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Tech Apr 23, 2026

Apple Patches Critical iOS 18 Vulnerability Exposing Deleted Messages

Apple released a critical update for iOS 18 to address a security flaw where deleted messages remai…
The Critical Privacy Flaw in iOS 18 Apple has released a software update for iPhones and iPads running iOS 18 to address a significant security vulnerability that exposed deleted private communications to law enforcement. The bug allowed forensic tools to extract message content that had been marked for deletion or automatically removed by messaging apps, due to a flaw in how the operating system handled notification caches. How Law Enforcement Exploited the Notification Cache The vulnerability was first brought to light by 404 Media, which reported that the FBI successfully used forensic tools to extract deleted Signal messages from a suspect's device. The issue stemmed from the fact that the content of messages was displayed in system notifications and subsequently stored in the device's database, even after the user deleted the messages within the app. Notification Retention: Notifications marked for deletion were unexpectedly retained on the device for up to a month. Signal's Response: Meredith Whittaker, president of Signal, called for the fix, stating that "notifications for deleted messages shouldn't remain in any OS notification database." Backporting: Apple backported the security patch to older versions of iOS 18 to ensure a broad range of devices were protected. The Future of OS-Level Privacy Protections This incident highlights a growing tension between operating system design and end-to-end encryption promises. For users relying on self-destructing features—such as the timer in Signal or WhatsApp—to protect sensitive conversations from authorities, this bug represented a critical failure point. As privacy activists express alarm over the ease with which law enforcement bypassed these security measures, the industry can expect increased pressure on OS developers to ensure that notification handling does not compromise user privacy.
#Apple #iOS 18 #Signal
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Politics Apr 22, 2026

Trump's Economic Backfire: When Short-Term Priorities Become Political Liabilities

Trump's political strategy of prioritizing immediate personal interests over broader moral consider…
The Lead: Trump's Economic CalculusThe airport in Las Vegas last Friday afternoon was what you might expect for a WrestleMania weekend. Packed terminal. Delays stacking up. Nobody going anywhere. Then we heard why. Air Force One was on the ground. Everything stopped. No one was taking off until the president finished doing his business.People were doing what people do. Checking their phones. Standing up like something might have changed. Sitting back down when it hadn't. When Air Force One finally started moving, a few people across Terminal B jumped to their feet. Plenty of us, myself included, didn't. I sat staring the opposite way, where I could clearly read the president's name atop his Vegas hotel. Power moves. The rest of us wait.The Political Strategy: Narrowing EmpathySitting in that terminal, it didn't feel like a theory. Trump and the movement around him understand this very human limitation well enough to exploit it. For more than a decade now, they have run a politics of deliberate narrowing. They tell us to distrust the press that extends our vision, distrust the institutions that ask us to consider strangers, and distrust empathy itself as weakness. The same people who wrap themselves in scripture and spectacle tell us it is naïve to care about those you will never meet.Now Trump needs that same public to hold a war in its moral imagination. Traveling home to Cleveland for my uncle's funeral, I had been thinking about a quick Sunday drive to Pittsburgh to visit family and my mother's grave. I decided against it. Didn't even rent the car. Gas prices were a main reason why. That isn't a rhetorical device. That's just what's true.The Economic Impact: Gas Prices as Political BarometerGas is averaging a little more than $4 per gallon nationally, more than a dollar higher than before the war began. In the Bay Area, I'm paying nearly $7 per gallon. This time last year, the national average was a little more than $3, and we thought that was high. Trump's reckless war shows up for most Americans as a number at a gas pump, not as images or moral reckoning. The war arrives in our wallets. As a calculation about whether a trip is worth making, or whether a car is worth using at all. As pressure, immediate and cumulative, it worms its way into the margins of a life.That ledger extends well beyond our shores. The same oil shock Americans feel at the pump is devastating economies that have far less cushion to absorb it. The bombing of a girls' school in Iran, believed to be caused by the US, was a war crime. As we see from our own school shootings, though, kids dying doesn't hold the attention of the American news consumer quite like gas prices. That is an indictment of us all, but our line of sight is partly to blame. Even worse, the aperture did not narrow on its own.The Political Consequences: The Instrument That Built TrumpAmericans don't need a moral case against this war. They have a gas receipt. Trump is being undone by the instrument he built. The movement that spent years training people not to extend their concern beyond the visible is now being judged exactly the way it taught people to judge everything else – by what it costs me, now, this week, at this pump.The numbers reflect that. Foreign policy barely registers as the public's top concern. Gas prices do. So do grocery bills, housing costs and healthcare. The White House understands this, which is why it no longer explains the war in terms of what it destroys. It explains the war in terms of when gas prices come down. The administration has not even been able to keep its own story straight about when that pain ends. The treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, predicted $3 gas by summer. On Sunday, energy secretary Chris Wright said we might not hit that rate until 2027. Trump then said that was "totally wrong", but who is to say?The Future Outlook: Beyond Economic ReliefSo let me say this plainly: if gas prices come down and Trump's ratings rebound, that will not mean this was worth it. It will mean the trick worked. Trump breaks something that was functioning, extracts an enormous cost in money and blood and moral credibility, halfway fixes it through belated and chaotic diplomacy, and claims victory. The country, exhausted and relieved, exhales. Moves on. I imagine that is what the administration is counting on.Back in Las Vegas, Air Force One eventually lifted off. The runway cleared. Flights resumed. Within the hour, most of that terminal had boarded, found their seats, and was somewhere over the desert, drinks in hand, the delay mostly forgotten. That's the mechanism. The pain recedes, and we let it take the memory with it. Power moved. The rest of us waited, paid, adjusted, and got on with it. Don't. Not this time.Remember the math you did at the pump, or the trip you reconsidered. This didn't have to happen. None of us ever had to pay this cost at all, even though the people responsible are already telling us that it was worth it. The price of gas may yet come down. That isn't accountability, though. It isn't a reckoning. We may have the privilege of worrying about such things, but we don't have the luxury of forgetting.
#Donald Trump #Iran War #Gas Prices
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Politics Apr 22, 2026

