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The noble feat of Nike | The Spectator
http://www.spectator.co.uk/features/11183/the-noble-feat-of-nike
The Spectator from 1 per week. Books & Arts. The noble feat of Nike. Globalisation – otherwise known as 'ruthless international capitalism' – is enriching the world's poor, says Johan Norberg. Globalisation otherwise known as ‘ruthless international capitalism’ is enriching the world’s poor, says Johan Norberg. Today Nike has almost four times more workers in Vietnam than in the United States. I travelled to Ho Chi Minh to examine the effects of multinational corporations on poor countries. Nike ...Furth...
blogs.spectator.co.uk
Alex Massie, Author at Coffee House
http://blogs.spectator.co.uk/author/alex-massie
Create an account to continue reading. Registered readers have access to our blogs and a limited number of magazine articles. For unlimited access to. Registered readers have access to our blogs and a limited number of magazine articles. Sign in to continue. Already have an account? What's my subscriber number? Subscribe now from £1 a week. Including the full archive from 1828. Weekly delivery of the magazine. Phone and tablet edition of the magazine. Subscriber-only offers, events and discounts. You've ...
blogs.spectator.co.uk
Douglas Murray, Author at Coffee House
http://blogs.spectator.co.uk/author/douglas-murray
Subscribe from 1 per week. Books & Arts. Douglas Murray is Associate Director of the Henry Jackson Society and an author, most recently of Bloody Sunday: Truth, lies and the Saville Inquiry. It’s a bad day for Anjem Choudary – and a good day for secular law. 16 August 2016 18:10. So farewell then Anjem Choudary. At least for a few years. Britain’s biggest loudmouth Islamist has finally been convicted in…. Why the Prevent strategy isn’t the problem. 12 August 2016 18:04. 9 August 2016 17:20. Last Friday I...
health.spectator.co.uk
Mind Archives | Spectator Health
http://health.spectator.co.uk/category/mind
Subscribe from 1 per week. Diet & fitness. 8216;Inner fat’ is a killer lurking in your belly. Here’s how to get rid of it. A nasal spray for depression? It doesn’t pass the sniff test just yet. A nasal spray can ‘rapidly and significantly’ improve the symptoms of depression in patients who do not respond to other…. One step closer to finding the root of depression. New research has revealed the physical root of depression, according to a study published in the journal Brain. The study,…. Smoking just one...
blogs.spectator.co.uk
Rod Liddle, Author at Coffee House
http://blogs.spectator.co.uk/author/rod-liddle
Create an account to continue reading. Registered readers have access to our blogs and a limited number of magazine articles. For unlimited access to. Registered readers have access to our blogs and a limited number of magazine articles. Sign in to continue. Already have an account? What's my subscriber number? Subscribe now from £1 a week. Including the full archive from 1828. Weekly delivery of the magazine. Phone and tablet edition of the magazine. Subscriber-only offers, events and discounts. You've ...
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Taki, Author at Coffee House
http://blogs.spectator.co.uk/author/taki
Create an account to continue reading. Registered readers have access to our blogs and a limited number of magazine articles. For unlimited access to. Registered readers have access to our blogs and a limited number of magazine articles. Sign in to continue. Already have an account? What's my subscriber number? Subscribe now from £1 a week. Including the full archive from 1828. Weekly delivery of the magazine. Phone and tablet edition of the magazine. Subscriber-only offers, events and discounts. You've ...
spectator.co.uk
No need to panic — probably | The Spectator
http://www.spectator.co.uk/books/598831/no-need-to-panic-probably
The Spectator from 1 per week. Books & Arts. No need to panic — probably. When there is so much data suggesting the world’s climate is heating up, some may find it presumptuous of Nigel Lawson, who is not a scientist and has undertaken no original research, to hope to challenge the prevailing orthodoxy. Would we take seriously an appraisal of his time as Chancellor of Exchequer written by someone whose only expertise was in oceanography? An Appeal to Reason. Duckworth, pp.149, 9.99. For some, this will b...
blogs.spectator.co.uk
Four reasons why this year's Labour party conference felt so weak | Coffee House
http://blogs.spectator.co.uk/coffeehouse/2014/09/four-reasons-this-years-labour-conference-felt-so-flat
Subscribe from 1 per week. Books & Arts. Four reasons why this year’s Labour party conference felt so weak. There are many reasons why Labour conference felt flat this year, and many of them are out of the party’s control. But there are a number of things that the party could help, and they were much more powerful than any of the confounding factors. 1 Ed Miliband’s poorly-delivered speech. The party leader’s decision to memorise. 2 Exposing the gaps in Miliband’s speech. You might also like. Ed Miliband...
spectator.co.uk
Interstellar: like Star Trek – but dumber and more tiring
http://www.spectator.co.uk/arts/cinema/9361902/interstellar-like-star-trek-but-dumber-and-more-tiring
The Spectator from 1 per week. Books & Arts. Interstellar: like Star Trek but dumber and more tiring. Please let the obliteration begin so we can all go home, writes Deborah Ross. Christopher Nolan’s futuristic epic. How can anyone know what nature’s intentions might be? What did it intend for dinosaurs, for example? The use of ‘mankind’, rather than ‘humankind’, is also telling, as this is very much in the tradition of the alpha-male American superhero who single-handedly saves us (ladies too! There is ...
blogs.spectator.co.uk
No, the Syrian civil war is not "Obama's Rwanda"
http://blogs.spectator.co.uk/alex-massie/2013/02/no-the-syrian-civil-war-is-not-obamas-rwanda
Subscribe from 1 per week. Books & Arts. No, the Syrian civil war is not "Obama's Rwanda". Question To Which the Answer Is No. Is asked by Will Inboden over at. Has Syria Become Obama’s Rwanda? There are many reasons why it has not, not the least of them being that the question rests upon an utterly false premise. According to Inboden, however:. What would you do differently? What do you most regret? I think a more honest answer to the question might have to include the words. Moreover, there is a limit ...