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World news in 7 minutes. Thursday 5th June 2025.Today: Bulgaria euro. Germany evacuation. EU tariffs. S Korea government. Pakistan India talks. Mongolia PM resigns. El Salvador officers sentenced. Mexico metal measures. US ship abandoned. Nigeria border fences. UN Libya investigation. National Spelling Bee. With Juliet MartinSEND7 is supported by our amazing listeners like you.Our supporters get access to the transcripts written by us every day.Our supporters get access to an English worksheet made by us once per week. Our supporters get access to our weekly news quiz made by us once per week. We give 10% of our profit to Effective Altruism charities. You can become a supporter at send7.org/supportContact us at podcast@send7.org or send an audio message at speakpipe.com/send7Please leave a rating on Apple podcasts or Spotify.We don't use AI! Every word is written and recorded by us!Since 2020, SEND7 (Simple English News Daily in 7 minutes) has been telling the most important world news stories in intermediate English. Every day, listen to the most important stories from every part of the world in slow, clear English. Whether you are an intermediate learner trying to improve your advanced, technical and business English, or if you are a native speaker who just wants to hear a summary of world news as fast as possible, join Stephen Devincenzi, Ben Mallett and Juliet Martin every morning. Transcripts, worksheets and our weekly world news quiz are available for our amazing supporters at send7.org. Simple English News Daily is the perfect way to start your day, by practising your listening skills and understanding complicated stories in a simple way. It is also highly valuable for IELTS and TOEFL students. Students, teachers, TEFL teachers, and people with English as a second language, tell us that they use SEND7 because they can learn English through hard topics, but simple grammar. We believe that the best way to improve your spoken English is to immerse yourself in real-life content, such as what our podcast provides. SEND7 covers all news including politics, business, natural events and human rights. Whether it is happening in Europe, Africa, Asia, the Americas or Oceania, you will hear it on SEND7, and you will understand it.For more information visit send7.org/contact or send an email to podcast@send7.org
WORLD: Pakistan, India take war to airspace | May 25, 2025Visit our website at https://www.manilatimes.netFollow us:Facebook - https://tmt.ph/facebookInstagram - https://tmt.ph/instagramTwitter - https://tmt.ph/twitterDailyMotion - https://tmt.ph/dailymotionSubscribe to our Digital Edition - https://tmt.ph/digitalSign up to our newsletters: https://tmt.ph/newslettersCheck out our Podcasts:Spotify - https://tmt.ph/spotifyApple Podcasts - https://tmt.ph/applepodcastsAmazon Music - https://tmt.ph/amazonmusicDeezer: https://tmt.ph/deezerStitcher: https://tmt.ph/stitcherTune In: https://tmt.ph/tunein#TheManilaTimes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The conflict between Pakistan and India has put Turkey's arms industry in the spotlight, exposing the limits of its much lauded drones and raising questions about whether Turkey's arms industry is a loser in this latest round of conflict. Michael Rubin, the director of policy analysis at the Middle East Forum and a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, joins Thanos Davelis as we look into the Turkey angle to the Pakistan-India conflict, and dig into what developments on the ground tell us about Ankara's arms industry and Erdogan's ambitions to position Turkey as a military export power.You can read the articles we discuss on our podcast here:Is Turkey's Arms Industry a Loser in the India-Pakistan War?Mitsotakis highlights Greece's commitment to maritime security in UN speechGreece an ‘ideal connector' in the IMEC corridor
China says it supports Pakistan and India in properly handling their differences through dialogue, stressing this is in line with the fundamental and long-term interests of both sides.
Afghanistan, Balochistan Squeeze Pakistan | India's Secret Game | Sumit Peer & Sanjay Dixit
051225 Scott Adams Show, Trump wins Pakistan, India, Ukraine, Russia, China Trade, BigPharm, and Riyadh SA
The Pakistan-India conflict saw Australian cricketers and coaches rushing home from both nations. As the IPL and PSL try to complete their respective seasons, the long-term ramifications are taking hold. It's no secret India largely controls global cricket, so what might this mean? Podcaster Sam Perry was covering the IPL in India when the situation escalated and joins us to help break down the implications. Featured: Sam Perry, cricket writer and podcaster. Subscribe to the ABC Sport Newsletter
Bob talks about a possible trade deal with China, the Pakistan - India settlement, his weekend and the commencement speech at St. John Fisher, Republican candidate for Greece Town Supervisor William Murphy being referred for a possible investigation for perjury, and Bob talks lunch.
Let's talk about spies, ceasefires, Pakistan, India, and Trump....
Our thoughts on the recent developments in cricket in Pakistan & India, and what this means for the future of cricket?Timestamps:0:00 - PSL & IPL suspended 7:18 - Current state and future impact on cricket15:03 - Our experience with Indian cricket fans21:08 - ESPN Cricinfo underreporting PSL on social media 26:15 - India's monopoly in cricket 30:20 - Final thoughts
WORLD: Pakistan, India conflict escalates | May 11, 2025Visit our website at https://www.manilatimes.netFollow us:Facebook - https://tmt.ph/facebookInstagram - https://tmt.ph/instagramTwitter - https://tmt.ph/twitterDailyMotion - https://tmt.ph/dailymotionSubscribe to our Digital Edition - https://tmt.ph/digitalSign up to our newsletters: https://tmt.ph/newslettersCheck out our Podcasts:Spotify - https://tmt.ph/spotifyApple Podcasts - https://tmt.ph/applepodcastsAmazon Music - https://tmt.ph/amazonmusicDeezer: https://tmt.ph/deezerStitcher: https://tmt.ph/stitcherTune In: https://tmt.ph/tunein#TheManilaTimesVisit our website at https://www.manilatimes.netFollow us:Facebook - https://tmt.ph/facebookInstagram - https://tmt.ph/instagramTwitter - https://tmt.ph/twitterDailyMotion - https://tmt.ph/dailymotionSubscribe to our Digital Edition - https://tmt.ph/digitalSign up to our newsletters: https://tmt.ph/newslettersCheck out our Podcasts:Spotify - https://tmt.ph/spotifyApple Podcasts - https://tmt.ph/applepodcastsAmazon Music - https://tmt.ph/amazonmusicDeezer: https://tmt.ph/deezerStitcher: https://tmt.ph/stitcherTune In: https://tmt.ph/tunein#TheManilaTimesw Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
