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В Дании арестовали дочь обвиняемой во вмешательстве в государственную власть подруги президента Южной Кореи

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NewsHubВ Дании полиция арестовала дочь подруги президента Южной Кореи Пак Кын Хе Чхве Сун Силь. Об этом сообщает агентство южнокорейский телеканал JTBC.
Отмечается, что Чон Ю Ра, которая в настоящий момент должна была находится в Германии, была задержана в датском городе Ольборг за незаконное пребывание.
В Сеуле сообщили, что намерены добиться выдачи Чон Ю Ра.
Политический кризис в Южной Корее разразился после того, как стало известно, что правоохранительные органы Кореи подозревают подругу президента Цой Сун Силь и двух ее бывших помощников во вмешательстве в государственные дела и давлении на промышленные компании.
Нынешний президент Южной Кореи Пак Кын Хе отстранена от власти в порядке импичмента , однако она имеет иммунитет от уголовного преследования. В прокуратуре не исключают ее причастности к коррупционным схемам.

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В Конгрессе США пообещали ответить на отмену санкций Трампом

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NewsHubЕсли новоизбранный президент США Дональд Трамп решил отменить санкции против России, он встретит решительный ответ со стороны Конгресса. Об этом заявил член палаты представителей от Демократической партии Адам Шифф в интервью ABC.
« Мы думаем, что должно быть сделано больше. Мы не думаем, что, откровенно говоря, предпринятые шаги достаточны для сдерживания. Вы увидите поддержку более жестких санкций со стороны обеих партий в Конгрессе », – подчеркнул он.
Кроме того, Шифф, который входит в комитет по делам разведки в палате представителей, высказался о том, что Трамп ставит под сомнение отчеты спецслужб о российских кибератаках.
« Если он хочет иметь хоть какой-то авторитет как президент, ему необходимо перестать так говорить. Он должен перестать очернять разведку. Он должен рассчитывать на нее. Ему придется рассчитывать на нее », – подчеркнул член палаты представителей.
Напомним, 29 декабря США расширили антироссийские санкции , связав их с предполагаемым вмешательством Москвы в американскую избирательную кампанию. В частности, Вашингтон объявил нон-грата 35 российских дипломатов и закрыл две российские дипломатические миссии в штатах Нью-Йорк и Мэриленд.

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Украинцы не пострадали во время теракта в Стамбуле

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NewsHubПо информации украинского консула в Стамбуле, украинцев среди погибших во время теракта в воскресенье нет.
Как сообщил Департамент консульской службы МИД Украины, идентификация погибших и раненых в Стамбуле завершается. Граждан Украины среди жертв и пострадавших нет.
« Консул Украины поддерживает оперативный контакт с полицией Стамбула », – говорится на странице ведомства. Читайте также: Стамбульский кошмар: в сети появилось видео нападения на ночной клуб
Напомним, в ночь с 31 декабря на 1 января неизвестный, вооруженный автоматическим оружием мужчина совершил нападение на ночной клуб, где сотни людей праздновали наступление нового года. В результате теракта погибли 39 человек (среди них – 16 иностранцев), 69 человек были госпитализированы. Читайте также: Украинка, ставшая свидетелем теракта в Стамбуле, рассказала, как ей удалось выжить

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How fertiliser helped feed the world

