Lord Sugar says Boris Johnson and Michael Gove should be ‘in jail’ for ‘lies’ they told about Brexit. In an interview with the Sunday Times, the businessman said Brexit was the ‘worst thing I have experienced in business.’

The Daily Britain

@dailybritainonx

Lord Sugar says Boris Johnson and Michael Gove should be ‘in jail’ for ‘lies’ they told about Brexit. In an interview with the Sunday Times, the businessman said Brexit was the ‘worst thing I have experienced in business.’

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Axios: Exclusive: Trump’s deal terms

Exclusive: Trump’s deal terms
 
Photo illustration of President Donald Trump in a collage featuring a mural of Iran's slain supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, supporters of the  Houthi movement brandishing their weapons, the Strait of Hormuz, and radar and clock elements
Photo illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios. Photos via Getty Images
 
Axios’ Barak Ravid reports that the agreement the U.S. and Iran are close to signing involves a 60-day ceasefire extension during which the Strait of Hormuz would be reopened. Iran would freely sell oil, and negotiations would be held on curbing its nuclear program.

Why it matters: The deal would avoid war escalation and would decrease pressure on the global oil supply. It’s unclear whether it’d lead to a lasting peace agreement that also addresses President Trump’s nuclear demands.

State of play: Both Trump and the mediators have indicated the deal could be announced as soon as today, though it hasn’t been finalized and could still fall apart.

A U.S. official provided a detailed outline of the draft. Those details haven’t been confirmed by the Iranian side, though Tehran has also indicated a deal is getting close.What’s in the deal

Both sides would sign a memorandum of understanding lasting 60 days, extendable by mutual consent.

During the 60-day period, the Strait of Hormuz would reopen with no tolls, and Iran would clear its mines in the strait.

In exchange, the U.S. would lift its blockade on Iranian ports and issue some sanctions waivers to allow Iran to sell oil freely.The U.S. official acknowledged that would be a boon to Iran’s economy but said it would also give significant relief to the global oil market. The official said Trump’s key principle in the agreement is “relief for performance.” 

The draft MOU includes commitments from Iran to never pursue nuclear weapons and to negotiate over a suspension of its uranium enrichment and the removal of its stockpile of highly enriched uranium, the U.S. official said.

Iran gave the U.S., through the mediators, verbal commitments on the scope of concessions it’s willing to make on suspending enrichment and giving up nuclear material, according to two knowledgeable sources.

U.S. forces would stay in the region during the 60-day period and only withdraw if a final deal is reached.

Some of Iran’s frozen funds could be released if it hits certain milestones, but none would be freed upfront, a U.S. official says. No sanctions would be permanently lifted before a final deal is reached.

The intrigue: The draft MOU also makes clear that the war between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon would end.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu expressed concern about that condition during a phone call with Trump yesterday, an Israeli official said.How it happened

Trump sounded out several Arab and Muslim leaders about the deal in a conference call yesterday, and all said they support it, three sources familiar with the call said.

They included the UAE’s hawkish president, Mohammed bin Zayed. Also on the call were the leaders of Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Egypt, Turkey and Pakistan, all of which have been involved in the mediation efforts.

Several hawkish Republicansincluding Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), released statements opposing the terms. Get the latest.
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Do You Talk to Yourself? Here’s How to Harness Your Inner Voice. Ethan Kross, Neuroscientist

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DW: Trump’s America – Is US democracy in Danger? Democracy under attack

May 23, 2026 #dwdocumentary#documentary#dwdocs

Nations once considered beacons of democracy are under attack. Many countries around the world are moving toward authoritarianism and jeopardizing once staunchly protected democratic values. Among them: the USA. The new DW documentary series, “Democracy Under Attack,” is an urgent look into the heart of these conflicts. It puts a spotlight on countries where democratic values have long been taken for granted. In an ever-increasingly fractured world, how resilient are today’s democracies?

