KrISS feed 8.11
- Un simple et superbe (ou stupide) lecteur de flux. Par
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Justin McCurry in Tokyo)
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Record number of young people in Japan rejecting marriage, survey shows
Rise in people aged 18-24 who don’t intend to marry has consequences for Japan’s low birth rate and depopulation concernsA record proportion of men and women in Japan say they do not intend to marry, a trend experts have warned will undermine efforts to address the country’s population crisis.The National Institute of Population and Social Security – a government-affiliated body in Tokyo – said the results of its 2021 survey, published this month, would add to concerns about the low birth rate.
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Shah Meer Baloch in Quetta)
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‘The hospital has nothing’: Pakistan’s floods put pregnant women in danger
A third of the country is under water and a UN fund says almost 650,000 women in affected areas need maternity servicesCrying, vomiting and eight months pregnant, the young woman walked in labour pains for an hour in search of an ambulance.When Naseeba Ameerullah, 23, eventually found one, she had to beg the driver to take her. Pakistan’s floods had left the roads damaged and gridlocked, making what is usually a two-hour journey to the provincial capital of Quetta a punishing, 12-hour drive. Con
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Martin Farrer)
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‘Final homecoming’: front pages as the Queen’s coffin arrives at Buckingham Palace
The papers show pictures of a hearse delivering the Queen’s coffin to the palace where it will rest overnightThere’s only one place to start for the papers as the Queen’s coffin was driven through the gates of Buckingham Palace in what was inevitably dubbed the “final homecoming”.The front of Wednesday’s Mirror features a dramatic picture of the hearse sweeping towards the brightly lit palace as crowds formed a roadside guard of honour. “Led home by lights of love”, the headline says. Continue
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Associated Press)
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Panel says Confederate memorial at Arlington cemetery should be dismantled
The commission presented its final report on Confederate-honoring military bases and assets that should be renamedAn independent commission is recommending that the Confederate memorial at Arlington National Cemetery be dismantled and taken down, as part of its final report to Congress on the renaming of military bases and assets that commemorate the Confederacy.Panel members on Tuesday rolled out the final list of ships, base roads, buildings and other items that they said should be renamed. Bu
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Presented by Hannah Moore with John Collingridge; produced by Sarah Lawrynuik, Tom Glasser, Natalie Ktena and Rudi Zygadlo; executive producers Elizabeth Cassin and Phil Maynard)
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Will Liz Truss’s energy plan keep Britain warm this winter? – podcast
The prime minister’s energy plan may have been overshadowed by the death of the Queen, but its implications for households and businesses – as well as the national debt – will be huge. John Collingridge explains what it all meansWhen Liz Truss rose to her feet last Thursday, she expected the announcement of her landmark energy policy to dominate the news cycle for days. It was to be one of the most expensive economic interventions by the Treasury in living memory – overshadowing even the huge co
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Helen Davidson in Taipei)
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Strength of ‘limitless’ China-Russia ties to be tested at summit
Ukraine setback weakens Russian position as leaders prepare to jostle for regional influence in UzbekistanMajor setbacks for Moscow’s forces in Ukraine will further test the “limitless partnership” between China and Russia when their leaders meet this week for the first time since the invasion, analysts have said.The meeting of Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin, scheduled for Thursday at the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation summit in Samarkand, Uzbekistan, is likely to involve jostling for influenc
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Staff and agencies)
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Kazakhstan to change name of capital from Nur-sultan back to Astana
The capital of the central Asian country was renamed Nur-sultan in 2019 in honour of outgoing president Nursultan NazarbayevKazakh president Kassym-Jomart Tokayev has agreed to restore the former name of the country’s capital just three years after he renamed it in honour of his predecessor, his spokesperson said.Tokayev’s spokesman, Ruslan Zheliban, said the president agreed to the name change after an initiative by a group of MPs. Continue reading...
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Thomas Keneally)
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Hollow, cloying veneration greeted the Queen’s death. Now history calls on us to get an Australian head of state | Thomas Keneally
Though Elizabeth II outlasted and undid our republican impulses, it’s astonishing to see the nonstop public piety in operationThere is an undeniable power to monarchy. The monarch is an archetype on our collective unconscious, along with the deity, the prophet, Christ figures and the princesses little girls seek stories of, even in the new world of women’s power. Kingship is there with all the rest of our psychic paraphernalia. The Anglican church is still locked into believing the late Queen a
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Adrian Horton)
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Catherine Called Birdy review – Lena Dunham’s delightful medieval romp
Toronto film festival: The Girls creator handles an adaptation of Karen Cushman’s much-loved novel with wit and creativityCatherine Called Birdy, Lena Dunham’s thoroughly enjoyable adaptation of the millennial YA classic by Karen Cushman, opens in the mud. Fourteen-year-old Catherine, played with gusto by Game of Thrones’s Bella Ramsey, rolls in the dirt with her village friends, relishing the filth that coats her clothes, her cherubic face, her curtain of dark hair. The year is 1290, in the Eng
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Sep 14, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (As told to Marisa Bate)
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A moment that changed me: ‘As I recovered from spinal surgery, the death of Princess Diana made me value life’
At 19, I had an operation that left me in a back brace for a year. But as I lay confined to bed, I realised that I had much to be grateful forDuring a family holiday in 1996, my mum noticed something wasn’t quite right with my back. Sunbathing by the pool, she saw a flap of skin that looked out of place. When we got home, Dad’s osteopath traced an S-shape with her finger along my spine, and suggested I see a faith healer. Mum insisted on a more traditional route, and at the Royal National Orthop