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      Moscow targeted as Ukraine and Russia trade large drone attacks

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 10 November, 2024

    Ukrainian strike on Moscow is biggest since full-scale invasion while Russia sends wave of record 145 drones

    Ukraine has carried out its biggest drone strike on Moscow since Vladimir Putin’s full-scale invasion in 2022, Russian media said on Sunday, as the Kremlin launched its own record air attack over Ukraine.

    Three airports in the Russian capital were temporarily closed and flights diverted. At least one person was injured. Russia said its air defences shot down 70 drones, nearly half of them in the skies above Moscow and the rest in western Russia.

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      Mak£ Good: The Post Office Scandal review – a musical miscarriage of justice

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 10 November, 2024

    Omnibus theatre, London
    The installation of the Horizon digital till resembles the villain’s entrance in a pantomime

    The false prosecutions and persecutions of 900 subpostmasters by the Post Office and the state has moved from a story publicly ignored for 20 years – despite the heroics of some journalists and politicians – to a landmark national scandal, following the impact of ITV’s Mr Bates vs the Post Office in January.

    This both blesses and curses subsequent retellings, such as this summer’s Glitch by Rabble Theatre and now the Pentabus company’s Mak£ Good. Interest in the subject matter is guaranteed but narrative tension largely absent. Pentabus’s innovation of retelling the events as a musical makes the delivery unfamiliar but the contents remain a much-read letter. In these dramas, the installation of the Horizon digital till resembles the villain’s entrance in a pantomime.

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      Mishal Husain left ‘shaken’ by experience of racism in UK this year

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 10 November, 2024

    BBC presenter says unrest over the summer has made her question her beliefs about British tolerance

    BBC presenter Mishal Husain has said her experience of racism in Britain over the last year has been more pronounced than at any other time in her career.

    The presenter of Radio 4’s Today programme said that she had been left “shaken” at times and the summer riots had made her question her beliefs about British tolerance.

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      This Remembrance Day, let’s acknowledge how Britain’s colonies suffered during the second world war | Mihir Bose

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 10 November, 2024

    While war raged against Hitler, people in places such as India were brutalised – despite their own sacrifices to the cause

    With Remembrance Day coming, arguments about whether poppies should be worn are in full flow. Yet there is one issue that never seems to be heard in the annual debate that now marks this solemn occasion: while Britain fought the second world war to defeat Nazi Germany, putting its own existence as a free country at stake, it denied freedom to its colonies.

    Winston Churchill made no secret of his belief that “coloured” people had no right to be free. In August 1941, in Placentia Bay, Newfoundland, he signed with the US president Franklin D Roosevelt the Atlantic charter which asserted “the right of all peoples to choose the form of government under which they will live”. This was hailed as a great war aim of the allies. Yet on his return, Churchill told the House of Commons that this was not “applicable to coloured races in colonial empire” but only to the states and nations of Europe.

    Mihir Bose is the author of Thank You Mr Crombie: Lessons in Guilt and Gratitude to the British

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      Kamala Harris is just the latest victim of global trend to oust incumbents

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 10 November, 2024

    Voters across the world have backed any alternative to the people in charge

    What do the British Conservatives , the New Zealand Labour party , the LDP of Japan and the ANC of South Africa have in common? Defeat. All four led governments that have been pummelled at the polls recently as part of the greatest wave of anti-incumbent voting ever seen. Governments of left and right, radicals and moderates, liberals and nationalists: all are falling.

    This week the US Democratic party joined the electoral casualty list, bested by the man they ousted four years ago, the past and now future president, Donald Trump. Critics and cheerleaders alike see Trump as an extraordinary figure with a unique appeal. But his triumph is the rule, not the exception. Defeated vice-president Kamala Harris ran ahead of the global trend, even more so in the crucial swing states. But she was swept away nonetheless.

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      ‘No time to pull punches’: is a civil war on the horizon for the Democratic party?

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 10 November, 2024

    Accusations and recriminations abound as Democrats try to figure out what went wrong after an electoral trouncing

    Joe Biden stood before the American people, millions of whom were still reeling from the news of Donald Trump’s victory in the presidential race, and reassured them: “We’re going to be OK.”

    In his first remarks since his vice-president and chosen successor, Kamala Harris , lost the presidential election, Biden delivered a pep talk from the White House Rose Garden on a sunny Thursday that clashed with Democrats ’ black mood in the wake of their devastating electoral losses. Biden pledged a smooth transfer of power to Trump and expressed faith in the endurance of the American experiment.

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      Trump’s White House circle takes shape amid fears over extremist appointments

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 10 November, 2024

    President-elect said to be considering immigration and foreign policy hardliners – plus the controversial RFK Jr

    Donald Trump’s second administration has begun to take shape amid fears over extremist appointments and how far right the US will go while Republicans control the White House and probably both chambers of Congress.

    The range of names being put forward varies from members of Trump’s inner circle to the world’s richest man, tech mogul Elon Musk. Alongside plutocrats and technocrats are hardline ideologues on immigration and foreign policy and the controversial figure of Robert F Kennedy Jr, a leading vaccine conspiracy theorist.

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      Red One review – charm-free festive caper with Dwayne Johnson

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 10 November, 2024

    A strictly bodyguarded Santa is hijacked in this oddly pitched, CGI-heavy action-adventure

    As synthetically festive as an eggnog-flavoured plug-in air freshener, Red One is a cynical, soulless action-adventure that imagines Santa (JK Simmons), codenamed Red One, as a quasi-militaristic elite operative with his own security detail, headed by stony-faced tough guy Callum Drift (Dwayne Johnson). When Santa is kidnapped, Callum is forced to partner with “level 4 naughty lister” Jack (Chris Evans), a hacker and general miscreant who sells his dubious skills to the highest bidder – in this case, a shady individual who has nefarious plans that threaten the very future of Christmas.

    A charmless, CGI-heavy spectacle, Red One falls into an ill-considered audience no man’s land: it’s too intense for little kids (we get to visit Krampus in what appears to be a yuletide S&M dungeon) and too bland to attract teens and genre fans.

    In UK and Irish cinemas

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      ‘I was doing a reverse Samson’: comedian Lloyd Griffith on having a hair transplant

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 10 November, 2024 • 1 minute

    For years, Lloyd Griffith had been worried about going bald. Finally, he took the plunge and had a hair transplant. Here, he describes the unexpectedly empowering result of tackling his fears

    On a Saturday, while my mum was working at the local Wimpy, my auntie’s boyfriend would take me to watch Grimsby Town. After one game, I bolted through the door to tell my mum that I’d learned some new songs. There was “Who’s the wanker in the black?” to the referee, and “Shut up baldy” to the opposing team’s manager. My mum explained the referee was probably doing his best and that the manager couldn’t help being bald.

    Twenty-five years later and I was sitting in hair and makeup on the set of Soccer AM while the makeup artist covered up the bags under my eyes. I’d got home at 2am after doing a comedy gig in Manchester and then got up again at 6am. After touching up my face, she reached for a pot and started sprinkling black powder generously on my hair. “It’s for the cameras,” she said, “so the lights don’t bounce off your bald patches.” It felt as if I’d been heckled, but had no comeback prepared. My stomach dropped. It was the first time that I’d been described as “bald”.

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