DG ISPR confirms India sent Heron drones that were shot down. Pakistan has neutralized 12 drones in the following cities Lahore, Gujranwala, Chakwal, Rawalpindi, Attock, Bhawalpur, Mianu, Chhor and Karachi. The debris of these drones are being collected. One drone engaged a military target in Lahore and one civilian died in Mianu, Sindh.The Pakistan Experience is an independently produced podcast looking to tell stories about Pakistan through conversations. Please consider supporting us on Patreon:https://www.patreon.com/thepakistanexperienceTo support the channel:Jazzcash/Easypaisa - 0325 -2982912Patreon.com/thepakistanexperienceAnd Please stay in touch:https://twitter.com/ThePakistanExp1https://www.facebook.com/thepakistanexperiencehttps://instagram.com/thepakistanexpeperienceThe podcast is hosted by comedian and writer, Shehzad Ghias Shaikh. Shehzad is a Fulbright scholar with a Masters in Theatre from Brooklyn College. He is also one of the foremost Stand-up comedians in Pakistan and frequently writes for numerous publications. Instagram.com/shehzadghiasshaikhFacebook.com/Shehzadghias/Twitter.com/shehzad89Join this channel to get access to perks:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC44l9XMwecN5nSgIF2Dvivg/join
• அதிகாரிகளின் விளக்கங்களை மட்டுமே வெளியிட அனுமதி? • இந்திய எல்லையில் நள்ளிரவுத் தாக்குதலின்போது என்ன நடந்தது? • இந்திய எல்லையில் நடந்த தாக்குதல் பற்றி இந்திய ராணுவம் கூறியது என்ன? • ராணுவ தளபதிக்கு மத்திய அரசு கூடுதல் அதிகாரம்? • டார்கெட் செய்யப்பட்ட கராச்சி துறைமுகம்?! • பதற்றத்தைத் தணிப்பது பாகிஸ்தானின் பொறுப்பு - விக்ரம் மிஸ்ரி • சண்டையை நிறுத்த உதவுமாறு உலக நாடுகளுக்குப் பாகிஸ்தான் கோரிக்கை வைத்ததா?• முப்படை தளபதிகளுடன் ராஜ்நாத் சிங் ஆலோசனை.• Golden Temple: 54 வருடங்களுக்குப் பிறகு அணைக்கப்பட்ட பொற்கோயிலின் விளக்குகள்? • சிஏ தேர்வுகள் ஒத்திவைப்பு?• பாதியில் நிறுத்தப்பட்ட ஐபிஎல் போட்டி?• ஐ.பி.எல். நடப்பு சீசன் காலவரையறையின்றி ஒத்திவைப்பு?• Jaishankar: 'துல்லியமான பதிலடி' - உலக நாடுகளின் பிரதிநிதிகளுடன் உரையாடிய ஜெய்சங்கர்.• இந்தியா, பாகிஸ்தான் பதற்றம் குறித்து துருக்கி அதிபர் எர்துவான் சொன்னது என்ன? • "தீவிரவாதத்துக்கு எதிராக நிற்கிறோம்; எங்கள் மண்ணை பயன்படுத்த முடியாது'' - நேபாளம் அறிக்கை!• India - Pakistan Conflict: ``எங்களுக்கு எந்தச் சம்பந்தமும் இல்லை" - அமெரிக்க துணை அதிபர் பேட்டி.• நீதிபதி யஷ்வந்த் பதவி நீக்க தலைமை நீதிபதி கோரிக்கை? • தமிழ்நாடு அரசின் பேரணியில் பங்கேற்கப் பொதுமக்களுக்கு முதலமைச்சர் அழைப்பு. • திருச்சியில் புது பேருந்து நிலையம் திறப்பு?• தோல்வி பயத்தால் தற்கொலை செய்து கொண்ட மாணவி 413 மார்க் எடுத்து தேர்ச்சி? • மாற்றுத்திறனாளி மாணவனுக்கு உதவிய ஸ்டாலின்?• தமிழ்நாடு அரசின் கொள்கையால் ஹிந்தி படிக்க முடியவில்லை எனக் கூறிய பாஜக வழக்கறிஞருக்கு, உச்ச நீதிமன்றம் அளித்த பதில். • Pope: வெளியேறிய வெள்ளை புகை; வாடிகனில் புதிய போப் ஆண்டவர் தேர்வு! • யார் இந்தப் புதிய போப் 14-ம் லியோ?
Tensions explode as a terrorist attack in Kashmir sparks deadly conflict between India and Pakistan. With both nations armed with nuclear weapons and backed by global powers, this story could reshape global alliances and escalate fast.
Let's talk about nukes, Pakistan, India, and your questions....
An update on the Pakistan-India war games. Will Pakistan attack India and take revenge?Did India target Masood Azhar?French official confirms Pakistan downed a Rafale?The Pakistan Experience is an independently produced podcast looking to tell stories about Pakistan through conversations. Please consider supporting us on Patreon:https://www.patreon.com/thepakistanexperienceTo support the channel:Jazzcash/Easypaisa - 0325 -2982912Patreon.com/thepakistanexperienceAnd Please stay in touch:https://twitter.com/ThePakistanExp1https://www.facebook.com/thepakistanexperiencehttps://instagram.com/thepakistanexpeperienceThe podcast is hosted by comedian and writer, Shehzad Ghias Shaikh. Shehzad is a Fulbright scholar with a Masters in Theatre from Brooklyn College. He is also one of the foremost Stand-up comedians in Pakistan and frequently writes for numerous publications. Instagram.com/shehzadghiasshaikhFacebook.com/Shehzadghias/Twitter.com/shehzad89Join this channel to get access to perks:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC44l9XMwecN5nSgIF2Dvivg/join
• 31 பேர் உயிரிழப்பு: பாகிஸ்தான் அதிகாரப்பூர்வ தகவல்?• இந்தியாவுக்குப் பதிலடி தருவோம்: பாகிஸ்தான் பிரதமர் - சிபி• Pakistan: லாகூரில் குண்டுவெடிப்பு சத்தம்; மீண்டும் தாக்குதலா... என்ன நடந்தது? • பூஞ்ச் மாவட்டத்தில் பாகிஸ்தான் அத்துமீறி நடத்திய தாக்குதலில் 13 இந்தியர்கள் உயிரிழப்பு? • 'இந்தியா பின்வாங்கினால்...' - ஆபரேஷன் சிந்தூர் குறித்து பாகிஸ்தான் பாதுகாப்புத்துறை அமைச்சர்?• `பாகிஸ்தானில் பயங்கரவாத முகாம்கள் இல்லையா?' - நெறியாளர் கேள்விகள்; நேரலையில் திணறிய பாக்., அமைச்சர்.• Operation Sindoor: "நம் அப்பாவி மக்களைக் கொன்றவர்களை மட்டுமே குறிவைத்தோம்" - ராஜ்நாத் சிங் விளக்கம்.• போர் சூழல் ஒத்திகை- இருளில் மூழ்கிய டெல்லி.• 21 விமான நிலையங்கள் மே 10 வரை மூடல்?• அனைத்துக் கட்சி கூட்டத்தில் நடந்தது என்ன?• Operation Sindoor: ``கண்களில் கண்ணீர் வந்துவிட்டது"- பஹல்காம் தாக்குதலில் பாதிக்கப்பட்டவர்கள் பேட்டி!• இந்தியாவுக்கு இஸ்ரேல் ஆதரவு?• Operation Sindoor: "இந்தியாவின் தாக்குதல் நியாயமானது!" - இங்கிலாந்து முன்னாள் பிரதமர் ஆதரவு.• பயங்கரவாதிகளுக்கு இறுதி அஞ்சலி செலுத்திய பாகிஸ்தான்?• ஆபரேஷன் சிந்தூர்: '1000 இளைஞர்களுடன் யுத்த களத்திற்குச் செல்ல தயார்'- கே.டி.ராஜேந்திர பாலாஜி ஆவேசம்!• "2 மதங்களைச் சேர்ந்த பெண் ராணுவ அதிகாரிகள்; பெண்ணினத்திற்கே பெருமை" - தமிழிசை செளந்தரராஜன்.• நீதிபதி யஷ்வந்த் வீட்டில் பணம் கண்டுபிடிக்கப்பட்டது உண்மை - அறிக்கையில் தகவல்?• CBI இயக்குநருக்கு ஒரு ஆண்டுக்காலம் பதவி நீட்டிப்பு?• 12ம் வகுப்பு பொதுத்தேர்வு தேர்ச்சி விகிதம் 95.03% • “Result எதுவானாலும் அதுவே முடிவல்ல" - முதல்வர் மு.க.ஸ்டாலின்.• திமுக அமைச்சரவையில் மீண்டும் மாற்றம்; துரைமுருகனிடமிருந்து கனிம வளத்துறை பறிப்பு!• கேளிக்கை வரி மசோதாவுக்கு ஆளுநர் ஒப்புதல்?• மதுரை: திருக்கல்யாணத்தைத் தொடர்ந்து பக்தர்களுக்கு விருந்து.• “வரும் 11ம் தேதி ஞாயிறு அன்று ECR, OMR சாலைகளைப் பொதுமக்கள் பயன்படுத்த வேண்டாம்” - பாமக தலைவர் அன்புமணி ராமதாஸ் கோரிக்கை.
