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Search Result for “enterprise awards”

Showing 1 - 10 of 14

OPINION

How a bad Trump edit became a global controversy

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 14/11/2025

» I have spent thousands of hours sitting alongside video editors working on productions quite similar to the Panorama documentary that has landed the British Broadcasting Corporation with the threat of a billion-dollar libel suit by Donald Trump. I think I know what happened.

OPINION

It's time to go geoengineering on climate issue

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 05/06/2025

» This is the second anniversary of the arrival of the emergency but practically nobody is mentioning it. Instead people are choosing to worry about more familiar problems like global trade wars, the rise of fascism and genocidal wars. It's kind of a global displacement activity: if we don't mention it, maybe it will go away.

OPINION

Unpunished crimes, except Duterte's maybe

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 18/03/2025

» Everybody has heard the saying: "The mills of justice grind slowly, but they grind exceeding fine". The saying is a promise that all crimes will eventually be punished -- but it is a lie.

OPINION

The whys and wherefores of expanding Brics

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 29/08/2023

» You can expand the curious organisation called the Brics, but you can't define it. In fact, it's hardly even an organisation: no headquarters, no secretariat. Even the (British) Commonwealth and la Francophonie have more substance: at least they share a former oppressor. Yet the Brics are expanding.

THAILAND

Starship: The Iterative Design Methodology

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 23/04/2023

» 'Obviously, this is not a nominal situation," said John Insprucker, a senior engineer at Space-X, who was doing a webcast on Thursday's launch attempt of Elon Musk's gigantic Starship rocket. So why did Mr Musk's employees, hundreds of whom were watching live, cheer when it blew up only four minutes into flight?

OPINION

Beijing will use 'floggings' until morale improves

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 14/03/2023

» Xi Jinping was confirmed in a third term as president of China at the National People's Congress last week, and not one of the 3,000 delegates voted against him. Why would they? Everything is perfect in the People's Republic of Oz, and the chief Wizard doesn't even to need to hide behind a curtain.

OPINION

A resurgence of alliances is an echo of past wars

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 21/01/2023

» Alliances are as old as civilisation. Older, actually: almost every hunter-gatherer band that anthropologists have studied, from the New Guinea highlanders to the Yanomamo in the Amazon, made alliances with other groups to try to protect themselves.

OPINION

The benign sociopath that is Elon Musk

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 02/11/2022

» Elon Musk is that rarest of things, a benign sociopath, and therefore a person of considerable value to the world. He has just made a mistake that could ruin his long-term plan, for his purchase of Twitter is almost bound to end in tears. The sharks are always circling the very rich and highly geared, and I find myself worrying about him.

OPINION

EU elections point to hectic Brexit agenda

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 29/05/2019

» The best way of describing what just happened in the European Union elections is to say that the choices are getting clearer -- and a lot of people are realising which side they are on.

OPINION

The 'immigrant problem': from bad to worse

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 03/04/2019

» In a recent survey of potential adult migrants worldwide, 47 million said they would most like to move to Canada. There are only 37 million people in Canada. The same goes for Australia: 36 million would like to move there; only 25 million do live there. Most of these would-be immigrants are going to be disappointed. In fact, Canada lets in just 300,000 immigrants a year; Australia 200,000.