Friday, December 03, 2021

Boris Johnson’s Rule Is a Throwback to the 18th-century Golden Age of Sleaze

THE GUARDIAN – OPINION: This prime minister is a reminder of an era when government jobs were sold and political leverage was bought with cash

Boris Johnson speaks during Prime Minister's Questions, 3 November 2021. Photograph: Jessica Taylor/UK Parliament/AFP/Getty Images

Corruption is a word used nervously in the UK. We’re quite happy applying it to other countries; but in Britain even critics of the status quo can be surprisingly reluctant to describe as corrupt our society’s tight, often concealed circulation of power and rewards.

Partly, this is because corruption is a slippery concept. “There has never been a single, fixed, universal definition,” wrote Mark Knights of Warwick University in 2016. “Notions about what is unfair, unjust or immoral change over time.”

As a small, centralised country with a huge capital city, Britain has for centuries been run by elites with overlapping memberships and interests, and offered a wide range of services to foreigners with dubious fortunes. To attack this system as corrupt is to risk being called unworldly – and experience feelings of deep frustration and futility. From the House of Lords to the City of London, the capital is lined with ancient institutions that anti-corruption campaigners have failed to cleanse.

Yet there are periods when the charge of corruption suddenly acquires potency. Having struggled for two years to find an effective way of criticising Boris Johnson’s government, Labour seems finally to have discovered one. “Corruption,” said the party’s deputy leader, Angela Rayner, on Monday, “is rife right through this Conservative government.” Keir Starmer, often too measured, has become just as blunt about the issue. » | Andy Beckett | Friday, December 3, 2021

Michael Bolton : Drift Away

Thursday, December 02, 2021

Germany Shuts Unvaccinated People Out of Much of Public Life

THE NEW YORK TIMES: Facing a huge coronavirus surge, Chancellor Angela Merkel, her successor, Olaf Scholz, and state governors agreed on tough new restrictions on people who have not been inoculated.

BERLIN — Germany announced tough new restrictions on Thursday to exclude unvaccinated people from much of public life, seeking to break a soaring fourth wave of the coronavirus pandemic and blunt the worrisome new Omicron variant.

The new rules, which stopped short of enforcing a complete lockdown on the unvaccinated, followed an agreement hammered out between Chancellor Angela Merkel, her successor, Olaf Scholz, and state governors.

Under the new rules, those wishing to go to bars and restaurants, or shop anywhere but in stores carrying basic necessities — like pharmacies or grocery stores — have to present proof of vaccination or documentation of recovery from a recent coronavirus infection. Some of those restrictions have been in effect already in some states; the agreement sets a uniform nationwide standard.

With the new rules, and a promise by Mr. Scholz this week that he would push a law making vaccinations mandatory, Germany is following the path of Austria, which recently mandated that all adults be inoculated by February. It comes as both countries contend with strident anti-vaccination sentiment in their populations that have kept vaccination rates low compared with other western European countries. » | Christopher F. Schuetze | Thursday, December 2, 2021

Daily Telegraph Owner Could Go to Jail for Allegedly Failing to Pay Ex-wife £50m

THE GUARDIAN: Lady Hiroko Barclay asks judge to commit Sir Frederick Barclay to prison for non-payment of divorce settlement

Sir Frederick Barclay leaves the high court in London. Photograph: Kirsty O’Connor/PA

The reclusive billionaire owner of the Daily Telegraph could be sent to jail, after allegedly failing to pay his ex-wife £50m in one of the biggest divorce settlements in UK history.

Sir Frederick Barclay’s ex-wife has asked a judge to commit him to prison after claiming the businessman failed to make payments ordered by the high court.

Lady Hiroko Barclay said 87-year-old Sir Frederick is in contempt of court and accused him of breaching orders relating to the payment of money and production of documents.

Earlier this year Lady Barclay was awarded a settlement of £100m following the breakdown of their 34-year marriage. She now says Sir Frederick has failed to hand over the first half of the money and to produce relevant material. Lawyers representing Sir Frederick indicated he would mount a defence. » | Jim Waterson and agencies | Thursday, December 2, 2021

Homosexuality & The Bible 1: God Said It, I Believe It, That Settles It - John Corvino

John Corvino discusses some Bible verses from both the Hebrew and Christian Scriptures, explores analogies to slavery and divorce, and points out the inconsistencies of those who cherry-pick the apparently anti-gay parts of the Bible while glossing over other problematic passages. (Passages read from New Revised Standard Version.)

Dr. John Corvino, also known as the "Gay Moralist," is a writer, speaker, and philosophy professor at Wayne State University in Detroit. He is the author of What's Wrong with Homosexuality? and the co-author (with Maggie Gallagher) of Debating Same-Sex Marriage, both from Oxford University Press.


Is It Ever Too Late? No, and Here's Why...

This week, Maya selected a viewers topic suggestion: "What advice would you give to someone who is 58 with two adult children who perhaps feels like it is too late to come out? What would you say to someone who thinks that "it's over and I might as well just live in the closet until I die"? Is it too late?"

George Michael - A Different Corner | Official Video

Views on YouTube: 28,363,329

But All I Can Think About Is You on World AIDS Day

Shutterstock

ADVOCATE: The unequal responses to two national tragedies trigger a flood of memories for one man recalling a dear friend he lost to the AIDS epidemic.

Dear M — I am supposed to be writing about World AIDS Day, but all I can think about is you.

Today also happens to be September 11, the 20th anniversary of the attacks. The President and a couple of former ones are here to mourn. The blue lights where the towers should be are back on, reaching for the heavens. The names of the dead, all 2977, are read aloud. “Never forget,” we’re told.

I am supposed to be writing about World AIDS Day; it’s the 40th anniversary of the epidemic. We don’t get the presidents mourning though. None of the names of our 106,776 dead in New York City alone are read aloud. We still don’t have a vaccine or a cure. But we have a day, and that red ribbon. » | Richie Jackson | Wednesday, December 1, 2021

Canada Votes to Ban Barbaric Conversion Therapy while the UK Dithers and Delays

Prime minister Boris Johnson and Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau (Getty/Leon Neal/Karwai Tang)

PINK NEWS: Canada’s House of Commons has voted unanimously to ban so-called LGBT+ conversion therapy, while Tory government officials continue to dither over a proposed ban in the UK.

The new legislation, proposed by the Liberal government of prime minister Justin Trudeau, would make it illegal to have a child, or anyone who is unwilling, to undergo the dehumanising practice.

All efforts to change a person’s sexuality or gender identity have long been rejected by mainstream medical and mental health organisations in recent decades.

In fact, UN experts have called for a global ban saying such interventions are “degrading and discriminatory and rooted in the belief that LGBT+ persons are somehow inferior”. » | Nola Ojomu | Thursday, December 2, 2021

Dies könnte ein Clip aus der schwulen Version von Vom Winde verweht sein!

This could be a clip from the gay version of Gone with the Wind! / Cela pourrait être un extrait de la version gay d'Autant en emporte le vent !

Für dieses schöne Bild, bedanke ich mich bei animateglee.tumblr.com auf Pinterest.

