The world ahead: Will you (not) marry me? | The Economist: The world ahead on acast

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What will the future look like for CCTV surveillance? We ask our technology correspondent halhod in 'The World ahead' podcast

 

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natashaloder Much ado about distraction

natashaloder As a business opp, how addictive is it? for recurring income we need users to be comming back every day, like alcohol and cigarettes... can we get some nicotine in it? can we get some opioid precursors? Then we need police tests that work so we can lock abusers up! 🤷‍♀️🤦‍♀️

natashaloder From a children and parent perspective. A pint at a bar, or a joint in a cafe? I find it very troublesome to watch this trend. I further suspect that journalists at The Economist are looking forward to getting high without breaking the law. Abusing The Economist to get their will

natashaloder DavidLenigas When the wheels fall of the rest of the market in 2019 cannabis biz shares and the outsider natural resource development stocks like DOR AAAP PREM will shine through

natashaloder Aurora!

natashaloder I love people.

natashaloder Interesting days ahead

natashaloder okothkenneth

natashaloder American Ethane. In addition to Voloshin and Yuriev , its shareholders have remained Konstantin Nikolaev and Andrey Kuatbaev. Both are on the Board of Directors of American Ethane.

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The world ahead: Will you (not) marry me? | The Economist: The world ahead on acastWhy will civil partnerships become more common – among straight people? What will the future look like for CCTV surveillance? Also, the business opportunities in North America for retailing cannabis. Simon Long hosts. Music by Chris Zabriskie "Candlepower" (CC x 4.0)
Source: TheEconomist - 🏆 6. / 92 Read more »

The Week ahead: The great emu bubble | The Economist: The week ahead on acastIn this episode we dive into stories from The Economist’s festive double issue. In the 1980s Texas farmers looking for alternative meat sources pinned their hopes on the emu, an enormous and leggy bird. What can today’s market-watchers learn from the great emu bubble? We explore the curiously dangerous history of harmony in choral music. And in Belgium, the renovation of the world’s largest African museum at last confronts the country’s horrific colonial past. Jason Palmer hosts. I quite like ostrich burgers so if emu tastes anything like that I'd welcome that bubble back 👍 My start up rents scooters to emus. We saw it in the grocery store here at western N.C. foothills didn't sell too well, Turkey burgers still aren't selling.
Source: TheEconomist - 🏆 6. / 92 Read more »

The Week ahead: The great emu bubble | The Economist: The week ahead on acastIn this episode we dive into stories from The Economist’s festive double issue. In the 1980s Texas farmers looking for alternative meat sources pinned their hopes on the emu, an enormous and leggy bird. What can today’s market-watchers learn from the great emu bubble? We explore the curiously dangerous history of harmony in choral music. And in Belgium, the renovation of the world’s largest African museum at last confronts the country’s horrific colonial past. Jason Palmer hosts. Wrong 'discreet'. Discrete. Thank you Richard
Source: TheEconomist - 🏆 6. / 92 Read more »

The Week ahead: The great emu bubble | The Economist: The week ahead on acastIn this episode we dive into stories from The Economist’s festive double issue. In the 1980s Texas farmers looking for alternative meat sources pinned their hopes on the emu, an enormous and leggy bird. What can today’s market-watchers learn from the great emu bubble? We explore the curiously dangerous history of harmony in choral music. And in Belgium, the renovation of the world’s largest African museum at last confronts the country’s horrific colonial past. Jason Palmer hosts. does it include the severed hands Yes! We need a Museum for Perpetual Self-Flagellation! Have Mongols, Ottomans, Chinese, Arabs and Aztecs confronted their colonial history?
Source: TheEconomist - 🏆 6. / 92 Read more »