Pakistan's prime minister has given his military the green light to respond to Indian airstrikes. The Federal Reserve has a tough decision to make when it comes to interest rates. Trump officials are set to meet with Chinese representatives to talk trade. Five people have been charged in California over an alleged human smuggling operation. Plus, Smokey Robinson has been accused of sexual assault. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
1- Agire urgentemente per evitare l "annientamento" dei palestinesi nella Striscia di Gaza. L'appello dell'Onu alla comunità internazionale. ( Francesco Giorgini) 2- Pakistan - India. Lo scontro militare tra disordine mondiale, geopolitica e questioni identitarie. ( Emanuele Valenti) 3- Diario americano: si allarga la questione delle deportazioni dei migranti. La Casa Bianca chiede a due paesi in guerra . Ucraina e Libia – di di ospitare i detenuti. ( Roberto Festa) 4-Novi Sad _ Bruxelles. La maratona degli studenti per portare in Europa la protesta contro il regime serbo. ( Massimo Moratti – OBCT) 5-Progetti sostenibili: 30 anni di rigenerazione degli spazi e delle acque del fiume Sprea a Berlino. ( Fabio Fimiani) 6-Romanzo a fumetti: “ C'era una volta l'Est “ il graphic novel Di Boban Pesov. ( Luisa Nannipieri)
1. Operation Sindoor: India Strikes Back In a dramatic pre-dawn move on May 8, India launched Operation Sindoor, striking nine terror camps across Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir, including key Lashkar and Jaish hubs in Bahawalpur, Kotli, and Muzaffarabad. The operation was a direct response to the Pahalgam terror attack that killed 26 civilians on April 22. Executed using fighter jets, loitering munitions, cruise missiles, and tri-service precision, the strikes were conducted entirely from Indian airspace and targeted only terrorist infrastructure. India described the operation as “focused, measured, and non-escalatory,” avoiding Pakistani military installations while showcasing significant firepower and coordination across the Army, Navy, and Air Force. 2. Pakistan Responds: “This Won't Go Unanswered” Reacting to the strikes, Pakistan's military issued a stern warning. The Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) stated, “India's temporary pleasure will be replaced by enduring grief,” vowing retaliation at a time and place of its choosing. Pakistan confirmed strikes in three locations and mobilized its air force, while closing its airspace for 48 hours. Tensions along the Line of Control have since intensified, with reports of heavy artillery exchanges. 3. IAF Combat Drills & Civil Defence Readiness Parallel to Operation Sindoor, the Indian Air Force began a major combat readiness exercise across the western sector, involving fighter jets, drones, helicopters, AWACS, and refuellers in Rajasthan, Gujarat, Haryana, and UP. Though termed “routine,” the timing—post-Pahalgam—adds strategic weight. Simultaneously, India conducted nationwide civil defence drills across 244 districts, the largest since 1971. These drills tested air raid sirens, evacuation plans, blackout protocols, and communications, sending a clear message: India is prepared for all scenarios. ⸻ 4. India, UK Seal Historic Free Trade Deal In a major diplomatic win, India and the UK signed a long-awaited Free Trade Agreement after three years of negotiations. The deal unlocks a $45 billion trade corridor, addresses visa access for Indian professionals, and introduces the Double Contribution Convention to ease social security obligations for cross-border workers. While hailed as a boost for textiles, automotive, and seafood exports, concerns remain over the UK's upcoming carbon tax that could hurt Indian steel and cement exports. Still, the FTA is expected to double bilateral trade to $100 billion by 2030, marking a new chapter in India's global trade diplomacy. 5. SEBI Exposes IPO Scam at Synoptics In a first-of-its-kind action, SEBI has cracked down on Synoptics Technologies and its merchant banker, First Overseas Capital Ltd, for misusing over ₹19 crore from IPO proceeds. The money was diverted to shell entities a day before listing, with ₹2 crore used to buy Synoptics shares and artificially inflate demand. SEBI called the misuse “shocking and stunning,” banned FOCL from handling any new IPOs, and barred Synoptics' promoters from the market. A deeper probe has been launched into 20 other IPOs managed by FOCL. The message is clear: tampering with public money won't go unpunished. 6. India to Overtake Japan as 4th Largest Economy According to the IMF's April 2025 Outlook, India is projected to surpass Japan in 2025 with a GDP of $4.187 trillion, becoming the world's fourth-largest economy. This rise reflects India's resilience, reforms, and growing domestic demand—even as growth cools to 6.2% in FY25. Challenges persist: trade tensions, including recent US tariffs, and slowing momentum may test the climb. But India's long-term trajectory remains upward, with Germany next in its sights.
India heeft gisteren luchtaanvallen uitgevoerd op doelen in Pakistan, als reactie op een terroristische aanslag in de regio Kasjmir twee weken geleden. Pakistan meldt vooralsnog 8 doden en ruim 30 gewonden. En Pakistan zelf heeft ook al gereageerd, volgens India zijn er drie burgers gedood door Pakistaans artillerievuur. Onze correspondent in India, Lisa Dupuy, vertelt je de laatste stand van zaken. En Microsoft heeft last van de onzekerheid in Europa over de Amerikaanse overheid onder Trump. Zijn handelsoorlog én het gebrek aan sluitende regelgeving die onze data beschermt, zijn een probleem voor die techreus. Onze tech-journalist Joe van Burik sprak samen met Ben van der Burg met de vice-bestuursvoorzitter bij Microsoft. Hij legt uit wat het probleem is. Over deze podcast In Ochtendnieuws hoor je in 20 minuten het belangrijkste nieuws van de dag. Abonneer je op de podcast via bnr.nl/ochtendnieuws, de BNR-app, Spotify en Apple Podcasts. Of luister elke dag live via bnr.nl/live. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This is May 6, 2025. Pakistan-India war, war on Christians, Israel's war with Iran and all involved. America into most all of it. Where do you stand as we enter a speeding up time?
