancer the most common forms of the illness, the Dutch cancer centre IKNL said on Friday.

Cancer of the oesophagus, bladder and lung cancer are also far more prevalent in the Netherlands than in most other European countries, the IKNL said. The data comes from combined Dutch and European sources.

Women in the Netherlands suffer from cancer more often, particularly breast cancer and lung cancer while incidences of prostate cancer among men is also higher than in other European countries. The high incidence rate of lung cancer is down to more women smokers as a result of the ‘early emancipation wave’ of the 1970s,

IKNL cancer specialist Otto Visser told broadcaster NOS. ‘ ‘You can see this in other countries where the emancipation of women started relatively early,’ Visser said. ‘In Denmark many women took up smoking during the 70s and 80s and that country is in the top three.’

 Read more:
The Netherlands has one of the highest incidences of cancer in Europe - DutchNews.nl

USA - March on Washington Thousands gather in D.C. to commemorate historic March on Washington

After a week of protests and outrage over the police shooting of Jacob Blake in Wisconsin, thousands gathered in Washington on Friday to commemorate the historic 1963 March on the U.S. capital.
Civil rights leaders and advocates convened near the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, where Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. delivered his historic "I Have A Dream" address, a vision of racial equality that remains elusive for millions of Americans.

The event, organized by Rev. Al Sharpton's National Action Network under the title Commitment March: Get Your Knee Off Our Necks in recognition of George Floyd, a Black man who died May 25 after a white police officer in Minneapolis, Minn., held a knee to his neck for nearly eight minutes. Floyd's death sparked weeks of sustained protests and unrest across the country.

Read more: Thousands gather in D.C. to commemorate historic March on Washington | CBC News

Turkey: ErdoÄŸan on Mediterranean dispute: 'We will not compromise' - by Koert Debeuf

Turkish president Recep Tayyip ErdoÄŸan is not giving up Turkish claims in the eastern Mediterranean, he said in a fiery speech. "We will not compromise over what belongs to us ...

We are determined to do whatever is necessary," ErdoÄŸan said on Wednesday (26 August) in a speech on the commemoration of an 11th century military victory by Seljuk Turks over the Byzantine empire at Malazgirt.

Read more at: 
ErdoÄŸan on Mediterranean dispute: 'We will not compromise'

US Presidential elections: Foreign observers can flag unethical voting practices - by Markos Kounalakis

Authoritarian nations, semi-legitimated dictatorships and dying democracies are regularly subjected to international observers whom they grudgingly allow into their countries to monitor elections. The United States sends teams of former government officials and private-sector volunteers around the world to certify —and sometimes condemn — electionpractices and results. They bear witness to vote tampering, citizen intimidation, ballot stuffing, polling place irregularities and outright
stolen elections. They also often get to watch inspiring people power and real democracy at work.

It’s now America’s turn.

his year, the global democratic community needs to gear up and step in to oversee, monitor and judge the fairness of November’s U.S. presidential election. Germany, Sweden,Japan, India, Australia, Canada, Costa Rica, Chile, Ethiopia, Tunisia, Israel, and other nations all need to up their game. They should immediately train and send new volunteers to conduct sweeping election monitoring across America, mostly in tough battleground states.

The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) already has a 500-person delegation slated to monitor America’s process. It should crank up those numbers significantly, especially since OSCE recently raised concerns around November’s “most challenging” election.

Read more at:
https://www.miamiherald.com/opinion/op ed/article245309125.html?fbclid=IwAR3Nxc7YDGeEPKftVEKi5N4wmm4BvUh-YktK2UEB7LcZR7S0yXpwxJfRF88

8/27/20

Capitalism: if it can still be revived, needs a complete overhaul

Capitalism’s failures arise from two of its defining elements. The first is perpetual growth. Economic growth is the aggregate effect of the quest to accumulate capital and extract profit. Capitalism collapses without growth, yet perpetual growth on a finite planet leads inexorably to environmental calamity.

 Those who defend capitalism argue that, as consumption switches from goods to services, economic growth can be decoupled from the use of material resources. A paper in the journal New Political Economy, by Jason Hickel and Giorgos Kallis, examined this premise. They found that while some relative decoupling took place in the 20th century (material resource consumption grew, but not as quickly as economic growth), in the 21st century there has been a recoupling: rising resource consumption has so far matched or exceeded the rate of economic growth. The absolute decoupling needed to avert environmental catastrophe (a reduction in material resource use) has never been achieved, and appears impossible while economic growth continues. Green growth is an illusion.

A system based on perpetual growth cannot function without peripheries and externalities. There must always be an extraction zone – from which materials are taken without full payment – and a disposal zone, where costs are dumped in the form of waste and pollution. As the scale of economic activity increases until capitalism affects everything, from the atmosphere to the deep ocean floor, the entire planet becomes a sacrifice zone: we all inhabit the periphery of the profit-making machine.
This drives us towards cataclysm on such a scale that most people have no means of imagining it. The threatened collapse of our life-support systems is bigger by far than war, famine, pestilence or economic crisis, though it is likely to incorporate all four. Societies can recover from these apocalyptic events, but not from the loss of soil, an abundant biosphere and a habitable climate.

There is no going back: the alternative to capitalism is neither feudalism nor state communism. Soviet communism had more in common with capitalism than the advocates of either system would care to admit. Both systems are (or were) obsessed with generating economic growth. Both are willing to inflict astonishing levels of harm in pursuit of this and other ends. Both promised a future in which we would need to work for only a few hours a week, but instead demand endless, brutal labour. Both are dehumanising. Both are absolutist, insisting that theirs and theirs alone is the one true God.

From March to June 2020, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos saw his wealth rise by an estimated $48 billion. The journal might also have added that 40 million workers had filed for unemployment compensation and that prison labor was being paid $1 per hour to fight deadly forest fires in California.

Bezos describes his strategy similarly, asserting that “the stronger our market leadership, the more powerful our economic model…we will make bold rather than timid investment decisions where we see a sufficient probability of gaining market leadership advantages.” Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has conveyed the same approach, but more to-the-point; for many years, he allegedly ended staff meetings shouting, “Domination!”