Making sense of these questions is Turkish investigative journalist Can Dündar, who has lived in exile in Germany since 2016. In the DW Documentary original series, “Guardians of Truth,” he brought stories from Mexico, Belarus, and his home country, Turkey. He met people who, like him, faced the brutal consequences of corrupt institutions and the suppression of a free press. Having lived the realities of increasing authoritarianism firsthand, Dündar believes it’s time to sound the alarm that more and more democracies are under attack.

The premiere episode of “Democracy Under Attack: Can Dündar and Trump’s America” takes viewers to the United States. In 2026, the USA will celebrate the 250th anniversary of its founding. The country, which has often been called the cradle of modern democracy, is under enormous pressure: The political camps are almost irreconcilably opposed to each other.

For many observers, President Donald Trump is governing in an increasingly authoritarian manner, and he and his supporters fiercely attack their critics. In the film, directors Can Dündar and Demid Sheronkin meet one such person who has become a target. Mark Bray, a Rutgers professor, was denounced as “Dr. Antifa” and later received death threats after members from the right-wing youth organization Turning Point USA launched a petition to get him fired from the university. He and his family fled the country for Spain.

Moving between US college campuses and a political convention, talking to student activists, Turning Point USA members, and professors, the documentary presents a tense collision of competing visions of democracy. What is the state of freedom of expression and democracy in the United States of America? Is US democracy really in danger?

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Axios: End of internet’s golden era

 End of internet’s golden era
 
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios. Stock: Getty Images

Google’s overhaul of the search bar this week washes away one of the last vestiges of the internet’s halcyon era — when search tools felt empowering, social media and swiping were novel, and popular disillusionment had yet to set in, Axios’ Neal Rothschild writes.

Why it matters: The AI era and the TikTok-ification of social media have produced a digital world that’s responsive to today’s market demands, and unrecognizable from a decade ago.🖼️ 

The big picture: Americans’ trust in Big Tech has plunged over the past 15 years, forcing drastic shifts from the status quo alongside technological advancements.

The share of Americans with a “great deal” or “quite a lot” of confidence in tech companies was only 24% in 2025, down from 32% in 2020, according to Gallup polling.

Between 2015 and 2019, the share of Americans who said tech companies have a positive effect on the country plunged from 71% to 50%, according to Pew polling.

Go back even further, and tech companies topped a 2010 Pew poll of the most favorable institutions, on par with small business.Share this story.
    
 
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Fortune: Time to focus on new credo “Learn, Unlearn and Relearn”; get the skills too. In the US there is a shortage in construction workers! Why?

North America Immigration

America is suffering a shortage of construction workers and sabotaging its ability to fill vacancies by wiping out the industry’s immigrant backbone

Sasha Rogelberg

By 

Sasha Rogelberg

Reporter

May 23, 2026, 6:30 AM ET

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A construction worker wearing a yellow helmet wipes his nose with his hand.

The Trump administration’s immigration crackdown has exacerbated a construction labor shortage.LEONARDO MUNOZ/AFP—Getty Images

Last July, construction site superintendent Robby Robertson warned his $20 million recreation center project in Mobile, Alabama, would likely be delayed for three weeks. He told Reuters that half of his workers stopped showing up to the site after an Immigration and Customs Enforcement raid on another site in Florida, nearly 230 miles away, afraid of facing the risk of deportation.

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The delay would cost Robertson an estimated $84,000, with $4,000 of daily “liquidation damages” mounting for each day the project dragged past its Nov. 1 deadline.

Robertson’s problem may be a nationwide challenge. New data has confirmed economists’ concern that the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown has led to fewer jobs in critical industries, particularly construction, reifying fears of labor shortages, delays, and ultimately passed-down costs to homebuyers.

working paper recently published by the National Bureau of Economic Research found employment among likely undocumented immigrants dropped 4% on average in areas where ICE conducted recent raids. Construction was the most affected industry the researchers tracked, with employment dropping 7.5% for undocumented workers. The Associated General Contractors of America (AGC) estimates 35% of construction workers are immigrants.

Despite immigrants’ role in the construction industry—and the broader economy—the Trump administration has taken substantial efforts to curb immigration. On Friday, the White House announced that most foreigners seeking green cards must go back to their home countries in order to apply, a policy shift that could impact hundreds of thousands of foreigners seeking permanent residency in the U.S.