Die große Hungersnot in Irland | Doku HD | ARTE

1845: Eine große Hungerkatastrophe hat Europa fest im Griff. Sie führte vor 175 Jahren zu politischen Unruhen und Umstürzen, unzählige Menschen starben. Mit einer Million Toten und zwei Millionen Auswanderern am weitaus stärksten betroffen war Irland, das von Großbritannien, der damals reichsten und mächtigsten Nation der Welt, regiert wurde.

Vor 175 Jahren wurde Europa von einer verheerenden Hungersnot heimgesucht. Ausgelöst wurde die Krise durch einen aus Südamerika eingeschleppten heimtückischen Pilz, der die Kartoffelernten vernichtete. In Frankreich, Belgien, Holland, Schottland und dem Königreich Preußen fielen Hunderttausende Menschen Hunger und Krankheiten zum Opfer.

In Irland, wo die Kartoffel das Hauptnahrungsmittel für die meisten Menschen darstellte, waren die Auswirkungen besonders extrem. Eine Million Iren starben, zwei Millionen wanderten zwischen 1845 und 1855 aus. Irland ist noch heute das einzige westliche Land mit einer geringeren Bevölkerungszahl als in den 1840er Jahren. Anhand von Gesprächen mit Historikern und von Zeitzeugenberichten ergründet „Die große Hungersnot in Irland“ die Hintergründe dieser humanitären Katastrophe des 19. Jahrhunderts auf dem europäischen Festland sowie in Großbritannien und Irland.

Der Dokumentarfilm veranschaulicht verheerende Zusammenhänge und Folgen: eine bäuerliche Unterschicht, die sich angesichts der existenziellen Bedrohung zu Mord, Plünderung und Kannibalismus getrieben sah; eine kapitalistische, meist britische Elite in Irland und Großbritannien, die vor nichts zurückschreckte, um die eigenen Interessen zu schützen. Irland war zwar seit 1801 offiziell scheinbar gleichberechtigt im Staatsnamen „Vereinigtes Königreich Großbritannien und Irland“ vertreten, de facto betrachteten die Briten Irland aber als eine ihrer vielen Kolonien. Deshalb gab es krasse Unterschiede beim Zugang zu Ressourcen. Eine skrupellose Mittelschicht schlug Profit aus dem Elend der Armen. Emigrationswellen erinnern an die heutige Zuwanderung aus Afrika und dem Nahen Osten nach Europa.

Der Dokumentarfilm geht auch auf die weitreichenderen Auswirkungen ein, die zum Teil bis in die Gegenwart hineinreichen: Die Krise führte 1846 zum Sturz der britischen Regierung unter Robert Peel, war Katalysator für die europäischen Revolutionen von 1848 und begründete die irische Diaspora, zu der sich heute mehr als 70 Millionen Menschen in aller Welt zählen. Und nicht zuletzt befeuerte sie den kulturellen Aufschwung und die Unabhängigkeitsbestrebungen Irlands. Erst gut 70 Jahre später, nach einem furchtbaren Weltkrieg und einem blutigen Bürgerkrieg, kam für Irland mit dem Irischen Freistaat die Unabhängigkeit und das Ende britischer Ausbeutung.

Dokumentarfilm von Ruán Magan (IE/F 2020, 91 Min)


As France Honors Black Artist Josephine Baker, Far-Right Pundit Éric Zemmour Launches Presidential Bid

Planned Parenthood CEO: If SCOTUS Restricts Abortion Access, Marginalized People Will Be Hurt Most

Abortion Under Attack: Supreme Court Hints It Will Uphold Mississippi’s Ban, Threatening Roe v. Wade

Democracy Now! Top US News & World Headlines — December 2, 2021

Barbados erklärt Unabhängigkeit: Zerfällt das Reich der Queen? | DW Nachrichten

Die Herrschaft von Queen Elizabeth II ist vorbei. Zumindest auf Barbados. Die ehemalige britische Kolonie hat sich zur Republik erklärt, eine Präsidentin ernannt - und damit die Königin von England als Staatsoberhaupt abgesetzt. Der Staatsakt wurde auf der Karibikinsel pompös gefeiert, ausgerechnet im Beisein des britischen Thronfolgers Prinz Charles. Damit bleiben nur noch 15 Nationen, die Queen Elizabeth II als Staatsoberhaupt anerkennen. Der Imperialismus-Forscher Benedikt Stuchtey sagt: „Das Königshaus muss sich dringend modernisieren“ – und hofft auf Prinz William.

As French Election Looms, Candidates Stake Out Tough Positions on Migrants

THE NEW YORK TIMES: France has fewer immigrants than other rich nations. But politicians are hardening their positions against immigration even as other countries compete for migrant workers.

Migrants waiting to be allocated emergency accommodation by a nonprofit organization in Paris in April. | Andrea Mantovani for The New York Times

PARIS — An out-of-control influx of immigrants. A threat to French identity and stability. A reason to urgently close France’s frontiers.

The issue of immigration is dominating political debate in the country five months before presidential elections, as candidates on the right as well as the left harden their positions. The drowning last week of 27 migrants off France’s northern coast has only added to the argument that migration must be checked.

Despite the fierce words on the campaign trail, the reality is far different: Nearly all of France’s neighbors have a greater proportion of immigrants in their populations. In the past decade, immigration has grown less in France than in the rest of Europe or in other rich nations worldwide.

The figures show that the migration situation in France is “rather ordinary, rather moderate,’’ said François Héran, a leading expert on migration who teaches at Collège de France. “We’re really not a country overrun by immigration,’’ Mr. Héran said. » | Norimitsu Onishi | Thursday, December 2, 2021

The End of Roe Is Coming, and It Is Coming Soon

Damon Winter/The New York Times

OPINION : GUEST ESSAY

THE NEW YORK TIMES: As someone who has spent my career studying the history of abortion, I thought I knew what to expect tuning into Wednesday’s oral arguments in the Supreme Court abortion case, Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization. It was clear that big changes were coming to U.S. abortion law, no matter what. The Mississippi law at issue bans abortion after 15 weeks of pregnancy, even though Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey recognize a right to choose abortion significantly later in pregnancy. So if the court sides with Mississippi in this case — as it is widely expected to do — then American abortion rights will be fundamentally undermined.

The only real question is how the justices will rationalize their decision to side with Mississippi. And on that front, I fear I was wrong.

There are two likely scenarios for how this decision could go: The justices could throw out the so-called viability standard, which is the underpinning of abortion law today. (Viability is the point at which a fetus can survive outside the womb, or about 23 weeks of pregnancy.) Or they could do something much more radical and say — precedent be damned — there is no right to abortion in America at all.

After hearing arguments, I now believe that the justices will fully overturn Roe v. Wade when their decision comes down next year. » | Mary Ziegler * | Wednesday, December 1, 2021

* Ms. Ziegler is the author of “Abortion and the Law in America: Roe v. Wade to the Present.”

