The greatest reality TV show in town – the Donald arrives
“Dog show” screams the red neon flashing sign board outside what appears to be a bland North Carolina sports hall. “Bead show”, it flashes too. “TRUMP RALLY” shouts the very same sign.
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“Dog show” screams the red neon flashing sign board outside what appears to be a bland North Carolina sports hall. “Bead show”, it flashes too. “TRUMP RALLY” shouts the very same sign.
Two women with contrasting feelings eight years on. But both equally sceptical of the next Presidency to come.
We appear in short to be in uncharted waters in a contest that is pitching a rogue billionaire against a woman who is portrayed even by some Democrats as far too close to the bankers on Wall Street.
The sense of alienation in Trump rallies reminds one of the populism that swept Britain out of the EU.
This is the ugliest time in American politics since the language of the anti-communist witch-hunts of Senator McCarthy’s time.
The flummery, obscurity, ya-booing, and the rest, for all its theatrical entertainment, suggest a state living in the Dark Ages.
For many this WAS a vote about Europe, but for as many it was a vote about dispossession amid constant images of largesse and greed.
No vote in modern British history has been more important than the vote as to whether to leave or remain in the European Union.
Would doctors or nurses in the NHS have been able to get away with playing with their phones while seeing patients?
We keep asking, but when the constant refrain of Government Department press officers is “no Minister available”, how can we hold those in power to account for their actions?
The Great Mosque of Brussels is said to remain a centre of Saudi-funded Wahhabi preaching and Salafism.
Our return to Sri Lanka’s killing fields coincides with the President announcing that there will be no “international component” in any “investigation” of the civil war or the alleged war crimes.
If world leaders settle for modest restraints on global warming, I do not want to have to be the reporter sent to see the unfolding tragedy in Bangladesh.
The evidence of Friday night’s horror is still plain to see at the back door of the Bataclan concert hall. For local residents, the Paris terror attacks left psychological scars too.
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn is to get a one-on-one meeting next week with the Chinese President Xi Jinping – his first official meeting with any head-of-state as Labour leader.