But it’s not just construction jobs at risk because of the immigration crackdown, economists warn. 

“If the supply of immigrants is cut off, as it seems to be with the borders effectively closed these days, I think it will get much harder for the construction industry to fill positions,” Ken Simonson, chief economist at AGC, told Fortune.

“But the even bigger, broader concern is that the population as a whole is going to stop growing, and that will mean less demand for homes, for schools, for retail, for many consumer-facing kinds of construction projects, and a general slowdown in economic growth that sooner or later affects every kind of construction. I think that’s a real risk.”

Where have the construction workers gone?

Even prior to Trump’s clampdown on immigration, the U.S. was facing both a labor shortage in construction and a slowdown in homes being built. Last year, construction workers broke ground on about 1.36 million homes, a 0.6% drop from 2024, according to data from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, a worrying statistic for economists saying the U.S. needs to build 3 million to 4 million additional homes “beyond normal construction” to resolve the country’s housing crisis.

According to the Associated Builders and Contractors, a trade group, the U.S. must hire 349,000 more construction workers in 2026 in order to meet demand. By comparison, the U.S. added 181,000 total jobs in 2025.

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Simonson said that while construction has been hit by the same low-hire, low-fire conditions straining job growth, the industry faces more severe shortages from both an aging workforce and dwindling interest from younger generations.

“There certainly is turnover in construction,” he said. “There are a lot of retirements happening, and so to keep that construction employment rising, we do need a pool of new entrants to the workforce.”

But the U.S. population of 18-to-22-year-olds has peaked, Simonson noted, and while more Gen Z workers are joining construction, the generation makes up just 14% of payroll, with Millennials and Gen X holding 71% of the jobs. From 2019 to 2023, the share of Baby Boomers in construction fell from 20.6% to 14.2%.

Tony Payan, a fellow at Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy, said if labor shortages in the industry continue, construction companies will face cost overruns from delays or have to hike wages to attract workers from competing companies. Already facing tight margins, construction firms are not going to be able to absorb those costs.

“Everything is going to be passed down to the consumer,” Payan told Fortune.

Why construction jobs are being threatened

Historically, immigrants have been able to fill some of the gaps in construction’s labor supply, but mass deportation efforts have impacted more than just these foreign-born workers. Elizabeth Cox, a professional research assistant at the University of Colorado Denver and co-author of the NBER study on ICE’s impact on construction labor participation, said fear has been one of a few drivers of job losses.

“A lot of this is likely due to the public perception of ICE activity, and that people are a little bit more fearful than they have been in previous instances,” Cox told Fortune.

While deportation directly removes someone from the labor market, it also produces chilling effects, discouraging immigrants, particularly those undocumented, from participating in everyday activities, Cox said.

Those chilling effects account for why foreign-born workers may no longer participate in the labor market, but does not fully account for why immigration crackdowns would lead to fewer U.S.-born workers. 

Cox explained fewer immigrants generally leads to less growth, which can disincentivize a workplace from hiring in general. Immigrants fulfill a complementary role in the workplace, meaning their jobs necessitate roles to support their work that may be more likely to be held by U.S.-born workers. For example, at a construction site, fewer laborers would necessitate fewer electricians to be working on site, as well as fewer managers to oversee the work.

Finding solutions to construction’s labor problem

Payan said the Trump administration could take action to address construction’s labor problem. While the agriculture industry has a dedicated H-2A visa for temporary agriculture workers, it does not have a specific visa for those in construction. Instead, there’s an H-2B visa for non-agricultural workers. 

But these designations are meant for mostly seasonal or intermittent workers, not construction jobs that have yearlong demand. Visas are often granted for only up to one year, while many construction jobs require seasoned workers with certifications and good insurance.

“You need workers for at least a few years to train them and get them to be quite good at what they’re doing, so that they can deliver the project on time, on cost, and of course do it well,” Payan said.

