Tuesday, January 19, 2021

«La violence n'est jamais la solution» : Melania Trump publie une vidéo d'adieu

LE FIGARO: La première dame s'apprête à quitter la Maison-Blanche et n'a qu'à peine évoqué son mari.


Vous pouvez lire l’article ici »

Brexit Was a Typically English Revolution – One That Left the Elites Unharmed

THE GUARDIAN: Our ruling class is expert in maintaining a myth of continuity, and absorbing supporters from the ranks of the aggrieved

Jacob Rees-Mogg’s star has waned since his glory days leading backbench rebellions against Theresa May. He is on TV less, playing to smaller crowds. I caught him the other week on the BBC Parliament channel telling the Commons that fish unable to reach EU markets were “better and happier” because Brexit makes them more British.

Watching his performance, I recalled the perennially startling fact about Rees-Mogg: he is younger than Kylie Minogue (also Noel Gallagher and Damon Albarn, but Minogue is the more arresting comparator for some reason).

No one expects politicians and pop stars from the same generation to sound and dress alike, but how many people realise that the artist known to fans as Moggy is of Kylie’s generation? His style implies something ancient, but that is the point. It is a look, tailored for an audience – just like any theatrical costume. Except his stage is parliament. » | Rafael Behr | Tuesday, January 19, 2021

The Last Christmas of the Romanovs

Christmas 1917 would be the last for the Romanov family. Isolated from the world, exiled in Siberia, they lived the joy of the feast of love, distributing gifts to the members of their staff that they had made themselves. Under house arrest and closely guarded, they were able to organize a traditional Christmas that was in many ways their closest family holiday.

Democracy Now! Top US & World Headlines — January 19, 2021

President Trump: The 24 Final Hours in the White House | DW News

Washington has become a fortress city of roadblocks and barricades, and the FBI is vetting all 25,000 people providing security for President-elect Joe Biden's upcoming inauguration. Rehearsals of the ceremony are taking place in a city that now resembles a ghost town.

Le nouveau président de la CDU, un choix rassurant pour l’Allemagne et l’Europe

LE MONDE: Editorial. En choisissant de porter Armin Laschet, fidèle de la chancelière Angela Merkel, à la tête de leur parti, les conservateurs allemands réaffirment leur ancrage dans une ligne européenne et centriste.

Editorial du « Monde ».
Quinze ans après l’élection d’Angela Merkel à la tête du gouvernement allemand, le congrès de l’Union chrétienne-démocrate (CDU), vendredi 15 et samedi 16 janvier, avait un parfum d’adieu : « Selon toute vraisemblance, c’est mon dernier congrès en tant que chancelière », y a déclaré Mme Merkel, qui s’est engagée à quitter le pouvoir après les élections législatives du 26 septembre.

Si elle s’apprête à tourner la page des années Merkel, la droite allemande n’entend toutefois pas rompre avec le « merkélisme ». Armin Laschet, 59 ans, le nouveau président de la CDU, est un fidèle de la chancelière, dont il a toujours soutenu la politique, y compris quand elle se heurta à de vives critiques dans le parti, comme en 2015, lors de la crise des réfugiés. » | Éditorial | lundi 18 janvier 2021

Covid-19 : la lourde responsabilité de Donald Trump dans l’hécatombe américaine

LE MONDE: Editorial. Le bilan de 400 000 morts apparaît comme la conséquence de ce mélange d’arrogance, de cynisme, de mépris pour les scientifiques et de mensonge caractéristique de la personnalité du président américain.

Editorial du « Monde ».
Il y a tout juste quatre ans, Donald Trump promettait devant le monde abasourdi de « mettre fin au carnage américain ». A la veille de quitter la Maison Blanche, le président républicain laisse derrière lui un pays en lambeaux, parcouru de divisions rarement égalées, secoué par des violences politiques inédites et, surtout, ravagé par une pandémie galopante et, par endroits, totalement hors de contrôle.

Sa gestion de la crise sanitaire, marquée tour à tour par l’indifférence, le déni, les mensonges et l’instrumentalisation politique, laisse les Etats-Unis face à un bilan unique au monde : près de 400 000 morts en onze mois, 23 millions de personnes contaminées. A son actif demeureront seulement les efforts financiers déployés pour permettre la découverte rapide d’un vaccin. » | Éditorial | Samedi 16 janvier 2021

Tunisia Protests: Hundreds Arrested as Clashes Continue

BBC: Police in Tunisia say they have arrested more than 600 people as a fourth night of violent protests saw protesters return to the streets.

On Monday, crowds of mainly young demonstrators again gathered in the centre of the capital, Tunis, throwing stones and petrol bombs at police.

Security forces responded with tear gas and water cannon.

Tunisia faces severe economic problems and a third of its young people are unemployed.

The economic crisis has worsened under the pandemic.

The latest unrest comes almost exactly 10 years since the Tunisian revolution ushered in democracy and triggered the Arab Spring revolts across the region. However, hopes that this would bring more jobs and opportunities have been disappointed.