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NewsHubIt has been called one of the greatest inventions of the 20th Century, and without it almost half the world’s population would not be alive today.
A hundred years ago two German chemists, Fritz Haber and Carl Bosch, devised a way to transform nitrogen in the air into fertiliser, using what became known as the Haber-Bosch process.
But Haber’s place in history is controversial.
He is also considered the « father of chemical warfare » for his years of work developing and weaponising chlorine and other poisonous gases during World War One.
Plants need nitrogen: it is one of their five basic requirements, along with potassium, phosphorus, water and sunlight.
In a natural state, plants grow, they die, the nitrogen they contain returns to the soil, and new plants use it to grow.
Agriculture disrupts that cycle: we harvest the plants, and eat them.
From the earliest days of agriculture, farmers discovered various ways to prevent crop yields from declining over time: by restoring nitrogen to their fields.
Manure has nitrogen. So does compost.
The roots of legumes host bacteria that replenish nitrogen levels.
That is why it helps to include peas or beans in crop rotation.
But these techniques struggle to fully satisfy a plant’s appetite for nitrogen.
Add more, and the plant grows better.
That is exactly what Fritz Haber worked out how to do, driven in part by the promise of a lucrative contract from the chemical company BASF.
That company’s engineer, Carl Bosch, then managed to replicate Haber’s process on an industrial scale.
Both men later won Nobel Prizes – controversially, in Haber’s case, as many by then considered him a war criminal.
50 Things That Made the Modern Economy highlights the inventions, ideas and innovations which have helped create the economic world we live in.
It is broadcast on the BBC World Service.
You can listen online or subscribe to the programme podcast .
The Haber-Bosch process is perhaps the most significant example of what economists call « technological substitution », where we seem to have reached some basic physical limit, then find a workaround.
For most of human history, if you wanted more food to support more people, then you needed more land.
But the thing about land, as Mark Twain once joked, is that they are not making it any more.
Haber and Bosch provided a substitute: instead of more land, make nitrogen fertiliser.
It was like alchemy.
« Brot aus Luft », as Germans put it, or « Bread from air ».
From air and quite a lot of fossil fuels.
First of all, you need natural gas as a source of hydrogen, the element to which nitrogen binds to form ammonia.
Then you need energy to generate extreme heat and pressure.
Haber discovered that was necessary as a catalyst to break the bonds between air’s nitrogen atoms and persuade them to bond with hydrogen instead.
Imagine the heat of a wood-fired pizza oven, with the pressure you would experience 2km under the sea.
To create those conditions on a scale sufficient to produce 160 million tonnes of ammonia a year – the majority of which is used for fertiliser – the Haber-Bosch process today consumes more than 1% of all the world’s energy.
That is a lot of carbon emissions.
And there is another very serious ecological concern.
Only some of the nitrogen in fertiliser makes its way via crops into human stomachs, perhaps as little as 15%.
Most of it ends up in the air or water.
This is a problem for several reasons.
Compounds like nitrous oxide are powerful greenhouse gases.
They pollute drinking water.
They also create acid rain, which makes soils more acidic, disrupting ecosystems, and threatening biodiversity.
When nitrogen compounds run off into rivers, they likewise promote the growth of some organisms more than others.
The results include ocean « dead zones », where blooms of algae near the surface block out sunlight and kill the fish below.
The Haber-Bosch process is not the only cause of these problems, but it is a major one, and it is not going away.
Demand for fertiliser is projected to double in the coming century.
In truth, scientists still do not fully understand the long-term impact on the environment of converting so much stable, inert nitrogen from the air into various other, highly reactive chemical compounds.
We are in the middle of a global experiment.
One result is already clear: plenty of food for lots more people.
If you look at a graph of global population, you will see it shoot upwards just as Haber-Bosch fertilisers start being widely applied.
Again, Haber-Bosch was not the only reason for the spike in food yields.
New varieties of crops like wheat and rice also played their part.
Still, if we farmed with the best techniques available in Fritz Haber’s time, the earth would support about four billion people.
Our current population is around seven and a half billion, and growing.
Back in 1909, as Haber triumphantly demonstrated his ammonia process, he could hardly have imagined how transformative his work would be.
On one side of the ledger, food to feed billions more human souls; on the other, a sustainability crisis that will need more genius to solve.
For Haber himself, the consequences of his work were not what he expected.
As a young man, he converted from Judaism to Christianity, aching to be accepted as a German patriot.
Beyond his work on weaponising chlorine, the Haber-Bosch process also helped Germany in World War One.
Ammonia can make explosives, as well as fertiliser.
Not just bread from air, but bombs too.
When the Nazis took power in the 1930s, however, none of this outweighed his Jewish roots.
Stripped of his job and kicked out of the country, Haber died, in a Swiss hotel, a broken man.
Tim Harford is the FT’s Undercover Economist. 50 Things That Made the Modern Economy was broadcast on the BBC World Service. You can listen online or subscribe to the programme podcast.

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Dating 101: Do the Math | Keeping the Faith