With little likelihood of a visa being created to accommodate foreign-born construction workers, he noted construction companies have some, albeit limited, options to ease the burden of labor shortages. AI has helped to automate some roles in the industry, but automated construction equipment is still expensive and not yet reliable, Payan warned.

Moreover, more automation in construction doesn’t necessarily reduce jobs, as humans still need to oversee the work of the robots. Construction firms can also raise wages, but run into the problem of competing for the same pool of workers.

“They’re really at a quandary as to what to do,” Payan said. “Construction company owners and CEOs, they’re really at this point of reaching into the depths to compete for the available labor. It essentially means greater costs, that’s it.”

The Fortune 500 Innovation Forum will convene Fortune 500 executives, U.S. policy officials, top founders, and thought leaders to help define what’s next for the American economy, Nov. 16-17 in Detroit. Apply here.

About the Author

By Sasha RogelbergReporter

Sasha Rogelberg is a reporter and former editorial fellow on the news desk at Fortune, covering retail and the intersection of business and popular culture.

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Fortune: Elon Musk’s SpaceX IPO filing just told us what business he’s betting on for the future—and it’s not rockets

InvestingFinance

Elon Musk’s SpaceX IPO filing just told us what business he’s betting on for the future—and it’s not rockets

Shawn Tully

By 

Shawn Tully

Senior Editor-at-Large

May 23, 2026, 4:00 AM ET

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Elon Musk gives a tour to U.S. President-elect Donald Trump and lawmakers of the control room before the launch of the sixth test flight of the SpaceX Starship rocket on November 19, 2024 in Brownsville, Texas.

Elon Musk gives a tour to U.S. President-elect Donald Trump and lawmakers of the control room before the launch of the sixth test flight of the SpaceX Starship rocket on November 19, 2024 in Brownsville, Texas.Brandon Bell/Getty Images

It’s no surprise that the SpaceX offering statement, filed the evening of May 20, shows that as of today, the rocket, satellite and AI enterprise sports tiny revenues and books large losses. That its market cap following the IPO slated for mid-June’s expected to hit $1.5 trillion or more highlights that its fans are basing their overwhelming optimism almost exclusively on great things to come. But a careful reading of the S-1 reveals substantial barriers in the path to achieving the sorcerous performance required to reward shareholders who flock to the most anticipated debut ever seen.

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The reason isn’t simply that SpaceX will be fighting the law of large numbers by starting life as a public company as an extremely expensive stock. Put simply, as the prospectus highlights, Elon Musk’s creation has essentially re-invented itself from a commercial space pioneer facing relatively mild competition, to an AI-centric player that’s vying for the same dollars and customers, as the hyperscaler crowd led by MicrosoftGoogle, OpenAI, Coreweave, and sundry smaller but still formidable participants.

To win in that crowded and hot sector, SpaceX will need to go super-big on capex for data centers and R&D that hatches fresh enterprise products. As the prospectus displays, those already-huge expenditures are already accelerating, and they’ll keep ramping over the next few years. Yet garnering major profits from AI may take a lot longer. The S-1 makes that point as well. The original space businesses may prove highly successful, but it’s likely not big enough to do most of the work. It’s clear that Musk’s ambitions, and the investors’ hopes as reflected in the valuation, are heavily tilted to a knockout performance in AI.

To handicap SpaceX’s prospects, it’s crucial to ignore the Wall Street buzz and Musk hype about colonies on the moon and examine, via the prospectus, how much money SpaceX now pours into fashioning the AI franchise, and what it’s reaping from the space ventures to support it.

An excellent new report from David Trainer, CEO of financial research firm New Constructs, identifies several weaknesses threaten SpaceX’s prospects. They include a lopsided governance structure where the funds and individual will own almost 60% of shares but get almost no voting power. Instead, Elon Musk will exercise virtually total control; the founder and CEO can’t be removed from office by a shareholder vote and is free to name a board dominated by insiders. (This reporter addressed these issues in a previous story https://fortune.com/2026/05/22/space-x-stock-ipo-price-elon-musk-shareholders/.) Trainer also notes that SpaceX will make its public debut as the most unprofitable player in all of its main businesses.