The cliché is that we are all in this together. This is so only in the sense that some of us own luxury yachts capacious enough to hold luxury lifeboats while the bottom third clings to leaky life preservers. The mortgages of even many middle-class citizens are soon to be underwater.

What does it mean to have wealth approaching six-figure billions? Sen. Everett Dirksen once famously quipped “a billion here and a billion there and pretty soon you are talking real money.” It is helpful to translate these highly abstract big numbers into the real goods and services one could command with this money.

A state-of-the-art naval destroyer costs about one billion, about the cost of an NBA franchise. One can add a few luxury homes and still have spent only a small fraction of one’s wealth. Clearly possession of an ever-growing stream of goods seems to be an unlikely motivator of the mega wealthy.

During the pandemic, as during the world finance crisis, power has been both the means and the end of domestic and international economic policy. During the early stages of the global economic crisis, government responded by creating a $700 billion facility to purchase troubled assets from banks, but only about 10 percent of these expenditures went to lowering mortgage interest rates.

Federal Reserve treatment of the big finance center banks was much more generous. It lowered the interest rate charged member banks to near zero, a figure it held for almost a decade. The effects of this policy were not neutral.

Lower rates in the financial sector were supposed to encourage new investment in the real economy but instead did little more than stimulate a bull market in stocks and cheap money to finance stock buybacks and leveraged mergers and acquisitions. (Yves Smith , founder of the blog Naked Capitalism, points out that the only industry for which cheap money is a resource that might encourage further investment is finance. So much for restoring the productivity of main street.)

Monopoly power and concentrated wealth do immense harm to the bottom third of the wealth spectrum. We have returned to Franklin Roosevelt’s one-third of a nation ill-housed, ill-clad, ill-nourished. Late last year The Los Angeles Times reported: “New research establishes that after decades of living longer and longer lives, Americans are dying earlier, cut down increasingly in the prime of life by drug overdoses, suicides, and diseases such as cirrhosis, liver cancer, and obesity… the authors of the new study suggest that the nation’s lifespan reversal is being driven by diseases linked to social and economic privation, a healthcare system with glaring gaps and blind spots, and profound psychological distress.”

So what does a better system look like? There is no complete answer, and it also seems no one person does have. But a rough framework is emerging. Part of it is provided by the ecological civilisation proposed by Jeremy Lent, one of the greatest thinkers of our age. Other elements come from Kate Raworth’s doughnut economics and the environmental thinking of Naomi Klein, Amitav Ghosh, Angaangaq Angakkorsuaq, Raj Patel and Bill McKibben. Part of the answer lies in the notion of “private sufficiency, public luxury”. Another part arises from the creation of a new conception of justice based on this simple principle: every generation, everywhere, shall have an equal right to the enjoyment of natural wealth.

The moral case for egalitarian reforms is overwhelming. Obscene wealth disparities are a product of political and economic power, not virtue or extraordinary talent. On the center Left the most popular proposals are various versions of a wealth tax. Such proposals should surely be part of any reform package.

A wealth tax would begin to redress the damage inflicted by four decades of socialism for the rich. And it should be framed that way in order to counter in advance the inevitable carping that tax reformers are motivated by envy. Nonetheless more needs to be promoted in order to address the causes as well as consequences of this inordinate wealth concentration.

Trying to address wealth inequality without addressing monopoly power is like trying to stop a boat with a hole in the bottom from sinking by bailing out the water, but not plugging up the hole.

In addition, it is essential to develop policies that give working-class citizens more voice in designing the economic instruments that will produce future wealth for us all. Antitrust law, cooperatives, labor rights to organize, and democratization of the Fed would all be parts of such reform packages.

The moral choice seems to be, do we stop life to allow capitalism to continue, or stop capitalism to allow life to continue?

The window of opportunity to make radical changes to the defunct Capitalist system is getting smaller by the day, and if not dealt wih rapidly, is surely to result in civil unrest and violence of which the likes have never been seen before.

EU-Digest

The Netherlands: How the Netherlands got universal health insurance with a private market - "but polls show citizens still find healthcare too costly for the average citizen"

Critics argue that the Netherlands made a mistake in handing over so much of its health care to the private market. Dutch patients face higher financial barriers to care than their peers in more socialized systems, like Germany, Britain, Spain, and spending has accelerated in recent years, trends the critics blame on the privatized market.

The average cost to a Dutch citizen for health insurance is about 1,400 euros, or $1,615, annually. People with lower incomes get additional government assistance to reduce their payments. The government also collects contributions from employers to help fund the insurance scheme and covers the cost for children; revenues are spread among the insurers based on the health status of their customers. Public financing covers about 75 percent of the system’s costs; the insurers have also generally operated as nonprofits.

The benefits are designed to encourage cost-efficient use of medical care by patients. Dutch patients can visit a primary care doctor for free. For a visit to the hospital, they will need to pay toward their deductible. The annual deductible is today capped at €385 ($429), although people can choose to pay a lower monthly premium in exchange for a higher deductible — up to €885 ($980).

That is still well below the typical deductible in America (more than $1,600 on average for workers on their employer’s plan, and many people have a higher deductible than that).

The system has more or less delivered universal coverage. More than 99 percent of Dutch people have insurance; people with conscientious objections are exempted from the mandate to buy insurance.

The system is designed to funnel people with minor problems to a general practitioner to free up the ER for more emergencies. But Dutch patients weren’t thrilled with the idea of the co-ops when they first started nearly 20 years ago, wary about seeing somebody other than their normal physician. 

 Read more at: How the Netherlands got universal health insurance with a private market - Vox

8/26/20

The Netherlands: Coronavirus decimates train travel but there will be more services next year

 Despite the fall in the number of travellers caused by the coronavirus crisis, Dutch rail infrastructure company ProRail is expecting an increase in the number of services in 2021.

Next year railway companies plan to add nearly 2,800 more services – for both goods and passenger trains – taking the total up to 2,172,187. This means more trains on the tracks,

ProRail said, including an additional train between Groningen and Leeuwarden and a night train from Amsterdam to Vienna.