Outside Tunis, clashes were reported on Monday in the cities of Kasserine, Gafsa, Sousse and Monastir. » | Tuesday, January 19, 2021

Italy Smoking: Want to Light Up in Milan? Not Any More, You Can't

BBC: It's all change for the trendy crowds along the canals of Milan, used to holding a glass of aperitivo in one hand and a cigarette in the other. Because a ban on smoking outdoors has just come into force in a range of public places.

Smoking within a 10m (30ft) distance of other people is no longer permitted from Tuesday at bus and tram stops as well as in the city's parks and green spaces, sports and recreational grounds, children's play areas, stadiums and cemeteries.

Italy was the first country in the EU to pass a law backing an indoor ban on smoking in public places in 2003.

Milan is now the first Italian city to introduce such an extensive outdoor ban, part of a package of measures to improve air quality and combat climate change.

Other planned regulations, which will come into effect in phases over the next three decades, also target factors like car emissions and heating fuels. » | Dany Mitzman | Bologna | Tuesday, January 19, 2021

Majority of Europeans Fear Biden Unable to Fix 'Broken' US

THE GUARDIAN: Survey finds more Europeans than not say US cannot be trusted after four years of Trump

A majority of Europeans believe America’s political system is broken, that China will be the world’s leading power within a decade, and that Joe Biden will be unable to halt his country’s decline on the world stage, according to a report.

While many welcomed Biden’s victory in November’s US election, more Europeans than not feel that after four years of Donald Trump the US cannot be trusted, according to the study by the European Council on Foreign Relations.

“Europeans like Biden, but they don’t think America will come back as a global leader,” said the thinktank’s director, Mark Leonard. “When George W Bush was president, they were divided about how America should use its power. With Biden entering the White House, they are divided about whether America has power at all.” » | Jon Henley | Tuesday, January 19, 2021

Chris Hedges on the Bleak Future of the USA (Audio Only)

A chilling speech by Chris Hedges, Pulitzer prize winning journalist and political activist, given at St. Andrew's - Wesley United Church in Vancouver, CA on March 3, 2017.

Listen HERE »

Lights Go Out on Trump's Reality TV Presidency but Dark Legacy Remains

THE GUARDIAN: For four years the outrages piled up so high they were hard to keep track of but the coronavirus pandemic proved to be one crisis he couldn’t bluster away

In a cold, sombre, damp Washington four years ago this Wednesday, Donald Trump took the oath of office as the 45th president of the United States and delivered an inaugural address now remembered for two words: American carnage.

He delivered, but not as he promised. Trump pledged to end the carnage of inner-city poverty, rusting factories, broken schools and the scourge of criminal gangs and drugs. Instead his presidency visited upon the nation the carnage of about 400,000 coronavirus deaths, the worst year for jobs since the second world war and the biggest stress test for American democracy since the civil war.

“It’s not just physical carnage,” said Moe Vela, a former White House official. “There’s also mental carnage and there’s spiritual carnage and there’s emotional carnage. He has left a very wide swath of American carnage and that is the last way I would want to be remembered by history, but that is how he will be remembered.” » | David Smith in Washington | Tuesday, January 19, 2021

Brexiters Are Waking Up to the Damage They've Done

THE GUARDIAN: From horse racing to fishing to road haulage, British industry is in chaos. No wonder leavers are turning on each other

Brexit has beached the fishing boats at Hastings. The two-man crew of Paul Joy’s boat Kaya have left for shore jobs, after the price of the huss they land fell to just 2p a kilo. Exports to the European Union are Brexit-blighted, with fishers across Britain poleaxed by new costs and regulations, their catches rotting before they reach EU markets. It’s costing them millions already.

For the past two years Joy, a passionate Brexiter, has consistently told me he believes his industry would be shafted in any trade deal. “Betrayed, sacrificed,” he says, outraged at the government’s failure to secure British fishing rights for 12 miles around the coast, and now crippled by the export costs. So when foreign secretary Dominic Raab has the effrontery to tell the BBC’s Andrew Marr that this is “a great deal for the fishing industry”, he must know it’s not true.

Other industries want to know if Boris Johnson’s promised “compensation” for fishing losses means a huge subsidy in perpetuity for this less than 0.2% sliver of the economy? Because the problems exploding in one industry after another, in less than three Brexit weeks, are not going away.

Friction is the new normal. As the chief EU negotiator, Michel Barnier said firmly last week, things have “changed for good”. UK choices mean “mechanical, obvious, inevitable consequences when you leave the single market and that’s what the British wished to do”. It’s not French revenge, or bloody-minded Brussels, but ordinary life as a third country. » | Polly Toynbee | Monday, January 18, 2021

Biden’s Incoming Chief of Staff Warns That the Virus Death Toll Will Reach 500,000 by the End of February.

