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Respondiendo al mensaje unas páginas más atrás sobre la caída del imperio y una hipotética guerra civil en USA:https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/armed-militias-on-us-streets-as-racial-divisions-widen-wjvjrtzxcCitarArmed militias on US streets as racial divisions widenWill Pavia, New YorkMonday September 07 2020, 12.01am, The TimesHeavily armed black militias marched on the Kentucky Derby and white protesters carrying guns clashed with Black Lives Matter activists as violence erupted in cities across America.A right-wing group led by a man known as the Angry Viking and a black brigade that calls itself the Not F***ing Around Coalition manoeuvred through the streets of Louisville on Saturday during what was regarded as the strangest Derby Day in history.No puedo ver el vídeo ahora mismo pero la portada no muestra a los típicos paletos desorganizados. Ya sólo hace falta que se encuentren con otros como ellos enfrente y que uno sea de gatillo fácil.
Armed militias on US streets as racial divisions widenWill Pavia, New YorkMonday September 07 2020, 12.01am, The TimesHeavily armed black militias marched on the Kentucky Derby and white protesters carrying guns clashed with Black Lives Matter activists as violence erupted in cities across America.A right-wing group led by a man known as the Angry Viking and a black brigade that calls itself the Not F***ing Around Coalition manoeuvred through the streets of Louisville on Saturday during what was regarded as the strangest Derby Day in history.
El alquiler ya ha dejado de ser un problema en este país.
A new Great Game has begun in the Eastern MediterraneanAs tensions soar over oil and gas development, the international community should actively look to encourage de-escalation(...) Oil and gas discoveries off the coasts of Egypt, Gaza, Israel, Lebanon, Syria and Cyprus have added a new dimension to old, unresolved conflicts. The dispute between Greece and Turkey for control over the Aegean Sea, the division of Cyprus, and the issue of maritime boundaries between Lebanon and Israel are just a few examples. Almost all of the countries on the Eastern Mediterranean’s shores claim conflicting and overlapping exclusive economic zones (EEZs) to exploit these resources up to 200 nautical miles from their coasts. A political and legal controversy - promising decades of work and fees for specialised international jurists and lawyers - is looming.These increasing tensions have been attributed to the alleged disengagement of the US from the area and from its recent historical role as referee. But a referee must be impartial, and the record of the US, from this point of view, is far from satisfactory. The real problem is the lack of US leadership when it had the soft and hard power, as well as an intact reputation, to make a difference. American leadership within Nato has not eased the decades-old rivalry between the organisation’s two southernmost members, Greece and Turkey. The same can be said about the Cyprus issue. Instead of solving problems, Washington has preferred to freeze or ignore them. The US now seems to be a narcissistic socialite who has received a VIP party invitation and wonders: “Will they notice me more if I attend or I do not?” Furthermore, from November onwards, the US will likely be paralysed for months in deciding who has really won the presidential election.Ambitious agendaWhen the US leaves a void, many are ready to fill it. Russia and Turkey are two perfect examples here. For around a decade, Russia has been smartly playing its cards in the Syrian and Libyan conflicts - and in any possible settlement of these crises, its interests will have to be taken into account. Turkey is assertively promoting an ambitious regional agenda that includes the Aegean Sea, EEZs, Cyprus and, again, the conflicts in Syria and Libya. Furthermore, Ankara’s support for the Muslim Brotherhood is stirring tensions in Egypt, Israel, the UAE and Saudi Arabia, as well as in some western democracies.Turkey seems determined to reclaim the leadership of Sunni Islam that it held for centuries during the Ottoman Empire. Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Egypt, in particular, perceive this as an existential threat. Turkey has also been seeking for decades to join the European Union, an ambition it seems to have given up on. While it was long a secular country, that is no longer the case, and the strong reservations by Germany and France to such an entry have been insurmountable. No matter how secular Turkey’s constitution has been, the core issue has remained its predominantly Muslim population. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan now has the attitude of someone who, after a very long engagement, realises he will never get to marriage, and reacts with acrimony and a spirit of vengeance. Historians in the future will establish whether his Islamist and authoritarian drive was planned since the beginning, or whether it was a reaction to the EU's resistance. Zero friendsThe truth is that Turkey, which once sought to maintain good relations with its neighbours, has moved to a position of having almost no friends in the neighbourhood. Ankara is experiencing tensions with Greece, Cyprus, Syria, Iraq, Egypt, France and the EU. It also has a hostile relationship with Saudi Arabia and the UAE, an ambivalent relationship with the US, and conflicting agendas with Russia in Syria and Libya. The country’s economy is also in a state of uncertain health. But Erdogan is a shrewd player, and he still possesses some important cards: a strategic position on Nato’s southern flank, US military bases, and the ability to reopen the tap and send millions of Syrian refugees hosted in Turkey towards Europe. The large oil and gas reserves discovered in the Eastern Mediterranean should ideally be convoyed to Europe through a so-called East Med pipeline involving Egypt, Israel, Cyprus and Greece. Late last year, Turkey and the Tripoli-based Libyan government signed a maritime boundaries deal, potentially blocking any pipeline towards Europe. Egypt, Greece and Cyprus proclaimed their own zones, specular to Turkey’s and Libya’s. While Russia and Turkey have shown conflicting agendas in Syria and Libya, on the East Med pipeline, they might be on the same page. Both nations have an interest in not enlarging the list of eastern energy suppliers to Europe.The EU is acting in a scattered fashion. France is supporting Greece and sending its navy, Germany is trying to mediate, Italy is watching with the migration issue with concern and Brussels seems paralysed. Things are also very bad for Nato, diagnosed as brain dead by French President Emmanuel Macron.Joint naval exercises in the area are not helping to calm tensions; in such circumstances, accidents are possible, and the capability to manage them cannot be taken for granted.Tabling grievancesDe-escalation is sorely needed, and to achieve it, a sort of consultation mechanism must be established. A contact group for the Eastern Mediterranean, where all political, economic and legal grievances could be tabled and discussed, may be a starting point. Such a group should encompass all the nations overlooking the basin, together with the US, EU, Russia and some other major European powers. Considering its status in the UN Security Council and that the southern corridor of its massive Belt and Road Initiative will go through the Eastern Mediterranean, China’s presence may also be important.Last but not least, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres should consider the appointment of a special envoy for the Eastern Mediterranean.
