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Sep 06, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Nigel Slater)
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Nigel Slater’s recipe for summer bean and tomato soup with gochujang
Add plenty of herbs for a delicious late summer soupPeel and roughly chop 1 medium-sized onion. Peel and finely slice 1 fat clove of garlic, or 2 smaller ones. In a medium-sized saucepan, warm 2 tbsp of olive oil, stir in the chopped onion and garlic. Cook over a moderate heat until pale gold and soft. You can expect this to take a good 15 minutes. Stir regularly, so the onion and garlic don’t burn.Roughly chop 450g of tomatoes (you could use canned tomatoes if you prefer, but the flavour will b
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Sep 06, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Tom Phillips in Rio de Janeiro)
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Brazil braces for turbulence on eve of Bolsonaro’s independence day rallies
Rightwing glee over president’s beach party contrasts with progressive anger that bicentennial celebration has been hijackedAt daybreak on Wednesday, Sgt Alexandre Martins will pull a yellow Brazil shirt on to his bullet-pocked body and set off from his suburban home for a date with destiny on Copacabana beach.“It’s going to go down in history. It’ll be a unique moment – a watershed … It will astonish the world,” promised the 44-year-old police veteran who has spent half his life battling drug g
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Sep 06, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Mark Brown North of England correspondent)
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‘Her death cannot be in vain,’ says Olivia Pratt-Korbel’s father
Father of nine-year-old girl shot dead in Liverpool says ‘words can’t express the pain we are going through’The father of nine-year-old Olivia Pratt-Korbel, who was shot dead in her Liverpool home, has spoken publicly for the first time, paying tribute to “a real bright spark … who loved to laugh and make people laugh”.The death of Olivia “cannot be in vain”, John Francis Pratt said in a statement from him and the wider family released through Merseyside police on Tuesday. Continue reading...
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Sep 06, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Omar Ferwati, Maheen Sadiq, Bryony Moore, Monika Cvorak and Katie Lamborn)
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Bolsonaro's war on the Amazon: examining evidence of crimes against Indigenous people– video
A serial denier of human-driven climate breakdown, Jair Bolsonaro has been criticised in the past for failing to protect the Amazon rainforest and its native communities.Now, with less than a month before Brazilians cast their ballot in the country's presidential elections on 2 October, using architectural techniques and satellite technologies, researchers at Forensic Architecture, in cooperation with the Climate Litigation Accelerator, have examined evidence of crimes against Indigenous people
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Sep 06, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Isobel Koshiw in Kyiv and Patrick Wintour Diplomatic editor)
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West reluctant to put Putin on trial, say Ukrainian officials
Country is seeking an international tribunal but fears its allies are still focused on future relations with RussiaRussia-Ukraine war: latest newsUkraine’s major western allies have yet to sign up to establish a tribunal to try Vladimir Putin and his inner circle for the crime of aggression, wanting to leave space for future relations with Russia, according to Ukraine’s top officials.“It’s big politics. On the one hand, countries publicly condemn the aggression but on the other, they are putting
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Sep 06, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Charlie Porter)
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‘Clothes to lie in’: what Boris Johnson’s carefully tailored chaos tells us about the man
Our former prime minister’s scruffy outfits are clothes in which to get away with lies. And they are symbols of patriarchal powerIt’s nothing, what Boris Johnson wears: suit, shirt, tie, socks, shoes. It’s how he dresses that matters, what his clothes mean, and our reactions to it. We, after all, acquiesce to the societal codes within which he seeks his power.Johnson’s clothes are an easy target: shambolic, unkempt, scruffy. He’s dressed this way since his schooldays at Eton college, more than f
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Sep 06, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Tom Silverstone Oliver Laughland)
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The Florida activist hoping to become the first Gen Z member of Congress – video
Maxwell Frost, at just 25 years old, has won a competitive primary in Florida’s heavily Democratic 10th congressional district. That gives him a strong chance of becoming a member of the US House of Representatives – and the first generation Z candidate to do so. Before his victory, the Guardian's Oliver Laughland met him during his campaign to talk about why he decided to enter the race and what he hopes to achieve as in Congress ‘I’ve always had these crazy ideas’: the 25-year-old U
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Sep 06, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Guardian community team)
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UK teachers: how are rising costs affecting pupils?
We’d like to hear from staff working in primary and secondary schools about the impact of the cost-of-living crisis on children and young people.School leaders have voiced concerns about an increasingly precarious funding situation this year as energy bills soar.Meanwhile, teachers and charities have called for the government to introduce universal free school meals amid fears that hunger will be the “single biggest challenge” as children return to classrooms in England, Wales and Northern Irela
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Sep 06, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Andrew Lawrence)
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‘I’ve been Maced, I’ve been to jail …’ Can 25-year-old Maxwell Frost now be the first Gen Z member of Congress?
The gun-control activist has been endorsed by Bernie Sanders and won a Democratic primary in Florida – but he still drives an Uber to make ends meet. Can he now make history?It’s been a decade since Maxwell Alejandro Frost launched his first big campaign. He was 15 years old, coming off a stint volunteering on Barack Obama’s reelection bid and desperate to attend the president’s second inauguration. In an online search for tickets, Frost stumbled across a page soliciting applications to perform
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Sep 06, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Jamie Grierson)
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Boris Johnson likens himself to Roman who returned as dictator
Departing PM references Cincinnatus, who turned to farming after leaving Rome – but then returned to powerBoris Johnson delivers farewell speech in Downing StreetPolitics live – latest updatesIn his departure speech, Boris Johnson likened himself to Cincinnatus, a figure who “returned to his plough”, apparently suggesting he would return quietly to the backbenches.However, what Johnson, who studied classics at the University of Oxford, did not include in his speech was that while the Roman state