‘These new services have to be scheduled in in such a way that they don’t clash with other services,’ ProRail spokesman Sybren Hazenberg told broadcaster NOS. The new schedule also means existing services will operate faster, Hazenberg said.

 Read more at:
Coronavirus decimates train travel but there will be more services next year - DutchNews.nl

Belarus: How a women's revolution is testing Belarus dictator - by Oleg Sukhov

The largest mass protests in Belarus' history, unfolding right now, could be called a women's revolution.

Events, which have jeopardised dictator-president Alexander Lukashenko's 26-year rule, are being driven by three women, including presidential candidate Svetlana Tikhanovskaya.

Female demonstrators played a crucial role in street protests.
And women with flowers helped pause police brutality.

The protests were triggered by a rigged election on 9 August, in which Lukashenko declared himself the landslide winner.

There is evidence his victory was faked.

And Tikhanovskaya's success - there are signs she won the vote - came as a surprise for the sexist leader.

His election commission, which had shut down all his other opponents, only registered her because Lukashenko did not think a woman posed a threat
.
But against all odds, the 37-year old Tikhanovskaya, the wife of a jailed opposition blogger, galvanised public mutiny.

"She was transformed from an ordinary woman into the symbol of the protest movement," Belarusian journalist Anna Baraban told EUobserver.

Read more at:
How a women's revolution is testing Belarus dictator

The Universe: Could life have started on Mars before coming to Earth? Possibly, new study suggests

How life arose on Earth remains a mystery, though many theories have been proposed. Now a new study by Japanese scientists has reinvigorated the discussion around panspermia: The idea that life may have reached Earth from Mars.

The panspermia hypothesis suggests life may have arisen on another planet, with bacteria travelling through space, hitching a ride on a piece of rock or other means, eventually making its long-distance journey to Earth. Mars is a particularly appealing source, as studies suggest it was once potentially habitable with a large hemispheric ocean.

However, the biggest challenge has been determining if bacteria could survive the harsh interplanetary — or even intergalactic — journey.


Read more at:
Could life have started on Mars before coming to Earth? Possibly, new study suggests | CBC News

USA: the Republican Presidential Convention: Republican Speaker Booted from Convention for Boosting Qanon and "Protocols"

Mary Ann Mendoza, an “angel mom,” was set to speak on Tuesday night. But then she took to Twitter to encourage followers of the QAanon Conspiracy to read a thread about the Rothschilds.

USA - Trumpers: RNC 2020: Stuart Stevens, an ex-GOP operative, on why the party should be burned to the ground

Of all the “Never Trumpers,” Stuart Stevens might be the most interesting.

Stevens is one of the most successful GOP operatives in the last couple of decades. He helped lead several presidential campaigns (notably George W. Bush’s two campaigns and Mitt Romney’s failed bid in 2012) and multiple gubernatorial and congressional races. He’s as seasoned as they come in Republican politics.

But Stevens stands out among Trump’s conservative critics because of his candor about the deeper rot at the core of the GOP. And in a new tell-all book, called It Was All a Lie: How the Republican Party Became Donald Trump, he offers a grand mea culpa for his own role in paving the way for Trumpism. “It is a strange, melancholy feeling to turn sixty-five, and realize that what you have spent a good portion of your life working for and toward was not only meritless but also destructive,” Stevens writes.

Stevens isn’t the only Republican who has criticized the GOP’s capitulation to Trump. He’s part of the Lincoln Project, a group of former Republicans who are spending a ton of money pushing anti-Trump ads. But he is somewhat unique for openly implicating himself and apologizing for his role in the party’s open embrace of nativism and bigotry.

I spoke to Stevens by phone about the story he wanted to tell in this book and why he insists that “Donald Trump did not change the Republican Party as much as he gave the party permission to reveal its true self.” Then we discuss which Republicans, in his words, “bamboozled” him by pretending to care about conservative principles only to toss them out the window the second it was convenient to do so.

Read more at: 
RNC 2020: Stuart Stevens, an ex-GOP operative, on why the party should be burned to the ground - Vox

8/25/20

The Netherlands: Storm Francis poised to hit the Netherlands, winds of up to 80kph expected

Summer storm Francis will hit the Netherlands on Tuesday evening, bringing wind speeds of up to 100 kph at sea, with rain and gales inland, weather bureaus say.

The KNMI meteorological office has issued a code yellow storm warning for coastal areas overnight, saying the wind could reach up to 80kph in the west. In particular strong gusts of wind may bring down trees which have been weakened by the drought, weather bureau Weerplaza said. This is likely to be a particular issue in built-up areas.

Read more at: 
Storm Francis

USA - Coronavirus update: U.S. death toll tops 177,000 as FDA head acknowledges he misspoke on convalescent plasma -

The U.S. death toll from the coronavirus illness COVID-19 climbed above 177,000 on Tuesday, as experts continued to question claims made about the use of convalescent plasma as a treatment for hospitalized COVID-19 patients and a leading government official conceded he misspoke at a Sunday press briefing.

Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Stephen Hahn acknowledged in a tweet posted late Monday that his comment that a study had shown plasma achieving a 35% improvement in survival was inaccurate. Hahn made the comment, accompanied by President Donald Trump, while announcing an emergency-use authorization for convalescent plasma.

Read more at: 
Coronavirus update: U.S. death toll tops 177,000 as FDA head acknowledges he misspoke on convalescent plasma - MarketWatch

Germany: Berlin hospital says Alexei Navalny was likely poisoned

Berlin Charite hospital said in a statement on Monday that its data indicated Alexei Navalny was probably intoxicated by a substance in the cholinesterase inhibitors group of chemicals, but that it had not yet identified a precise substance.

Read more:
Berlin hospital says Alexei Navalny was likely poisoned | News | DW | 25.08.2020

Belarus - Toppling the Lukashenko Dictatorship : activists jailed, country's supreme court rejects election appeal

Belarus jailed two opposition leaders for 10 days on Tuesday as the government pursued a crackdown on the few figures still at large, while schoolteachers led a new protest of thousands against President Alexander Lukashenko.