El alquiler ya ha dejado de ser un problema en este país.Ahora el foco está puesto en que personas de 90 años fallecen.
Cita de: el malo en Septiembre 14, 2020, 12:07:50 pmCon un aval de 2.400€ en una hipoteca de 400.000€ ¿qué van a comprarse? ¿el buzón y el timbre de la puerta? Es propaganda. Propaganda muy muy mala. Que a poco que pienses un minuto, casi consigue lo contrario de lo que pretende. Lo mismo que las inmo-noticias de los telediarios (que parecen redactadas por las mismas personas, independientemente del canal).Por cierto, ¿alguno conoce a alguien, aunque sea de oídas, que solicitara la "ayuda" para pagar el alquiler? sospecho que fue un fracaso estrepitoso. No se ha vuelto a saber más.
Con un aval de 2.400€ en una hipoteca de 400.000€ ¿qué van a comprarse? ¿el buzón y el timbre de la puerta?
¿Esto como cuadra con la TE? No habíamos terminado con el desagüe?¿Que necesidad hay de enmarronar a los jovenes con precios de burbuja, enmarronando de paso al estado al avalar?Cita de: Negrule en Septiembre 14, 2020, 09:51:18 am..., y con un precio que oscile entre los 150.000 y 400.000 euros de valor del inmueble en el mercado inmobiliario, bien sea de nueva construcción o de segunda mano.
..., y con un precio que oscile entre los 150.000 y 400.000 euros de valor del inmueble en el mercado inmobiliario, bien sea de nueva construcción o de segunda mano.
Cita de: CHOSEN en Septiembre 14, 2020, 12:32:43 pmEl alquiler ya ha dejado de ser un problema en este país.Sí, sobre todo para los caseros No sé los demás, pero yo llevo mirando el mercado en mi ciudad desde antes del Covid y no he visto aún bajadas significativas en viviendas normales (no cuento los AirBnb que se han pasado al residencial). Sigo viéndolo todo sobrepreciado de narices y las mismas condiciones leoninas de pedir meses de fianza, nóminas, aval bancario y la sangre de tu primogénito. No he probado aún a negociar bajadas en viviendas que me interesen, pero creo que la mayoría me mandarían a la mierda. Me parece que aún queda para que se acepte la claudicación.
No manejo el suficiente conocimiento respecto a los precios, pero en todos los artículos relacionados con este tema que he leído, dicen que el gas licuado tiene un mayor precio que el de pipeline.
También dices, y cito textualmente: ” El proyecto de Nordstream está bien porque el gas va a ser muy necesario como energía de transición en los próximos 10 años o así”Tu has estado alguna vez en invierno en un país del norte de Europa, p.ej. Alemania?Como te imaginas que se calientan las casas de la gente, edificios, fábricas y un largo etc.? Con qué energías renovables crees que se podría calentar todo esto durante el invierno? Con fotovoltaicas, molinos eólicos, baterías Tesla?
El gas no es una energía de transición, es una energía existencial para países con inviernos duros.Ahora la pregunta para Alemania es si gas licuado (dependencia de USA), o Pipeline (dependencia Rusia).Y aquí hemos visto una intensa campaña de los agentes transatlánticos - la prensa en su conjunto y varios políticos en particular - a favor de paralizar Nordstream 2.
La experiencia que ha hecho Alemania en estos 50 años es que Rusia ha sido un proveedor fiable y que no ha usado el gas para presiones políticas o estratégicas.
