Axel Springer CEO calls for tariff-free democratic trade club against China and Russia

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 05:32:28 GMT

Axel Springer CEO calls for tariff-free democratic trade club against China and Russia To avoid being undermined by autocracies such as Russia and China, democracies should trade freely amongst themselves, while imposing stiff tariffs against countries that don’t have the same environmental or human rights standards, the head of German media company Axel Springer proposed.Speaking to POLITICO’s Anne McElvoy in her new Power Play podcast, Mathias Döpfner, CEO of Axel Springer — POLITICO’s parent company — called for the creation of a two-speed world trade system that would be shaped by countries’ political regimes.Only transatlantic democracies that abide by a set of minimal standards — which include respecting the rule of law and human rights or setting targets for carbon dioxide emissions — should be allowed in the free world’s duty-free trade club, Döpfner said.These democracies would still be able to trade with “autocratic or dictatorial systems, but then these countries have to pay tariffs,” the media executive continued, ...

Caught in a trap: Mathias Döpfner’s call for free trade

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 05:32:28 GMT

Caught in a trap: Mathias Döpfner’s call for free trade Listen on Spotify Apple Music Google Play EN_Google_Podcasts_Badge Created with Sketch. Acast As the Middle East crisis deepens, how should the West react to a growing sense of unease about the world order?On this week’s edition of Power Play, host Anne McElvoy speaks to Mathias Döpfner, CEO of Europe’s leading digital publisher, Axel Springer (POLITICO’s parent company).His new book, “Trade Tr...

At least 22 people dead, gunman at large after shootings in Lewiston, Maine, officials say

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 05:32:28 GMT

At least 22 people dead, gunman at large after shootings in Lewiston, Maine, officials say At least 22 people are dead in connection with a series of shootings in Lewiston, Maine, according to a Lewiston city councilor. Police were still searching for a gunman as of around 11:30 p.m. WednesdayMaine State Police in a post on X shortly after 8 p.m. said residents should stay inside with their doors locked, adding “Law enforcement is currently investigating at multiple locations.”Officials in a later update said shootings happened shortly before 7 p.m., resulting in “multiple casualties.”Commissioner Mike Sauschuck of the Maine Department of Public Safety confirmed authorities had identified a man named Robert Card as a person of interest. Lewiston police previously shared photos of Card, who officials have described as “armed and dangerous.” Sauschuck said members of the public should not approach Card or make contact with him.A shelter-in-place status remained in effect for Lewiston as of Wednesday night, according to Sauschuck. There was also a shelter-in-place for nearby...

McKone: Congress must pass credit card act to ease fees

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 05:32:28 GMT

McKone: Congress must pass credit card act to ease fees In the world of sponsorships, VIP seats, and lavish executive privileges, credit card giants like Visa and Mastercard, along with every major bank, have perfected the art of selling their products. From top sponsorships at everything from the Olympics to the World Cup, you can’t turn on the TV without getting inundated with credit card marketing. Yet, behind them lies a startling truth: these ads are being bankrolled by excessive credit card swipe fees charged to your local businesses and, inevitably, you.American businesses pay the highest swipe fees in the industrialized world. While these fees remain hidden from consumers, their impact is far-reaching. Last year alone, U.S. merchants paid over $126 billion in credit card processing fees, a staggering increase of more than 20% from just a year earlier. Such an exponential rise has severe implications for businesses, especially small enterprises, struggling to recover from the economic aftermath of the pandemic.Yet Visa and Masterc...

‘The Persian Version’ a multi-layered cinematic feast

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 05:32:28 GMT

‘The Persian Version’ a multi-layered cinematic feast To the tune of Wet Leg’s hit “On the Chaise Longue,” the surprisingly angry coming-of-age film “The Persian Version” begins with its lesbian heroine narrating the action, attending a drag party dressed in a “burka-tini” and having a one-night stand with a straight but cross-dressing British actor playing the lead in a Broadway production of “Hedwig and the Angry Inch.”Life is so complicated. Our heroine Leila Jamshidpour (Layla Mohammadi) gets pregnant, and in spite of her independent spirit, she decides to have the baby with the halting approval of “Hedwig.” “The Persian Version” then proceeds to examine the terrible relationship Leila, who has five or six grown-up brothers, has had with her tall, beautiful mother Shireen (Niousha Noor). Complicating Leila’s relationship with her mother is her father’s daunting medical state.Her father, whose name is Ali Reza (Bijan Daneshmand) is a longtime physician so in need of a heart transplant that he is about to be given a...

