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LyrArc brings in selected articles from many of the world's top publications.

Articles are selected by experts and you can see the gist of the important articles.


The Guardian Original article ›
The Guardian Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
France restricts domestic flights to destinations that can be reached by 2 hours by train after extensive debate in the National Assembly on ways to implement climate change rules. Air France argued that this would affect jobs at the airline during the pandemic. Macron's climate commission had recommended a time of 4 hours by train. Other opinion was that the earlier four hour restriction would restrict access for people in the distant Massif Central mountainous regions of France. The flights from Orly airport south of Paris will use the new rule so flights to Bordeaux or Nantes from Paris will no longer operate. Paris to Nice with 6 hours train ride, and Toulouse with 4 hours will not be affected. Connecting flights from Charles De Gaulle airport will not be affected. Austria has a 30 euro tax passed by a Conservative-Greens coalition that is placed on flights over 217 miles. No flights to destinations that can be reached in 3 hours by train. Netherlands is also working on similar rules, such as does it make sense for a flight Amsterdam to Brussels that is a distance of 93 miles. That Brussels flight is now banned. ...
WSJ Original article ›
The Guardian Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
The P1 coronavirus variant from Brazil is seen in 200 of 877 cases in ski resort in Whistler, British Columbia. Helath officials have little knowledge of how this variant entered Canada's western province. This report says the housing shortage for hospitality workers is worsening the pandemic with 6-8 hospitality workers living together and no chance to limit the spread.   The decision by the state health officials not to screen with testing for which variant is responsible for an infection of covid is coming under criticism, as reported in The Guardian. This allows the variant to spread with no knowledge about where it is happening so that countermeasures can be taken. In the absence of this type of screening and testing one is flying blind, says this report. Recent steps to contain the spread in India advocated by prime minister Modi in India give micro-containment a big role, with screening and testing and detection of incidence of mutation becoming critical. To do this the health system has to be well prepared and have full support and direction from a unified authority bringing together every arm of government at the federal, state and local levels. Response has to be very quick and resource allocation proper from testing labs, people on the ground, vaccine supplies, and vaccination drive effective. ...
The Guardian Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Estimates that about 161 million people have been vaccinated in China with Sinovac vaccine made in China. That vaccine has effectiveness of 50.1% at preventing symptomatic infections, as estimated by researchers in Brazil. This compares with the newer technology used in Pfizer and Moderna vaccines that have effectiveness of over 90%. 

The Guardian Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Climate change and increase in carbon dioxide in planetary atmosphere can increase hay fever, asthma and allergy symptoms by 60%. Experts discuss the implications for forecasting weather patterns and pollen count.

BBC News Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Prince Charles talks about Prince Philip and how he feel enormously the loss of his father in this video from the BBC. He says Prince Philip would be amazed at how people across Britain and the Commonwealth have felt about this loss.

BBC News Original article ›
WSJ Original article ›
WSJ Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
This article in the WSJ remembers Prince Philip for his remarkable service during World War II, coming from a generation that sees the British struggle against Germany in World War II in almost mythological terms. Prince Philip and Queen Elizabeth navigated both that period and the transition of the British Empire into free nations in Asia and Africa. The significance of this achievement is understated in America. It can only be fully appreciated in the nations of the British Commonwealth, for no other colonial nation has been able to make that kind of transition, not the Dutch in Indonesia, not the French in Algeria without war. Another significant achievement of that period was the sense of duty that pervaded Britain not only for this generation in Britain, but the generations that preceded it going back to the conflict with Napoleonic France and the British Navy under Admiral Horatio Nelson. It is forgotten that much of the sense of duty to country and the people, and one's fellow citizens, helped Britain prevail against Napoleonic France in the period around 1800. This shaped Britain and Prince Philip, and is also part of what India and other free nations in Asia and Africa can learn from. It is also what makes Global Britain not just a slogan but a way to bring together a partnership with UK, US, Australia, and India, the largest democracies with a common history. ...
WSJ Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
China's regulatory authority places a fine of $2.8 billion on Alibaba for anti-competitive practices. This is about 4% of sales. The law limits fines to 10% of sales. Qualcomm paid a fine of $975 million equal to 8% of sales in 2015.

