Többet láthatsz a The Guardian oldalból, ha bejelentkezel a Facebookra.
Üzenetet küldhetsz ennek az oldalnak, értesülhetsz a közelgő eseményekről stb. Ha nincs Facebook-fiókod, létrehozhatsz egyet, hogy többet tudj megnézni az oldalból.
Többet láthatsz a The Guardian oldalból, ha bejelentkezel a Facebookra.
Üzenetet küldhetsz ennek az oldalnak, értesülhetsz a közelgő eseményekről stb. Ha nincs Facebook-fiókod, létrehozhatsz egyet, hogy többet tudj megnézni az oldalból.
Most nem
Bejegyzések

It is six years since Khalida had to leave her family and her homeland, terrified for her life and personal safety, after pioneering women’s football in a country that has been described as one of the most dangerous places to be female.

Khalida Popal was the face of women’s football in Afghanistan but fled because of death threats. Now living in Denmark, and defying the US president, she tells Louise Court how she is helping women gain confidence through sport
theguardian.com

"A consumer survey for HSBC has this week revealed that we Brits now prefer vodka to whisky or gin. How did that happen? Vodka: the petrol-tasting substance Russians used to drink in small glasses that they would then throw into the fireplace before bursting aggressively into tears."

When I was young we used to sit in pubs enjoying warm beer. Now it’s all dodgy body art and ‘pre-drinking’ petrol-tasting spirits
theguardian.com
Videók
Thank you for your support, which is more important now than ever
739
79
Austerity is a feminist issue
2 ezer
327
Inside Banksy's Walled Off hotel in Bethlehem
13 ezer
1,6 ezer
Bejegyzések

“If you are saying you want the referendum because of Brexit, then you have to know what the arrangement is that the UK has secured in relation to leaving the EU and how that has been delivered and, of course, you need to know what the SNP alternative to that proposal is.”

UK prime minister expected to argue that holding vote before final EU deal is agreed would be premature and misleading
theguardian.com

"Without The Killing, there would have been no Broadchurch, The Missing or River: British shows that learned how to explore a storyline and a landscape in a way that was daringly slow by local standards."

As European broadcasters team up to create ever more silly fusion cop shows, a beloved genre has gone from thriller to bland filler in just six years
theguardian.com

When was the last time you said 'golly'?

A new study sheds light on how the English language is changing – but what shapes the vocabulary du jour?
theguardian.com

“You can’t level an accusation of that type without retracting it or explaining just why it was done.”

Republican Devin Nunes says he does not believe there was ‘an actual tap of Trump Tower’ as committee leaders say they are still waiting for evidence
theguardian.com

"There was not much to fear from the opposition. But Downing Street did feel it had something to fear from Fleet Street."

The cost of backtracking on national insurance is not just financial. It is a blow to the prime minister’s authority when she needs it most
theguardian.com

From Royal Burgess Golfing Society to the Cresta Run, these are the last of the male-only haunts.

Now that Muirfield golf club has voted to allow women in, where can men go to be surrounded only by other men? We rate the blokiest holdouts around
theguardian.com

"There's something particularly vulgar about depriving people of food, watching people go hungry, just to whip up a bit of extra drama. It feels entitled and indulgent and queasily contemporary: let them not eat cake."

From Big Brother to Mutiny, the crux of any reality show is contestants bickering due to near-starvation. Why can’t we stop this tasteless deprivation?
theguardian.com

"I started seeing Gen. I’d never met anyone like him. He was very well read, quite the archetypal revolutionary-cum-bohemian artist. He’d moved into a flat in Spring Bank, where my friend Graham also lived. Gen slept under the kitchen table, in a sleeping bag inside a polythene tunnel he called his rainshell. It was a strange and unromantic place to conduct our liaisons, but it made some sense: it was free, and warm from the cooker."

The art provocateur recalls life in an art commune in Hull, fighting the Hells Angels and thrashing Genesis P Orridge on stage in Amsterdam
theguardian.com

"Children aged three to five are shown shouting their support for the prime minister and urging his government to protect Japan from Chinese aggression."

Political scandal surrounding Moritomo Gakuen kindergarten deepens as parents also say treatment of pupils verges on abuse
theguardian.com

A search for the hashtags in the message – #Nazialmanya and #Nazihollanda in the original Turkish – returned thousands of results, indicating widespread success on the part of the hackers. The attackers also changed profile pictures and header images for some more high-profile targets, changing the main image to a Turkish flag and the profile picture to a Turkish-style coat of arms.

Accounts that use third-party analytics service Twitter Counter compromised to tweet in support of Turkey’s prime minister
theguardian.com

“Can you make his accent a little more authentic? That usually meant they wanted the Simpsons character Apu.”

Indian-American actor shares pictures on Twitter of ‘awful’ scripts asking for everything from a ‘Pakistani computer geek’ to ‘more authentic’ Hindi accents
theguardian.com

When news of the Yahoo breach broke last year, the company itself was widely condemned for what technologists called improper security – the breach was possible because the hackers were able to forge “cookies” that told Yahoo’s servers to allow them full access to vast numbers of private email accounts.

Four indicted in conjunction with the hack of a billion Yahoo accounts, amid intense political controversy over Russian interference in the US election
theguardian.com

"I wanted to tell a different story; of how what was then the most powerful state in Europe was driven by fear and bigotry to destroy a defenceless minority and act against its own material interests.

These tendencies are present in every society and in every era. I hoped then, as I hope now, that Blood and Faith might make readers more alert to the destructive possibilities in our own."

Matthew Carr, the author of Blood and Faith, explains how the plight of the Moriscos, driven from their home country as detested aliens, has urgent lessons for our own age
theguardian.com

"It was a project about crossing the road … how everyone is different, everyone has an identity," says shaken artist Franck Allais.

Franck Allais says London sign reported to police as a hate crime was not meant to be an antisemitic statement
theguardian.com

Book your tickets now …

PM will seek to appease concerns over inclusion of devolved administrations in EU talks and ease tensions with Scottish government
theguardian.com
Emberek
7 202 368 kedvelés
11 731 látogatás
Másoknak tetszik még
HelyekLondonThe Guardian