Prince of Wales Charles III released to mark its launch
What Xi, the WEF, and people like Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D–Mass.) have in common is that they favor so-called stakeholder capitalism, which is a euphemism for making companies answer first to special interests. They want to reorganize corporate boards to include representatives from labor, environmental, and social justice groups. Warren proposed a bill to require 40 percent of large corporate board seats be elected by workers. In China, the state simply owns or controls a majority stake in most of the country's largest firms.
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Crashing the UK economy
Yanis Varoufakis on how Liz Truss is upping the ante in Britain's class war, going for broke on behalf of the ultra-rich.
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The Real Reason Why The Russia-Ukraine War is Not Ending
Responding to a question by Czech entrepreneur and mathematician, Karel Janeček, Sadhguru explains the root cause of the Russia-Ukraine war, and what we must do to put an end to it. Yogi, mystic and visionary, Sadhguru is a spiritual master with a difference. An arresting blend of profundity and pragmatism, his life and work serves as a reminder that yoga is a contemporary science, vitally relevant to our times.
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Climate Change causes Hurricane Fiona to hit Puerto Rico
The global geo-economic landscape is looking increasingly fragmented while the threat from climate change is becoming ever more pressing.
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Our Digital Future Exploitation: Central Bank Digital Currencies
How can public-private partnerships in areas such as technology, finance, and innovation both create business value and strengthen climate adaptation?
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This Is The Alarmingly Simple Way To Communicate About Climate Change
Climate change is real. That’s the bottom line and it’s one that shouldn’t be debated, argued or challenged. Yet as the threat from climate change becomes more real, and its impact more noticeable, we are left with a question; what can we do about it? The answer is simple; we must fight climate change cooperatively. And I don’t mean with each other; I mean with nature. Working with nature is far from an act of the hippy-dippy “treehugger” stereotype. In fact, some of the most innovative strategies that have been used to help mitigate and adapt to global warming come from…you guessed it, trees. Trees can give us insight into how plants survive in extreme environments and this could be the vital clue to stopping global warming (and saving our planet while we’re at it).
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