THE NEW YORK TIMES: Officials in the incoming Biden administration braced the country for continued hardship in the days after the inauguration, with the president-elect assuming control of a struggling economy and surging coronavirus outbreak in less than three days.

Ron Klain, President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s incoming White House chief of staff, had a dire forecast for the course of the coronavirus outbreak in the new administration’s first weeks, predicting that half a million Americans will have died from the coronavirus by the end of February. The current toll is nearing 400,000.

“The virus is going to get worse before it gets better,” Mr. Klain said in an appearance on CNN’s “State of the Union.” “People who are contracting the virus today will start to get sick next month, will add to the death toll in late February, even March, so it’s going to take awhile to turn this around.”

Average daily U.S. deaths from the virus have risen to well past 3,000, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has sounded the alarm about a fast-spreading, far more contagious variant of the coronavirus that officials project will become the dominant source of infection in the country by March, potentially fueling another wrenching surge of cases and deaths. » | Chris Cameron | Sunday, January 17, 2021

Opinion: The Extraordinary Courage of Aleksei Navalny

THE NEW YORK TIMES: After a near-fatal poisoning, Russia’s top dissident steps back into the bear’s den.

Aleksei Navalny knew he would be arrested as soon as he stepped foot on Russian soil, and he had no illusions about what this could mean.

Mr. Navalny had been abroad since August, after all, because President Vladimir Putin’s political goons had poisoned him, and had failed to kill him only because a pilot had diverted his flight to Omsk, where doctors kept him alive until he could be evacuated to Germany. Ironically, his flight was diverted again on Sunday — this time by Russian authorities afraid of the welcoming crowd gathering at the Moscow airport where his flight was supposed to land.

Mr. Navalny knew he would be arrested, because he has been arrested several times before. Repression is the only way Mr. Putin knows. But he is also learning that, in the era of social media, every arrest on a trumped-up charge only broadens Mr. Navalny’s following and amplifies his indictment of the corruption of Russia’s rulers. » | The Editorial Board | Sunday, January 17, 2021

Monday, January 18, 2021

Nicholas and Alexandra | by HRH Prince Michael of Kent | Parts 1 & 2

Narrated by Jack Perkins, presented by HRH Prince Michael of Kent, includes interviews with Prince Nicholas Romanov (1922-2014), and people who were born in the late 19th century, and witness to Nicholas II's reign.

For almost a century their fabled dynasty and tragic fate have been enveloped in myth and surrounded by mystery. Now, with the opening of the former Soviet Union, the true story of Nicholas and Alexandra can be told. This groundbreaking production, filmed on location throughout the former Soviet Union and Europe, presents a treasure trove of information and documents that have been kept secret for decades. Intimate diaries, letters, and personal effects from the once-sealed imperial archives tell the astonishing story of the Romanovs' reign. Chilling eyewitness accounts, testimony from executioners, and a somber exhumation finally put to rest the enigma of their dynasty's horrifying end. Stunning, fact-filled and grand, this is the ultimate chronicle of a romance that changed the world.

Originally produced by A&E Biography, 1998.



Sunday, January 17, 2021

Prof. Wolff on the Capitol Hill Riot: Capitalism's Last Gasp?

Sterben & Tod – Warum haben wir Angst davor? | Philosophie | Bleisch & Bossart | SRF Kultur – Ein Gespräch in Schweizerdeutsch (Schwiezertüütsch)

Muss man vor dem Tod Angst haben? Vielleicht nicht vor dem Tod, denn den Zustand des Totseins erleben wir ja nicht mehr. Ist es also das Sterben, das uns beschäftigt? Barbara Bleisch und Yves Bossart diskutieren über Facetten der Endlichkeit – vom Sekundentod bis zum ewigen Leben und fragen: Wäre Unsterblichkeit die Lösung?

Hebrew University's Prof. Yuval Noah Harari on the Era of the Coronavirus: Living in a New Reality

Interview between journalist Romi Noimark and Hebrew University's Prof. Yuval Noah Harari on The Era of the Coronavirus: Living in a New Reality

Evangelical Christians in the USA | DW Documentary

Evangelical Christians often have a huge impact on American politics. Many of these people are socially conservative, consider themselves patriots, and believe that Americans have a constitutional right to own guns.

This documentary explores the core beliefs of America's fundamentalist Christians - including the concept of creation, as opposed to evolution.

Our report features interviews with conservative evangelicals who, for example, believe that God created the world in six days about 6,000 years ago. Our reporters traveled to the state of Kentucky to visit a Creation Museum and a Christian theme park that features a life-size model of Noah's Ark.

Christian churches in the US play a major social role, especially in rural areas. They operate schools and universities and organize music festivals that celebrate their faith.

Most fundamentalist Christians are opposed to abortion, pre-marital sex, and homosexuality. They believe that those who engage in these activities will be condemned to Hell. And some have formed paramilitary groups to defend themselves against those whom they perceive as enemies - including non-believers, Communists, and Muslims.