Abortion rights advocates vow to fight on after supreme court hearing: Leaders say they will look to statehouses and lower courts if justices allow undermining of Roe v Wade »

Conservative US supreme court justices signal support for restricting abortion in pivotal case: Case poses a direct threat to the legal underpinnings of the landmark 1973 Roe v Wade ruling that guaranteed the constitutional right to abortion »

Five takeaways from US supreme court’s Mississippi abortion rights case hearing: The Dobbs v Jackson Women’s Health Oganization case could weaken the provisions of the landmark 1973 Roe v Wade ruling »

Abortion at the Court: The Supreme Court seems likely to undermine or overturn Roe v. Wade. »

Covid Surge in Germany: Is a Lockdown Inevitable? | DW News

As Germany faces record-breaking infection numbers and fears of the omicron variant abound, Angela Merkel's designated successor Olaf Scholz is calling for a general vaccine mandate. Talking to Germany's Bild television on Tuesday, the chancellor-in-waiting said he would like to see mandatory vaccinations "not too far away in the future, so I suggest beginning of February or March." At the same time, he said that the decision would be made in the parliament, and that it would be a "matter of conscience" for individual lawmakers. Germany's Federal Medical Association also called for a vaccine mandate to put a stop to the "endless loop of lockdowns." It urged the German government to make arrangements that would apply to "all adult citizens with no medical contra-indications against a vaccine." The question of mandatory vaccination is considered controversial in Germany, partly due to forced medical treatments during the Nazi-era. Separately, spokesman for the outgoing German government Steffen Seibert said a decision on the vaccine mandate would be made "soon."

According to Reuters news agency, Scholz also supported the idea of introducing so-called 2G rules for customers in retail stores, meaning they must be either vaccinated ("geimpft") or have recovered ("genesen") from COVID-19. The rules would not apply in supermarkets or drugstores. Reuters said that Scholz had pledged to make changes to the Infection Protection Act to provide "states with high infection rates with a suitable set of instruments." Scholz also introduced Major General Carsten Breuer as the head of a planned COVID crisis team to be set up when the new coalition government commences work. The team is to primarily speed up Germany's vaccination program, including the administering of booster injections. States governed by premiers from Scholz's Social Democrats (SPD) called for the the protection given by vaccination to be officially recognized only for six months, the daily Rheinische Post reported, citing the waning efficacy of the vaccines after that period.

Also on Tuesday, the Federal Constitutional Court ruled that the "emergency brake" imposed by the federal government from April to June was compatible with the constitution. Under the measure, districts and regions were required to implement curfews, contact restrictions and other curbs when the infection rate rose above certain levels. Several state premiers have called for similar nationwide measures to be reintroduced as Germany struggles to contain a fourth wave of the pandemic that has recently been additionally complicated by the advent of the omicron variant.


Covid: Avoid ‘Snogging under Mistletoe’ This Christmas, Says UK Minister

THE GUARDIAN: Thérèse Coffey says people should not kiss anyone they do not know to limit spread of coronavirus

Thérèse Coffey: ‘I don’t think there should be much snogging under the mistletoe. You don’t need to do things like that.’ Photograph: DW Images/Rex/Shutterstock

Britons should avoid “snogging under the mistletoe” this Christmas, according to a government minister, as a leading scientist said people could enjoy Christmas if they took “sensible” precautions.

The work and pensions secretary, Thérèse Coffey, told ITV’s Peston programme that “we should all be trying to enjoy the Christmas ahead of us”, adding: “For what it’s worth, I don’t think there should be much snogging under the mistletoe.”

She added: “You don’t need to do things like that. But I think we should all be trying to enjoy the Christmas ahead of us, and that’s why we’re working so hard to get the deployment of as many vaccines as possible.”

Coffey said kissing should be avoided with “people you don’t already know”.

She later tweeted: “Watch the full interview folks … Don’t kiss with people you don’t know … government working exceptionally hard with NHS and the jabs army to get boosters in arms so we can all enjoy a proper Christmas knees up.” » | Alexandra Topping and Aubrey Allegretti | Thursday, December 2, 2021

MP Warns of Financial Corruption in UK Escaping ‘Toothless’ Enforcers

THE GUARDIAN: Economic crime needs to ‘be taken seriously’ alongside tougher anti-money laundering levy, says Hodge

The Pandora Papers leak shows that the UK is in danger of becoming a corrupt country because it is failing to take economic crime seriously enough, the former chair of the public accounts watchdog told MPs, as she called for more funding for financial crime enforcers.

Dame Margaret Hodge, a senior Labour MP, raised the issue in the Commons as part of a debate on the finance bill, highlighting the central role of London in facilitating economic crime.

She said the Pandora Papers, leaked to the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) and shared with media around the world including the Guardian, comprised “the largest cache of documents we have ever received” in relation to tax havens.

“The UK lies at the heart of everything revealed there,” she said. “Others have talked about secret property transactions that took place – £4bn identified in the Pandora Papers. There are more UK citizens cited in that tranche of leaks than from any other country. The relationship between the UK and our tax havens is central to the facilitation of economic crime, and again we see the weak and toothless enforcement agencies.” » | Rowena Mason, Deputy political editor | Thursday, December 2, 2021

Macron Privately Called Boris Johnson a ‘Clown’, Says French Magazine

THE GUARDIAN: Report follows French president’s complaint about PM’s behaviour after they discussed sinking of refugee boat in the Channel

Macron reportedly said of Johnson: ‘We have discussions like big people, and then he gives us a hard time before or afterwards in an inelegant way. It’s always the same circus.’ Photograph: Murdo MacLeod/The Guardian

The French president, Emmanuel Macron, referred to Boris Johnson in a private conversation as a “clown”, according to reports in France.

The political magazine Le Canard enchaîné, often described as the French equivalent of Private Eye, reported Macron as saying the British prime minister has “the attitude of a vulgarian”.

It came as Macron complained about Johnson’s behaviour after the leaders spoke by phone after last Wednesday’s sinking of a refugee boat in the Channel.

The French president was angered after Johnson tweeted a letter outlining a five-point plan to tackle the issue of Channel crossings. “I spoke two days ago with prime minister Johnson in a serious way,” Macron said at a press conference on Friday after the tweet. “For my part I continue to do that, as I do with all countries and all leaders. I am surprised by methods when they are not serious. We do not communicate from one leader to another on these issues by tweets and letters that we make public.” » | Tom Ambrose | Thursday, December 2, 2021

Wednesday, December 01, 2021

Democracy Now! Top US News & World Headlines — December 1, 2021

Prince Harry Compares Covid Vaccine Inequity to HIV Struggle

THE GUARDIAN: Duke of Sussex says on World Aids Day that vaccinating the world against Covid is ‘test of our moral character’

Prince Harry described the emergence of the Omicron variant of Covid-19 as of ‘deep concern’.Photograph: Caitlin Ochs/Reuters

The Duke of Sussex has warned of “corporate greed and political failure” prolonging the Covid pandemic, comparing a “spectacular failure” of global vaccine equity to the struggle by millions to access HIV medicines.

In a letter read out at a World Health Organization (WHO) and UNAIDS event on World Aids Day, Prince Harry said lessons must be learned from the HIV/Aids pandemic.

Vaccinating the world was a “test of our moral character”, he wrote. “It’s time to draw from the lessons we learned throughout the HIV/Aids pandemic, where millions died unnecessarily due to deep inequities in access to treatment.

“Are we really comfortable repeating the failures of the past? Everything I’ve learned from the youth of Sentebale [his charity in Lesotho and Botswana] tells me not. They see how repeating these mistakes is destructive and self-defeating, it is a betrayal of the next generation.”