Politics Set to Dominate LA 2028 Olympics After Milano Cortina

The Milano Cortina Games ended in spectacle, but the political undercurrents foreshadow a far more …
Milano Cortina 2026 closed with light, spectacle and speeches about unity, yet the event revealed a simmering political tension that is likely to intensify at the Los Angeles 2028 Games. Political Undercurrents at Milano Cortina 2026 American athletes used the Winter Games to model a nuanced patriotism. Alysa Liu, the daughter of a Chinese dissident, celebrated personal gratitude rather than geopolitical triumph. Chloe Kim and veterans like Mikaela Shiffrin and Jessie Diggins argued that loving one’s country can coexist with dissent, echoing Governor Spencer Cox’s call for athletes to stay out of politics. Nonetheless, former President Donald Trump continued to weaponize sport, posting an AI‑generated video of himself scoring a goal against Canada and engaging in a public spat with freeskier Hunter Hess. The clash highlighted how quickly political narratives can infiltrate Olympic coverage. Media Rights and Viewership Numbers Signal High Stakes NBC secured U.S. broadcast rights through 2032 for $7.75 bn. Winter Games viewership jumped 94 % from Beijing 2022, averaging 24 m viewers across prime windows. Streaming reached 14.8 bn minutes in the U.S., more than double the total of all previous Winter Games combined. Team USA returned with a record 33 medals, including 12 golds. How the U.S. Political Climate Is Reshaping the Olympic Narrative The Olympics have become a proxy battleground for culture wars. Both sides of the aisle amplify athletes’ statements: Kamala Harris’ office labeled Liu “woke,” while Trump’s social‑media presence turns every victory into a political rally. Governor Cox’s plea to keep politics off the field underscores a growing tension between sporting ideals and partisan exploitation. What to Expect at Los Angeles 2028 If Trump remains a political force in 2028, he could appear on the opening ceremony stage, turning the Games into a national campaign platform. NBC’s robust rights deal and soaring streaming metrics suggest the U.S. audience will be larger and more engaged than ever, providing fertile ground for political messaging. Athletes are likely to face intensified scrutiny, with social‑media abuse and media questioning becoming routine. The definition of patriotism will be tested on the world’s biggest sporting stage, potentially reshaping how future Olympians navigate personal belief and national representation.
#Los Angeles 2028 #Milano Cortina 2026 #Donald Trump
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Entertainment Apr 22, 2026

La Haine Director Predicts AI Will Dominate Film Industry Within Two Years

La Haine director Mathieu Kassovitz predicts that within two years, audiences won't distinguish bet…
The AI Cinema Revolution BeginsMathieu Kassovitz, the acclaimed director of "La Haine," has made a bold prediction that within two years, audiences will no longer distinguish between human and AI actors in films. At the World AI film festival in Cannes, Kassovitz embraced artificial intelligence as "the last artistic tool we need" and dismissed concerns about copyright, declaring "Fuck copyright." The award-winning filmmaker is currently developing an almost entirely AI-enabled film based on a 1940s wartime comic book by Edmond-François Calvo.The Technical Breakthrough in AI PerformanceKassovitz revealed that he was recently stunned by an AI-generated character with "an emotion in his eyes that made me shiver," challenging the notion that AI characters appear soulless. He predicts the emergence of "AI superstars" with millions of followers that audiences can interact with directly through their phones. The director has paused production on his film adaptation "The Beast is Dead" to explore using AI technology, which he claims will reduce visual effects costs from $50-60 million to $25 million.The Financial Impact on Film ProductionThe cost implications of AI in cinema are substantial. Traditional US and European studios had estimated Kassovitz's visual effects at $50-60 million, but with AI technology, the cost drops to $25 million—a 50% reduction. This financial disruption is prompting Hollywood studios to integrate more AI in their operations, with investments in AI companies and tech leaders being hired to steer the new technology. David Ellison, CEO of Paramount (recent owner of Warner Bros), stated: "AI is here, and it's going to be transformative across all aspects of the business."The Industry's Shifting Attitudes Toward AIThe film industry remains divided on AI's role. While Kassovitz enthusiastically embraces the technology, the main Cannes film festival recently announced an AI ban for films in its official competition. Festival president Iris Knobloch claimed that "AI imitates very well, but it will never feel deep emotions." Meanwhile, Val Kilmer, who died a year ago, recently appeared in a trailer for "As Deep as the Grave," with his performance AI-generated with permission from his estate. Critics fear AI-enabled cinema lacks soul and will leave actors, composers, and creative craftspeople redundant.The Future of AI in EntertainmentKassovitz is setting up an AI film studio in Paris, comparing it to George Lucas creating Industrial Light and Magic for Star Wars. He predicts that "in two years from now nobody will care" whether film characters are created by AI or played by actors. While dismissing copyright concerns—"La Haine was made from other films. They stole also. I stole shots from Scorsese"—he acknowledged he would sue if someone "is doing some stupid shit" with his work. The industry faces over 140 pending copyright cases against AI companies, with lawyers arguing that tech platforms should compensate creators for using their copyrighted material.
#Mathieu Kassovitz #AI in Film #La Haine
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Science Apr 22, 2026

