80 jili free 100

Sowei 2025-01-13
80 jili free 100
80 jili free 100 What lies ahead for the global economy as Donald Trump prepares to take office

Sheriffs Say They Can Help ICE in Trump’s Mass Deportation Plan

None

KATE Moss has split from aristocrat boyfriend Count Nikolai von Bismarck after nine years together. Pals say the fun-loving supermodel , who turned 50 this year, has moved out of the London home she shared with the 37-year-old teetotal photographer. Meanwhile, Nikolai , who shares his family name with the legendary World War Two German battleship, wants a “quieter life”. A source said: “ Kate and Nikolai have been on and off for months, and ­eventually Kate felt the time was right to move on and cut ties. “She felt they were going on different journeys in life. And, at 50, Kate feels fabulous and like she wants to get back out there and have some fun in time for Christmas . “Despite being 13 years her junior, Nikolai wants to enjoy a quieter life. He remains on his sober path and they just have increasingly different hobbies and wants. READ MORE ON KATE MOSS “Her pals have been rallying around her, and are super supportive. “Obviously it’s a bit awkward because they move in similar social circles and he is the son of her great family friend ­Debbie von Bismarck. “But she and Nikolai remain on friendly terms, and are both adamant there won’t be any tension or hostility.” Pals say Kate has moved out of the couple’s London home. Most read in Celebrity They were family friends for four years before getting together in 2015. Harrow-educated Nikolai was rumoured to have dated Princess Beatrice. He is a great-great-grandson of 19th-century German Chancellor Otto, Prince of Bismarck. Giant World War Two battleship The Bismarck was named after him. It was sunk by the Royal Navy off France in 1941. Nikolia went sober in 2017 and Kate — once dubbed Late Moss by pals because of her love of all-nighters — gave up booze a year later. Two years ago she launched her own wellness range Cosmoss. In January they celebrated Kate’s 50th in Paris despite previous reports they were no longer dating . In recent months, Kate has been seen ­enjoying nights out while Nikolai has said he enjoys “being out of the limelight”. In May, it was revealed that Kate had struck up a close friendship with singer Skip Marley , grandson of late reggae legend Bob. The pair were snapped holding hands after a performance at the MedBodrum festival in Turkey . Meanwhile, Nikolai was linked to French-American model and actress Camille Rowe, an ex of Harry Styles . However, pals later suggested Kate and ­Nikolai had a “bohemian” relationship and were still together. Some friends believe Kate Moss has never got over a three-year relationship with Johnny Depp , which ended in 1997. She also famously dated Babyshambles wildman Pete Doherty, before marrying The Kills frontman Jamie Hince in 2011. They divorced four years later. She has a model daughter, Lila, from her relationship with publisher Jefferson Hack, in 2002. MOSS HAVE BEEN LOVE... BUT IT'S OVER NOW JOHNNY DEPP KATE led a Hollywood lifestyle with heart-throb Depp from 1994 to 1997. Things got off to a tempestuous start when Depp trashed a New York hotel room after a pal was said to have “screwed” him over. Depp caused £8,000 damage in the rampage while Kate slept. JEFFERSON HACK SHE dated fashion mogul Hack after her relationship with guitarist Antony Langdon. Their daughter, Lila Grace, was born in 2002, but her parents split in 2004. Reports suggest the pair continued to spend time with Lila Grace, who also chose a fashion career. PETE DOHERTY KATE met Pete at her 31st birthday bash in January 2005. In September, images emerged of her preparing cocaine — leading to her being dropped by two fashion houses. She and Pete split, reunited, went to rehab together, got engaged, then parted for good in July 2007. JAMIE HINCE KATE and Hince started dating in 2007 after mutual friends set them up. One year on they got engaged in Amsterdam and married in 2011 at a glitzy bash in Gloucs. READ MORE SUN STORIES They divorced in 2016. Kate is believed to have kept most of their combined wealth in an out-of-court deal.A statue of former Prime Minister Sir Robert Borden stands by the Confederation Building on Parliament Hill in Ottawa. Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press Ryan Manucha researches interprovincial trade and is a contributor to the Macdonald-Laurier Institute. He is frequently called upon to advise agencies and governments, and his book on the subject won the Donner Prize for best in Canadian public policy. Donald Trump’s “America First” bombast and promise of a 25-per-cent tariff on imports threaten to upend Canada’s economic stability. Over the coming weeks, Canada’s first ministers will rapidly assemble a playbook for how to handle the demands of the incoming U.S administration. Beyond managing Mr. Trump’s immediate wants , our leaders should consider the lessons from 19th century Canadian history, which now, more than ever, instruct us to strengthen our own economic union and dismantle trade barriers in our own backyard. Now that access to the American market is under threat, let’s remember we have a big internal market that we’ve yet to fully tap. On the eve of Confederation in 1867, Canada’s Fathers of Confederation averaged approximately 50 years old. These men had their economic worlds turned upside down twice during their adulthoods by the whims of foreign governments. In the 1840s, Britain repealed the Corn Laws, ending imperial preferences for Canadian goods. The value of Canadian flour nearly halved and a glut of timber piled up in Quebec ports with nowhere to go. Lord Elgin, the governor-general of Canada at the time, captured the destitute Canadian conditions and national frustrations with Britain in a letter to Earl Grey in Britain, explaining that Canada had been left an economic wreck and that its prosperity had been “robbed” and transplanted to England. The consequences of repeal were so grave they even gave rise to a short-lived movement to join the U.S. Hardly 20 years later in 1866, Canada suffered a second economic shock at the hands of a different foreign government. The U.S. terminated an 1854 free-trade agreement, once again shaking the economy of pre-Confederation Canada. Twice was enough for Canada’s Victorian-era leaders. Globe founder and then-opposition leader George Brown, in arguing for Confederation, advanced that “one of the best features of this union is, that if in our commercial relations with the United States we are compelled by them to meet fire with fire – it will enable us to stop this improvidence and turn the current of our own trade into our own waters.” Mr. Brown firmly believed that economic union would provide national strength and insulate against the recurring protectionism of foreign powers. The nation of Canada was forged in part as a response to the harmful trade policy changes of foreign governments. Canada must once again look within for economic resilience and prosperity. Specifically, it must renew focus on obstacles to trade within our own borders. Economists model that the patchwork nature of Canada’s regulatory landscape imposes the equivalent of a 7-per-cent tariff on goods that cross provincial and territorial boundaries. Another study suggests that the Canadian economy could grow by between 4.4 per cent and 7.9 per cent (between $110-billion and $200-billion a year) if internal trade barriers were fully eliminated by mutual recognition policies – an extremely powerful tool to improve internal trade. Complete unfettered free trade is not the answer, as provincial autonomy must be respected and unique local conditions will forever demand nuanced regulations. But the numbers suggest that there is considerable room to improve. Gone are the days of tariff officers at intercolonial frontiers. The work ahead is technical and will require extensive collaboration amongst Canadian regulators. But our internal trade community has already proven that they can accomplish great things when first ministers prioritize removing domestic trade barriers. In 2019, for the first time, Canada’s provincial and territorial governments finally aligned on a single set of construction codes that is progressively going into effect across the country, saving up to $1-billion by 2028. More recently Canada’s governments announced a mutual recognition project to tackle disharmonious trucking regulations, signalling an exciting shift toward the use of mutual recognition agreements. Trade barriers facing Canada’s truck transportation industry add approximately 8.3 per cent to freight rates, and hinder the economy by $1.6-billion a year, making mutual recognition reform efforts exceedingly worthwhile. The Canadian Free Trade Agreement’s indefatigable Regulatory Reconciliation and Cooperation Table will continue to serve as the agent of change, and the Internal Trade Data Hub released by Statistics Canada earlier this year supports a data-driven approach to trade barrier identification, measurement and resolution. But nothing replaces clear and ambitious direction from the premiers and prime minister. Given the surge in protectionist thinking globally and from our southern neighbours, now is the ideal moment for Canada’s political leaders to learn from the Fathers of Confederation and revitalize the economic union by working together to mutually recognize and harmonize underpinning regulations.