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In today's episode, we cover England's local elections, Pakistan-India tensions, South Korea's political drama, and the US-Ukraine minerals deal.Watch TLDR's latest videos here:https://youtu.be/-KVvjsQJfLc?si=ebsnSr3GU8vQ4L3ehttps://youtu.be/3wuJXJQ3zRE?si=nTBWgQrrWq8PrlrB Watch the latest episode of Starmergeddon here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xZ7Jj_cJQoE&t=1684s&ab_channel=TLDRPodcastsTLDR's Daily Briefing is a roundup of the day's most important news stories from around the world. But we don't just tell you what's happening, we explain it: making complex topics simple to understand. Listen to the Daily Briefing for your global news bulletin every weekday.Pre-order the next edition of Too Long, TLDR's print magazine, here: https://toolong.news/dailyProduced and edited by Scarlett WatchornHosted by Georgina FindlayWritten by Ben Blissett and Georgina FindlayMusic by Epidemic Sound: http://epidemicsound.com/creator//////////////////////////////Sources:✍️ England Votes in Local Electionshttps://www.instituteforgovernment.org.uk/explainer/local-and-mayoral-elections-2025✍️ Pakistan Claims India Is Planning Imminent Attackhttps://www.euronews.com/2025/05/01/india-is-planning-imminent-military-strike-pakistan-claimshttps://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cvgnw9kydgqo ✍️ South Korea's Acting President Resignshttps://www.ft.com/content/ae3bf1d5-8650-4091-8075-05c91a908f36https://www.euronews.com/2025/05/01/south-koreas-acting-president-han-duck-soo-resigns-amid-reports-of-expected-presidential-b ✍️ US and Ukraine Sign Minerals Dealhttps://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c5ypw7pn9q3ohttps://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/ukraine-minerals-deal-trump-us-russia-b2742374.html See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
In this compelling episode of the Jason Baidya podcast, we dive deep into the escalating India Pakistan tensions 2025 following the recent Pahalgam attack analysis. Explore the complex Kashmir conflict escalation and the broader South Asia geopolitical crisis shaping the region's future. Jason Baidya provides expert insights into China's strategic interests in Balochistan and how US deep state influence in Indian politics is impacting regional stability. We unpack the proxy wars in South Asia, including the role of US China Pakistan relations and the potential suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty amid rising border skirmishes. The discussion highlights the increasing nuclear conflict risk India Pakistan faces and the ongoing diplomatic crisis fueled by cross-border terrorism debates. Gain a nuanced understanding of Modi Pakistan response 2025 and Pakistan India military standoff dynamics, alongside analysis of false flag operations and their implications for global security in South Asia. Whether you're interested in regional power dynamics Asia or seeking a comprehensive geopolitical podcast 2025, this episode offers a thorough examination of the forces shaping one of the world's most volatile hotspots. Stay informed and engaged in this essential discussion on South Asia's future.
I break down the latest developments in the brewing war between Pakistan and India, including where China fits into the mix.
World news in 7 minutes. Wednesday 30th April 2025.Today: Canada Liberals win. Spain Portugal power on. Sweden shooting. France Russia cyberattack. Brazil data centres. Nigeria, Kenya, jihadist attacks. Ghana gold smuggling. Pakistan India conflict. Nepal Everest permits. Indian record smasher.SEND7 is supported by our amazing listeners like you.Our supporters get access to the transcripts and vocabulary list written by us every day.Our supporters get access to an English worksheet made by us once per week.Our supporters get access to our weekly news quiz made by us once per week.We give 10% of our profit to Effective Altruism charities. You can become a supporter at send7.org/supportContact us at podcast@send7.org or send an audio message at speakpipe.com/send7Please leave a rating on Apple podcasts or Spotify.We don't use AI! Every word is written and recorded by us!Since 2020, SEND7 (Simple English News Daily in 7 minutes) has been telling the most important world news stories in intermediate English. Every day, listen to the most important stories from every part of the world in slow, clear English. Whether you are an intermediate learner trying to improve your advanced, technical and business English, or if you are a native speaker who just wants to hear a summary of world news as fast as possible, join Stephen Devincenzi and Juliet Martin every morning. Transcripts, vocabulary lists, worksheets and our weekly world news quiz are available for our amazing supporters at send7.org. Simple English News Daily is the perfect way to start your day, by practising your listening skills and understanding complicated daily news in a simple way. It is also highly valuable for IELTS and TOEFL students. Students, teachers, TEFL teachers, and people with English as a second language, tell us that they use SEND7 because they can learn English through hard topics, but simple grammar. We believe that the best way to improve your spoken English is to immerse yourself in real-life content, such as what our podcast provides. SEND7 covers all news including politics, business, natural events and human rights. Whether it is happening in Europe, Africa, Asia, the Americas or Oceania, you will hear it on SEND7, and you will understand it.Get your daily news and improve your English listening in the time it takes to make a coffee.For more information visit send7.org/contact or send an email to podcast@send7.org
India's Masterstoke Against Pakistan: India to Use Afghanistan Territory? | 5 New Dams in J&K
How India can make Pakistan Pay for the Pahalgam terror attack Produced by Prateek Lidhoo Sound mix by Aman Pal
Saltan las alarmas sobre un posible enfrentamiento entre Pakistán e India motivado por las aguas del río Indo. Junto a Fernando Cañas analizamos este conflicto y , además analizamos otras cuencas hidrográficas del mundo y su peso geopolítico.
Pakistan is set to adopt countermeasures against India's move following the killing of tourists in Indian-controlled Kashmir. The IMF predicts that economic growth in the Asia-Pacific will slow to 3.9 percent in 2025. The Shenzhou-20 astronauts enter China's space station.
