Charm Offensive
China Tries a Different Tack With India

Rather than continue the passive-aggressive—and sometimes just aggressive—tit for tat between China and India, the Chinese ambassador to India has chosen a softer tack, penning a couple of choicey op-eds in mainstream Indian newspapers rather than the usual angry rants issued by the foreign office in Beijing.

Bacon-Flavored Progress
China Pioneers Factory Cloning

A Chinese company is mass producing cloned pigs at an unprecedented pace, hinting at what may be the future of how we source our meat and test our medical products. The Beijing Genomic Institute (BGI) is cloning 500 pigs a year at a facility in rural China, and these pigs could be very good for our health, for once.

Winter for Higher-Ed
The Very Model of a Modern Major Terrible

The choir at Canada’s Simon Fraser University has produced an amazing video set to the tune of Gilbert and Sullivan’s “I Am the Very Model of a Modern Major General.” It dramatizes in proper Anglosphere fashion the bad major choices college students these days feel they have. Definitely worth five minutes of your time to enjoy this video, and while you do so keep in mind this graph that continues to make the rounds, most recently on Instapundit.

The Media Catches On to Papal Program

Those who’ve followed the MSM’s coverage of Pope Francis know that it has been soaked in hopes that Francis’ words and gestures may lead to a relaxation of controversial Catholic teachings. But it now looks like the media and other bodies are starting to catch on to what we’ve all along identified as the real priorities: cleaning up the Curia, reforming the Vatican Bank, and building on Benedict’s steps towards a better response to the sex abuse crisis.

Jewcentricity Watch
Professor Calls on Americans with "Jewish-Sounding" Names to Write the Senate

UCLA Prof. Mark Kleiman telling people with “Jewish sounding names” to write their DC representatives to oppose the Iran sanctions bill in the Senate. Apparently, Kleiman thinks that US Senators and Representatives will count email from “Jewish sounding names” as being so important that it will sway their votes. The truth is that Jews don’t actually run the United States, and unless there’s a huge tidal wave of feedback on a hot issue, US politicians tend to do to mail from people with “Jewish sounding names” exactly what they do with 95% of their constituent mail.

The Rebirth of Nationalism
Germans Increasingly Rejecting Blame for WWI

Three new books on World War One that question a German-centric account of the blame for WWI have been selling like hotcakes in Germany— suggesting a growing consensus among Germans that their country is not the main country to blame for the war. Both Germany and Japan are becoming ‘normal countries’ again, reasserting their right to define and act on their national interest. A new generation of Germans is looking at the world and at German history and is likely to see things in different ways than their parents and grandparents.

Selling Citizenship
Passports! Get Your Red Hot European Passports!

It will cost you, but for a little under $1.5 million in fees and investments, you can buy a passport from the tiny island of Malta. That might not sound like such a great deal unless they’re throwing in a falcon, but since Malta is one of the 28 members of the EU, that passport gives you an automatic right to live and work in any member state. This story underscores that the separation of citizenship from residency is growing throughout the world. The world we live in today isn’t the democratic and liberal utopia that we sometimes like to think it is —and it won’t be until it’s as easy for an 18 year old Turk to bum around the US for a summer as it is for US college kids to see Istanbul over the break.

The God Wars
A Six-Year High for Global Religious Hostility

Pew has released a series of new report on global religious freedom, and the results aren’t pretty: religious hostility shot up to a six-year high in 2012. If you’ve been reading the news, you’ll know that religious violence has spiked in the Middle East and in African countries like the Central African Republic. So the increase in countries with high or very high levels of religious tension (20 percent in 2007 to 33 percent today) might not be surprising. But Pew also uncovered some things that may hit closer to home for Westerners.

Winter for Higher-Ed
Another Reason Not to Get a PhD

Graduate programs have been churning out far more PhDs than there are available academic positions, and on top of a desperate job hunt aspiring PhDs increasingly have another problem to worry about: student debt. Unlike other degrees, PhD programs often allow students to attend school for free, receiving tuition waivers, stipends, and fellowships to cover their expenses. But in some disciplines, at least, this is beginning to change as programs accept more students without funding, or provide only meager stipends.

Surrender and tragedy
A Bad Day for India’s Congress Party

It hasn’t been a great day for India’s ruling Congress Party. First Rahul Gandhi, the popular scion of the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty that has ruled India off and on for decades, was ruled out of the running for the premiership in the country’s upcoming national election. Then tragedy struck: the wife of Shashi Tharoor, the Indian Minister of State for Human Resource Development who is well-liked inside and outside India, was found dead in a Delhi hotel room. She apparently took her own life.

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