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NewsHubby Ilana Angel
3 hours ago
I received a memory reminder picture from Facebook last night. It was a photo I had taken four years ago while on vacation with an ex-boyfriend. I was visiting his family abroad with his kids, and my son. It was my first time meeting his family and a lovely picture of his brother and sister-in-law. I admired the picture and thought back to the trip, which felt like a big deal at the time.
He had paid for me and my son to fly overseas for Christmas break with his entire family. We are no longer together of course, but I have remained close to his brother, sister-in-law, and their kids. They are people who matter to me and are like family. His sister-in-law is my sister and I love her. I was about to send her the pic as she looks great in it, but paused to remember the trip.
I thought about the man I had been so close to, and decided to look at his Instagram because I was curious to see how he was doing. He now lives with his girlfriend and there are a lot of pictures of food. There was one picture however, that was interesting. Not because they were laying naked in his bed on the sheets I bought him as a gift, but because it was an anniversary picture.
More specifically, their four-year anniversary. Are you following? The picture of them in bed was from October 2012. We were together four years ago on New Year’s Eve, yet they were celebrating four years together in October? Are you doing the math? When he took me to meet his family he was also dating her. I stared at the picture for a long time and was truly shocked.
Not only was he dating us at the same time, but he broke up with me in March, which means he dated us both for another three months. That is six months he was dating the two of us. Who does that? Listen, if I wanted to hurt him I would print his name, but the goal is not to hurt him, only to let him know that I know. It’s just between me and my readers. Me and my millions of readers.
So why write about him four years later? Because it is important for me to say that had I known this was going on, I would have left. I am a smart girl and I would have opted out, but he didn’t respect me enough to give me the right to leave. He treated me like I was nothing ,which makes our relationship nothing. I was kind to this man and he is a pathological liar. That is painful.
I think back to that time and wonder who in our lives knew what. Did people know and not tell me? In the end I suppose it doesn’t matter. I have no regrets, and there were blessings from that relationship, but that does not make it hurt any less. People break up all the time and life goes on. It is a shame however when you learn that you invested in someone who did not value you.
I’m writing about it because he reads my blog and will see it. He will now know that I know he is a liar. He better pray that his daughters avoid men like him. To his girlfriend, you’ll lose him the way you found him. As for your food, it looks like it is made for dogs, and since he is one, that makes sense. Stay in school kids and learn math. It is important and reminds you keep the faith.
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‘Community’ project seeks to open Israeli eyes to Diaspora

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NewsHubA group of Israeli journalists and public opinion makers have had their eyes opened to a part of the Jewish nation they barely considered before by a new project – titled “Community” – that seeks to put the subject of Diaspora Jewry on the Israeli agenda.
“Israeli public discourse has virtually no interest in Diaspora Jewry,” explained a statement by Community’s co-creators, the Gesher Leadership Institution and the Diaspora Affairs Ministry. “The predominant view in Israel is that Diaspora Jewry is obligated to support and invest in the State of Israel, and while we take note of our Diaspora brethren in times of tragedy, familiarity with the world of values and challenges that face Diaspora communities is virtually nonexistent.”
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The project sets out to change this.
Its third delegation returned last month from Los Angeles, where they visited Jewish schools and college campuses, and met with community members, leaders and rabbis. Each Community project is comprised of 10 meetings with approximately 20 participants each, and includes an in-depth visit to Jewish communities outside Israel. Thus far, two groups have visited the US and one visited South Africa.
“What happens in Israel very much impacts Jews in the Diaspora, and we need to be aware of that – and most Israelis aren’t,” said executive director of Gesher Ilan Geal-Dor.
Gesher, together with the Diaspora Ministry, set out to provide encounters with world Jewry to Israelis and expose them to the challenges they face. “It’s not us and them,” he emphasized, explaining that by introducing these ideas to journalists and opinion makers, they hope it will, in turn, influence public discourse about issues such as the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement, assimilation and Israel’s impact on the Diaspora.
“For most people it’s something very new on their radar,” the Diaspora Affairs Ministry’s senior director of Diaspora affairs, Hagay Elitzur, told The Jerusalem Post on Sunday. “Most people say they weren’t aware of this topic at all, or didn’t think it was an important issue.”
Indeed, this was the case for Yisrael Hayom columnist Emily Amrousi, who is taking part in the current sessions. “I have no family in the Diaspora, and I didn’t have any knowledge about it,” she told the Post, confessing that she was guilty of “rejecting the Diaspora” and that the only thing that initially attracted her to the project was the offer of a free flight to Los Angeles.
“I thought that I have nothing to say to anyone who doesn’t make aliya,” Amrousi said candidly, explaining that she is very Zionist and it was “clear to her that there was only one center for Jews” – Israel.
Now, halfway through the program and following the visit to Los Angeles, Amrousi has expanded her horizons and opened her mind. Having met and conversed with a variety of US Jews and having had a glimpse into their lives, she has learned to accept the concept of a Diaspora Jewish life.
“Maybe it’s OK that there will be several centers for Jews,” she reflected.
Amrousi is a religious Jew and was impressed by the egalitarian approach of a synagogue she visited in Los Angeles.
“I saw a more equal approach to women there,” she said.
Amrousi is someone who has also been very clear in her mind that the only definition of a Jew that counts is the one according to Halacha, Jewish religious law. But her recent experiences and encounters have moved her to question that. Recounting her meeting with a pro-Israel student who has a Jewish father, she explained that her eyes were opened to a much wider pool of people who identify with Israel and the Jewish nation – beyond those who fit that halachic definition.
“Suddenly, there are more people who are part of the family,” she said, opining that it’s important to reopen the question of “Who is a Jew?” Amrousi also believes the subject should not be referred to as “Diaspora,” but rather as the “Jewish nation.” “The topic of diaspora doesn’t interest our readers, because we speak about someone else, that is not us,” she explained. “If I want to interest our readers, then we need to change the concept. We need to talk about the Jewish nation – that’s also us. “It’s not us and them – it’s one big story.”
The program – which included Jews across the entire spectrum of society – enabled participants to break down barriers, not just overseas, but also back at home. Tirza Zisman, editor-in-chief of Channel 2’s 6 with Oded Ben-Ami, overcame the stigmas she associated with haredim (ultra-Orthodox). She spent the last Shabbat being hosted at a haredi home, having become close friends with three ultra-Orthodox men who participated in the project.
“I didn’t know their way of life,” she told the Post, explaining that she had preconceptions about them, such as the exclusion of women in their culture.
While she had these opinions about other sectors of society in Israel, she simply did not think about Jews in the rest of the world before participating in the Community project.
“It made me see something I didn’t even look at before,” she said. After having been hosted at Jewish home in Los Angeles, Zisman has a newfound appreciation for Diaspora Jewry, admiring the way they hold tight to their identity despite the challenges of doing so in a non-Jewish country. “I saw how important it is to help them preserve their Judaism, because it’s not easy,” she said, pointing to the difficulty of observing the Jewish holidays abroad, or simply holding on to your identity, despite the fact that “it’s not so popular to be Jewish.”
Cinema and TV director Daniel Syrkin came to the program with a different perspective as a Russian immigrant. The program allowed him to further explore a subject in which he had always been interested. “Israel is very important to them [Diaspora Jews] and Israel cannot ignore the influence it has on Jews around the world.
“US Jews want an Israel they can love and can be proud of,” he said, having been struck by the passion for Israel he witnessed in the Jews he met in Los Angeles, whether from the Left or Right, religious or secular. Having grown up scanning the credits for Jewish names, an encounter with Hollywood Jews was of particular interest for Syrkin. He noted that even there, where people tend to be rather cynical, he witnessed this attachment to Israel. For instance, he met with Creative Artist Agency’s Adam Berkowitz and saw his eyes “light up” when the conversation turned to Israel. “Even among the most cynical people,” Syrkin said, he found this connection between Jews and Israel both moving surprising.
“It makes you understand that we have to be a light unto the nations,” he said, stating that Israel had not yet finished its task of building the ideal society. “They love us and because we are the state of all the Jews we also owe them something.”
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Ben Affleck Seems Ambivalent About Directing ‘The Batman’

