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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Joan E Greve)
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‘Transformational’: could America’s new green bank be a climate gamechanger?
Long championed by climate activists, the green bank would provide funding to expand clean energy use across the USBuried on page 667 of the Inflation Reduction Act is a climate policy that has been in the making for more than a decade.The Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund provides $27bn in funding for projects aimed at lowering America’s planet-heating emissions. Some of those funds, roughly $7bn, will be dedicated to clean energy deployment in low-income communities – but the vast majority of the
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Dan Collyns in Ayacucho)
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Abimael Guzman, Shining Path’s leader died a year ago. The terror he unleashed on Peru lives on
The professor-turned-messianic figure’s terror group killed tens of thousands of people in 1980s and 1990s, ripping apart the country’s political and social fabricA year has passed since Abimael Guzmán, the aging leader of the Shining Path terror group, died in prison, yet the trauma he inflicted on the Andean nation continues to haunt its people and his legacy still poisons Peru’s fraught politics.The professor-turned-messianic leader, who died aged 86, unleashed an internecine conflict that ki
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Christie Watson)
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Experiencing the perimenopause has many alarming downsides. But it can be sexy, too…
When Christie Watson put on an HRT patch she found herself thinking about sex, all the time. What was going on?I began using HRT patches at 42, after a seemingly catastrophic breakdown that resulted in my climbing into a Sainsbury’s fish-finger freezer. My mental health was horrendous. I felt totally outside my own skin, dissociated, and that I’d lost my sense of self. I told a therapist that I related to Mrs Dalloway, a chronically depressed – and arguably narcissistic and bourgeois – fictional
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Joan Bakewell)
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I watched Queen Elizabeth’s entire reign: she was an anchor in a dizzy world | Joan Bakewell
The monarch’s consistency over decades of change allowed us all to enjoy our expanding freedomsTo have sustained a role as constitutional monarch of such a diverse and wide-reaching country as ours is one of the great achievements of Queen Elizabeth’s long reign. It will stand in the history books as outstanding in this or any other era.Her first decade on the throne, the 1950s, was a time of turbulent upheaval – socially, politically, culturally. For Elizabeth II it coincided with her 30s, when
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (David Smith in Washington)
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Over 70 years Queen Elizabeth met 13 US presidents (and graciously overlooked several faux pas)
The Queen’s record reign spanned 14 presidencies, from Truman to Joe Biden – and met all but oneWhen Elizabeth ascended the throne, the Soviet Union was in the iron grip of Joseph Stalin, China was led by Mao Zedong and the president of the United States was Harry Truman.The Queen held an audience with 15 British prime ministers, most recently Liz Truss, but her record reign also spanned 14 American presidents, from Truman to Joe Biden. She met them all, Democrat and Republican, except Lyndon Jo
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Stewart Lee)
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Pity poor Britons playing Liz Truss’s lottery | Stewart Lee
The new prime minister’s cabinet is comprised of people who were born to win, but for the rest of us, life is just a gambleLast week, on ITV’s This Morning, the cheerily rodentine Phillip Schofield and his margarine-moulded familiar, Holly Willoughby, offered a desperate member of the public the chance to have their energy bills paid at the whim of a gaudy spinning wheel of chance. Schofield is a cruel god, for whom we are mere flies, our sufferings simply sport. The former gopher handler fired
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Sophie Zeldin-O'Neill)
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Man held over Manchester IRA bombing released without charge
Man was interviewed by counter-terrorism officers in connection with 1996 attack that injured 200A man who was arrested in connection with the 1996 Manchester IRA bombing has been released without charge.He was held on suspicion of terrorism at Birmingham airport on Thursday and has now been released from custody, Greater Manchester police said. The man was interviewed by officers from Counter Terrorism Policing North West. Continue reading...
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Reuters in Stockholm)
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Sweden votes in election amid fears of far-right role in government
Rightwing bloc that has embraced anti-immigration Sweden Democrats aims to win power from centre-leftSwedes are voting in an election pitting the incumbent centre-left Social Democrats against a rightwing bloc that has embraced the anti-immigration Sweden Democrats in an attempt to win back power after eight years in opposition.With steadily growing numbers of shootings unnerving voters, parties have vied to be the toughest on gang crime, while surging inflation and the energy crisis in the wake
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Frank Cottrell-Boyce)
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When we asked the Queen to tea with Paddington, something magic happened – the most lovely goodbye | Frank Cottrell-Boyce
The writer behind HM’s encounter with the bear explains the sketch’s tender powerIn 1972, Rick Sylvester skied off the edge of Mount Asgard in Canada in one of cinema’s most electrifying stunts. It’s the bit in The Spy Who Loved Me where Bond is chased over the edge of a cliff to his certain death. Except it turns out that Bond takes a parachute with him when he goes skiing just in case –a union jack parachute. In his brilliant book about Bond and the Beatles, Love and Let Die, John Higgs quotes
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Sep 11, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (David Barnett)
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Rare signed edition of The Catcher in the Rye on sale for £225,000
JD Salinger did not want his friends cashing in, so inscribed copy of classic novel is one of the hardest titles for collectors to acquireIt was once the most censored book in American schools and libraries. Now, the only edition of The Catcher in the Rye that the author JD Salinger signed with his childhood nickname, Sonny, is going up for sale for £225,000.Salinger was said to have been resentful of friends and family cashing in on the success of his 1951 novel, and as a result signed copies d