Despite most major opposition figures being in jail or exile, Lukashenko has so far failed to put down protests against his 26-year-old rule, more than two weeks after an election his opponents say was rigged.

Read more at:Belarus activists jailed, country's supreme court rejects election appeal | CBC News

8/24/20

The Netherlands: Record number of infections in one week in the Netherlands

The Netherlands recorded 574 new coronavirus infections in the last 24 hours, the largest increase since 15 August. Some 3,600 new cases have been reported in the last 7 days.

The Dutch authorities recorded 457 new infections on Sunday and 508 on Saturday. However, the total number of new cases is slowly but surely decreasing: more than 600 cases had been recorded on
15 August.

Read more at: 
Record number of infections in one week in the Netherlands

US Presidency: Trump’s sister says president is a liar with “no principles” in secret recordings.

Maryanne Trump Barry, Donald Trump’s older sister, harshly criticized the president, characterizing him as cruel and a liar who could not be trusted, in a series of recordings secretly made by her niece, Mary L. Trump. The Washington Post was the first outlet to report on the recordings and published them online Saturday night.

Several outlets later said they independently obtained the recordings in which Barry, 84, mocks her 74-year-old brother and strongly criticizes his tenure as president. “His goddamned tweet and the lying, oh, my God,” she says in one of the recordings. “I’m talking too freely, but you know. The change of stories. The lack of preparation. The lying. Holy shit.”

Read more at:
Trump’s sister says president is a liar with “no principles” in secret recordings.

USA: State Department memo warned Senate-approved officials against appearing at partisan events - by NAHAL TOOSI

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s decision to share a message with the Republican National Convention this week is a break from all sorts of norms and precedents designed to keep America’s chief diplomat out of the partisan fray. 

It may also be violating State Department policy he himself approved, according to an email sent by his deputy.

Read more at:
State Department memo warned Senate-approved officials against appearing at partisan events - POLITICO

Republican Convention, Day 1- by Intelligencer Staff

Despite President Trump’s interest in drumming up excitement for his reelection with a crowded, in-person convention in the middle of a pandemic, this year’s RNC is largely virtual. The president appears to be consoling himself by making the event even more “all about Trump”: The party announced there is no 2020 platform, many of the featured speakers are members of his family, and — in a big break with tradition — the president will speak during all four nights. Still, there are a few non-Trump attractions; Monday night’s headliners include Senator Tim Scott, Representative Matt Gaetz, Representative Jim Jordan, and former 

Read more at: 
Republican Convention, Day 1: Live Updates

8/23/20

America's economy just had its worst quarter on record

The US economy contracted at a 32.9% annual rate from April through June, its worst drop on record, the Bureau of Economic Analysis said Thursday.

Read more at:
America's economy just had its worst quarter on record - CNN

Coronavius: Europe can contain virus without second lockdown, says WHO

 It is possible to keep the coronavirus pandemic in check in Europe while also keeping the economy running and an education system in operation, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said on Thursday (20 August).

The WHO European Regional Office is convening a virtual meeting for all 53 countries on re-opening of schools and COVID-19 on 31 August where concrete actions will be discussed to ensure children receive proper education in safe settings.

Such options might include heightened hygiene and physical distancing in school settings for all and the introduction of targeted measures quickly and effectively to suit local circumstances, such as adjusting school schedules and limiting pupil numbers where cases are more widespread.

However, he cautioned that Europe must make sure that it adopts the right public health measures in order to contain the virus while normal life resumes, stressing in particular that the approaching influenza season will increase pressure on healthcare services.

“It is critical that countries monitor flu activity and restore and reinforce routine sentinel surveillance to include both viruses, and that they promote flu vaccination for at-risk groups. This is even more important this year as we need to protect our hospitals and health workforce already coping with COVID-19, from being overwhelmed,” he said.

“This year, even more than previous years, we must support older people to get their flu jab early, in a safe environment”, Kluge stressed.

Read more at: 
Europe can contain virus without second lockdown, says WHO – EURACTIV.com

Qanon Conspiracy: Trump's line on QAnon nonsense goes from bad to worse

After He let that opportunity pass. Trump didn't voice support for the ridiculous conspiracy theory, but he also dodged the question

Donald Trump touted his support last week for a QAnon adherent who won a Republican congressional primary, a reporter asked the president on Friday for his thoughts on the crackpot conspiracy theory. It offered the president a great opportunity to denounce the nonsense publicly..

It was a disappointing response, which he made vastly worse nearly a week later.

Read more at: 
Trump's line on QAnon nonsense goes from bad to worse

Mexico: As COVID-19 deaths surpass 60,000, Mexico hits 'catastrophic scenario' officials warned about

According to figures from the Mexican government, the country has close to 560,000 confirmed cases and this week surpassed 60,000 deaths.

In early June, Deputy Health Minister Hugo Lopez-Gatell had said that reaching 60,000 deaths would represent a "very catastrophic scenario." At the time, the country hd just over 12,500 deaths.

Despite the extent of the crisis, the country has decided not to pursue mass testing. Lopez-Gatell has argued that limited testing and statistical modelling were a more effective and efficient use of resources.

Read more at: 
Mexio: As COVID-19 deaths surpass 60,000, Mexico hits 'catastrophic scenario' officials warned about | CBC News

8/22/20

Germany: Russian dissident Alexei Navalny arrives in Berlin for medical treatment

Navalny is in a coma after a suspected poisoning. Russia gave permission for the NGO to transfer the 44-year-old to the German capital from Siberia on Friday. Initially Russian medical professionals said he was not in a fit state to travel by plane, but relented when the German doctors declared he could be transported.

Navalny will now be treated in Berlin's Charité hospital. German Chancellor Angela Merkel was among those who pushed for a speedy transfer for Navalny to Germany.

Read more at:
Russian dissident Alexei Navalny arrives in Berlin for medical treatment | News | DW | 22.08.2020

8/21/20

Turkey: 'Natural gas find could close Turkey's current account gap'

Friday’s big announcement of a natural gas find in the Turkish Black Sea could eliminate the country’s current account deficit issue, said Turkey’s treasury and finance minister on Friday.

