What are the implications of policies that govern the use of hotels for temporary housing for homeless individuals?
Charity worker describes incident at Manchester hotel as disgusting and ‘complete discrimination on appearance’
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Charity worker describes incident at Manchester hotel as disgusting and ‘complete discrimination on appearance’
President Donald Trump flanked by pictures of soldiers
Myanmar will face accusations that it is responsible for genocide against the Rohingya ethnic minority at the top court of the United Nations, as long-awaited hearings are set to begin
The Conservative leader fundamentally misunderstands the problems with the social order Source
What history reveals about authoritarianism’s animating force
DAVOS, Switzerland -- BlackRock CEO Larry Fink will open the World Economic Forum with a blunt acknowledgment that Davos — and the economic system it represents — is facing a crisis of legitimacy. Why it matters: As thousands of executives and global leaders descend on the Swiss Alps for a week of cocktails and canapés, WEF's interim co-chair will warn that the prosperity they celebrate has left too many people behind. Outside of the United Nations, this year's conference marks "the largest gathering of global leadership of the post-COVID era," Fink will say in his opening remarks Tuesday."But now for the harder question," he'll add. "Will anyone outside this room care?" The big picture: Fink, who inherits the mantle of "mayor of Davos" from WEF founder Klaus Schwab, is casting this year's forum as an elite gathering struggling for relevance in an age of populism and deep institutional distrust. "Many of the people most affected by what we talk about here will never come to this conference," Fink will acknowledge."Prosperity isn't just growth in the aggregate. It can't be measured by GDP or the market caps of the world's largest companies alone. It has to be judged by how many people can see it, touch it, and build a future on it." Between the lines: Fink believes the AI revolution — a theme of virtually every pavilion on the Davos promenade — will pose the ultimate test of whether capitalism can deliver prosperity beyond its traditional winners. "Since the fall of the Berlin Wall, more wealth has been created than in all prior human history combined," the world's most powerful asset manager will say. Most of it has accrued to the kinds of people who attend Davos."Now AI threatens to replay the same pattern," Fink will warn. "If AI does to white-collar work what globalization did to blue-collar, we need to confront that directly." What to watch: Fink's remarks set the stage for a week in which Davos' elite consensus will be tested by populist politics — including Pr
The article examines how former President Trump's policies and rhetoric contributed to the immigration challenges and excesses experienced during his administration, shaping current debates on the issue.
Demand for housing is increasing, but development hurdles are ever so obvious
Hundreds of protesters are believed to have been killed or injured, and many more detained