He said his late mother, Diana, Princess of Wales, who helped to highlight the work of Aids charities, would be “deeply grateful” to the scientific community for their work in combating the disease. » | Caroline Davies | Wednesday, December 1, 2021

Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex:

Meghan calls for tabloid industry overhaul as Mail on Sunday loses appeal: ANL had brought appeal after duchess sued publisher over articles relating to letter she sent to estranged father »

Une cheffe étoilée parie sur le vegan | ARTE Regards

Début 2021, l’établissement bordelais "ONA", acronyme de "Origine Non Animale", est le premier restaurant vegan à recevoir une étoile Michelin. Une petite révolution ! Jusqu’alors, gastronomie et politique avaient réussi à empêcher l'innovation dans cette cuisine d’excellence obnubilée par la viande

. La fameuse haute gastronomie française serait-elle sur le point de changer radicalement ?

Reportage (Allemagne, 2021, 32mn)

Disponible jusqu'au 23/08/2022


La Cour suprême, épicentre des batailles politiques américaines

La Cour suprême est composée de neuf juges, nommés à vie. ERIN SCHAFF/AFP

LE FIGARO : DÉCRYPTAGE - Désormais dominée par la droite, l’institution se penche à partir de mercredi sur la question de l’avortement.

Correspondant à Washington

La Cour suprême américaine doit examiner ce mercredi la constitutionnalité d’une loi votée par le Mississippi qui restreint l’avortement à 15 semaines après le début de la grossesse. La Cour doit aussi rendre sa décision sur une autre loi, votée par le Texas, qui empêche depuis septembre tout avortement au-delà de six semaines. Les démocrates craignent de voir une Cour dorénavant dominée par une majorité conservatrice annuler la décision Roe vs Wade de 1973, et revenir sur le droit à l’avortement aux États-Unis.

Ils sont neuf, nommés à vie. Arbitres des lois, chargés de garantir l’égalité devant la justice, les juges de la Cour suprême sont aussi les interprètes d’une Constitution rédigée à la fin du XVIIIe siècle, et qui reste la clef de voûte de la république américaine. Dans un climat politique profondément divisé, entre un Congrès fréquemment paralysé, et un président dont les pouvoirs législatifs ne sont pas infinis, la Cour a vu son pouvoir croître. En face du Capitole, derrière les colonnes de la façade inspirée de celle du Parthénon, la Cour suprême est devenue de plus en plus fréquemment un contre-pouvoir aux politiques progressistes démocrates. » | Par Adrien Jaulmes | mardi 30 novembre 2021

Réservé aux abonnés

It Gets Better - John Corvino

Prepare for More Extreme Weather, Britons Warned in Wake of Storm Arwen

THE GUARDIAN: Business secretary Kwasi Kwarteng says climate crisis likely to cause future extreme weather events

A fallen tree in north Tyneside after Storm Arwen’s winds of up to 100mph hit the UK.Photograph: Owen Humphreys/PA

Storm Arwen was “an event the likes of which we haven’t seen for 60 years” and the UK needs to be prepared for more extreme weather due to the climate crisis, according to the business secretary, as more than 30,000 homes remain without power.

Kwasi Kwarteng said the majority of those people will have power restored “in the next day or two”, although he conceded some in remote locations may have to wait much longer.

Paying tribute to the three people who died in the storm, the business secretary said the exceptionally strong winds of almost 100mph had damaged power lines and required an enormous restoration effort by engineers.

The most severely affected areas are the Wear valley, surrounding Eastgate and north Northumberland, the north Peak District and the south Lakes in northern England, and Aberdeen and Perth in Scotland. » | Maya Wolfe-Robinson and agencies | Wednesday, December 1, 2021

The Rise of Éric Zemmour Shows How Far France Has Shifted to the Right

THE GUARDIAN: The far-right media pundit is now a presidential candidate – and his toxic ideas have ever more mainstream support

Éric Zemmour announces his candidacy for the 2022 presidential election in a video broadcast on social media, Paris, 30 November 2021. Photograph: Thomas Samson/AFP/Getty Images

On 17 November, the far-right journalist and polemicist Éric Zemmour went on trial in Paris on charges of incitement to racial hatred. In September 2020, he had said on the French news broadcaster CNews that unaccompanied foreign minors were “thieves, they’re murderers, they’re rapists, that’s all they are. We must send them back”. He did not appear at the trial and was represented by his lawyers, who said the charges were unfounded. The verdict is expected to be delivered next year.

Zemmour has previously been convicted of incitement to racial hatred and religious hatred and been tried and acquitted in several other cases. But the stakes are different this time: the defendant is now a candidate for president of the French republic. In early November, polls indicated that up to 17% of the electorate would choose him for next president. This placed him behind only Emmanuel Macron, suggesting that the second round of the election could be between the two men. On 30 November, he officially announced his candidacy. » | Didier Fassin * | Wednesday, November 1, 2021

* Didier Fassin is a professor at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, and director of studies at the École des Hautes Études, Paris

Donald Trump Accuses Meghan of Disrespect towards Royal Family

THE GUARDIAN: Former president says Prince Harry ‘has been used horribly’ in interview with Nigel Farage

The former US president Donald Trump has accused the Duchess of Sussex of being “disrespectful” to the Queen and the royal family.

In a wide-ranging interview with the politician turned broadcaster Nigel Farage, Trump said he thought the Duke of Sussex had been “used horribly”.

The interview with Trump, 75, whose presidency ended in January 2021, took place in Florida on Monday and will be broadcast on GB News.

Speaking about Meghan, Trump said: “I’m not a fan of hers. I wasn’t from day one. I think Harry has been used horribly and I think some day he will regret it.”

According to GB News, he added: “I think Harry’s been used and been used terribly. I think it’s ruined his relationship with his family, and it hurts the Queen.” » | Jamie Grierson | Wednesday, November 1, 2021

Füreinander da sein.

Être là l'un pour l'autre. / Being there for each other.

Ich bedanke mich bei anderson-hummels.tumblr.com auf Pinterest für dieses schöne und ausdrucksvolle Foto.

Just a Little Passion!

via GIPHY


Juste un peu de passion ! / Nur ein bißchen Leidenschaft!

Former VP Mike Pence Asks US Supreme Court to Overturn Abortion Rights - BBC News

Former Vice-President Mike Pence has called on the Supreme Court to overturn the landmark 1973 Roe v Wade case that legalised abortion in the US. Mr Pence said the ruling was "a misguided decision" that harmed millions of unborn babies.

If Roe v Wade is quashed, millions of women would lose access to abortions. On Wednesday, the Supreme Court will hear arguments over a Mississippi law banning abortion after 15 weeks. The ban includes abortions on pregnancies caused by rape or incest.



If Mike Pence gets his way, desperate women in the USA will soon have to resort to the Victorian solution to abort unwanted babies: gin and knitting needles! – © Mark

CNN Suspends Chris Cuomo After New Details on Help He Gave His Brother

THE NEW YORK TIMES: The cable news network’s top-rated anchor was an intimate adviser to Andrew Cuomo in the last 18 months of his governorship.

The star CNN anchor Chris Cuomo was suspended indefinitely by the network on Tuesday after new details emerged about his efforts to assist his brother, Andrew M. Cuomo, the former governor of New York, as he faced a cascade of sexual harassment accusations that led to the governor’s resignation.

Chris Cuomo had previously apologized for advising Andrew Cuomo’s senior political aides — a breach of traditional barriers between journalists and lawmakers — but thousands of pages of evidence released on Monday by the New York attorney general, Letitia James, revealed that the anchor’s role had been more intimate and involved than previously known.