“With the current exploration and potential here, I hope in the coming days we will talk about a current account surplus,” said Berat Albayrak, speaking alongside Energy and Natural Resources Minister Fatih Donmez on the Turkish drill ship Fatih off the Black Sea province of Zonguldak.

The discovery of significant gas resources in the Black Sea could reduce Turkey’s reliance on energy imports, he added.

Some 320 billion cubic meters of natural gas reserves were found after the drill ship Fatih started work on July 20 off the Black Sea coast, as announced Friday by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Read more at:
'Natural gas find could close Turkey's current account gap' | TurkishPress

Russia:Putin critic Navalny hospitalized with suspected poisoning

Alexei Navalny, a prominent Russian opposition leader and vocal critic of Vladimir Putin is in a coma after a suspected poisoning attack.

Read more at:
Putin critic Navalny hospitalized with suspected poisoning | CBC.ca

8/20/20

US COVID-19 response: How miscommunication, selfishness played role

For a century or more, the United States has been a beacon of hope and strength to the rest of the world. But its response to the pandemic, many public health experts say, has been uniquely hapless, ineffective, undisciplined and selfish. By some measures, the United States has handled the health crisis as badly as any country has.

Although the United States represents only 4% of the world’s population, it accounts for a quarter of all COVID-19 cases and 22% of all deaths.

The country whose military and economic might powered a victory in the Second World War, and whose confidence and technological wizardry planted the first human being on the moon, now finds itself as a reverse role model during the worst public health crisis in a century.

“The U.S. response – I exaggerate not – is a textbook example of how to do it wrong,” said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.

To be sure, some American states, particularly in New England, have fared better than others, but that only reflects the disjointed national response, epidemiologists say.

Read more: 
US COVID-19 response: How miscommunication, selfishness played role

The Netherlands:A rise in Covid-19 infections triggers stricter rules in the Netherlands

The number of new coronavirus infections in the Netherlands remainshigh, despite the measures being tightened up earlier this month. Forthis reason, Prime Minister Mark Rutte and Minister Hugo de Jonge announced new restrictions at a press conference held on 18 August 2020.

Read more at: 
A rise in Covid-19 infections triggers stricter rules in the Netherlands | TheMayor.EU

The Netherlans: Dutch economy expected to grow again next year, Covid-19 effects to linger

The Dutch economy will  shrink by 5.1 percent this year, but recovery will start at the end of the year and in 2021 the economy will grow b3.2 percent, according to central planning office CPB's draft-macroeconomic foresight studies. The effects of the Covid-19 crisis will linger, however, with unemployment rising to 7 percent next year.

The CPB expects all parts of the economy to recover somewhat nextyear. Household consumption will decrease by 5.9 percent this year, and increase by 4.1 percent next year. Investments will go from -7.5 percent his year, to plus 4.4 percent next year. Exports will decrease by 5.2 percent this year, but increase by 4.7 percent next year, and imports will go from -3.7 percent this year to plus 5.4 percent in 2021. Government consumption is the only factor that won't see a decrease this year. It is expected to increase by 2.9 percent this year and by 2.0
percent next year.

CPB director Pieter Hasekamp told NOS that the coronavirus blow to the Dutch economy is "unprecedentedly hard" and "largely yet to befelt". "The corona crisis also has major consequences or things that affect the quality of life: we miss celebrating a wedding oranniversary, the theater and concert stages are empty, and there are serious concerns about loneliness in nursing homes."

Read more at: 
Dutch economy expected to grow again next year, Covid-19 effects to linger | NL Times

8/19/20

US Presidential Elections: How anti-Trump Republicans are working to defeat him - by Judy Woodruff:

Last night's Democratic Convention featured Republicans who will vote for Joe Biden in the election, including John Kasich, the former governor of Ohio, and 2016 Republican presidential candidate.

Some Republican groups are going further, supporting a Democratic candidate in ways never seen before.

Read more
How anti-Trump Republicans are working to defeat him | PBS NewsHour

Global Economy: The coronavirus recession is over for the rich, but the working class is far from recovered - by Heather Long

U.S. stocks are hovering near a record high, a stunning comeback since March that underscores the new phase the economy has entered: The wealthy have mostly recovered. The bottom half remain far from it.

This dichotomy is evident in many facets of the economy, especially in employment. Jobs are fully back for the highest wage earners, but fewer than half the jobs lost this spring have returned for those making less than $20 an hour, according to a new labor data analysis by John Friedman, an economics professor at Brown University and co-director of Opportunity Insights.

Though recessions almost always hit lower-wage workers the hardest, the pandemic is causing especially large gaps between rich and poor, and between White and minority households. It is also widening the gap between big and small businesses. Some of the largest companies, such as Nike and Best Buy, are enjoying their highest stock prices ever while many smaller businesses fight for survival.

Read more at:
The coronavirus recession is over for the rich, but the working class is far from recovered - The Washington Post

USA: Joe Biden wins Democratic nomination for presidential polls

Joe Biden wins Democratic nomination for presidential polls 

Read more at:
Joe Biden officially nominated as party's candidate to take on Donald Trump in November race for White House.

Finland:Coronavirus: Finland is stockpiling paracetamol over fears of a second wave

Finland has started stockpiling drugs containing paracetamol and dexamethasone as the country prepares for a second wave of coronavirus, authorities said on Tuesday.

Consumers will be allowed to buy three-months worth of paracetamol and dexamethasone at a time until at least January, the Ministry of Health said, with the aim to "prepare for a possible increase in global demand" during autumn and winter.

Global supplies of paracetamol - commonly used to treat fevers - have been hit after the COVID-19 pandemic prompted some countries, including in China, to cut production.