EU to delay euro clearing decision due to Brexit divorce threat - sourceThe European Union is set to delay a decision on allowing City of London clearing houses to continue clearing euro transactions for EU-based clients due to concern over Britain’s plan to breach its Brexit divorce settlement, a derivatives industry source said on Monday.Brussels had already said it would grant Britain "time-limited" access to euro clearing from January to avoid huge disruption to markets as a unit of the London Stock Exchange LSE.L clears the bulk of euro-denominated swaps that are widely used by companies.The bloc’s executive European Commission was due to formally take the decision on access later this week, but is now expected to delay this until around the end of the month, the source said, citing an industry meeting late last week with a European Commission official.The European Commission had no immediate comment.The delay was linked to Britain’s perceived unpicking of the Withdrawal Agreement it signed with the bloc, the source added.Britain left the EU in January and transition arrangements that still allow unfettered access to the bloc, end on Dec. 31.Without legal certainty of access to the EU, the LSE’s clearing unit LCH must give its clients in the bloc three-months’ notice to move their swaps positions out of Britain.
The chairmen of UBS Group AG and Credit Suisse Group AG are exploring a potential merger to create one of Europe's largest banks, Inside Paradeplatz reported, citing unidentified people inside the two lenders.
Europe's banking industry is under pressure to consolidate as the coronavirus pandemic adds to headwinds from negative interest rates. Spain's CaixaBank SA and Bankia SA said this month they're exploring a merger to form the largest lender in the country and kickstart consolidation. While a deal between the two Swiss banks would allow for overlap to be eliminated, executing such a transaction could be difficult, said Andreas Venditti, an analyst at Vontobel.
BRUSSELS, Sept 14 (Reuters) - Europe’s plan to tackle climate change is under review. The European Union’s executive is planning deeper emissions cuts this decade, requiring every sector to become greener, faster.The Commission will propose that the EU commits to cut its greenhouse gas emissions by 55% from 1990 levels by 2030. Experts say this is the minimum needed to put the bloc on track to meet its pledge to reach net zero emissions by 2050.The current target is a 40% cut by 2030.A draft Commission plan, seen by Reuters and due to be published on Thursday, lays out the sweeping changes needed to deliver on the target, which needs approval from the European Parliament and national governments.Here are the key points.ENERGYEurope’s fossil fuel use would plummet. By 2030, EU coal consumption would drop by 70% from 2015 levels. Oil use would fall by 30% and gas by 25%.Meanwhile, the EU’s share of renewable power production would more than double from today’s 32%.These changes would save 100 billion euros in energy imports over 2021-2030, the draft said, boosting EU energy security.Europe would use less energy, which could be done by renovating the 75% of EU buildings that are energy-inefficient. By 2030, the Commission wants to double the EU’s building renovation rate, currently stuck at just 1%.TRANSPORTThe Commission will assess the date by which internal combustion engine car sales should end, and propose tighter 2030 CO2 emissions standards for cars.Road transport could also be added to the EU carbon market, to hurry the shift to zero-emissions vehicles.Aviation and shipping must step up their climate efforts. The Commission wants to add intra-EU maritime transport to the EU carbon market, and give fewer free carbon permits to airlines.It will also examine EU tax exemptions for fossil fuels, to give aviation and ships an extra nudge towards low-carbon fuels.INDUSTRYHeavy industry must overcome technological barriers and conduct large-scale tests of low-carbon hydrogen, carbon capture equipment and electricity-powered high heat before 2030.Factories could face higher carbon costs, as the Commission will further assess the amount of free pollution permits they receive in the carbon market.FARMING AND FORESTSForestry and land will be counted towards the EU’s new 2030 climate target - the sector absorbs more CO2 than it emits, which could help offset emissions in other sectors.Sustainable forest management and restoration of wetlands could help natural carbon sinks absorb 300 million tonnes of emissions by 2030, up from roughly 260 million tonnes in 2018.A new EU certification system will encourage farmers to store carbon on their land, while a “strong decrease” in consumption of animal products could cut 30 million tonnes of emissions by 2030. (Reporting by Kate Abnett; editing by Philip Blenkinsop and Kirsten Donovan)
CitarFACTBOX – Europe's plan to make deeper emissions cuts this decade
FACTBOX – Europe's plan to make deeper emissions cuts this decade
LEAK: EU’s 2030 climate plan makes case for 55% emissions cutThe European Commission will argue this week in favour of a 55% cut in greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 and push for higher shares of renewable energy as part of an ambitious plan to achieve net-zero emissions by mid-century, EURACTIV has learned.The move will be confirmed on Wednesday (16 September) when Commission President Ursula von der Leyen will make the announcement in her first State of the Union address before the European Parliament in Brussels.Europe’s unprecedented economic response to the COVID-19 crisis “offers a unique opportunity to accelerate the transition to a climate-neutral economy,” the European Commission will argue in a document expected to be published on Thursday.(...)
Europe would use less energy, which could be done by renovating the 75% of EU buildings that are energy-inefficient. By 2030, the Commission wants to double the EU’s building renovation rate, currently stuck at just 1%.
Factories could face higher carbon costs, as the Commission will further assess the amount of free pollution permits they receive in the carbon market.
a “strong decrease” in consumption of animal products could cut 30 million tonnes of emissions by 2030
http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article67672.html