ISRAEL - During the meeting, which will take place in the Russian town of Sochi on October 22, Bennett and Putin are expected to discuss a range of political, security and economic issues as well as important regional issues, most notably the Iranian nuclear program, a statement by the Prime Minister Office said. Putin congratulated Bennett shortly after he replaced Benjamin Netanyahu as prime minister in June. However, Israeli officials wished that the two leaders will only meet after the Israeli premier's meeting with US President Joe Biden, which took place in August. Bennett has said repeatedly that Israel won't allow Iran to acquire nuclear weapons, while opposing the US efforts to revive the 2015 nuclear deal with Tehran.
ISRAEL - Israel’s minister of infrastructure, energy and water, Karine Elharrar has announced that Tel Aviv has formally signed off on a deal to double its freshwater supply to Jordan, in a bid to bolster “good neighborly relations.” The deal comes months after Israel announced plans to sell 50 million cubic meters of water to Jordan, as part of renewed efforts to build cooperation between the neighboring states by addressing a major area of disagreement which has persisted since the 1994 peace deal. Having traveled to Jordan for a signing ceremony, Elharrar said in a tweet that the deal was “an unequivocal statement” that Tel Aviv wants to secure “good neighborly relations” with Amman.
USA - Green fields of alfalfa and cotton rolled past as Brad Robinson drove through the desert valley where his family has farmed with water from the Colorado River for three generations. Stopping the truck, he stepped onto a dry, brown field where shriveled remnants of alfalfa crunched under his boots. The water has been temporarily shut off on a portion of Robinson’s land. In exchange, he’s receiving $909 this year for each acre of farmland left dry and unplanted.
USA - Pregnant people in Texas, or in any other US state, can visit an array of websites that will mail them two pills—mifepristone and misoprostol—that will induce a miscarriage when used in the first trimester of pregnancy and possibly even later. The so-called self-managed abortion is therefore an option at least six weeks further into a pregnancy than the controversial new Texas law’s six-week “heartbeat” cutoff for an abortion at a clinic. Though people in other states have several websites to choose from, Texans can visit a website that provides the pills for $105 or less based on income.
UK - Britain and other Western nations should welcome declining populations and ageing demographics as it will help them meet climate change goals, the former chairman of the Financial Services Authority (FSA) has argued. In a report from Population Matters entitled Smaller Families and Ageing Populations, Lord Adair Turner, the chairman of the UK Energy Transitions Commission and former head of the FSA, argued that declining native populations will enhance prosperity. “The biggest reason to welcome this demographic shift is that it results from the free choice of empowered people, and in particular women,” Lord Adair wrote. “But ceasing endless population growth will also reduce humanity’s future press on the natural environment, ease the challenge of adequate housing provision, and make it easier to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas emissions while supporting prosperity growth in developing countries.”
EUROPE - The Vatican enjoys sovereign immunity that protects it from sexual-abuse lawsuits in local courts, the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) has ruled, after a case was put forward by 24 people who claim to be victims. On Tuesday, the top court dismissed a case submitted by two dozen people who claim to be survivors of child sexual abuse at the hands of the Catholic clergy from France, Belgium and the Netherlands.
USA - This is an amazing list, some of these you will never think about. China is buying all America. Some brands that you may think are quintessentially American are actually owned or overseen by Chinese investment conglomerates. It’s not always obvious until you see it yourself – even sports clubs have some interesting stakeholders. America is home to many companies that are true titans of industry. From General Electric to General Motors, all of these thriving businesses help buoy the economy when it needs it – but even these giants need to get their money from somewhere. Investments come from across the globe, but China is always looking to America to try and create fruitful partnerships.
USA - In North Dakota, it’s worse than the Dust Bowl. Joey and Scott Bailey are sitting in their kitchen trying to figure out how they’ll get through these next few months. “Just your grass hay that we would spend $30 a bale on, people are spending $150 a bale, and they’re driving 250 miles to get it,” Scott says. The Baileys own a ranch on the remote prairie about 60 miles south of the US-Canada border, in the heart of what locals boast is the capitol of North Dakota cattle country, McHenry County. The county is also one of the most drought plagued places in the nation, where comparisons are now being drawn to the Dust Bowl. Ranchers here have been forced to sell off their herds at historic rates and are now worried they won’t have enough feed to keep their remaining cows alive this winter. The Baileys sold twenty cows a few months back, because they couldn’t afford to keep them fed. It’s been so dry that they couldn’t grow much of their own hay. ndeed, make or break decisions, with the prospect of yet another dry winter looming.
USA - Aftershock to America's biggest earthquake in fifty years hits Alaska Peninsula more than two months later: 6.9 magnitude strikes in same region as mega 8.2 quake that struck in July. An earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 6.9 struck early Monday off the coast of Alaska, two months after America's biggest earthquake in 50 years struck the same region. The earthquake comes just a day another with a magnitude of 6.2 struck south of the island of Hawaii on Sunday, but there was no tsunami warning afterward and no immediate reports of damage. Alaska was hit by a 9.2-magnitude earthquake in March 1964, the strongest ever recorded in North America, leading to the deaths of 250 people.