Read mre at:
Coronavirus: Finland is stockpiling paracetamol over fears of a second wave | Euronews

8/18/20

EU Economy: As eurozone records 3.8% slump ECB chief warns of worse to come

Former ECB president Mario Draghi claimed last year that the majority in favour of further loosening was so large that it was unnecessary even to count the votes. Never mind that the countries opposing the decision hold 56% of the ECB’s paid-in equity capital and account for 60% of eurozone output. Counting their compatriots on the ECB governing council, however, they have only seven out of 25 potential votes (subject to a rotating limitation). Draghi did have a majority, then, but it represented a very clear minority of the ECB’s liable capital. This raises considerable concerns about the governing council’s decision-making process.

Todays head of the ECB Christine Lagarde has warned that the eurozone could be on course for a 15% collapse in output in the second quarter as evidence of the economic toll caused by Covid-19 pandemic started to emerge, with France and Italy falling into recession.

After news that the 19-nation monetary union area had contracted a record 3.8% in the first three months of 2020, Christine Lagarde said much worse was possible in the April to June period, when the impact of lockdown restrictions would be most severe.

 Read more at:

Canada - Covid 19 measures: Why Canada is keeping its international borders shut tight during COVID-19

While many countries are reopening their international borders, Canada continues to keep its doors firmly shut to most foreigners.

Many Canadians applaud the government for its strict travel restrictions, implemented to help stop the spread of COVID-19 in the country.

However, some affected groups — such as the travel industry — have urged Ottawa to relax some restrictions in ways they say would provide minimal risk.

Read more at :
Why Canada is keeping its international borders shut tight during COVID-19 | CBC News

Coronavirus - EU : 19 European countries record high incidence rates as surge continue

More than six months after the World Health Organisation (WHO) declared the COVID-19 outbreak a Public Health Emergency of International Concern, the 14-day incidence rate across Europe is surging again.

 Read more at:
Coronavirus: 19 European countries record high incidence rates as surge continues | Euronews

8/17/20

Belarus: Lukashenko hints at new elections after constitutional change

EU leaders will hold an emergency meeting to discuss their response to the crisis on Wednesday, which could include further sanctions. It is rare that the EU convenes to discuss foreign policy, but European Council President Charles Michel considered the situation in Belarus serious enough to warrant such a meeting.

 Read more at:
Belarus live updates: Lukashenko hints at new elections after constitutional change | News | DW | 17.08.2020

Denmark: What does Denmark’s GDP drop tell us about jobs and the economy?

The Danish economy also shrank, by around 2 percent, in the first quarter of 2020, meaning the country is now technically in a recession.
The latest figures are according to national database Statistics Denmark, and were released last week.

 Read more at
What does Denmark’s GDP drop tell us about jobs and the economy?

8/16/20

US economy: U.S. closes in on something it hasn't done since WWII — borrow more money than it raises

Amid the economic devastation caused by the coronavirus pandemic, the U.S. government is nearing a new — and potentially ominous — fiscal milestone: it will borrow as much or more this year than it raises through taxes and other means.

Read more at: 
U.S. closes in on something it hasn't done since WWII — borrow more money than it raises - MarketWatc

The Netherlands: As coronavirus cases rise, Paris, Madrid and Ibiza are added to Dutch 'no go list'

The Netherlands has placed Paris, Ibiza, Madrid and Brussels on its code orange list of places where all but essential travel is advised against, because of the increase in coronavirus cases.

The French, Spanish and Belgian capitals have been added to the orange list, as have the Balearic islands (include Majorca and Ibiza), and the Spanish provinces of Burgos, Salamanca, Almeria and Navarra.

The French Bouches-du-Rhone region, close to Aix en Provence and Marseille, is also out of bounds.

The ministry says all but essential travel to these places should be avoided and anyone returning to the Netherlands from one of them should go in to quarantine for 14 days. Britain has also been added to the code orange list, but travellers will not have to quarantine on their return to the Netherlands.

Travel advice to the UK has been tightened up as a warning, because the British have introduced quarantine requirements for people from the Netherlands, the foreign ministry said.

Read more at: 
As coronavirus cases rise, Paris, Madrid and Ibiza are added to Dutch 'no go list' - DutchNews.nl

Pollution and the Global Car Market: It’s time to recognise that SUVs are the big bad villains of vehicle air pollution

The growing worldwide love affair with larger, heavier Sports Utility Vehicles has all but wiped out the motor industry’s gains in fuel efficiency over the past 20 years

Read more at: 
It’s time to recognise that SUVs are the big bad villains of vehicle air pollution | Business Post

Tajikistan: Chinese business briefing: Working overtime to protect Chinese workers overseas

As a source of raw metals, Tajikistan has become a destination for thousands of low-skill Chinese laborers. How Beijing regards these workers has charged into view during the coronavirus pandemic. Spoiler alert: They are not a priority.

Chinese workers at a mine in northern Tajikistan had been demanding passage home for weeks before learning that a Chinese national in the country had contracted COVID-19. Rumors then spread that two had died. On May 20, around 100 of the miners rioted, reportedly fearful they would not receive adequate treatment in Tajikistan if they, too, were infected. Authorities suppressed them with force. Many Chinese workers are stranded.

Contrast their treatment with the fuss made over a Chinese engineer in Turkmenistan: On May 1, China’s envoy to Ashgabat, Sun Weidong, called Turkmen Foreign Minister Rashid Meredov to ask that a Chinese medivac plane be permitted to land and fetch the engineer, who had suffered a detached retina. He was evacuated for surgery in Tianjin.

It often appears that Chinese diplomats elsewhere in Central Asia are more concerned with their nationals’ health and well-being. For months, embassy press releases from Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan have described efforts to distribute protective equipment and medicine to Chinese businessmen, teachers, engineers and students. The Chinese Embassy in Tajikistan, by comparison, has been more reticent. Judging by the outpost’s few statements, only a handful of students and teachers have received such packages. A package of aid did finally arrive for the miners, reported China Securities Journal on May 20, the day they resorted to rioting.

Read more at:
Chinese business briefing: Working overtime | Eurasianet

8/15/20

USA: Khizr Khan: 'Trump may damage American democracy permanently

When Democrats convene for their 2020 convention next week, albeit virtually, Khan will again be taking part. His darkest fears about Trump and the mortal threat he poses to the constitution have been realised, he says. But he retains faith in America and finds hope in Joe Biden, the Democratic presumptive nominee, who understands what it is to endure the death of a child.

