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The Independent
Август
2015

Новости за 25.08.2015

Cornwall may be an Instagrammer's dream, but it's still the poorest region in Britain

The Independent 

Ah, those pictures of David Cameron and his delightful wife on the beach in Cornwall. What a perfect vision of England in the summertime, a couple chillaxing, appealingly dishevelled after a bracing early morning swim under a battleship grey sky. How lucky we are to have a Prime Minister of such vitality and homely appeal, who wears a £35 polo shirt with insouciant style, and who chooses the prosaic delights of the north Cornish coast for his holidaymaking.

A man who changed the lives of hundreds faces years in Thai prison while our government drags its heels

The Independent 

I expected Andy Hall to sound jumpy when we spoke on the phone yesterday morning. He has just been indicted by a Thai court, and faces seven years in prison, on top of an £8m fine. The crime? In 2012, Hall met and interviewed workers at a factory belonging to Natural Fruit, a Thai pineapple-processing firm, for a report on their labour conditions. Disgusting, was the summary.

Death on the Fringe and the Sick of the Fringe: Two programmes at Edinburgh tackle bigger issues

The Independent 

Death. It comes to us all, the great leveller and the one great certainty. Yet when it comes to talking about it we Brits are often as silent as … well, the grave. We can be morbid, or squeamish, or embarrassed about discussing grief or contemplating our own mortality – and actually, such nervousness extends to anything to do with our frail human bodies. Sickness, mental health or disability also have a tendency to make us clam up; while modern society is making strides in destigmatising such things... Читать дальше...

No, we shouldn't crucify the irritating Christian vlogger who was keeping an Ashley Madison account

The Independent 

It was a crappily-ever-after ending to the hacking scandal for users of ‘cheat on your spouse, because life is short’ website Ashley Madison as details of their adulterous curiosities were leaked for the world to see this week. Anonymous hackers known as the Impact group released the data for more than 33 million users under the moralistic premise of targeting companies profiting from the “pain of others, secrets and lies,” and the individuals who utilise the service.



Women-only train carriages? Here's a Corbyn idea I can't get on board with

The Independent 

Jeremy Corbyn has made some sensible and laudable suggestions on tackling the scourge of sexual harassment: the extension of a scheme tested in Bradford to register the number plates of  men who shout at women in the street, and the creation of a police hotline for reporting harassment and assault staffed exclusively by women, is especially encouraging. But a pilot scheme of women-only train carriages after 10pm? Not so much.

Jeremy Corbyn is a stranger to responsibility and will loathe leadership

The Independent 

I feel for Jeremy Corbyn. Not for the extraordinary summer he has enjoyed: I am sure he has been having the time of his life, fired by adrenalin, as he heads towards his astonishing victory. But I pity him for what lies ahead, as he settles into the ghastly task of leading the Labour Party in opposition – a role for which he is so utterly unsuited. I suspect he will hate every miserable minute of it.

With up to 100,000 now barred, Labour has become less a broad church and more a secret society

The Independent 

Labour is trying to accomplish the impossible: become electable while shunning voters. Thanks to Labour’s decision to purge its own supporters - a process predicated, in Harriet Harman’s words, on “letting the public in to see our arguments” and enabling the public to be “brutally honest about what they think of us and what they want from us” – it now risks descending into an anti-democratic farce. Harman’s announcement today seemed to concede  that as many as 100,000 voters could have been blocked from the leadership vote. Читать дальше...

Prom 50, Royal Albert Hall, review: Andras Schiff casts a spell with Bach's Goldbergs

The Independent 

A darkened hall, a box of hammers, and a pair of hands – this was enough to draw a capacity crowd to Sir Andras Schiff’s late-night recital of Bach’s Goldberg Variations. Composed to cure a rich patron’s insomnia, this extraordinary work makes supreme demands on technique, imagination, and memory, and great pianists are drawn to it like climbers to Everest.

Here's one important reason why Labour has never chosen a female leader - and won't this time either

The Independent 

Reams of paper and considerably more 1s and 0s have been sacrificed on the altar of this crucial sticking point: Do the 600,000 eligible voters (some of them so freshly minted they still have that 'new car' smell) go for values or power? Will the wider and future general electorate go for principles or polish? And most important of all, why has Labour yet to choose a woman as the party's leader, decades after the Tories did the same with dear old Maggie?

The legacy of One Direction isn't anything to do with the 1D boys or Simon Cowell, but the extraordinary power of teenage girls

The Independent 

People are often surprised when they discover that I love One Direction. Maybe its because I spent my teen years obsessively cataloguing Rolling Stones singles, or maybe its because I took Milton seriously at university. Maybe its simply because I’m not twelve years old with H A R R Y scribbled across my forehead in permanent marker.

Edinburgh Fringe: 25 funniest jokes of all-time

The Independent 

The winner of the funniest joke at this year’s Edinburgh Fringe has been revealed. But of all the hilarious one-liners that have been cracked in comedy venues across the city, not everyone is impressed with Darren Walsh’s “I just deleted all the German names off my phone. It’s Hans-free.”





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