‘Charlie Chaplin vs. America’ unpacks life of iconic Tramp

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 05:32:28 GMT

‘Charlie Chaplin vs. America’ unpacks life of iconic Tramp Scott Eyman’s new biography “Charlie Chaplin vs. America” (Simon & Schuster, publishes Oct. 31) chronicles the amazing – and still shocking – fall from grace that led Hollywood’s first global superstar to virtually disappear into a voluntary Swiss exile.As WWI raged Chaplin’s Tramp made him famous in every country of the world and wildly wealthy. Yet as post-WWII America went through political convulsions with anti-Communist conspiracies and purges born out of moral indignation, Chaplin in the late 1940s became a target of the FBI chief J. Edgar Hoover’s obsession with his sexual life and his liberal politics.But Eyman, the best-selling biographer of John Wayne and Cary Grant, doesn’t confine himself to just that chapter of Chaplin’s extraordinary life.“My intent was to narrow it to 12 years,” Eyman. 72, said in a phone interview. “Then I thought, I can’t assume 21st century readers know anything about Charlie Chaplin, about his childhood and all that. And if you don’...

DeMar DeRozan cherishes opening night in his 15th NBA season, but the Chicago Bulls fall to the Oklahoma City Thunder 124-104

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 05:32:28 GMT

DeMar DeRozan cherishes opening night in his 15th NBA season, but the Chicago Bulls fall to the Oklahoma City Thunder 124-104 Even after 14 years, opening night never gets old for DeMar DeRozan.The Chicago Bulls forward started his 15th NBA season Wednesday night against the Oklahoma City Thunder at the United Center. DeRozan scored a team-high 20 points, but the Bulls lost 124-104.DeRozan, 34, has collected numerous All-Star accolades and trips to the playoffs. But the first day of a fresh season still holds the same glow.“It’s amazing to play this game so long, especially having looked at a lot of people that I watched play, some of them played 13, 14 years,” DeRozan said. “To still be going, to still love the game, to still have motivation, passion, everything about it — I don’t look at it like I feel old. It’s a blessing more than anything to still be playing.”DeRozan wasn’t quite as confident on his first opening night in 2009, when he made his debut in Toronto for the Raptors against a Cleveland Cavaliers team that included Shaquille O’Neal ...

Lucas: Biden’s weakness on display in Mideast

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 05:32:28 GMT

Lucas: Biden’s weakness on display in Mideast If Joe Biden were not such a weakling, he would have warned Iran of the U.S. destruction of Hamas unless the Islamic terrorist group released all Americans it is holding hostage.Instead, Biden is providing Hamas, Iran’s jihadist proxy, with $100 million in humanitarian aid that will surely end up in the hands of the Hamas terrorists.The United States says it does not pay ransom for hostages, except when it does. That is when Americans are taken hostage by Iran or one of its proxies, and a Democrat, like Joe Biden or Barack Obama, is in the White House.Then the U.S. is fair game and Iran, the biggest spreader of terrorism in the world, keeps taking Americans hostage. The money keeps rolling in.Hardly had Biden announced approval of the $100 million in aid to the Palestinians in Gaza then Hamas, which controls the place, released two Americans they had kidnapped during their barbaric killing spree Oct. 7 where they slaughtered 1,400 people in Israel, including women and children.Among...

Collegiate Charter School offers path to college

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 05:32:28 GMT

Collegiate Charter School offers path to college Do you think a college education is financially impossible for your child? We can help. Set your child up for success by enrolling them in the Collegiate Charter School of Lowell. Last year, we found over $750,000 in needs-based grants, aid, and scholarships for our 28 graduates. According to a National Center for Education Statistics study, in 2022 high school graduates ages 25-34 years old made $36,600 a year while the student with a bachelor’s degree made $59,600.We are accepting applications right now to be a part of this wonderful newer K-12 school. We are located near the Rourke Bridge off Middlesex Street in Lowell. Please check out our open houses on Nov 13 and Nov. 28 from 5-7 pm. You may also apply on our website at www.collegiatelowell.orgAs our motto says at Collegiate, your child will be seen, be heard, and belong. We offer a strong college preparatory curriculum in a family-type atmosphere. The whole family can go to school together since we offer a kindergarten ...

‘Anatomy of a Fall’ complex, worthwhile mystery

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 05:32:28 GMT

‘Anatomy of a Fall’ complex, worthwhile mystery Cannes award-winner “Anatomy of a Fall” suggests a mash up of last year’s “Tar” with Sandra Huller (“Toni Erdmann”) giving a Cate Blanchett-level performance as a writer accused of her husband’s murder; Ingmar Bergman’s landmark “Scenes from a Marriage;” and, of course, Otto Preminger’s courtroom classic “Anatomy of a Murder.”Directed and co-written by Justine Triet (“Sibyl”), the film is a dense, sophisticated deep dive into the complexities of a marriage after the French husband dies in a tumble from the third floor of the family’s fix-it-up, wooden chalet in Grenoble, where he, his German writer-wife and their piano-playing 11-year-old son Daniel (Milo Machado Graner) lived.Before her husband’s death, Huller’s Sandra Voyter is interviewed in the chalet by a young journalist. But they have to give up because Sandra’s husband Samuel Maleski (Samuel Theis), also a writer, although a failed one, is renovating on the third floor and blar...