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Search Result for “Abortion”

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OPINION

Why China's marriage crisis really matters

Oped, Yi Fuxian, Published on 04/04/2025

» New marriages in China reportedly plummeted by one-fifth last year, implying that the official number of births will likely fall from 9.54 million in 2024 to 7.3- 7.8 million in 2025. Thus, while China represents 17.2% of the global population, it will account for less than 6% of births -- comparable to Nigeria.

OPINION

A 'retrospective' on Trump's first year back in job

Oped, Jeffrey Frankel, Published on 16/01/2025

» Predictions about 2025 come with flashing caveats: no one can know what US President-elect Donald Trump will do, let alone how the rest of the world will respond. But one can speculate. Imagine it is January 2026.

OPINION

Party-pooping haze

Oped, Postbag, Published on 11/01/2025

» Re: "PM2.5 tipped to worsen until Monday", (BP, Jan 10).

OPINION

Trump II's intellectual foundations

Oped, Thitinan Pongsudhirak, Published on 22/11/2024

» It seems counterintuitive and contradictory to think of an intellectual foundation behind United States President-elect Donald J Trump when he is professedly unintellectual, even anti-intellectual. But make no mistake. Mr Trump is merely a phenomenon. Understanding it reveals his worldview and consequent policy prospects. But doing so requires seeing the Trump phenomenon as it is rather than why and how it is detested by countless millions of us. Indeed, the biggest difficulty when analysing Mr Trump and his second administration is the global disdain he elicits.

OPINION

The Trump shock is the Democrat Party's fault

Oped, Daron Acemoglu, Published on 19/11/2024

» The outcome of the US presidential election was more of a Democratic loss than a triumph for Donald Trump. The Democrats lost not because US President Joe Biden stayed in the race too long and not because Kamala Harris is unqualified but because they have been losing workers and failed to win them back.

OPINION

Two issues at stake in US president race

Oped, Thitinan Pongsudhirak, Published on 01/11/2024

» As the quadrennial presidential contest in the United States reaches its conclusion next week, the two fundamental and entwined issues at stake are how America sees itself at home and how its consequent role abroad ought to be. This is not the first time these soul-searching questions are determining who gets to rule the country, but they are a recent phenomenon. Beyond them, the rest are merely theatre, money, and manoeuvres that underpin any major election spectacle.

OPINION

Creepy toys

Oped, Postbag, Published on 15/06/2024

» Re: "Doll seller faces charges over undelivered orders", (BP, June 11).

OPINION

Argentina must break its vicious political cycle

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 15/11/2023

» Bertolt Brecht lived in Germany, not in Argentina, and he has been dead longer than he was alive, but his famous question applies to the Argentine election next Sunday: "Would it not be simpler if the government dissolved the people and elected another?"

OPINION

When do we die? Disputing the definition of death

Oped, Peter Singer & Charles Camosy, Published on 14/11/2023

» 'What is it you don't understand? She's dead, dead, dead." That is how David Durand, Chief Medical Officer of Oakland's Children's Hospital, attempted to convince the family of Jahi McMath that the standard medical tests for brain death had shown that their teenage daughter was no longer alive.

OPINION

'Women's economics' goes mainstream

Oped, Antara Haldar, Published on 10/11/2023

» William Shakespeare's 1597 comedy Love's Labour's Lost tells the story of four Frenchmen as they navigate the tension between commitment to intellectual development and the quest for domestic bliss. Some four centuries later, Harvard economist Claudia Goldin reimagined the tale from the vantage point of American women balancing career and family. Now, Ms Goldin's profound insights into women's labour-market outcomes have won her a Nobel Prize in Economics.