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Ben Jennings on Trump and the Ukraine peace talks – cartoon
news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 5 days ago - 17:59
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add Followpeople 416 subscribers • The need for independent journalism has never been greater.
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Far-right National Rally ‘not a danger’ to France, Sarkozy claims
news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 5 days ago - 17:59
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Sydney Sweeney, Richard Linklater and Emma Thompson are up for most egregious snub in the 2026 Golden Globe nominations
news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 5 days ago - 17:43 • 1 minute
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Jim Caviezel to play Jair Bolsonaro in ‘heroic’ biopic
news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 5 days ago - 17:42
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Cornish activist injured as police remove her from tree-felling protest
news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 5 days ago - 17:30
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England health officials identify newly evolved variant of mpox
news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 5 days ago - 17:19
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Anglo American’s merger bonus was a pay wheeze too far | Nils Pratley
news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 5 days ago - 17:18
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A better understanding of mental ill health is crucial | Letters
news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 5 days ago - 17:03
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Nigel Farage is wrong – victims don’t forget bullying and abuse | Letters
news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 5 days ago - 17:02
Nicolas Sarkozy’s new book, The Diary of a Prisoner, is being released this week – and also details the time he spent in jail
The former French president Nicolas Sarkozy has said Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally (RN) party is “not a danger” to France, and he would not support a united front of parties against Le Pen at the next election.
In his new book, written at a “small plywood table” in prison where he recently served 20 days of a sentence for criminal conspiracy, Sarkozy said many of his former supporters were now potential Le Pen voters, and he appeared to include the RN in his vision of a broad French right.
Continue reading...Linklater is missing from the best director list despite having two nominated films, and actors including Sydney Sweeney and Josh O’Connor are nowhere to be seen. It looks like Paul Thomas Anderson’s year
It’s become traditional to look for the snubs in any award list – and heaven help anyone whose job it is to curate the “in memoriam” montage on the night and then the next morning apologise for the inevitable hurtful omissions.
Snubs have become a cliche of awards season commentary, but you have to wonder about the best director list of this year’s Golden Globes nominations. No Richard Linklater? This amazing director actually has two films in the “best musical or comedy” section (so I guess he can’t really be that depressed). There’s his amazingly witty and poignant chamber piece Blue Moon , with Globe-nominated Ethan Hawke playing depressed Broadway lyricist Lorenz Hart, and his eerily accomplished pastiche-homage Nouvelle Vague , about the making of Godard’s classic Breathless, shot not in the boring old colour in which these events happened but in a beautifully realised monochrome – a little reverential for my tastes but still a marvellously accomplished picture. Two films in one year, and such different films. Quite a feat.
Continue reading...Actor, who starred in The Passion of the Christ, will play the disgraced ex-Brazilian president in film written by his one-time secretary of culture
Jair Bolsonaro , the former Brazilian president now in prison for plotting a coup, is getting the biopic treatment.
Jim Caviezel, who played Jesus in Mel Gibson’s 2004 film The Passion of the Christ, is reportedly filming a “heroic” portrait of the rightwing ex-politician in secret. Dark Horse, directed by Cyrus Nowrasteh and written by Mário Frias, who served as secretary of culture under Bolsonaro, started shooting three months ago in Brazil, where Bolsonaro served as president from 2019 until 2023. He was sentenced to 27 years and three months in prison in September 2025 for leading a criminal conspiracy to stop his leftwing rival, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva , taking power, though his supporters deny the allegations and have compared the prosecution to the “lawfare” allegedly faced by Donald Trump before he was re-elected.
Continue reading...
Charity worker had joined 40 demonstrators ‘bearing witness’ to the loss of three lime trees in Falmouth
A charity worker suffered a head injury when police tried to remove her from a protest against trees being felled in a Cornish seaside town.
Debs Newman, 60, was “bearing witness” to the loss of three mature lime trees in Falmouth when she was seized by officers.
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Virus caught by person who travelled to Asia combines more severe form of mpox with less virulent type
Health officials have identified a new variant of mpox in England after a person who recently travelled to Asia was tested for the virus.
Genome sequencing showed that the virus was a “recombinant” form containing elements of two types of mpox currently in circulation: the more severe clade 1, and the less virulent clade 2, which sparked the 2022 global mpox outbreak.
Continue reading...Miner will have to do things by the book after ditching plan to pay bosses millions in bonuses after Teck deal
Shareholder rebellions over executive pay aren’t what they used to be. In the past 18 months, bumper incentive arrangements for the bosses have been approved at AstraZeneca , the London Stock Exchange Group and Smith & Nephew . All those companies have managed to argue successfully that, since the bulk of their revenues are made on the other side of the Atlantic, the executives should be paid like Americans.
Perhaps it was such favourable votes (for the executives) that persuaded the remuneration committee of FTSE 100 miner Anglo American that its cheeky “resolution 2” within the proposed $50bn all-share merger with the Canadian group Teck Resources wouldn’t cause a fuss.
Continue reading...Sagal Hassan and Dr Lisa Williams respond to the news that Wes Streeting has asked experts to investigate whether normal feelings have become ‘over-pathologised’
As a psychotherapist with child and adolescent mental health services, I welcome Wes Streeting’s change of heart on his comments about the “overdiagnosis” of mental health conditions, ADHD and autism ( I realise now that my view on mental health overdiagnosis was divisive. We all need better evidence, 4 December ). Political point-scoring has no place in public health.
By setting up this taskforce, Streeting acknowledges the complexity of the picture and that conversations must be led by research, where science and suffering can be held together.
Continue reading...Readers respond after another former Dulwich college pupil spoke out with allegations of racist behaviour by the Reform UK leader
Regarding Nigel Farage’s difficulty believing that people can remember schoolboy “banter” of more than four decades ago (
Former Dulwich pupil says Farage told him: ‘That’s the way back to Africa’, 5 December
), perhaps I can helpfully direct him to an African proverb: “The axe forgets, the tree never does.” This succinctly summarises the disparity in recollections of interactions between victims and perpetrators.
Juliet Winstone
Dorking, Surrey
• “Farage has suggested that it is simply inconceivable that anyone could recall such events of over four decades ago,” says Yinka Bankole in your article. Such events that hurt children or young people, whether words or actions, are remembered for the whole of a lifetime. I remember a similarly unpleasant event that happened to me at the age of 13 on 14 February 1964. I could go to the exact spot. That was more than six decades ago, not four.
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