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  • News & article

    The 'defence' follies of 'little boys' at play

    Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 26/03/2021

    » In the early decades of the Cold War, this was the season when North Atlantic Treaty Organization (Nato) defence chiefs would announce their spending plans for the next year, and they would almost always "discover" some new threat from the Soviet Union to justify the money. In the United States, for example, the intelligence services traditionally found a Soviet armoured brigade hiding in Cuba every February or March.

  • News & article

    English speakers feel Covid's wrath

    Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 26/02/2021

    » To those who obsessively followed Covid websites over the past 11 months, one thing demanded an explanation above all: Why were the worst death rates-per-million in the richest, most developed countries, and in the United States and the United Kingdom most of all?

  • News & article

    Playing football won't turn boys into manly men

    Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 12/02/2021

    » It seemed innocent enough at the start: just a surge in the number of boys coming to school with notes from doctors saying they were excused from playing contact sports. But pretty soon high schools all over China were having trouble finding enough willing young men to make up a football team.

  • News & article

    Iran: Yet another nuclear bungle?

    Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 17/02/2021

    » The self-esteem of two-year-olds and nation states is too fragile for them to admit they were wrong, which makes it hard for them to move on from blunders. That's why the toys don't get picked up and the broken treaties don't get fixed, and why there may be a tantrum (in the case of two-year-olds) or a nuclear war (in the case of the United States and Iran).

  • News & article

    Putsch against Suu Kyi reflects military's insecurities

    Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 05/02/2021

    » China's Xinhua news agency tactfully described the Burmese army's seizure of power on Monday as a "cabinet reshuffle". This suggests a possible new approach for Donald Trump's legal team as he faces a second impeachment trial, but it won't work, for two reasons. One, Mr Trump's coup attempt failed. Two, people got killed.

  • News & article

    Major powers' defence budgets are indefensible

    News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 04/01/2021

    » The recent war between Armenia and Azerbaijan made sense, in an old-fashioned way. The dispute was about territory -- borders that were drawn almost a century ago by a Russian dictator, Joseph Stalin -- and Azerbaijan had lost the last war and a lot of land.

  • News & article

    HK and China: One country, one system

    Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 18/11/2020

    » One Hong Kong lawmaker, Claudia Mo, said it was "the death-knell of Hong Kong's democracy fight". But she was part of it: one of the 15 remaining pro-democracy members of the Legislative Council (Legco) who resigned last Thursday in protest at the expulsion of four other democratically elected members of the pseudo-parliament.

  • News & article

    China, climate and the blame game

    Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 24/09/2020

    » China took a major stride forward on climate on Tuesday. President Xi Jinping, addressing the annual meeting of the United Nations General Assembly, for the first time committed China to a hard target for future greenhouse gas emissions.

  • News & article

    Be suspicious of miracle vaccines

    News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 14/09/2020

    » Nine of the world's biggest pharmaceutical companies have just promised not to apply for regulatory approval for any new Covid-19 vaccine before it has gone through all three phases of clinical study. Why would they do such a thing?

  • News & article

    Forced schooling of Mongolians driven by fear

    Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 05/09/2020

    » 'Residential schools" were a common feature of European settler societies (except New Zealand) until quite late in the 20th century, and their purpose was not just to educate but to "deracinate" their aboriginal pupils: to cut them off from their roots. The Chinese government would reject the analogy with its last breath, but it is now doing the same thing.

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