USA - China, the world's second largest economy, is likely to dominate many of the key emerging technologies, particularly artificial intelligence, synthetic biology and genetics within a decade or so, according to Western intelligence assessments. Nicolas Chaillan, the Pentagon's first chief software officer who resigned in protest against the slow pace of technological transformation in the US military, said the failure to respond was putting the United States at risk. "We have no competing fighting chance against China in 15 to 20 years. Right now, it's already a done deal; it is already over in my opinion," he told the newspaper. "Whether it takes a war or not is kind of anecdotal." China was set to dominate the future of the world, controlling everything from media narratives to geopolitics, he said.
USA - Wildfires have always been a normal part of life in the American West. During a typical year in the late 20th century, fires burned about 500,000 acres a year in California… Over the past decade or so, the number of fires has held fairly steady. But their intensity has changed. The ground is drier, because climate change has reduced the amount of snow that comes down from California’s mountains and because droughts are more common. “Everything is burning more intensely,” Robert Foxworthy, a former firefighter who is now a spokesman for the state’s Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, told us. The largest fire this year has been the Dixie fire, which began on July 13, about 100 miles northwest of Lake Tahoe. The fire may have been caused by a tree that fell on a power line, sparking a brush fire that quickly spread. It eventually grew to encompass more than 960,000 acres. “Fifteen years ago, a 100,000-acre fire would be the largest fire of your career. Now, we have one-million-acre fires,” said Kristen Allison, who has been a firefighter for the past 25 years. “Meanwhile, there are five other 100,000-acre fires burning right now in Northern California.”
Of a wide selection of irrational and dangerous movements to emerge from the selfie ‘think tanks’ of third-wave feminism and woke Instagram influencer activism, one concept is monumentally insane – the ‘Body Positive’ movement. Now, as usual with woke cultural weapons, this poisonous concept comes wrapped in silk, with a pink bow. Simply by stubbornly ignoring the concept’s malicious and deadly end-road, its advocates merely choose a name that sounds warmhearted and uplifting. Body Positive – who could be against that? Nothing but inclusivity and puppy dogs.
USA - DC announced Monday that its new Superman, Jon Kent, is set to begin a same-sex relationship in an ongoing series from writer Tom Taylor, The New York Times reports. In the comics, Jon Kent is the son of Clark Kent and Lois Lane, and DC has now revealed that the character is bisexual and in an upcoming issue will become romantically involved with reporter Jay Nakamura. The character of Jon Kent was first introduced in 2015, though he only recently took on the Superman mantle in DC's comics. His current series, Superman: Son of Kal-El, started earlier this year, and Jon's father Clark Kent is continuing to have off-world adventures, IGN notes. "Following a scene where Superman mentally and physically burns out from trying to save everyone that he can, Jay is there to care for the Man of Steel," DC said of the forthcoming issue, showing off art from the comic in which Jon and Jay share a kiss. That issue is set to be published on November 9.
EUROPE - The world has gone mad! LEGO has committed to removing gender stereotypes from all its toys - after survey findings found that people believed that the characters remained unequal. According to the findings, the main issues were found in how kids play with the toys, as well as their plans for their careers in the future after playing with Lego. Research showed that although girls were becoming more confident when it came to playing with the Lego toys, the same could not be said for boys. Madeline Di Nonno, the chief executive of the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media said: “Parents are more worried that their sons will be teased than their daughters for playing with toys associated with the other gender.” Ms Di Nonno added: “But it’s also that behaviours associated with men are valued more highly in society. “Until societies recognise that behaviours and activities typically associated with women are as valuable or important, parents and children will be tentative to embrace them.”
POLAND - Poland could be on a path to exiting the European Union after the country's supreme court ruled yesterday that EU treaties were incompatible with the Polish constitution. It casts the Eastern European nation's future in the EU into doubt, six years after the UK voted to leave the bloc in 2016 and kickstarted a continent-wide debate about the role of the 27-nation bloc. Warsaw has long been at odds with Brussels over democratic standards and the independence of its judiciary. But Thursday's ruling that parts of EU law are incompatible with the Polish constitution put Warsaw and Brussels on a full collision course. Jaroslaw Kaczynski, who leads the Law and Justice Party in parliament welcomed the court's ruling and said that the ability of Brussels to overrule the Polish government means that Poland is 'not a sovereign state'. He argues that Brussels has 'no right to interfere' in polish affairs, echoing the arguments made in Britain by pro-Brexit leaders who were angry at European red tape restricting Westminster's ability to rule. However the Polish court's ruling has been met with anger in Brussels, with the European Commission vowing to contest its conclusions and insist on the supremacy of EU law.
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