Diplomatic relations between India and Pakistan have rapidly deteriorated following the killings of 26 people in Indian-administered Kashmir. India's government has blamed Pakistan for the attack and introduced a series of measures including the suspension of a water-sharing treaty. Pakistan has said any attempt to limit waters from the Indus would be regarded as an act of war. We hear from a Pakistani minister and a former Indian diplomat.Also on the programme: US President Donald Trump tells Vladimir Putin to stop bombing Ukraine, but Volodymyr Zelensky says "more pressure" needs to be applied on Russia; and why China is sharing its moon rocks with the world.(Photo: A member of the Pakistan Rangers stands at a checkpoint at the Pakistan-India border, as visitors arrive to witness the flag-lowering ceremony, in Wagah, Pakistan, 24 April 2025. Credit: Rahat Dar/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock)
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In the 1960s, a deep anxiety set in as one thing became seemingly clear: We were headed toward population catastrophe. Paul Ehrlich's “The Population Bomb” and “The Limits to Growth,” written by the Club of Rome, were just two publications warning of impending starvation due to simply too many humans on the earth.As the population ballooned year by year, it would simply be impossible to feed everyone. Demographers and environmentalists alike held their breath and braced for impact.Except that we didn't starve. On the contrary, we were better fed than ever.In his article in The New Atlantis, Charles C. Mann explains that agricultural innovation — from improved fertilization and irrigation to genetic modification — has brought global hunger to a record low.Today on Faster, Please! — The Podcast, I chat with Mann about the agricultural history they didn't teach you in school.Mann is a science journalist who has worked as a correspondent for The Atlantic, Science, and Wired magazines, and whose work has been featured in many other major publications. He is also the author of 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus and1493: Uncovering the New World Columbus Created, as well as The Wizard and the Prophet: Two Remarkable Scientists and Their Dueling Visions to Shape Tomorrow's World.In This Episode* Intro to the Agricultural Revolution (2:04)* Water infrastructure (13:11)* Feeding the masses (18:20)* Indigenous America (25:20)Below is a lightly edited transcript of our conversation. Intro to the Agricultural Revolution (2:04)I don't think that people realize that the fact that most people on earth, almost the average person on earth, can feed themselves is a novel phenomenon. It's something that basically wasn't true since as far back as we know.Pethokoukis: What got my attention was a couple of pieces that you've worked on for The New Atlantis magazine looking at the issue of how modern Americans take for granted the remarkable systems and infrastructure that provide us comfort, safety, and a sense of luxury that would've been utterly unimaginable even to the wealthiest people of a hundred years ago or 200 years ago.Let me start off by asking you: Does it matter that we do take that for granted and that we also kind of don't understand how our world works?Mann: I would say yes, very much. It matters because these systems undergird the prosperity that we have, the good fortune that we have to be alive now, but they're always one generation away from collapse. If they aren't maintained, upgraded and modernized, they'll fall apart. They just won't stand there. So we have to be aware of this. We have to keep our eye on the ball, otherwise we won't have these things.The second thing is that, if we don't know how our society works, as citizens, we're simply not going to make very good choices about what to do with that society. I feel like both sides in our current political divide are kind of taking their eye off the ball. It's important to have good roads, it's important to have clean water, it's important to have a functioning public health system, it's important to have an agricultural system that works. It doesn't really matter who you are. And if we don't keep these things going, life will be unnecessarily bad for a lot of people, and that's just crazy to do.Is this a more recent phenomenon? If I would've asked people 50 years ago, “Explain to me how our infrastructure functions, how we get water, how we get electricity,” would they have a better idea? Is it just because things are more complicated today that we have no idea how our food gets here or why when we turn the faucet, clean water comes out?The answer is “yes” in a sort of trivial sense, in that many more people were involved in producing food, a much greater percentage of the population was involved in producing food 50 years ago. The same thing was true for the people who were building infrastructure 50 years ago.But I also think it's generally true that people's parents saw the change and knew it. So that is very much the case and, in a sense, I think we're victims of our own success. These kinds of things have brought us so much prosperity that we can afford to do crazy things like become YouTube influencers, or podcasters, or freelance writers. You don't really have any connection with how the society goes because we're sort of surfing on this wave of luxury that our ancestors bequeathed to us.I don't know how much time you spend on social media, Charles — I'm sure I spend too much — but I certainly sense that many people today, younger people especially, don't have a sense of how someone lived 50 years ago, 100 years ago, and there was just a lot more physical suffering. And certainly, if you go back far enough, you could not take for granted that you would have tomatoes in your supermarket year round, that you would have water in the house and that water would be clean. What I found really interesting — you did a piece on food and a piece on water — in the food piece you note that, in the 1980s, that was a real turning point that the average person on earth had enough to eat all the time, and rather than becoming an issue of food production, it became an issue of distribution, of governance. I think most people would be surprised of that statistic even though it's 40 years old.I don't think that people realize that the fact that most people on earth, almost the average person on earth, can feed themselves is a novel phenomenon. It's something that basically wasn't true since as far back as we know. That's this enormous turning point, and there are many of these turning points. Obviously, the introduction of antibiotics for . . . public health, which is another one of these articles they're going to be working on . . .Just about 100 years ago today, when President Coolidge was [president], his son went to play tennis at the White House tennis courts, and because he was lazy, or it was fashionable, or something, he didn't put on socks. He got a blister on his toe, the toe got infected, and he died. 100 years ago, the president of the United States, who presumably had the best healthcare available to anybody in the world, was unable to save his beloved son when the son got a trivial blister that got infected. The change from that to now is mind boggling.You've written about the Agricultural Revolution and why the great fears 40 or 50 years ago of mass starvation didn't happen. I find that an endlessly interesting topic, both for its importance and for the fact it just seems to be so underappreciated to this day, even when it was sort of obvious to people who pay attention that something was happening, it still seemed not to penetrate the public consciousness. I wonder if you could just briefly talk to me about that revolution and how it happened.The question is, how did it go from “The Population Bomb” written in 1968, a huge bestseller, hugely influential, predicting that there is going to be hundreds of millions of people dying of mass starvation, followed by other equally impassioned, equally important warnings. There's one called “Famine, 1975!,” written a few years before, that predicted mass famines in 1975. There's “The Limits to Growth.” I went to college in the '70s and these were books that were on the curriculum, and they were regarded as contemporary classics, and they all proved to be wrong.The reason is that, although they were quite correct about the fact that the human race was reproducing at that time faster than ever before, they didn't realize two things: The first is that as societies get more affluent, and particularly as societies get more affluent and give women more opportunities, birth rates decline. So that this was obviously, if you looked at history, going to be a temporary phenomenon of whatever length it was be, but it was not going to be infinite.The second was there was this enormous effort spurred by this guy named Norman Borlaug, but with tons of other people involved, to take modern science and apply it to agriculture, and that included these sort of three waves of innovation. Now, most innovation is actually just doing older technologies better, which is a huge source of progress, and the first one was irrigation. Irrigation has been around since forever. It's almost always been done badly. It's almost always not been done systematically. People started doing it better. They still have a lot of problems with it, but it's way better, and now 40 percent, roughly, of the crops in the world that are produced are produced by irrigation.The second is the introduction of fertilizer. There's two German scientists, Fritz Haber and Carl Bosch, who essentially developed the ways of taking fertilizer and making lots and lots of it in factories. I could go into more detail if you want, but that's the essential