At the recent World Economic Forum in Switzerland, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney proclaimed "a rupture" in the global "rules-based order" and a turn to great power rivalry. While its demise is ...
The “rules-based international order” was never a set of neutral rules. It was a story the U.S. told — about itself, its power and its right to bend norms when convenient. In January, that story ...
There are moments in global politics when the mask slips—not because power suddenly discovers morality, but because maintaining the performance becomes too expensive. Recently in Davos , the Canadian ...
Graham blocks Trump-backed spending plan, calls it a 'bad deal' as shutdown nears Catherine O'Hara, "Beetlejuice" and "Home Alone" star, dies at 71 Oops, scientists ...
A competitor lines up a putt at the 2025 Drive, Chip and Putt National Finals at Augusta National.getty images Bobby Jones, the legendary amateur and Augusta National co-founder, didn't just play golf ...
This project provides a Python-based trading bot that interfaces with the Binance Futures Testnet API. It supports placing market, limit, and stop-limit orders through a command-line interface with ...
A Python-based Telegram bot that automates SheerID student/teacher identity verification for multiple platforms. The bot automatically generates identity information, creates verification documents, ...
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney told global leaders Monday that the international rules-based order has collapsed and middle powers must unite to avoid subordination to great powers in an era of ...
Who is 'el Mencho' and the Jalisco New Generation Cartel?
The decline of the international rules-based order means middle-sized countries need to stick together, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said today, in a thinly veiled criticism of the US ...
THIS time last year, I wrote an article for New Scientist about the perfect way to cook the classic pasta dish cacio e pepe, according to physicists. The meal’s smooth, glossy emulsion of black pepper ...
It’s cozy, but it also tends to make us depressed. As Stanford-trained psychologist and author Kari Leibowitz has explained, “connection with nature, movement, and fresh air are all natural ...