DW.COM Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Support in Germany for a global corporate minimum tax rate, which stops the race to the bottom in tax rates that starves essential infrastructure of financing. US president Biden made this a part of his effort for $2 trillion in spending to renovate decaying American infrastructure. Infrastructure that has deteriorated and suffered over four decades.

France 24 Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
President Macron abolishes the elite school ENA, Ecole Nationale d'Administration, which with the Sciences Po university functions as the training ground for people serving in the government. Macron graduated from the school in 2004. Many French leaders graduated from the ENA. Macron wants to replace it with Public Service Institute that draws people from different backgrounds after complaints about elitism in France's public and private sectors. Charles De Gaulle established ENA in 1945 to train French leaders after the failures of the Vichy regime in World War II. 

The French people now see no need for an elite institution today, as most of the country's leading universities are quite capable of training the engineers, scientists, and administrative leaders needed to run French companies and the French government, and could do better in bringing diverse backgrounds and abilities.

The Guardian Original article ›
The Guardian Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
The Novavax vaccine to be manufactured in Britain faces a shortage of 2000 litre bags, bags in which the vaccine cells are grown. The first of 60 million doses ordered by the British government are already in production in Teeside, a factory in Britain.

The Guardian Original article ›
The Times Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Debt distress in Africa and other developing countries following the coronavirus pandemic in 2020-2021. Kenya and Zimbabwe are seeking IMF assistance. Corruption, mismanagement of the economy, and the effects of the pandemic combine to affect African countries.

The Times Original article ›
The Times Original article ›
The Times Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Lighter moments from a life with Queen Elizabeth over 7 decades. This is shown in The Times, from a book by Sally Smith published by Penguin.

The Times Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Prince Philip's career in the Royal Navy is remembered here in The Times. His service off the cost of Greece, at Gibraltar, and off the coast of Sumatra, on British Navy ships is recalled. Here he is seen saving airmen in the seas in the war against Japan near Sumatra, and in attacks on Italian cruisers after Italy invaded Greece. During this period till 1947 Philip served in the Royal Navy. When asked about any "if only" he had in a BBC interview, Philip once said there were none, except one about his career in the Royal Navy. Here he was following his uncle Lord Mountbatten. During his service in the war he leaned some things in the Navy that became part of his personality, the way he was, his style so to speak.  This was about being matter of fact, just doing it, never complaining, getting on with it. Philip was on the HMS Whelp on September 2, 1945, when the Japanese surrendered. He saw British seamen then who had been prisoners for many years, returning from camps. He recalls seeing tears stream down their cheeks as they sat with him in the mess on the ship and recognized the familiar environment, they could'nt speak. Shaped by these experiences Prince Philip reflected the values of devotion to duty, humility, respect for women, and feeling humbled by life's experiences. The experience in the Navy shaped his view of life. When asked about how he coped with wartime dead and wounded he once said - "we did'nt have counsellors rushing around every time someone let off a gun. You just got on with it." Seen out of context his remarks during the last few decades seemed blunt, seen in the context of the Navy and his formative experience in the ships in these years it was just the way it was. Simply who he was, as he once replied. With it also came the kind of dedication to country, being the "rock" of support that he was for Queen Elizabeth over many decades, and his unique style, now cherished by his family, the country and the British Commonwealth.   ...
The Times Original article ›
WSJ Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
After the lockdowns and indoor living there is nothing like the outdoors this year. Nothing like just walking out the door. Spend 2 hours outside, smell the flowers, the pine trees, feel the fresh air- its the best therapy one can find- hike, bike, simply stand and feel the breeze.

DW.COM Original article ›
DW.COM Original article ›

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