thing. This had never been done before, and suddenly cheap industrial fertilizer became available all over the world, and Vaclav Smil . . . he's sort of an environmental scientist of every sort, in Manitoba has calculated that roughly 40 percent of the people on earth today would not be alive if it wasn't for that.And then the third was the development of much better, much higher-yielding seeds, and that was the part that Norman Borlaug had done. These packaged together of irrigation fertilizer and seeds yielded what's been called the Green Revolution, doubled, tripled, or even quadrupled grain yields across the world, particularly with wheat and rice. The result is the world we live in today. When I was growing up, when you were growing up, your parents may have said to you, as they did me, Oh, eat your vegetables, there are kids that are starving in Asia.” Right? That was what was told and that was the story that was told in books like “The Population Bomb,” and now Asia's our commercial rival. When you go to Bangkok, that was a place that was hungry and now it's gleaming skyscrapers and so forth. It's all based on this fact that people are able to feed themselves through the combination of these three factors,That story, the story of mass-starvation that the Green Revolution irrigation prevented from coming true. I think a surprising number of people still think that story is relevant today, just as some people still think the population will be exploding when it seems clear it probably will not be exploding. It will rise, but then it's going to start coming down at some point this century. I think those messages just don't get through. Just like most people don't know Norm Borlaug, the Haber-Bosch process, which school kids should know. They don't know any of this. . . Borlaug won the Nobel Prize, right?Right. He won the Nobel Peace Prize. I'll tell you a funny story —I think he won it in the same year that “The Population Bomb” came out.It was just a couple years off. But you're right, the central point is right, and the funny thing is . . . I wrote another book a while back that talked about this and about the way environmentalists think about the world, and it's called the “Wizard and the Prophet” and Borlaug was the wizard of it. I thought, when I proposed it, that it would be easy. He was such an important guy, there'd be tons of biographies about him. And to this day, there isn't a real serious scholarly biography of the guy. This is a person who has done arguably more to change human life than any other person in the 20th century, certainly up in the top dozen or so. There's not a single serious biography of him.How can that be?It's because we're tremendously disconnected. It's a symptom of what I'm talking about. We're tremendously disconnected from these systems, and it's too bad because they're interesting! They're actually quite interesting to figure out: How do you get water to eight billion people? How do you get . . . It is a huge challenge, and some of the smartest people you've ever met are working on it every day, but they're working on it over here, and the public attention is over here.Water infrastructure (13:11). . . the lack of decent, clean, fresh water is the world's worst immediate environmental problem. I think people probably have some vague idea about agriculture, the Agricultural Revolution, how farming has changed, but I think, as you just referred to, the second half, water — utter mystery to people. Comes out of a pipe. The challenges of doing that in a rich country are hard. The challenges doing a country not so rich, also hard. Tell me what you find interesting about that topic.Well, whereas the story about agriculture is basically a good story: We've gotten better at it. We have a whole bunch of technical innovations that came in the 20th century and humankind is better off than ever before. With water, too, we are better off than ever before, but the maddening thing is we could be really well off because the technology is basically extremely old.There's a city, a very ancient city called Mohenjo-daro that I write about a bit in this article that was in essentially on the Pakistan-India border, 2600 BC. And they had a fully functioning water system that, in its basics, was no different than the water system that we have, or that London has, or that Paris has. So this is an ancient, ancient technology, yet we still have two billion people on the planet that don't have access to adequate water. In fact, even though we know how to do it, the lack of decent, clean, fresh water is the world's worst immediate environmental problem. And a small thing that makes me nuts is that climate change — which is real and important — gets a lot of attention, but there are people dying of not getting good water now.On top of it, even in rich countries like us, our water system is antiquated. The great bulk of it was built in the '40s, '50s, and '60s, and, like any kind of physical system, it ages, and every couple years, various engineering bodies, water bodies, the EPA, and so forth puts out a report saying, “Hey, we really have to fix the US water system and the numbers keep mounting up.” And Democrats, Republicans, they all ignore this.Who is working on the water issue in poorer countries?There you have a very ad hoc group of people. The answer is part of it's the Food and Agricultural Organization because most water in most countries is used for irrigation to grow food. You also have the World Health Organization, these kinds of bodies. You have NGOs working on it. What you don't have in those countries like our country is the government taking responsibility for coordinating something that's obviously in the national interest.So you have these things where, very periodically — a government like China has done this, Jordan has done this, Bolivia has done this, countries all over the world have done this — and they say, “Okay, we haven't been able to provide freshwater. Let's bring in a private company.” And the private company then invests all this money in infrastructure, which is expensive. Then, because it's a private company, it has to make that money back, and so it charges people for a lot of money for this, and the people are very unhappy because suddenly they're paying a quarter of their income for water, which is what I saw in Southwest China: water riots because people are paying so much for water.In other words, one of the things that government can do is sort of spread these costs over everybody, but instead they concentrate it on the users, Almost universally, these privatization efforts have led to tremendous political unhappiness because the government has essentially shifted responsibility for coordinating and doing these things and imposed a cost on a narrow minority of the users.Are we finally getting on top of the old water infrastructure in this country? It seems like during the Biden administration they had a big infrastructure bill. Do you happen to know if we are finally getting that system upgraded?Listen, I will be the only person who probably ever interviews you who's actually had to fix a water main as a summer job. I spent [it at] my local Public Works Department where we'd have to fix water mains, and this was a number of years ago, and even a number of years ago, those pipes were really, really old. It didn't take much for them to get a main break.I'm one of those weird people who is bothered by this. All I can tell you is we have a lot of aging infrastructure. The last estimate that I've seen came before this sort of sudden jerky rise of construction costs, which, if you're at all involved in building, is basically all the people in the construction industry talk about. At that point, the estimate was that it was $1.2 trillion to fix the infrastructure that we have in the United States. I am sure it is higher now. I am delighted that the Biden people passed this infrastructure — would've been great if they passed permitting reform and a couple of other things to make it easier to spend the money, but okay. I would like to believe that the Trump people would take up the baton and go on this.Feeding the masses (18:20)I do worry that the kind of regulations, and rules, and ideas that we put into place to try and make agriculture more like this picture that we have in our head will end up inadvertently causing suffering for the people who are struggling.We're still going to have another two billion people, maybe, on this earth. Are we going to be able to feed them all?Yeah, I think that there's no question. The question is what we're going to be able to feed them? Are we going to be able to feed them all, filet mignon and truffled . . . whatever they put truffle oil on, and all that? Not so sure about that.All organic vegetables.At the moment, that seems really implausible, and there's a sort of fundamental argument going on here. There's a lot of people, again, both right and left, who are sort of freaked out by the scale that modern agriculture operates on. You fly over the middle-west and you see all those circles of center-pivot irrigation, they plowed under, in the beginning of the 20th century, 100 million acres of prairie to produce all that. And it's done with enormous amounts of capital, and it was done also partly by moving people out so that you could have this enormous stuff. The result is it creates a system that . . . doesn't match many people's vision of the friendly family farmer that they grew up with. It's a giant industrial process and people are freaked out by the scale. They don't trust these entities, the Cargills and the ADMs, and all these huge companies that they see as not having their interests at heart.It's very understandable. I live in a small town, we have a farm down there, and Jeremy runs it, and