None

Panaya and Tritusa Join Forces to Enhance SAP Testing in AustraliaNovember 30 - RJ Thompson scored 23 points -- including the go-ahead 3-pointer with 56 seconds left -- as Charleston Southern shocked host Miami 83-79 on Saturday afternoon. Miami entered the game as a 23.5-point favorite. Charleston (2-7) won its first game of the season away from home after losing its previous six road or neutral-court contests. The Buccaneers also got 21 points from Thompson Camara and 20 points and 11 rebounds from Taje' Kelly. Camara match his previous career point total. Miami (3-4), playing at home for the first time in two weeks, lost its fourth straight game. Brandon Johnson led Miami with 23 points and freshman Austin Swartz scored a career-high 15. Swartz entered the game averaging just 2.3 points For the first time this season, Miami was without Nijel Pack, who has a lower-body injury. Pack leads the team in scoring (15.2) and assists (4.7). With Pack out, five-star freshman Jalil Bethea made his first start and had six points. The game featured quite a contrast in coaches. Miami's Jim Larranaga, 75, has won 743 games in 41-plus seasons. Charleston Southern's Saah Nimley, 31, is in his full first season as a head coach. He was named interim coach in November 2023. In the first half, Miami raced to a 17-10 lead. However, Charleston Southern posted an 11-0 run to grab a 21-17 advantage. The Hurricanes lost control late in the first half as Miami's Johnson hit a 3-pointer and was hit with a technical foul for taunting. Later in the first half, Larranaga was also hit with a technical. By the end of the half, the Buccaneers led 45-37. Camara led Charleston Southern with 16 first-half points on 6-for-7 shooting, including 4-of-5 on 3-pointers. Johnson scored 12 for Miami in the opening half, all on 3-pointers. In the second half, Charleston Southern stretched its lead to 13. Miami rallied as the clock wound down. With 38 seconds left, Miami called a timeout while trailing 81-79. With 15 seconds left, Swartz missed a 3-pointer and the Buccaneers got the rebound. Daylen Berry made two free throws with 11 seconds left to ice the game. Up next, Miami will host No. 19 Arkansas on Tuesday night as part of the ACC/SEC Challenge. Charleston Southern will return home to face Tennessee-Martin on Tuesday night. --Field Level Media Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. , opens new tab

Dexter: Original Sin will take audiences back in time to find out how the man became the monster — er, the monster-slayer — in the Showtime thriller. The prequel series, which premieres on Paramount+ with Showtime on Friday, December 13, takes place 15 years before we first met Dexter (then played by Michael C. Hall , who still narrates the new series) in the original Dexter . Taking over the title role in this iteration is Patrick Gibson , who has the character’s steely-eyed stares and smug sauntering style down to a science. With new characters being introduced in some familiar settings, the new series will bring some new details about Dexter’s past to light, but it will also inevitably retread some familiar territory from the first show, which had ample flashbacks. Here’s what to remember about Dexter ‘s past before Dexter: Original Sin . Dexter didn’t find out until he was a fully grown serial murderer that he had a big brother who was also running around slaughtering people. The Ice Truck Killer who stalked Dexter was actually Brian Moser, his slightly older brother who was not adopted (or even mentioned) by Harry. Dexter only found out about Brian because the Ice Truck Killer left clues that were tailored to catch his attention — reminding him of scenes from his past as part of the Morgan family. Laura Moser was the single mother to Brian and Dexter and worked as a confidential informant for Harry and the Miami-Metro Police Department against the Colombian cartel. She was brutally dismembered right in front of Brian and Dexter, who were left wading in her blood inside a shipping container. Harry adopted Dexter as his own upon finding him in the container, but Brian was sent into the foster system. In flashbacks in Dexter , it became clear that he was not a normal teenager with typical feelings or tendencies. In fact, he had an innate bloodlust that his father recognized and tried to quell with hunting trips, to the exclusion of his daughter Debra. Harry wanted to protect Dexter from himself — particularly his self-destructive impulses. Though Harry tried to find other ways for Dexter to quench his thirst for blood, so to speak, he soon gave in and encouraged him to kill someone when he discovered Nurse Mary was poisoning Harry and other patients in the hospital after his heart attack. Once Dexter began to kill, Harry worked hard to create a framework for his adoptive son to work within that, if he followed it to the letter, would keep his morality and freedom intact. The rules included being certain that the mark was worthy of being murdered and leaving no trace of evidence behind. Even after Harry’s death, Dexter worked to strictly adhere to this code in every kill. Dexter repeatedly revealed that he felt empty on the inside, and it was Harry who taught him to feign normal human feelings and social interactions around others — even if it meant faking a smile in his own family photos. Little by little throughout Dexter , we learn that Harry Morgan had several affairs while married to Doris, including with Laura Morgan and another confidential informant. Though Harry is definitely the most common star of Dexter’s flashback memories, his adoptive mother Doris is also a fixture of his past. She died when Deb was 16 and didn’t know about Dexter’s violent tendencies, even if she didn’t totally understand him at times. Dexter: Original Sin , Series Premiere, Streaming, Friday, December 13, Paramount+ with Showtime, Sunday, December 15, 10/9c, Paramount+ with Showtime More Headlines:

0 Comments: 0 Reading: 349