Louise Haigh, Dawn Butler, Richard Burgon and Nadia Whittom would all be OK but Labour seems pretty much finished.
Labour MPs must gain 80 nominations by Thursday to stand for deputy leader | Labour | The Guardian
https://www.theguar…
This is hard for me to understand. I mean, why not label China as a security threat?
I understand that China is a powerful economic partner, but I'm missing something here.
China spy case collapse due to Labour government, prosecutors say
https://www.
Five weeks after Trump fired the chief of the agency that gathers the country’s labor and price data,
his advisers are preparing a report fuming over imagined shortcomings of the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ jobs data
The latest jobs report points to a labor market that's faltering,
but the slowdown may have begun much earlier.
Economists expect the Bureau of Labor Statistics tomorrow to issue a major downward revision,
showing the nation added hundreds of th…
Jack Smith's lawfare and James Comey's arraignment on pathetically weak charges (Washington Post)
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2025/10/08/jack-smith-james-comey-lawfare-phone-records/
http://www.memeorandum.com/251008/p159#a251008p159
Nouveau : Félicien Bogaerts sur l'affaire OKC-Spatz https://chardonsbleus.org/nouveau-felicien-bogaerts-et-laffaire-okc-spatz/
"Highlights of the LIBER Annual Conference 2025" #LIBER25
Christian Catalini, co-creator of Meta's Libra stablecoin project, reflects on Libra's failure, what Stripe's Tempo blockchain can learn from it, and more (Christian Catalini/Forbes)
https://www.forbes.com/sites/christiancata
"Sir Keir’s reshuffle looks less like renewal than a coup by Labour’s “modernising” clique. Ian Murray’s sacking severs a bridge to Anas Sarwar’s Scottish Labour, which had been tacking leftwards, just as the Holyrood election looms, while Lucy Powell’s removal sidelines one of the few cabinet allies of Ed Miliband, the soft left’s champion" -- in other words, Labour is tacking even more violently towards the dark side.
Adam Dorr concluded that the current AI wave will not just convulse -- but obliterate the labour market by 2045.
What cars did to horses and carts, and electricity to gas lamps, and digital cameras to Kodak, are templates for the coming shock, he says.
“Technology has a new target in its crosshairs – and that’s us. That’s our labour.”
Some sectors will have an interregnum during which humans can work effectively alongside robots
– just like the period when chess gr…