The call before the storm? Brazil’s protests

The call before the storm? Brazil’s protests

Tens of thousands of people aligned with President Jair Bolsonaro held protests—at his direction. Yet the numbers are increasingly aligned against him as he eyes next year’s elections. Conspiracy theories are nothing new, but politicians espousing them, and exploiting them to great effect, make them much more than harmless tales. And a listen to the disappearing sounds of old Beijing.

Additional Beijing audio courtesy of Colin Chinnery.

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Judge, jury and executive: another power-grab in Tunisia

Judge, jury and executive: another power-grab in Tunisia

Last summer President Kais Saied nobbled the legislature; now he has abolished the judiciary. We ask where the country is headed, and why there is so little protest. Brazil’s modern-art scene, born a ...

16 Feb 202221min

Yen here before: Japan’s “new capitalism”

Yen here before: Japan’s “new capitalism”

Today’s figures showing the first annual economic growth in three years may seem promising. But the grand plans of Prime Minister Kishida Fumio resemble past policies that have not worked. The finely ...

15 Feb 202220min

Not trucking around: Canada’s protests spread

Not trucking around: Canada’s protests spread

It has become much more than a fight against proof-of-vaccination strictures. The anti-government mood has spread in Canada and abroad. What happens next? Haiti has received billions upon billions in ...

14 Feb 202222min

Withdrawal symptoms: Afghanistan goes hungry

Withdrawal symptoms: Afghanistan goes hungry

Since American forces left, pessimism has skyrocketed—and with good reason. Starvation is driving Afghans to sell their organs and even their children in order to eat. The artificial snow of this year...

11 Feb 202223min

Which way UP: India’s bellwether election

Which way UP: India’s bellwether election

The state-legislature poll in Uttar Pradesh is in effect a vote on Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s increasingly stringent Hindu-national agenda—and will hint at his party’s chances in 2024. Oil majors ...

10 Feb 202223min

The quiet man of Europe: Olaf Scholz

The quiet man of Europe: Olaf Scholz

So far Germany’s new chancellor has been all but invisible at home and on the international stage. We examine the motives behind his reticence—and his abilities during a European crisis. As space beco...

9 Feb 202224min

FAANGer danger: big tech takes a beating

FAANGer danger: big tech takes a beating

For years, the big tech firms Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix and Google were seen as a collective good bet; investors will soon judge them each on their merits—or demerits. After Israel’s creation, ...

8 Feb 202222min

Fission creep: Iran nuclear talks resume

Fission creep: Iran nuclear talks resume

After protracted negotiations, at last a conclusion appears nigh—but depending on whom you ask, a breakthrough is as likely as a breakdown. The regime in Bangladesh has been growing more brutal, yet s...

7 Feb 202222min

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