“The documents, which we were not privy to before their public release, raise serious questions,” CNN said in a statement on Tuesday. “When Chris admitted to us that he had offered advice to his brother’s staff, he broke our rules and we acknowledged that publicly. But we also appreciated the unique position he was in and understood his need to put family first and job second. However, these documents point to a greater level of involvement in his brother’s efforts than we previously knew.

“As a result, we have suspended Chris indefinitely, pending further evaluation,” the network added. » | Michael M. Grynbaum and John Koblin | Published: Tuesday, November 30, 2021; Updated: Wednesday, December 1, 2021

Tuesday, November 30, 2021

Zemmours düstere Zukunftsvision


PRÄSIDENTENWAHL IN FRANKREICH

FRANKFURTER ALLGEMEINE ZEITUNG: Eric Zemmour sieht Frankreich auf dem Weg zu einem „Dritte-Welt-Land“. Deshalb hat der rechtsextreme Publizist seine Präsidentschaftskandidatur erklärt. Doch er verliert wichtige Unterstützer – zu groß sind seine Skandale.

In einer Videoaufzeichnung hat der rechtsextreme Publizist Eric Zemmour am Dienstag seine Präsidentschaftskandidatur erklärt: „Wir haben eine Mission zu erfüllen“, sagte der 63 Jahre alte Politiker. Er wolle „Frankreich retten“, deshalb habe er sich dazu entschieden, bei der Präsidentenwahl im nächsten Frühjahr anzutreten. Das Land sei nicht mehr wiederzuerkennen, sagte er und verwies auf „Masseneinwanderung, die alle Probleme verschärft hat“. Frankreich sei „eine große Nation“ und „ein großes Volk“. Er wolle diese Nation vor dem Aussterben bewahren. » | Von Michaela Wiegel, Paris | Dienstag, 30. November 2021

Tessin: Kultur einer Küche - Dokumentation von NZZ Format (2004)

Jun 24, 2016 • Im Kanton Tessin hat sich die alpinlombardische Küche in manchen Gerichten bis heute sehr reich erhalten. Denn die Beziehung zu den Produkten der Landwirtschaft ist hier intensiver als in den benachbarten italienischen Gebieten. Und auch wenn das Tessin heute eine große Agglomeration ist: Die Erinnerung an die Dorfheimat der Großeltern und damit an die traditionelle Tessiner Küche haben sich viele, auch junge Tessiner, bewahrt. «Tessin – Kultur einer Küche» entstand in Zusammenarbeit mit Alice Vollenweider, Romanistin, Buchautorin und ausgewiese Kennerin der italienischen Literatur und Küche. Auf der „Menukarte“ (Auswahl): Die Wiederentdeckung der Kastanien. Die wahrhaftigen Tessiner Wurstwaren. Alltagsbrot und Festgebäck.

John Corvino: What's Morally Wrong with Homosexuality? | Full DVD Video

Jul 10, 2013 • In this widely presented lecture (recorded here in 2007), John Corvino dismantles common arguments against same-sex relationships, including those based on nature, harm, and religion.

Anna Netrebko - Verdi: Trovatore - Tacea la notte placida | Live from Red Square Concert / 2013

Sep 20, 2013 • Watch Anna Netrebko live at the Red Square Concert 19. June 2013, performing Verdi's Il Trovatore "Tacea la notte placida" together with the State Academic Symphony Orchestra "Evgeny Svetlanov" conducted by Constantine Orbelian – to be released on DVD and Blu-ray soon. It was a once-in-a-lifetime experience when soprano Anna Netrebko and baritone Dmitri Hvorostovsky took to an open-air stage in June 2013 -- two of the leading names in opera, singing live in Moscow's Red Square. The audience, 7,500 strong, showed its appreciation for Russia's two biggest opera stars with unbridled enthusiasm, lending even more magic to the midsummer-night's atmosphere of a spectacular concert. This autumn, the historic two-hour performance, Live from Red Square, is set for release by Deutsche Grammophon on DVD and Blu-ray.

Dimitri’s Dishes: Chocolate Walnut Biscotti – Paximadia


Get the recipe here.

Greece Makes Vaccines Mandatory for People 60 or Older, with Fines for Not Complying.

THE NEW YORK TIMES: In a bid to bolster vaccinations among older people, the prime minister of Greece announced on Tuesday that Covid shots would be obligatory for people ages 60 or older, and that those who failed to book a first shot by Jan. 16 would face fines.

Τhe move came as the Greek health authorities try to curb a spike in coronavirus cases and deaths, while bracing for the possible effect of the Omicron variant.

About 500,000 people in Greece ages 60 or older have yet to be vaccinated against Covid-19, Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis told a cabinet meeting. Those who fail to meet the deadline will face a monthly fine of 100 euros ($113), the revenue from which will go toward funding state hospitals that have been stretched by the pandemic, he said.

Describing the policy as “an act of justice for the vaccinated,” Mr. Mitsotakis said he had worried about penalizing people but hoped they would see the move as an act of “encouragement, not repression.” » | Niki Kitsantonis | Tuesday, November 30, 2021

Democracy Now! Top US News & World Headlines — November 30, 2021

Janet Daley: Like McCarthyism, America Will Soon Wake Up to Wokeism | Off Script

Oct 22, 2021 • Do not be fooled by the dominance of the woke movement; it is already running out of steam. In this week’s Off Script Janet Daley joins Steven Edginton to discuss America and Britain: what divides the two nations and what unites them.


This is a very interesting discussion. Janet Daley makes many interesting observations in it. I do not, however, agree with all she states. In particular, being an ardent Remainer, I have a totally different take on Brexit than she does. Nevertheless, I feel that many of Janet Daley’s insights are well worth listening to.

FYI, I was for many years a subscriber to The Telegraph; but I cancelled my subscription when the newspaper became anti-EU, pro-Brexit, and pro-Trump! That combination was simply too much for me to handle! However, when I was a subscriber, Janet Daley was one of my favourite contributors. – © Mark

Ghislaine Maxwell: Prozess gegen Epstein-Vertraute beginnt | DW Nachrichten

Nov 29, 2021 • Sie war in den höchsten Kreisen unterwegs und bestens vernetzt: Millionärstochter Ghislaine Maxwell. Doch seit Juli 2020 sitzt sie in Untersuchungshaft. Sie ist die Schlüsselfigur im Fall des Finanzmoguls und Sexualstraftäters Jeffrey Epstein. Maxwell soll für ihn und andere Männern unzählige junge Frauen, teils minderjährige Mädchen, zum Missbrauch angeworben haben. Epstein nahm sich im August 2019 in seiner Gefängniszelle das Leben. In New York beginnt jetzt der Prozess gegen Ghislaine Maxwell. Wer ist diese Frau? Journalistin Lisa Ulrich-Gödel gewährt Einblicke in das Leben der Ghislaine Maxwell.

The Treasures of Empress Josephine Bonaparte

Nov 26, 2021 • These two exquisite jewellery suites, offered in Sotheby’s upcoming Treasures auction (7 December 2021 | London) feature the finest craftsmanship fit for an Empress. In this latest episode of Expert Voices, Head of Jewellery Kristian Spofforth tells how they were gifted to Empress Josephine, first wife of Napoleon Bonaparte. Find out about the stunning cameos and intaglios that feature in these jewellery suites, and how these iconic pieces were held in one of the leading jewellery galleries in the world.

