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OPINION

Germany, Japan and the war on fuel rationality

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 19/02/2020

» Germany and Japan are finally winning a war together. Unfortunately, it is the War on Rationality.

OPINION

Assange hearing takes cues from Pentagon Papers

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 26/02/2020

» The cost of being a whistle-blower is going up. When Daniel Ellsberg stole and published the Pentagon Papers in 1971, revealing the monstrous lies that the US government was telling the American public about the Vietnam war, he was arrested and tried, but the court set him free.

OPINION

Kristallnacht for India's Muslims?

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 04/03/2020

» The anti-Muslim pogrom in northeastern Delhi last week only killed 43 people, and a few of them weren't even Muslims. But then on Kristallnacht ("The Night of Broken Glass") in Germany in 1938, only 91 Jews were killed. It was still a Nazi declaration of war on the Jews, and a forewarning of the 6 million Jewish deaths to come.

OPINION

A glimpse of the looming migrant 'Armageddon'

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 06/03/2020

» Turkey has opened the floodgates, and soon Europe will be drowning in immigrants. "Hundreds of thousands have crossed," Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan claimed on television, "and soon it will reach millions." And it must be true because you can see it live on your medium of choice.

OPINION

Bibi, Benny and Ruvi: Israel's future

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 13/03/2020

» Benjamin Netanyahu, or "Bibi" as everyone calls him, is the longest-serving prime minister in Israel's history, and still in office although he has failed to win three elections in a row. Last June, last September, and again early this month, Israeli voters split their votes in ways that made it almost impossible to put together a new government.

OPINION

Nations facing lengthy lockdowns to prevent spread

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 20/03/2020

» Most of the countries in Asia, Europe and North America are now in lockdown to slow the spread of the Covid-19 virus. This is the 'suppression' strategy, and it should keep the death rate from going exponential for a while. The unanswered question is: what do we do next?

OPINION

Covid-19 offers odd glimpse of a new future

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 25/03/2020

» They teach you in journalism school never to use the phrase "...X has changed the world forever". Or at least they should. Covid-19 is certainly not going to change the world forever, but it is going to change quite a few things, in some cases for a long time. Here's nine of them, in no particular order.

OPINION

Save the old or save the economy?

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 01/04/2020

» The basic choice all along with Covid-19 has been: Do we let the old die, or do we take a big hit economically? So far, the decision almost everywhere has been to take the hit and save the old (or most of them), but in some places it has been a very near-run thing.

OPINION

Will Hungary be outbreak's first casualty?

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 04/04/2020

» 'Hello, dictator!" said Jean-Claude Juncker cheerily to Hungary's leader, Victor Orban, at a European Union summit meeting a couple of years ago. The president of the European Commission was only joking, of course, but it was gallows humour. Dictatorship was clearly where Mr Orban was heading -- and now he has arrived.

OPINION

Reopening our economies is a balancing act

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 18/04/2020

» Wuhan, the Chinese city where it all started, was locked down for 79 days before the restrictions on movement were finally lifted last week. A bit over-cautious, perhaps, but in China the coronavirus does really seem to be under control -- not totally eradicated, but controllable without extreme measures.