Another red flag: Trainer dug into the S-1 to find that the lion’s share of the projected IPO proceeds is already spoken for. So the question arise, where will all this money needed for capex come from? The potential share issuance and borrowing needed to the AI march could prove a big negative for investors.

Of the two non-AI sectors, rockets are spouting losses while the satellite side’s thriving

As the S-1 shows, SpaceX stands on three main legs, Space, Connectivity and AI. All told, the consolidated enterprise posted $18.7 billion revenue and booked an operating loss of $2.6 billion. AI is the biggest drag, highlighting the challenge ahead. Space comprises the rocket lineup that the company manufactures in-house, and deploys to launch its own satellites. It also sells rockets to NASA and performs launches as a contractor for the agency, as well as hosting special orbital trips for high-paying VIPs.

By contrast, the Connectivity segment’s a big money-spinner that boasts an outstanding runway. It’s SpaceX’s only profitable franchise, and accounts for almost two-thirds of total sales. The Starlink segment runs a galaxy of 9,600 satellites, three-quarters of the total fleet in orbit. Over ten-million users pay subscriptions for mobile and broadband service. The business is well protected, since it’s far the biggest global player in commercial satellites, and the gigantic investment and tech wizardry needed to challenge its dominance provides a deep moat. It’s also annuity-style steady.

In the 12 months ended in Q1, Starlink doubled its roster of subscribers to reach that 10 million mark. The downside: The new customers it’s adding are getting less profitable. Its revenue per sub, a key metric, has fallen from $99 in 2023 to $66 in Q1 of this year. As a result, revenue growth lagged, rising 50% in 2025 vs last year to $11.4 billion. So far, the segment’s extremely profitable, returning $4.4 billion in operating income last year for a margin of 30%. Still, it’s facing strong pricing competition from terrestrial networks, operated by everyone from T-Mobile to Google fiber that users often find more reliable than satellite service. The overriding issue: Connectivity’s subscription machine, even if it keeps growing fast, isn’t nearly big enough to drive the kind of revenues and profits SpaceX will need to reward shareholders.

A big concern for shareholders: The IPO proceeds won’t be available from funding most of its AI capex. So where will the the tens of billions a year come from?

Instead, that burden falls to AI. It’s just recently that SpaceX recast itself as a giant in the hottest tech arena of this century. The shift came in February, when it merged with Musk-controlled xAI, a combo that reportedly boosted SpaceX’s private valuation by $250 billion. AI’s also responsible for the lion’s share of the deficits: In the past five quarters, it’s collected $4 billion in revenues and suffered over twice that amount, $8.9 billion, in operating losses.

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As Trainer observes, the losses from Space, and especially AI–despite Starlink’s success––place SpaceX as a whole dead last among all of its peers in broadband and mobile and in AI, measured by both profitability and return on invested capital. It scored -7% and -3% respectively in those categories last year, far behind Comcast (12% and 6%), AT&T (17% and 4%), Amazon (11% and 14%), and even Coreweave (10% and 1%).

That company-wide deficit in profitability could potentially raises questions about it will fund its gigantic requirement for the capex required to deliver on its promise make its AI side a supreme winner.

SpaceX is rapidly expanding at its portfolio of data centers newly acquired from xAI. The flagships are the aptly-named Colossus I and II facilities in Memphis covering a total of 2 million square feet. It’s also spending $20 billion on a new hyper-scale center in Mississippi. Since the start of 2025, the AI side has lavished $20.4 billion on infrastructure, two-thirds of the SpaceX’s total capes over that span. In Q1, the prized segment’s bill came to a staggering $7.7 billion. Last year, AI absorbed the equivalent of 60% of the overall enterprise’s R&D, and the number for Q1 hit $3.5 billion, twice the dollars spent a year ago.

The math suggests that Musk is marshaling his genius for hype, as well as legendary reputation as a visionary, to create a highly-overvalued stock. Hence, the IPO’s generated such seldom-seen excitement that it’s expected to raise $80 billion, yet will require SpaceX to sell only around 5% of its shares. It would appear, then, that SpaceX will be amass warchest sizable enough to fund a few years of AI investment on its down.

