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On Politics: This Week’s Biggest Stories

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By Unknown Author from NYT U.S. https://ift.tt/2OicggF

No-deal Brexit 'could halt production at UK Toyota plants'

Boss of carmaker’s Derbyshire plant says production could be disrupted for ‘hours, days, weeks – even months’ Toyota has said that production at its UK factories would be disrupted for weeks or maybe months if Theresa May failed to strike a Brexit deal. The Japanese car manufacturer is the latest in a list of foreign car companies to say there could be temporary stoppages and maybe even job losses if there are checks at Dover and Calais as a result of no deal. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/2Qi2wAb

Bournemouth nightclub evacuated after 'teargas' released

Up to 40 people treated by paramedics after spray was apparently released at Cameo club A nightclub in Bournemouth was evacuated in the early hours of Saturday morning after a canister of suspected teargas was released. As many as 40 people suffering from sickness, coughing fits and itchy eyes were treated at the scene by paramedics after the CS spray was apparently released at the Cameo club. One person was taken to hospital as a precaution. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/2DDbhmY

Exposing Cambridge Analytica: 'It's been exhausting, exhilarating, and slightly terrifying'

Observer reporter Carole Cadwalladr on her investigation into the firm at the centre of a data breach that shamed Facebook and exposed foul play in the EU referendum campaign and US presidential election Earlier this year, The Observer and The Guardian broke the story that became the Cambridge Analytica scandal . It was the result of a year-long investigation in which Carole Cadwalladr worked with ex-employee turned whistleblower Christopher Wylie to reveal how the data analytics firm that was behind Trump’s 2016 campaign and played a role in Brexit, had used the data harvested from 87 million Facebook users without their consent. Cadwalladr’s reporting led to the downfall of Cambridge Analytica and a public apology from Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg who was forced to testify before congress . Facebook has since lost $120 billion from its share price. She won the British Journalism Awards’ Technology Journalism Award in December 2017 and the Orwell Prize for political journalism in Ju...

Are automated email responses a good idea? Let me get back to you on that! | Hadley Freeman

‘Smart Reply’ is conclusive proof that Google does read our emails; now it has decided it can answer them better than us Last week I got an email from my boss about a recent piece I’d written on Donald Trump’s penis (just out here doing the family name proud). Surprisingly, it was a kind email as opposed to a notification of the termination of my employment for besmirching the paper of CP Scott with wisecracks about Trump’s junk, but, kind or otherwise, I’ve never known how to respond to messages from my editors. The informality of the email form clashes with my natural instinct, which is – as New Yorker writer Anthony Lane once wrote of his former editor Tina Brown – to stand to attention every time they call me on the phone. Is email the internet equivalent of going out for drinks with someone after work? Are you expected to be casual with each other in a way you aren’t in the office? Or should I express myself in a way that reflects my true feelings? “Dear Boss, I humbly thank y...

Journey to Brazil's heart: across 2,600 miles and seven states, we ask – how will Brazilians vote?

In the run-up to its bitterest election in decades, the Guardian retraced Lula’s historic road trip to hear the voices of 147m voters Twenty-five years ago, one of the titans of contemporary Latin American politics set off on a gruelling 2,600-mile bus journey across Brazil to take the pulse of the region’s biggest democracy and hear the voices of its forgotten masses. “I’ll have a mouth like a cricket and ears like an elephant,” future president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva vowed as he began a 20-day listening tour later dubbed “The Journey to the Heart of Brazil”. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/2Qh6U2i

Chelsea rediscover energy and optimism under Maurizio Sarri | Dominic Fifield

Italian head coach has overseen eye-catching start – and with Eden Hazard in the form of his life positivity abounds at Stamford Bridge Almost 11 weeks into his stint in charge, Maurizio Sarri is still stumped. The Italian would appear to have overseen an eye-catching start. Chelsea nestle third in the table behind two more fancied teams, and inflicted a first wound of the season upon the leaders, Liverpool , in the Carabao Cup before Saturday’s collision between the sides at Stamford Bridge. The smoothness of the tactical transition has surprised the head coach and rival managers, while Eden Hazard is playing with the vim and vigour that propelled them to the title in 2015 and 2017. The Belgian is in the form of his life and positivity abounds, with the atmosphere a throwback to the energy and optimism that fuelled those last two successful pursuits of the Premier League. And yet, with those triumphs in mind, Sarri is perplexed as to why he is even in situ. “The history of this club...