I'm very happy to see Jeremy. There's no Jeremy at Archer Daniels Midland. So the result is that there's a big revulsion against that, and people want to downsize the scale, and they point to very real environmental problems that big agriculture has, and they say that that is reason for this. The great problem is that in every single study that I am aware of, the sort of small, local farms don't produce as much food per acre or per hectare as the big, soulless industrial processes. So if you're concerned about feeding everybody, that's something you have to really weigh in your head, or heavy in your heart.That sort of notion of what a farm should look like and what good food is, that kind of almost romantic notion really, to me, plays into the sort of anti-growth or the degrowth people who seemed to be saying that farms could only be this one thing — probably they don't even remember those farms anymore — that I saw in a storybook. It's like a family farm, everything's grown local, not a very industrial process, but you're talking about a very different world. Maybe that's a world they want, but I don't know if that's a world you want if you're a poor person in this world.No, and like I said, I love going to the small farm next to us and talking to Jeremy and he says, “Oh look, we've just got these tomatoes,” it's great, but I have to pay for that privilege. And it is a privilege because Jeremy is barely making it and charging twice as much as the supermarket. There's no economies of scale for him. He still has to buy all the equipment, but he's putting it over 20 acres instead of 2000 acres. In addition, it's because it's this hyper-diverse farm — which is wonderful; they get to see the strawberries, and the tomatoes, and all the different things — it means he has to hire much more labor than it would be if he was just specializing in one thing. So his costs are inevitably much, much higher, and, therefore, I have to pay a lot more to keep him going. That's fine for me; I'm a middle-class person, I like food, this can be my hobby going there.I'd hate to have somebody tell me it's bad, but it's not a system that is geared for people who are struggling. There are just a ton of people all over the world who are struggling. They're better off than they were 100 years ago, but they're still struggling. I do worry that the kind of regulations, and rules, and ideas that we put into place to try and make agriculture more like this picture that we have in our head will end up inadvertently causing suffering for the people who are struggling.To make sure everybody can get fed in the future, do we need a lot more innovation?Innovation is always good. I would say that we do, and the kinds of innovation we need are not often what people imagine. For example, it's pretty clear that parts of the world are getting drier, and therefore irrigation is getting more difficult. The American Southwest is a primary candidate, and you go to the Safford Valley, which I did a few years ago — the Safford Valley is in southeast Arizona and it's hotter than hell there. I went there and it's 106 degrees and there's water from the Colorado River, 800 miles away, being channeled there, and they're growing Pima cotton. Pima cotton is this very good fine cotton that they use to make fancy clothes, and it's a great cash crop for farmers, but growing it involves channeling water from the Colorado 800 miles, and then they grow it by what's called flood irrigation, which is where you just fill the field with an inch of water. I was there actually to see an archeologist who's a water engineer, and I said to him, “Gee, it's hot! How much that water is evaporated?” And he said, “Oh, all of it.”So we need to think about that kind of thing if the Colorado is going to run out of water, which it is now. There's ways you can do it, you can possibly genetically modify cotton to use less water. You could drip irrigation, which is a much more efficient form of irrigation, it's readily available, but it's expensive. So you could try to help farmers do that. I think if you cut the soft costs, which is called the regulatory costs of farming, you might be able to pay for it in that way. That would be one type of innovation. Another type of thing you could do is to do a different kind of farming which is called civil pastoral systems, where you grow tree crops and then you grow cattle underneath, and that uses dramatically less water. It's being done in Sonora, just across the border and the tree crops — trees are basically wild. People don't breed them because it takes so long, but we now have the tools to breed them, and so you could make highly productive trees with cattle underneath and have a system that produces a lot of calories or a lot of good stuff. That's all the different kinds of innovation that we could do. Just some of the different kinds of innovation we could do and all would help.Indigenous America (25:20)Part of the reason I wrote these things is that I realized it's really interesting and I didn't learn anything about it in school.Great articles in The New Atlantis, big fan of “Wizard and the Prophet,” but I'm going to take one minute and ask you about your great books talking about the story of the indigenous peoples of the Americas. If I just want to travel in the United States and I'm interested in finding out more about Native Americans in the United States, where would you tell me to go?One of my favorite places just it's so amazing, is Chaco Canyon, and that's in the Four Corners area — that whole Four Corners area is quite incredible — and Chaco Canyon is a sign that native people could build amazing stuff, and native people could be crazy, in my opinion. It's in the middle of nowhere, it has no water, and for reasons that are probably spiritual and religious, they built an enormous number of essentially castles in this canyon, and they're incredible.The biggest one, Pueblo Bonito as it's called now, it's like 800 rooms. They're just enormous. And you can go there, and you can see these places, and you can just walk around, and it is incredible. You drive up a little bit to Mesa Verde and there's hundreds of these incredible cliff dwellings. What seems to have happened — I'm going to put this really informally and kind of jokingly to you, not the way that an archeologist would talk about it or I would write about it, but what looks like it happened is that the Chaco Canyon is this big canyon, and on the good side that gets the southern exposure is all these big houses. And then the minions and the hoi polloi lived on the other side, and it looks like, around 800, 900, they just got really tired of serving the kings and they had something like a democratic revolution, and they just left, most of them, and founded the Pueblos, which is these intensely democratic self-governing bodies that are kind of like what Thomas Jefferson thought the United States should be.Then it's like all the doctors, and the lawyers, and the MBAs, and the rich guys went up to Mesa Verde and they started off their own little kingdoms and they all fought with each other. So you have these crazy cliff dwellings where it's impossible to get in and there's hundreds of people living in these niches in these cliffs, and then that blew up too. So you could see history, democracy, and really great architecture all in one place.If someone asked me for my advice about changing the curriculum in school, one, people would leave school knowing who the heroes of progress and heroes of the Agricultural Revolution were. And I think they'd also know a lot more about pre-Columbian history of the Americas. I think they should know about it but I also think it's just super interesting, though of course you've brought it to life in a beautiful way.Thank you very much, and I couldn't agree with you more. Part of the reason I wrote these things is that I realized it's really interesting and I didn't learn anything about it in school.On sale everywhere The Conservative Futurist: How To Create the Sci-Fi World We Were PromisedFaster, Please! is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. 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Will S Jaishankar Visit Pakistan? | India - China Disengagement | Aalia Shah, Sanjay Dixit Interview
#PAKISTAN: #INDIA:Unbearable heat wave at 127F & what is to be done? Arif Rafiq, GlobelyNews.com https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/31/world/asia/pakistan-india-heat-wave.html 1900 Karachi
#PAKISTAN: #INDIA: India claims the authority to pursue terrorists into Pakistan. Husain Haqqani, Hudson. Bill Roggio, FDD. https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/india-will-enter-pakistan-to-kill-t... 1945 Pakistan
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World News in 7 minutes. Monday 10th July 2023. Today: Netherlands government collapse. Ukraine update. Pakistan India monsoon. China US talks. Chad refugees. ECOWAS. Syria Daesh hit. Brazil apartment collapse. Mexico journalist murder. And a robber ignored.With Stephen Devincenzi.If you enjoy the podcast please help to support us at send7.org/supportSupporters can read the transcripts at send7.org/transcriptsSupporters can try our weekly news quiz at send7.org/quizContact us at podcast@send7.org or send an audio message at speakpipe.com/send7Please leave a rating on Apple podcasts or Spotify.SEND7 (Simple English News Daily in 7 minutes) tells the most important world news stories in intermediate English. Every day, listen to the most important stories from every part of the world in slow, clear English. Whether you are an intermediate learner trying to improve your advanced, technical and business English, or if you are a native speaker who just wants to hear a summary of world news as fast as possible, join Stephen Devincenzi, Namitha Ragunath and Juliet Martin every morning. Transcripts can be found at send7.org/transcripts. Simple English News Daily is the perfect way to start your day, by practising your listening skills and understanding complicated stories in a simple way. It is also highly valuable for IELTS and TOEFL students. Students, teachers, and people with English as a second language, tell us that they listen to SEND7 because they can learn English through hard topics, but simple grammar. We believe that the best way to improve your spoken English is to immerse yourself in real-life content, such as what our podcast provides. SEND7 covers all news including politics, business, natural events and human rights. Whether it is happening in Europe, Africa, Asia, the Americas or Oceania, you will hear it on SEND7, and you will understand it. For more information visit send7.org/contactThis show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/4907677/advertisement