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NewsHubRachael and Anthony have it right; DiCaprio is nowhere near being in “Live By Night.” His production company Appian Way is one of the production entities.
At best, he could have been a decent director. Not as an actor.
Here is something to chew. It is about Superman; not Batman.
Superman badly needs a reboot. It has been raped and mangled to the point it is no longer recognizable.
Reboot Superman. Get an all American talented guy below 25. Get good script people. Ben Affleck and Amy Adam will be excellent as Superman’s earthly parents.
After 3 sequels and 8 or 9 years. Repeat reboot with new guy as Superman. Chris Pratt and J Lawrene should be great as the earthy parents for the 2027 version.
Pretty sure DICaprio isn’t in Live By Night….
Starring Affleck and DiCaprio? Uh .

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3 men decapitated, 2 more slain in Acapulco over New Year’s

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NewsHubACAPULCO, Mexico — At least five people were killed over the New Year’s weekend in the resort city of Acapulco, including three men found decapitated in a central neighborhood, officials said Sunday.
The three severed heads were found Saturday on a residential street on the roof of a car, with the bodies inside. The killings were confirmed by a law enforcement official who was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.
Later the same day, unknown gunmen opened fire at police who were assisting at the scene of a traffic accident in a tourist quarter near the beach, killing one officer. City government spokesman Jose Luis Mendez said it was not clear why the officers were attacked.
Early Sunday, a taxi driver was gunned down in his cab on a road that leads out of the city.
At least 35 people have been killed along Acapulco’s touristy beach areas this year, something that rarely happened in the past, as drug gang violence plagues the city and the surrounding state of Guerrero.
Also Sunday, another police officer was shot dead in Atoyac de Alvarez, about 55 miles (90 kilometers) northwest of Acapulco. Municipal police reported the officer was riding a scooter when an unknown attacker approached and shot him several times in the chest.