Read more at'
Khizr Khan: 'Trump may damage American democracy permanently' | US news | The Guardian

US presidential elections: How eco-friendly is the new Vice President nominee Kamala Harris?

 The California Senator Kamala Harris is on the Biden ticket for November's election, but how good is her environmental record? Very much so.

This is where Kamala Harris comes into her own. While she was district attorney of San Francisco, 15 years ago, Harris created an environmental justice unit, which specifically existed to deal with cases of environmental crime.

Read more at:
How eco-friendly is the new Vice President nominee Kamala Harris? | Living: The California Senator is on the Biden ticket for November's election, but how good is her environmental record?

German- US relations: Pompeo signs deal to move US troops from Germany to Poland

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has sealed an agreement with Poland to boost the number of American troops in the eastern EU member state.

Under the pact, another 1,000 US troops will be sent to Poland in addition to the 4,500 soldiers already stationed there. The deal also grants the US access to Polish military installations and allows for the modernization of existing facilities and capabili

Read  more at:
Pompeo signs deal to move US troops from Germany to Poland | News | DW | 15.08.2020

INDIA: Amazon launches online pharmacy in India

According to a report by EY, pharmaceutical players in the e-commercespace in India are expected to reach a combined market size of $2.7billion by 2023. The report cited rising internet penetration, smartphone ownership, and increased healthcare spending as some of the reasons for the expansion.

The US online retailer's entry in e-pharmacy comes at a time when demand for buying medicines online has increased in India owing to the lockdown to contain the coronavirus pandemic.

Read more at
Amazon launches online pharmacy in India | News | DW | 14.08.2020

8/14/20

Canada - US Relations: Canada-U.S. border will remain closed until Sept. 21


The federal government will extend the Canada-U.S. land border closure for another 30 days until Sept. 21, Public Safety Minister Bill Blair said Friday.

The closure to non-essential travel has been in place for months, but with caseloads still high in many U.S. states, the two governments have mutually agreed to continue restricting movement across the world's longest international border.

Read more at:
Canada-U.S. border will remain closed until Sept. 21 | CBC News

US health insurers doubled profits in second quarter amid pandemic

The enormous medical response in America to the coronavirus pandemic has not put a drain on US health insurers, which doubled profits in the second quarter of 2020 compared with the same time last year.

The US fight against the virus has been marked by overwhelmed hospitals, testing delays and personal protective equipment (PPE) shortages, but the high profits reported by some insurers have underlined concerns about America’s for-profit healthcare model.

Read more at:
US health insurers doubled profits in second quarter amid pandemic | US news | The Guardian

US Postal Services: Sen. Elizabeth Warren Demands ‘Corruption’ Probe After Report of Amazon Options Purchase by Postal Service Chief Louis DeJoy

Sen. Elizabeth Warren demanded that the U.S. Postal Service’s internal ethics watchdog investigate alleged “corruption by” Postmaster General Louis DeJoy for buying Amazon stock options after his appointment to his job
Read more at:
Sen. Elizabeth Warren Demands ‘Corruption’ Probe After Report of Amazon Options Purchase by Postal Service Chief Louis DeJoy – NBC 6 South Florida

China: The new state capitalism - Xi Jinping is trying to remake the Chinese economy

Last year Zotye, a carmaker, used it to tackle weak sales, and Wuliangye, a distiller, to improve the quality of its baiju; it helped Zheshang Bank to digitise its operations and catalysed the development of energy-saving technologies at China National Nuclear Power.

“Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteristics for a New Era” is, on the basis of these companies’ annual reports, quite the business-practice panacea.

For the complete report go to:
The new state capitalism - Xi Jinping is trying to remake the Chinese economy | Briefing | The Economist

8/13/20

USA: The Economy Is A Mess. So Why Isn’t The Stock Market? - by Neil Paine

We’ve said it before: The stock market is not the economy.

Usually, this simply means that fluctuations in the markets may have little to no real bearing on the underlying realities we think of as making up the economy. Or that there are many important structural factors that make the markets’ outlook different from how ordinary citizens view the country’s overall economic health.

But now, those usual bromides risk wildly understating the disconnect. In the time of COVID-19, the stock market couldn’t be more divorced from the United States’ broader economic situation. Although the S&P 500 tumbled sharply in March, as the coronavirus shut down large swaths of the economy, it had made back almost all of its losses by the first week of June — before dipping again and then quickly rebounding yet again.

Read more at:
The Economy Is A Mess. So Why Isn’t The Stock Market? | FiveThirtyEight

EU - US Relations: Donald Trump says EU was formed to take advantage of United States - by Thomas Colson

President Donald Trump on Tuesday claimed the European Union was formed to take advantage of the US and argued that the US's European allies had "never treated us well."

 His comments came during a long campaign-style speech covering a series of unrelated topics in the White House's Rose Garden.

The event had been billed as an announcement of new actions on China, but Trump instead spoke for roughly an hour about military spending, illegal immigration, and his friendship with Mexico's president while launching attacks on Joe Biden.

Read more at:
Donald Trump says EU was formed to take advantage of United States - Business Insider

Middle East: Israel and U.A.E. agree to full diplomatic relations

Israel and the United Arab Emirates announced Thursday they are establishing full diplomatic relations in a U.S.-brokered deal that required Israel to halt its contentious plan to annex occupied West Bank land sought by the Palestinians.

Read more at:
Israel and U.A.E. agree to full diplomatic relations | CBC News

8/12/20

Saudi Arabia - Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman strikes again: A top former Saudi spy files suit, spills the beans at an awkward time for Trump - by Leela Jacinto

In September 2017, a former top Saudi intelligence officer living in exile was desperately trying to get his two children safely out of the Gulf kingdom. Picking up his iPhone, Saad Aljabri got on WhatsApp and contacted the most powerful man in his homeland, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

The WhatsApp communication between Aljabri and MBS – as the Saudi crown prince is widely known – is detailed in a lawsuit filed last week in a US court.