We sit down and talk about those Paki pieces of s**t
First, Indian Express' Associate Editor Shubhajit Roy joins us to talk about India's invitation to Pakistan after the country's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said in an interview that he wants to have “serious and sincere” talks with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Next, Indian Express' Shubra Gupta speaks about India's two documentary nominations at the Oscars this year - ‘All That Breathes' and ‘The Elephant Whisperers'. (11:37)And lastly, Indian Express' Amitabh Sinha explains why the coronavirus infections in India have declined and what it means for the Covid-19 pandemic's future. (22:43)Hosted by Shashank BhargavaProduced and scripted by Utsa Sarmin, Shashank Bhargava, and Anwiti SinghEdited and mixed by Abhishek KumarFurther listening: RRR's Naatu Naatu wins at the Golden Globes
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: Call me, maybe? Hotlines and Global Catastrophic Risk [Founders Pledge], published by christian.r on January 24, 2023 on The Effective Altruism Forum. This post summarizes a Founders Pledge shallow investigation on direct communications links (DCLs or "hotlines") between states as global catastrophic risks interventions. As a shallow investigation, it is a rough attempt at understanding an issue, and is in some respects a work in progress. Summary Crisis-communication links or “hotlines” between states are a subset of crisis management tools intended to help leaders defuse the worst possible crises and to limit or terminate war (especially nuclear war) when it does break out. Despite a clear theory of change, however, there is high uncertainty about their effectiveness and little empirical evidence. The most important dyadic adversarial relationships (e.g., U.S.-China, U.S.-Russia, Pakistan-India, India-China) already have existing hotlines between them, and forming new hotlines is an unlikely candidate for effective philanthropy. Along with high uncertainty about hotline effectiveness in crisis management, the highest stakes application of hotlines (i.e., WMD conflict limitation and termination) remains untested, and dedicated crisis-communications channels may have an important fail-safe role in the event of conflict. War limitation- and termination-enabling hotlines have high expected value even with very low probability of success, because of the distribution of fatalities in WMD-related conflicts. Importantly, it appears that existing hotlines — cobbled together from legacy Cold-War systems and modern technology — are not resilient to the very conflicts they are supposed to control, and may fail in the event of nuclear war, electro-magnetic pulse, cyber operations and some natural catastrophic risks, like solar flares. Additionally, there are political and institutional obstacles to hotline use, including China's repeated failure to answer in crisis situations. Philanthropists interested in crisis management tools like hotlines could pursue a number of interventions, including: Funding work and dialogues to establish new hotlines; Funding work and dialogues on hotline resilience (including technical work on hotlines in communications-denied environments); Funding more rigorous studies of hotline effectiveness; Funding track II dialogues between the U.S. and China (and potentially other powerful states) focused on hotlines to understand different conceptions of crisis communication. We believe that the marginal value of establishing new hotlines is likely to be low. The other interventions likely need to be sequenced — before investing in hotline resilience, we ought to better understand whether hotlines work, and what political and institutional issues affect their function. Crucially for avoiding great power conflict, we recommend investing in understanding why China does not “pick up” crisis communications channels in times of crisis. Acknowledgments: I would like to thank Tom Barnes, Linton Brooks, Matt Lerner, Peter Rautenbach, David Santoro, Shaan Shaikh, and Sarah Weiler for helpful input on this project. Background Thomas Schelling first suggested the idea of a direct communications link between the United States and the Soviet Union in 1958, and the idea was popularized in outlets like Parade magazine. Although early attempts were made at implementing such a link (e.g. in early 1962), the need for such a dedicated communications channel between the United States and Soviet Union became pressingly clear during the Cuban Missile crisis, when Kennedy and Krushchev communicated through “clumsy” and slow traditional communications channels. Officials at the Soviet embassy in Washington later recalled that even their own communications with Moscow used slow an...
Photo: No known restrictions on publication. @Batchelorshow #Pakistan: #India: #PRC: The flood and the F-16s. Kamran Bokhari, director of Analytical Development at the Newlines Institute for Strategy & Policy: @GordonGChang, Gatestone, Newsweek, The Hill https://indianexpress.com/article/world/united-states-pakistan-relationship-india-jaishankar-comment-f16-8174908/
Jacob is back! The markets went nowhere (and everywhere, depending on how you look at it)! Hop back in to hear Jacob and Rob run through: Market Overview - 1:40-9:15 We like Europe - 9:15-19:20 China/Japan, Yuan/Yen - 19:20-32:20 Chile, Copper, U.S., Energy Transition - 32:20-47:55 Pakistan + India - 47:55-end Make sure to check out the Cognitive Dissidents site and services https://cognitive.investments (here).
Today's Topics: Season 6 is up and running! Today we're talking about Independence Days, former presidents in exile, drug wars, 1-year after regime a regime overthrow, and presidential elections! Always remember that Lofi Poli Sci is more than just me, it's the “we”, that we be. Episode Link: https://youtu.be/ma9SR77rfMQ Episode 1 Season 6 (series 519) Official Website: www.lofipolisci.com Instagram: lofi_poli_sci_podcast YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/LofiPoliSciPodcast LinkedIn: Michael Pickering #lofipolisci #lofi #politicalscience #news #worldnews #globalnews #lofiGlobalNews #alwaysHope #podcast #lofipoliscipodcast #Top10 #GoodNewsFriday #PickeringUnplugged #LettersOfTheLofiPoliSci #Pakistan #India #SriLanka #Mexico #Afghanistan #Kenya
Pakistan has too many fault lines, starting with their identity crisis to religion and ideology of Nazaria-e-Pakistan, to Military to population to economy. Lt Gen PR Shankar talks about these fault lines in this talk with Sanjay Dixit.
Today's Topics: Sports in England, Piracy between Iran and Greece/US, Hong Kong without Tiananmen Square Massacre Vigil, Pakistan Taliban and Pakistan Government, Sologamy in India. Always remember that Lofi Poli Sci is more than just me, it's the “we”, that we be. Episode Link: https://youtu.be/kioqZ58ERrk Episode 60 Season 5 (series 476) Official Website: www.lofipolisci.com Instagram: lofi_poli_sci_podcast YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/LofiPoliSciPodcast LinkedIn: Michael Pickering #lofipolisci #lofi #politicalscience #news #worldnews #globalnews #lofiGlobalNews #alwaysHope #podcast #lofipoliscipodcast #Top10 #GoodNewsFriday #PickeringUnplugged #LettersOfTheLofiPoliSci #England #cheeseRolling #Pirates #Piracy #Iran #Greece #US #HongKong #TiananmenSquare #Pakistan #India #Sologamy
On April 11, Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan was ousted from office, having suffered defeat in a dramatic no confidence vote in the national assembly. Soon after, Shehbaz Sharif—former chief minister of Punjab and brother of former prime minister Nawaz Sharif—was sworn into office as his replacement, capping a dizzying few weeks of political intrigue. To make sense of the latest developments in Pakistan, including what they mean for India, this week Milan is joined on the show by Aqil Shah. Aqil is the Wick Cary associate professor in the Department of International and Area Studies at the University of Oklahoma and a visiting scholar in the South Asia Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Aqil is the author of The Army and Democracy: Military Politics in Pakistan, one of the best guides to civil-military relations in Pakistan. Milan and Aqil discuss Imran Khan's dramatic fall from grace, the challenges facing the new government, and the country's complicated civil-military power balance. Plus, they talk about what these developments mean for India and Pakistan's frosty bilateral relationship. Aqil Shah, “The Shambolic End of Imran Khan,” Foreign Affairs, April 15, 2022.Aqil Shah, “Pakistan's ‘Moderate Taliban' Strategy Won't Hold Up—For Anyone,” Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, September 30, 2021.Aqil Shah, “Pakistan: Voting Under Military Tutelage,” Journal of Democracy 30, no. 1 (2019): 128-142.