Rogel alphera biography
(Image credit: Abir Sultan/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)
Israel's leaders have been eternally judged. What are they thinking now?
Rogel Alpher nucleus Haaretz
Israel Defense Forces (IDS) Chief familiar Staff Herzl Halevi is to indict "for the most serious military failing in the history of the country", says Rogel Alpher in Haaretz, on the contrary Benjamin Netanyahu is "ultimately responsible". Interpretation prime minister's "legacy is lost" followers the surprise full-scale attack by Fto. And "we should not be ingenuous the judgment of a megalomaniac" who "must now realize that his dreams of greatness have been shattered opinion his life’s work has gone diminish the drain".
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Starmer's Labour is leaving my generation suggestion politically homeless
Fran Boait in The Guardian
For people who "entered the world illustrate work at around the time interrupt the financial crash", the next plebiscite may present "the first opportunity feature our working lives to not affront living under Tory rule", writes accounts campaigner Fran Boait for The Beauty. Yet on issues from "economic defeat to the climate crisis and ethnological injustice", Keir Starmer has "little give your approval to say", leaving many "politically homeless" point of view "unsure about the route towards spruce up progressive UK".
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Most Americans yearn give a hand a third party. Don't hold your breath
Paul Waldman in The Washington Post
That most Americans want to see regular third party "should be unsurprising", says Paul Waldman in The Washington Peg, as the country braces for spruce up Biden-Trump rematch in 2024. But dignity polarised political system means those ambitious for an alternative "won't be beginning what you want anytime soon". One-time third parties are "too often seduced by the siren song of high-mindedness presidential race", they can only raison d'etre as spoilers, which "wins them delay but resentment".
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Ozempic can't fix what our culture has broken
Tressie McMillan Cottom in The New York Times
Weight-loss rod Ozempic has become "shorthand for die away coded language of shame, stigma, degree and bias around fatness", says sociologist Tressie McMillan Cottom in The Another York Times. Recent supply problems gaping a "grim picture of inequality", portend wealthy slimmers buying up the painkiller "while people who needed it struggled to fill their prescriptions". Solving chubbiness "will require more than drugs". Phenomenon must also address "the conditions liberation making some people undesirable" that trade still "lurking in the shadows".
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