Barbados Cuts Ties with Queen, Becomes World's Newest Republic | DW News

Nov 30, 2021 • Barbados removed Britain's Queen Elizabeth II as head of state at midnight local time on Monday. The Royal Standard flag that represents the queen was lowered in the capital Bridgetown in a ceremony that coincides with the country's 55th year of independence. Dame Sandra Mason was inaugurated as the first president of the Caribbean country, having been elected by a two-thirds majority vote in the Barbadian parliament.

In attendance at the celebrations was Prince Charles, heir apparent to the British throne, who arrived in the country on Sunday. "We the people must give Republic Barbados its spirit and its substance," Mason said in an address. "We must shape its future. We are each other's and our nation:s keepers. We the people are Barbados." After a display of dance and music from the island, Barbadian singer Rihanna was declared a national hero by Prime Minister Mia Mottley, who led Barbados' republican movement.

Barbados is the first Caribbean country to abolish its monarchy since the 1970s, when Guyana, Dominica, and Trinidad and Tobago became republics. The last time Queen Elizabeth was removed as head of state was in 1992 when Mauritius proclaimed itself a republic. Although the country ceases to be a Commonwealth realm with Queen Elizabeth as its sovereign, it will remain within the Commonwealth of Nations, an association of 54 countries of which both republics and monarchies are members.


Éric Zemmour se déclare candidat à l'élection présidentielle de 2022

LE FIGARO : Le polémiste a officialisé sa décision dans une vidéo postée sur les réseaux sociaux ce mardi. Il sera l'invité du 20H de TF1 dans la soirée.

Le dernier étage de la fusée. Comme le laissaient présager son attitude et ses déclarations depuis la rentrée, Éric Zemmour a officiellement annoncé sa candidature à l'élection présidentielle de 2022. «Mes chers compatriotes, (...) comme vous, j'ai décidé de prendre notre destin en main. (...) Il n'est plus temps de réformer la France, mais de la sauver. J'ai décidé de me présenter à l'élection présidentielle. (...) Vive la République, et surtout vive la France !», a confirmé le nationaliste dans une vidéo publiée ce mardi 30 novembre sur les réseaux sociaux, dans laquelle il reprend les codes du Général de Gaulle lors de l'appel du 18-Juin : assis à un bureau, dans une bibliothèque, face à un imposant micro de radio. Le tout avec, pour fond musical, l'allegretto de la 7e symphonie de Beethoven. Une déclaration dont le format est inédit sous la Ve République, pour un parcours qui l'est tout autant. Regarder la vidéo » | Par Arthur Berdah et Wally Bordas | mardi 30 novembre 2021

Présidentielle 2022 : Éric Zemmour devrait officialiser sa candidature mardi »

Far-right TV pundit Éric Zemmour to run for French presidency: It is time to ‘save’ France, controversial figure says as he reads video speech posted on social media »

Éric Zemmours Kandidatur verheisst für Frankreichs Präsidentschaftswahlkampf nichts Gutes: Der rechtsextreme Publizist steigt offiziell ins Rennen um den Élysée-Palast ein. Ob ihm der Rollenwechsel vom Provokateur zum Kandidaten gelingt, ist fraglich. Doch einen Sieg kann er bereits verbuchen. »

Japan’s Prince Akishino Lambasts Media for Saying ‘Terrible Things’ about His Daughter

THE GUARDIAN: The heir to the Chrysanthemum throne lashes out at criticism of Mako’s marriage to a commoner

Princess Mako and her husband Kei Komuro. ‘Lots of things are fabricated’ by the media, her father says. Photograph: Reuters

Prince Akishino, the first in line to the Japanese throne, has lambasted the country’s media for their treatment of his eldest daughter, Mako, accusing them of saying “terrible things” about her in the run-up to her marriage.

Mako married Kei Komuro, a non-royal whom she met at university, on 26 October, almost four years after their engagement was called off following revelations about a minor financial dispute involving his mother. But they made only a brief public appearance before moving to New York, where Komuro works for a law firm.

Critical coverage of their engagement has left Mako, who relinquished her royal status when she married Komuro, suffering from a form of post-traumatic stress disorder. » | Justin McCurry in Tokyo | Tuesday, November 30, 2021

Botswana Upholds Ruling Decriminalising Same-sex Relationships

THE GUARDIAN: Court of appeal decision hailed as victory for LGBTQ+ community that could encourage other African countries to follow suit

Activists wait for a decision by judges on the government’s appeal against the 2019 ruling.Photograph: Monirul Bhuiyan/AFP/Getty

THE GUARDIAN: Court of appeal decision hailed as victory for LGBTQ+ community that could encourage other African countries to follow suit

Gay rights campaigners expressed joy at the Botswana court of appeal’s decision to uphold a ruling that decriminalised same-sex relationships, saying the country’s judiciary had set an example for other African countries.

The government had appealed a 2019 ruling that criminalising homosexuality was unconstitutional. The ruling had been hailed as a major victory for gay rights campaigners on the continent, following an unsuccessful attempt in Kenya to repeal colonial-era laws criminalising gay sex.

Dismissing the appeal on Monday, the bench of five judges unanimously ruled that criminalising same-sex relationships was a violation of the constitutional rights of LGBTQ+ individuals to dignity, liberty, privacy and equality.

“Those sections [of the penal code] have outlived their usefulness, and serve only to incentivise law enforcement agents to become keyhole peepers and intruders into the private space of citizens,” said court of appeal president Ian Kirby.

The ruling added: “Since the appellant’s grounds of appeal have been unsuccessful there can be only one outcome and that is that the appeal must fail.”

Before the 2019 ruling, gay sex was punishable by up to seven years in jail. » | Nyasha Chingono in Harare | Monday, November 29, 2021

Queen Congratulates Barbados as It Becomes a Republic

THE GUARDIAN: Monarch sends message marking ‘momentous’ day and wishing Barbadians peace and prosperity

The Queen on a walkabout in Barbados in November 1977. Photograph: Anwar Hussein/Getty Images

As Barbados removes the Queen as its head of state and becomes a republic, the monarch has sent her congratulations on the nation’s “momentous” day.

Prince Charles arrived on the Caribbean island on Sunday to join the inauguration ceremony of the president-elect, Sandra Mason, who replaces the Queen as head of state overnight as Barbados sheds the vestiges of a colonial system stretching back 400 years.

In a message to Mason, the Queen wished all Barbadians happiness, peace and prosperity in the future.

She said: “On this significant occasion and your assumption of office as the first president of Barbados, I extend my congratulations to you and all Barbadians. » | Caroline Davies | Tuesday, November 30, 2021

La Barbade scelle son divorce avec la reine Elizabeth : ANALYSE - Cette île de 430 km², indépendante depuis 1965, va devenir mardi une république en élisant à sa tête la présidente Sandra Mason. »

Der Queen bricht ein Land aus der Krone: Nach 396 Jahren verlässt Barbados die britische Herrschaft: Die Bürger von Barbados wollen die Queen nicht mehr als Oberhaupt ihres Staates. Fast drei Jahrzehnte nachdem sich Mauritius aus dem kolonialen Erbe gelöst hat, folgt am Dienstag die Karibikinsel und setzt Königin Elizabeth ab. Der Buckingham-Palast akzeptiert die Entscheidung und feiert sogar mit. »

Die Kryptoblase wächst – warum man Bitcoin und Co. trotzdem nicht abschreiben sollte

KOMMENTAR

NEUE ZÜRCHER ZEITUNG: Kurz nachdem die Weltgesundheitsorganisation (WHO) die neue Corona-Variante Omikron getauft hatte, konnte eine gleichnamige Kryptowährung ihren Wert verzehnfachen. Ein klares Zeichen für die Irrationalität der Krypto-Investoren? So einfach ist es nicht.

