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King Charles can go greener now, even if his government sees red
So King Charles won’t be going to Cop27, by order of Liz Truss; an inauspicious start fora monarch with pretensions to remain an influencer and be known as the first green” king.
This uprising could fail like others did - but something feels different
In Hong Kong in 2019-20, millions took to the streets to oppose the repressive actions of an authoritarian regime. But ultimately their voices were silenced, their leaders jailed and China stripped away their democratic rights as hand-wringing western leaders looked on.
'The Scale Is Chilling' Floods Offer A Devastating Glimpse Into Earth's Future
Ali Baksh stood on the embankment and pointed across the flooded landscape to the spot where his fields used to be. The 45-year-old farmer is sheltering in a makeshift camp only accessible by boat in the Sindh province of Pakistan along with more than 2,000 others forced to flee their homes as the floods hit.
Head of the family
She was tired of fame at 10. Now, as her fifth album is released, the daughter of Will and Jada is still learning to live in the spotlight
A distressing search for answers amid Izium's mass graves
The men digging in the dusty ground looked visibly sickened by the gruesome task they had been given. The rotted bodies were mangled and the smell poisoned the fresh forest air. One corpse had a rope around the neck.
A very modern pilgrimage: in the queue with Waitrose bags, pizza and tired legs
Following the death of George VI in 1952, the Guardian's reports of his lying in state, witnessed by nearly 300,000 people over three days, were lively with detail. Other newspapers carried similar details. What marked out the Guardian was its wryness, its refusal to get carried away. It was a Manchester paper, after all.
The kingdom to come
Queen Elizabeth II was a political and diplomatic asset who spoke with the moral weight of the wartime generation. How will Britain face her loss?
Rack to the future: robot labs are here
At high-end labs in the US and UK, anybody, anywhere, can conduct experiments by remote control cheaply and efficiently. Is the rise of the robot researcher now inevitable?
Realms of possibility
Can King Charles III hold the Commonwealth together? | King Charles III's accession to the throne has reignited debate over the British royal family's role in the 21st century-and no more so than in the Commonwealth, where the monarch remains head of state in 15 of its 56 members. Now its devoted former figurehead Queen Elizabeth II is gone, and in the light of its roots in empire and slavery, will the 'family of nations' rethink its links with the crown? Our correspondents assess the mood in six key member states
Truss is preaching the discredited and toxic gospel of neoliberalism
Soon, the focus will return, and the collapse of many people's economic prospects will dominate once more. As winter approaches, it will become clear that our politics is spectacularly lacking in answers.
The west needs to take on Putin at his own information game
The Ukrainians have (again) done what nobody believed they could. They have (again) defeated the supposedly mighty Russia on the battlefield, and shown up the underlying incompetence and moral rot of the Putin system.
Double vision
In the early days, much of the children's material available on YouTube was broadly educational. But before long, some seriously strange stuff started to appear
Britain Needs Liz Truss To Echo The Monarch's Flexible Diplomacy Simon Tisdall
What will other leaders and nations make of Liz Truss in Britain’s hour of trial? This untested prime minister must now lead the country through a crisis of unity and confidence that may be triggered by the death of her infinitely better-known namesake, Elizabeth II.
In The Dark? Truss's Energy Price Plan Has One Problem – How To Fund It
No handouts? Forget the promise of the Conservative leadership race ; three days into her term as prime minister Liz Truss unveiled one of the biggest single packages of financial support for households in recent decades.
Moscow’s narrative on its ‘special operation’ starts to fray
It was not the ideal moment for a party. Last Saturday even-ing, as Russian troops speedily retreated from numerous towns in the Kharkiv region, and the Ukrainian army triumphantly raised its yellow and blue flag, spectacular fireworks crackled across Moscow.
The constant monarch
The Queen was not born to rule, but she devoted her life to the role, maintaining a political neutrality, even in stormy times
Will he or won’t he? Trump keeps his election foes guessing
In Tennessee in June, he asked a crowd: “Would anybody like me to run for president?” Then in Nevada in July, he remarked: “We have a president who ran twice, won twice and may have to do it a third time. Can you believe it?”
Kharkiv life precarious despite victories
Water and energy supplies are disrupted as liberating troops find bodies of civilians showing signs of torture
Politics needs to play its part as a divided Britain faces upheaval Martin Kettle
The death of a monarch is an entirely foreseeable event, the solemn formalities hardwired into the rituals of dynastic succession. But it is also an event that is difficult, partly for the simple reason of good manners, to anticipate with any accuracy at any particular time.
The Queen cherished the Commonwealth – but change lies ahead David Olusoga
Our ancestors were better prepared for moments like this. The corollary of having witnessed the longest reign in British history is that only a tiny fraction of us have any memory of a monarch’s passing – and such memories that do exist are faded, unreliable recollections.
As women broke new ground, having a queen was wonderful Rachel Cooke
The past is sometimes less of a foreign country than you might imagine. Last Friday morning, when my husband wondered aloud if we should get a new television “for the funeral” (ours is comically small), my mind turned to the coronation, the generations connected, even now, by the allure of an outside broadcast.
The west ignores our super-floods at its peril. Tomorrow it will be you Fatima Bhutto
Pakistan, the world’s fifth- most-populous country, is fighting for its survival. This summer, erratic monsoon rains battered the country from north to south – Sindh, the southernmost province, received 464% more rain over the past few weeks than the 30-year average for the period. At the same time, Pakistan’s glaciers are melting at a rate never seen before. These consequences of the climate crisis have combined to create a monstrous super-flood that has ravaged the country.
Eating meat is not a crime against the planet-if it's done right
I have huge admiration for George Monbiot, a Guardian columnist. His work has highlighted the urgent need to reduce our CO2 emissions and switch to greener energy.
Johnson's dreams of a comeback will be a nightmare for Liz Truss
Making his final appearance in the Commons as prime minister, Boris Johnson tendered some advice to his successor. Don’t break the laws that you yourself introduced to curb a deadly pandemic.
Landowners hail scheme to restore biodiversity
Ambitious schemes by farmers and landowners to restore nature and reduce flooding while still producing food will be supported by the government in 22 locations across England.
I'm glowing How an app is helping us measure the joy of trees
A new research project aims to discover how the age, size and shape of woodlands can benefit people's wellbeing
'It's a plague' On the night trail with the wallaby hunters
Pete Peeti flicks off the headlights, cuts the ignition and lets his truck roll quietly down a bush track, deep in the heart of New Zealand's North Island. Twilight is slipping into night and rain is falling in thick drapes.
Xi’s iron grip holds firm as Communist party caucus approaches
The announcement of a Chinese Communist party meeting that is expected to cement Xi Jinping’s agenda for the coming years shows the strength of his “ultimate authority”, analysts have said.
‘His was the slow way to freedom’: a farewell to Gorbachev
The Pillar Hall in the House of the Unions is a grand old ballroom where Soviet leaders are put on display when they die.
‘No quick wins’ Push to retake Kherson shows Kyiv’s cautious confidence By Dan Sabbagh
Ukraine declared last week it had begun a counter offensive aiming to retake Kherson – the one city Russia holds west of the Dnieper River – prompting a fog of uncertainty to descend on how the effort was progressing, never mind whether it would succeed.