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AFC West-worst Chargers fire McCoy as coach

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NewsHubThe San Diego Chargers fired head coach Mike McCoy following a loss Sunday that left the team at 5-11 for the season.
« Mike McCoy is a man of high character, and we thank him for his dedication to the Chargers, » team president John Spanos said. « The decision to dismiss Mike was made in the best interests of our franchise. Our team’s disappointing performance has not matched this team’s potential and has fallen short of the demanding standards that we seek to impose throughout our organization. Our comprehensive search for a new head coach begins immediately.  »
McCoy had just finished his fourth season, one that ended with a 37-27 home loss to the AFC West rival Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday. He was 28-38 overall, including 1-1 in the team’s only postseason trip during his tenure, in 2013.
Editor’s Picks With Mike McCoy out, Chargers need to find charismatic replacement
The Chargers will have a new coach as they enter an offseason that will likely bring plenty of change, including a possible move to Los Angeles. Tracking every NFL head-coaching change
Here’s everything you need to know about the head-coach openings throughout the NFL.
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The Chargers will have a new coach as they enter an offseason that will likely bring plenty of change, including a possible move to Los Angeles.
Here’s everything you need to know about the head-coach openings throughout the NFL.
The Chargers, though, have regressed under McCoy since then, finishing 4-12 in 2015 and then 5-11 this year, including a loss last week to the previously winless Cleveland Browns .
San Diego considered firing McCoy at the end of last season but instead gave him a one-year extension through 2017 and fired seven of his assistants, including offensive coordinator Frank Reich.
Specifically, under McCoy the Chargers struggled in their division, going 1-13 against West foes since November 2014.
« I want to thank Mike for his tireless work and commitment to this organization, » general manager Tom Telesco said in a statement. « He instilled a culture of work ethic and togetherness that we can build on for years to come.  »
The Chargers were competitive in most games. But they struggled to pull out contests in the fourth quarter, finishing with a 7-17 record in games decided by eight points or fewer dating to the 2015 season. The Chargers lost six games this season when they had led in the fourth quarter.
San Diego also has had to deal with the loss of several impact players due to injury this season, with a league-high 24 placed on injured reserve.
McCoy has shown he’s an innovator and can get his team ready for game day. Players respect him and are willing to put in the work to succeed on the field. And he’s credited with helping to turn around the fortunes of franchise quarterback Philip Rivers early in the coach’s tenure. Rivers, though, has regressed of late, entering Sunday with 14 turnovers in his past six games.
Ken Whisenhunt, whom the Chargers brought back to serve as the their offensive coordinator this season, could be a candidate as a replacement for McCoy. Whisenhunt has a 48-71 record as a head coach, including an appearance in Super Bowl XLIII with the Arizona Cardinals. He was fired as the Tennessee Titans head coach after one and half seasons, finishing with a 3-20 record.
The Chargers, of course, could be playing in a new location later this year.
Spanos has until Jan. 15 to announce a decision about the franchise’s future. The Chargers can stay in San Diego and hope the city can still present them with a workable stadium plan. Or the team can apply to the NFL for relocation and move to Los Angeles, where they would be tenants in the $2.66 billion stadium Rams owner Stan Kroenke is building in Inglewood, Calif.
Information from ESPN’s Eric Williams was used in this report.

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WNBA Players Were Near Site of Istanbul Attack, Coach Says

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NewsHubA handful of WNBA players, including Essence Carson, Chelsea Gray and Jantel Lavender of the Los Angeles Sparks , were next door to a deadly shooting in a nightclub in Istanbul early Sunday.
Sparks coach Brian Agler confirmed to The Associated Press that Carson had texted him to say that the three players were OK. The WNBA later told the AP that all of its players in Turkey were accounted for.
« The attack at Reina in Istanbul was tragic and we send our heartfelt condolences and prayers to the victims and their families, » WNBA President Lisa Borders said in a statement. « The WNBA was in contact with our players in the region after the incident; we are thankful each one of them is safe and accounted for.  »
An assailant believed to have been dressed in a Santa Claus costume opened fire at a nightclub in Istanbul during New Year’s celebrations, leaving at least 39 people dead in what the province’s governor described as a terror attack.
About two dozen WNBA players are in Turkey during their offseason playing in a league there.
Carson had tweeted earlier in the evening that she was « stuck inside of the club because of ‘terror’ shooting in Istanbul. Praises to the most high.  »
The incident occurred a week after the WNBA started offering to its players a phone application to assist them in trying to stay safe while traveling overseas.
The league has partnered with LiveSafe, a safety communications platform, to provide a mobile security app to its 60-plus players competing in Russia, Turkey, China and other countries this offseason.
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Follow Doug Feinberg on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/dougfeinberg

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