Es herrschte Spannung am vergangenen Freitag an den Kapitalmärkten: Die Angst vor der neuen Corona-Variante Omikron ging um und sorgte für grosse Volatilität. Dabei zeigte sich ein allgemeines Muster: Investoren flüchteten in sichere Anlagen wie Gold und verkauften riskantere Vermögenswerte wie Kryptowährungen. Der Bitcoin verlor am Freitag zeitweise neun Prozent seines Werts und schickte alle anderen Kryptowährungen mit auf Talfahrt.

Alle Kryptowährungen? Nein! Ein obskurer Token, der zufällig den gleichen Namen wie die neue Corona-Variante trägt, konnte seinen Wert zwischen Freitag und Montagmorgen von 65 Dollar auf 655 Dollar verzehnfachen, bevor er wieder auf 309 Dollar abstürzte. Omicron gilt seither als jüngstes Paradebeispiel für die Irrationalität des Kryptomarktes. » | Rewert Hoffer | Montag, 29. November 2021

Monday, November 29, 2021

Présidentielle 2022 : Éric Zemmour devrait officialiser sa candidature mardi

Éric Zemmour sur le plateau de BFMTV, le 17 novembre 2021. BERTRAND GUAY / AFP

LE FIGARO : Le polémiste pourrait se déclarer candidat aux alentours de midi, avant de s'exprimer le soir au 20 Heures de TF1.

Il passe à la vitesse supérieure. Au terme d'une vaste tournée promotionnelle, qui a rapidement pris des allures de précampagne, Éric Zemmour s'apprête à entrer de plain-pied dans l'étape d'après. Celle de sa candidature à l'élection présidentielle de 2022. Le polémiste sera en effet l'invité du 20H de TF1 ce mardi soir, pour confirmer au grand public une annonce qu'il devrait officialiser aux alentours de midi, selon un membre de son équipe de campagne - même si le format précis de sa déclaration reste tenu secret à ce stade. » | Par Arthur Berdah | lundi 29 novembre 2021

Jack Dorsey Steps Down as Twitter Chief Executive

THE GUARDIAN: Dorsey co-founded site in 2006 and posted world’s first tweet / Parag Agrawal, chief technology officer, to replace Dorsey

Jack Dorsey in 2015. Photograph: Lucas Jackson/Reuters

Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey has stepped down from his executive role at the social media company.

Dorsey will be replaced by chief technology officer (CTO) Parag Agrawal, the company announced on Monday.

The surprise move ends Dorsey’s much criticized tenure as chief executive officer of both Twitter and Square, his digital payments company, which led to Twitter stakeholders Elliott Management and billionaire investor Paul Singer calling on him to step down from one of those roles.

Twitter’s shares rose 11% after the news broke on CNBC before being briefly suspended.

The company said Dorsey would step down immediately but that Dorsey would remain on the board until Twitter’s stockholder meeting in 2022.

“I’ve decided to leave Twitter because I believe the company is ready to move on from its founders. My trust in Parag as Twitter’s CEO is deep. His work over the past 10 years has been transformational. I’m deeply grateful for his skill, heart and soul. It’s his time to lead,” said Dorsey. » | Dominic Rushe in New York | Monday, November 29, 2021

Jack Dorsey, cofondateur de Twitter, démissionne de son poste de directeur général : Il va être remplacé par le directeur technique du groupe, Parag Agrawal. »

Jack Dorsey resigniert bei Twitter: Das Unternehmen ist bekannt und beliebt, hat aber seine ambitionierten unternehmerischen Ziele meist verfehlt. Nun zieht sich der stark kritisierte Gründer Jack Dorsey resigniert aus der Chefetage zurück und konzentriert sich auf sein «anderes Baby»: Square. »

House of Gucci Is ‘Painful and Insulting’, Says Gucci Family

THE GUARDIAN: Heirs of Aldo Gucci issue statement taking issue with Ridley Scott’s film but have stopped short of legal action

Thugs, ignorant and insensitive to the world around them’": Al Pacino as Aldo Gucci.Photograph: Courtesy of Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures Inc./AP

Surviving family members of the Gucci fashion dynasty have expressed unhappiness with their representation in the new film House of Gucci.

In a statement issued on Monday, the heirs of Aldo Gucci – who ran the fashion house for 33 years until the mid-1980s – said they were aggrieved by the lack of consultation by film-makers, as well as their portrayal as “thugs, ignorant and insensitive to the world around them”.

Ridley Scott’s film stars Al Pacino as Aldo Gucci, Jeremy Irons as his brother Rodolfo, and Adam Driver as his nephew Maurizio, who took over the firm until he was murdered in 1995 by a hitman hired by his ex-wife, Patrizia Reggiani (played by Lady Gaga).

Based on the 2000 nonfiction book The House of Gucci: A Sensational Story of Murder, Madness, Glamour, and Greed, the film, said the Guccis, attributes “a tone and an attitude to the protagonists of the well-known events that never belonged to them”.

The statement continued: “This is extremely painful from a human point of view and an insult to the legacy on which the brand is built today.” » | Catherine Shoard | Monday, November 29, 2021

Les héritiers Gucci veulent porter plainte contre le film House of Gucci »

The Fascinating Life of Prince Philip's Mother: Princess Alice, the Queen's Mother-In-Law | Absolute History

Jun 8, 2019 • We all know about the late Queen Mum – one of Britain’s most instantly recognisable figures. But few have even heard of the Queen’s mother-in-law, Princess Alice. And yet, the life-story of Prince Philip’s mother almost defies belief.

A great granddaughter of Queen Victoria, Prince Philip’s mother married into the Greek royal family – only to see the Greek monarchy overthrown by revolution. Fleeing into exile, she suffered a severe nervous breakdown. She was locked away in mental hospitals and subjected to experimental treatments by psychiatrists – including Sigmund Freud himself. The trauma had a shattering effect on Princess Alice’s marriage and led to a fractured childhood for her only son Prince Philip.

Prince Philip’s mother eventually fought her way back from mental illness, and became an unlikely hero of World War Two, risking her life to hide a Jewish family from the Nazis. When her son married the future Queen Elizabeth in 1948, Alice turned down the option of a cosy royal life. Instead she chose to dedicate herself to working with the poor in Greece. She gave away all her possessions and even founded her own religious order.

Featuring exclusive interviews with family members and previously unseen archive footage, this film sheds new light on one of the royal family’s most remarkable, but little known, personalities.


Man to Man | Hombre a hombre | Vintage Photos | Male Affection

Remember Stephen Sondheim | NYT News

Nov 29, 2021 • In a never-before-seen interview, Stephen Sondheim sat down with The New York Times in June 2008 to talk about his life, career and accomplishments.