While the allegations have not yet been verified in court, the lawsuit makes for a jaw-dropping and yet disconcertingly familiar read.

“Tell me what you want in person,” texted MBS, according to the lawsuit, which includes a screen shot of the exchange in Arabic with an English translation.

“I hope that you will consider what I have already sent you, because this issue regarding the children is very important to me,” replied Aljabri.

Two minutes later, Saudi Arabia’s de facto ruler once again urged the former intelligence official in exile to return home. “I definitely need you here,” said bin Salman.

Before Aljabri could reply, the crown prince added a terse, “24 hours!”

Days after the Whatsapp exchange with MBS granting him "24 hours", Aljabri left Turkey for Canada. But two of his eight children, Omar and Sarah, were trapped in Saudi Arabia and are still being used as “human bait” to lure their father home, according to the lawsuit.

The Saudi strategy failed to entice Aljabri back. Instead it caught the attention of US lawmakers who called on President Donald Trump to act. Last month, four US senators on both sides of the aisle urged Trump to help secure the release of Omar, 21, and Sarah, 20, calling it a “moral obligation” to help the former Saudi intelligence official in exile. In a letter to the White House, Republican Senator Marco Rubio and Democratic senators, Patrick Le Kaine and Chris Van Hollen, described Aljabri as a “highly valued partner” of US intelligence and State Department agencies “who has been credited by former CIA officials for saving thousands of American lives by discovering and preventing terrorist plots”.

Read more at: 
A top former Saudi spy files suit, spills the beans at an awkward time for Trump

EU-US relations: Pompeo warns against Chinese, Russian influence on European tour

Beijing and Moscow pose a threat Czech energy independence, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Wednesday in Prague. Speaking after his meeting with Prime Minister Andrej Babis, the top US diplomat warned of what he said were the risks of expanding the Dukovany nuclear power plant.

"Partnering with Russian and Chinese nuclear companies will in fact undermine the Czech Republic's national sovereignty," he said.

Note EU-Digest: Who made America boss over EU members decissions?

Read more at:
Pompeo warns against Chinese, Russian influence on European tour | News | DW | 12.08.2020

European right politics thwarts the welfare state - by Muratcan Isildak

In the last quarter of the last century, the social state phenomenon in Europe was developing when the left leaders were in power. Starting from the end of the century, the burden brought by the welfare state began to restrict it, starting from Germany. Right-wing governments that came one after another in Europe almost competed with each other in narrowing the social state phenomenon.

Leaders in Europe at the end of the century such as Olof Palme, Willy Brandt, Francois Mitterrand, Papandreou paid attention to the social state phenomenon.

In 1999, the Schröder-Fischer duo in Germany, social democrats and green people started to implement a policy to bring the market to life. They brought aid money to the unemployed, aiming to expand employment. Employment increased with the project named Hartz IV. Thereupon, they started policies that cut social spending.

European right politics thwarts the welfare state - Modern Diplomacy

USA - A Nation Divided: The Republican Revolt Against COVID Science and Common Sense - by Jonathan Chait

Last October, the Nuclear Threat Initiative and the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security compiled a ranking system to assess the preparedness of 195 countries for the next global pandemic. Twenty-one panel experts across the globe graded each country in 34 categories composed of 140 subindices. At the top of the rankings, peering down at 194 countries supposedly less equipped to withstand a pandemic, stood the United States of America.

It has since become horrifyingly clear that the experts missed something. The supposed world leader is in fact a viral petri dish of uncontained infection. By June, after most of the world had beaten back the coronavirus pandemic, the U.S., with 4 percent of the world’s population, accounted for 25 percent of its cases. Florida alone was seeing more new infections a week than China, Japan, Korea, Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines, Australia, and the European Union combined.

During its long period of decline, the Ottoman Empire was called “the sick man of Europe.” The United States is now the sick man of the world, pitied by the same countries that once envied its pandemic preparedness — and, as recently as the 2014 Ebola outbreak, relied on its expertise to organize the global response.

Our former peer nations are now operating in a political context Americans would find unfathomable. Every other wealthy nation in the world has successfully beaten back the disease, at least significantly, and at least for now. New Zealand’s health minister was forced to resign after allowing two people who had tested positive for COVID-19 to attend a funeral. The Italian Parliament heckled Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte when he briefly attempted to remove his mask to deliver a speech. In May — around the time Trump cheered demonstrators into the streets to protest stay-at-home orders — Boris Johnson’s top adviser set off a massive national scandal, complete with multiple calls for his resignation, because he’d been caught driving to visit his parents during lockdown. If a Trump official had done the same, would any newspaper even have bothered to publish the story?

It is difficult for us Americans to imagine living in a country where violations so trivial (by our standards) provoke such an uproar. And if you’re tempted to see for yourself what it looks like, too bad — the E.U. has banned U.S. travelers for health reasons.

The distrust and open dismissal of expertise and authority may seem uniquely contemporary — a phenomenon of the Trump era, or the rise of online misinformation. But the president and his party are the products of a decades-long war against the functioning of good government, a collapse of trust in experts and empiricism, and the spread of a kind of magical thinking that flourishes in a hothouse atmosphere that can seal out reality. While it’s not exactly shocking to see a Republican administration be destroyed by incompetent management — it happened to the last one, after all — the willfulness of it is still mind-boggling and has led to the unnecessary sickness and death of hundreds of thousands of people and the torpedoing of the reelection prospects of the president himself. Like Stalin’s purge of 30,000 Red Army members right before World War II, the central government has perversely chosen to disable the very asset that was intended to carry it through the crisis. Only this failure of leadership and management took place in a supposedly advanced democracy whose leadership succumbed to a debilitating and ultimately deadly ideological pathology.

For the compledt report click on this link:
The Republican Revolt Against COVID Science and Common Sense

8/11/20

The Environment - Pollution Exclusive: European banks face indigenous calls to end Amazon oil trade

European banks committed to backing action on climate change face allegations of double standards from indigenous groups in Ecuador after a report named them as major players in the trade in oil from the Amazon rainforest.

Read more at:
Exclusive: European banks face indigenous calls to end Amazon oil trade - Reuters