But as Trainer spotlights, that’s not the case. As he points out, SpaceX has pre-pledged $62.8 billion, 78% of the expected proceeds, for payments to third parties. Almost exactly one-third each will go to Valor Equity Partners, a major early investor, Musk’s X Corp. and xAI creditors holders for repayment of debt, and Echostar for the “Spectrum Acquisition Closing.” That leaves less than $18 billion to devote towards growing SpaceX, principally by financing the promised explosion in AI compute capacity. Keep in mind that the AI area devoured more than amount just in the past five quarters.

The problem: $18 billion won’t last long, given the escalation in the AI spend, not just on capex, but operating expenses and R&D. It’s clear from the S-1 that the free cash flow from the rest of the company can fund just a piddling portion of what’s needed. By Fortune‘s estimate, the rest of SpaceX outside of AI last year generated just $1 billion free cash flow that could potentially support what Musk sees as its principal engine. The prospectus also talks about floating more shares and issuing debt to keep data center build rushing forward. But those moves will cost shareholders in dilution and rising interest expense.

Perhaps the most important statement in the entire, roughly 400 page document comes on page 53, where SpaceX details the immense expense and long timeline needed to mine the super-rich AI lode. The prospectus states, “We expect to allocate substantial capital to expand our compute infrastructure, and we expect a multi-year investment horizon before these deployments translate into sustained positive AI Segment Adjusted EBITDA. During this investment period, our capital expenditures will scale as quickly.” Keep in mind that’s “scaling up” from capex that in Q1 alone, reached a towering $7.7 billion.

The effusive document also reveals how heavily SpaceX is leaning on its new AI arm to achieve the explosive growth in revenues and profits needed to reward investors buying in at a $1. 5 trillion valuation. Page 11 displays one of the S-1 chief set-pieces, a chart showing the total addressable markets for each of its three segments. SpaceX projects its total TAM at a staggering $28.5 trillion. The corker: Of that total, AI accounts for $26.5 trillion or 93%. As Trainer writes, “Large TAMs provide strong growth potential. They also invite competition.” SpaceX is moving from relying on a satellite business it dominates to a field that’s lured a pantheon of the world’s most successful enterprises, from Microsoft to Google. The pie will expand fast, but sundry rivals will be vying for the pieces––a scenario that’s sure to pressure prices and margins.

Trainer’s a master of using discount models to forecast how much companies must earn in the future to justify huge market caps today. His analysis posits that to deliver decent returns to shareholders at a $1.5 trillion valuation, SpaceX would need to be booking $189 billion in annual profits by 2035. At $1.75 trillion, the bogey rises to $245 billion. For 2025, no U.S. company came close to even the lower number. As Trainer avows, Musk is counting on “Out of this World Profits” to ring the bell. And keep in mind, SpaceX is debuting as an enterprise that’s in the red.

If investors should focus on one item in the S-1, it’s not the gauzy stuff about solar powered data centers in orbit, but Musk’s frank admission that making money in AI will cost a ton and take a long time. Folks and funds may be right to back him. But though the spirits over the most eagerly awaited IPO are super-high, the risks are just as big.

The Fortune 500 Innovation Forum will convene Fortune 500 executives, U.S. policy officials, top founders, and thought leaders to help define what’s next for the American economy, Nov. 16-17 in Detroit. Apply here.

About the Author

By Shawn TullySenior Editor-at-Large

Shawn Tully is a senior editor-at-large at Fortune, covering the biggest trends in business, aviation, politics, and leadership.

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The Boring Company yes Elon Musk put this up. Ireland, it would have been CRH which is now quoted top 500 in US stocks but this below is real progress going forward

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Order Order Order … why do we always see war in the near distance when we witness this discipline by so many people under the control of their Government and Leaders

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Clash Report: Dr Yu Jie : China Foreign Policy Expert, Chatham House. Did you know China & Russia share a 4,300 km border?

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