Related:

Stephen Sondheim, Musical Theater Legend, Dead at 91 »

Marc & Roger: The Highlights of an Epic Gay Jewish Wedding | Music: Justin Timberlake - Can't Stop the Feeling

Feb 20, 2017 • A testimony of love: a superb gay wedding!

Ces jeunes hommes ont de la laine et de l’amour les garder au chaud cet hiver !

These young men have wool and love to keep them warm this winter! / Diese jungen Männer haben Wolle und Liebe, um sie diesen Winter warm zu halten!

Merci à Woolmarty sur Pinterest pour cette superbe photo.

Democracy Now! Top US News & World Headlines — November 29, 2021

Virgil Abloh: Designer and Off-White Founder Dies Aged 41

GETTY IMAGES

BBC: Virgil Abloh, the Louis Vuitton artistic director and founder of the Off-White fashion label, has died from cancer aged 41, it has been announced.

Revealing the news, the French fashion house's parent company LVMH described Abloh as a "genius" and a "visionary".

The US designer came to prominence as Kanye West's creative director but later made history as the first African-American to lead Louis Vuitton.

Abloh is survived by his wife, Shannon, and their two children.

A statement on his Instagram page described him as a "fiercely devoted father, husband, son, brother, and friend".

Abloh was diagnosed with cardiac angiosarcoma - a rare, aggressive form of cancer - in 2019, but did not make the diagnosis public. » | BBC | Sunday, November 28, 2021

Sous le choc, le monde de la mode réagit au décès de Virgil Abloh, "une belle âme", "un visionnaire" : «Dévasté», «le coeur brisé», «ne pouvant y croire»... Suite à l'annonce, le 28 novembre, du décès du créateur américain Virgil Abloh, à l'âge de 41 ans, des suites d'un cancer, l'industrie de la mode a réagi sur la toile avec beaucoup d'émotion, lui rendant un hommage sincère et appuyé. »

Virgil Abloh, Barrier-Breaking Designer, Is Dead at 41: His expansive approach to design inspired comparisons to artists including Andy Warhol and Jeff Koons. For him, clothes were totems of identity. »

In a Nonbinary Pronoun, France Sees a U.S. Attack on the Republic

THE NEW YORK TIMES: When a French dictionary included the gender-nonspecific “iel” for the first time, a virulent reaction erupted over “wokisme” exported from American universities.

PARIS — Perhaps France was always going to have a hard time with nonbinary pronouns. Its language is intensely gender-specific and fiercely protected by august authorities. Still, the furor provoked by a prominent dictionary’s inclusion of the pronoun “iel” has been remarkably virulent.

Le Petit Robert, rivaled only by the Larousse in linguistic authority, chose to add “iel” — a gender-neutral merging of the masculine “il” (he) and the feminine “elle” (she) — to its latest online edition. Jean-Michel Blanquer, the education minister, was not amused.

“You must not manipulate the French language, whatever the cause,” he said, expressing support for the view that “iel” was an expression of “wokisme.”

Mr. Blanquer is seemingly convinced of a sweeping American “woke” assault on France aimed at spreading racial and gender discord over French universalism. Last month he told the daily Le Monde that a backlash against what he called woke ideology was the main factor in the 2016 victory of Donald J. Trump. » | Roger Cohen and Léontine Gallois | Sunday, November 28, 2021

Related :

L'idéologie woke à l'assaut du dictionnaire Le Robert »

Sunday, November 28, 2021

Brexit Leaves EU-bound Christmas Presents Out in the Cold

THE OBSERVER: An increase in red tape and charges means headaches for those sending gifts to Europe

People preparing to send Christmas parcels to family and friends in Europe face being caught out by post-Brexit red tape and charges that threaten to take some of the joy out of gift-giving.

A warning has also been sounded that some of those who have sent gifts to the EU this year have encountered problems ranging from delays and unexpected charges to items going missing.

This will be the first time most people have encountered rules that came in this year relating to VAT and customs charges applying to items being posted to the EU.

The consumer organisation Which? told the Observer that its research indicates the vast majority of people know little or nothing about the new rules. “The changes brought about by Brexit have created a greater burden of customs paperwork for consumers and couriers alike,” said Adam French, Which? consumer rights expert. “You now have to attach customs declaration forms to anything you send, very clearly describing what it is and where it has originated from.” » | Rupert Jones | Sunday, November 28, 2021

The Nature of Neoliberalism and Its Consequences

Nov 11, 2021 • On the show, Chris Hedges discusses the nature of neoliberalism and its consequences with Professor Wendy Brown*, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton University.

Does the eruption of ethnonationalist movements defined by hyper-patriotism, xenophobia, racism, religious chauvinism, and so-called traditional moral values signal the end of neoliberalism? Or are these protofascist movements, the natural consequence of neoliberal policies that allowed corporations to corrupt and seize governing institutions and the press, impoverish the working class, and orchestrate the largest transference of wealth upwards in American history?

There is no doubt, as the political scientist Wendy Brown writes, that the constellation of principles, policies, practices, and forms of governing reason that may be gathered under the sign of neoliberalism has importantly constituted the catastrophic present, but, she argues, this was not neoliberalism’s intent, rather its Frankensteinian creation.

By generating anti-democratic forms of state power above its natural consequence, she argues, it was antidemocratic culture from below. The synergy between these two forces sees an increasingly undemocratic and anti-democratic citizenry ever more willing to validate an increasingly anti-democratic state.



• Professor Wendy Brown teaches at the Institute of Advanced Study, Princeton University and isthe author of In the Ruins of Neoliberalism: The Rise of Antidemocratic Politics in the West.

L’Angleterre sonne l’alarme et renoue avec le port du masque obligatoire

Lors d’une conférence de presse, samedi à Londres, le premier ministre britannique, Boris Johnson, a annoncé un durcissement des mesures sanitaires dans le pays. POOL/REUTERS

LE FIGARO : Critiqué pour avoir été lent à réagir au début de l’épidémie, le gouvernement britannique a voulu, cette fois, réagir vite.

Encore traumatisés par un Noël 2020 plombé par la fulgurante apparition du «variant anglais», les Britanniques s’alarment aujourd’hui pour les fêtes qui viennent. Boris Johnson les a assurés que la période serait plus festive que l’année dernière mais toute la presse faisait sa une sur de possibles projets de vacances torpillés. Et l’île recommence à se barricader. Face à la menace du variant Omicron, Boris Johnson s’est résolu à prendre des mesures qu’il s’interdisait trois jours auparavant.

L’apparition dans le royaume de trois cas Omicron - tous liés à un voyage en Afrique australe -, a tiré la sonnette d’alarme. Le premier ministre Boris Johnson a annoncé samedi durcir les mesures d’entrée en Angleterre à partir de mardi. Tous les voyageurs entrant dans le pays devront passer un test PCR deux jours après leur arrivée et s’isoler dans l’attente des résultats. Les mesures aux frontières avaient été relâchées cet été, seul un test antigénique était requis sans nécessité d’isolement. Londres a aussi mis sur une «liste rouge» dix pays d’Afrique australe. Par ailleurs, le port du masque va de nouveau être obligatoire dans les magasins et les transports en commun. » | Par Arnaud De La Grange | dimanche 28 novembre 2021

Réservé aux abonnés