Africa's Fungal Frontier: Scientists Race to Catalog Continent's Hidden Kingdoms

As Madagascar's first mycologist leads efforts to catalog the island's vast fungal diversity, Afric…
The LeadMadagascar has long been celebrated for its remarkable wildlife, with the vast majority of its species found nowhere else on the planet. But when discussing the island nation's endemic treasures, fungi are often left out of the conversation, despite their critical importance to life on Earth.The Fungal Frontier"Fungi are some of the most important things in the world," says Anna Ralaiveloarisoa, a Malagasy scientist and the first homegrown mycologist in Madagascar. "They feed 90% of terrestrial plants. Without them, there is no life on the Earth." Ralaiveloarisoa is working to classify each of the 200 new species she has identified so far, though she faces significant challenges: trying to preserve mushrooms without proper infrastructure; journeying to remote spots in the jungle without reliable roads or electricity; and having no other experts to collaborate with in the country.Less than 1% of the estimated 100,000 species of fungi in Madagascar have been scientifically described, highlighting the vast unknown territory that remains to be explored.The Conservation MovementAcross the globe, protecting fungi has lagged significantly behind the conservation of plants and animals. While the first organisations dedicated to protecting birds were established in the 19th century, fungi had to wait until the 21st century. The International Society for Fungal Conservation (ISFC) was established in 2010, and the first conservation nonprofit organisation, the Fungi Foundation, was created in 2012.Since those groups were established, a global movement has emerged. The first conservation legislation to include fungi was passed in Chile in 2013. The Fungi Foundation began to champion the phrase "fauna, flora, funga" to encourage fungi's inclusion in more conservation frameworks.The African ConnectionThough the obstacles are significant, they are ones Ralaiveloarisoa shares with many mycologists in nearby nations. She is part of an emerging cohort of scientists across Africa who are pioneering the study and conservation of fungi in their home countries.Last November, many met for the first time at the International Congress on Fungal Conservation, held in Cotonou, Benin. The conference drew mycologists from 27 countries across Africa, Europe, the Americas and Asia, with several hailing from African countries where they serve as the only – or one of very few – mycologists in the nation."What an exciting time: from almost nothing 20 years ago, fungal conservation has evolved from a little-known field into a dynamic global movement," said Nourou Yorou, a mycologist who was recently named general director of the Benin Agency for Science and Innovation. "The challenge is now to plan a future where fungi are firmly placed in the conservation mainstream."The Future OutlookThe momentum behind fungal conservation continues to grow. Other organisations have formed: in 2017, North America's first fungal conservation nonprofit group, Fundis, was created; in 2021, the research organisation SPUN (Society for the Protection of Underground Networks) was cofounded by the evolutionary biologist Toby Kiers.Later this year, the "fungal conservation pledge" first proposed at the UN biodiversity meeting of Cop16 in Colombia in 2024 will be discussed again at the forthcoming biodiversity conference in Armenia. As David Minter, president of the ISFC, notes: "In 2010, it was normal not to mention fungi at all in conservation ... In the future it will look strange if fungi don't get a mention."
#Anna Ralaiveloarisoa #Madagascar #Fungal Conservation
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Environment Apr 22, 2026

Bolivia's Cacao Farmers Defeat Gold Mining Through Local Ordinances

Bolivian cacao farmers successfully fought against gold mining in their region, implementing local …
The Lead: A Victory for Sustainable Agriculture In Bolivia's biodiverse north-west, cacao farmers have achieved a significant victory against the encroaching gold-mining industry. Through collective action and local legislation, farmers in Palos Blancos and Alto Beni have successfully banned mining activities, protecting their organic cacao farms and preserving the region's unique ecosystem. The Agroforestry Model: A Natural Defense Mahogany trees tower above Herminio Mamani as he tends his cacao farm in Bolivia's north-west. As former president of El Ceibo, the country's largest organic cacao co-operative with 1,300 members, Mamani emphasizes that their agroforestry model is vital not only for maintaining cacao quality but also for keeping gold mining at bay. "We cacao producers would never kill an animal here," he explains. "The parcels [of land] can never be monocultures – all the crops grow together." This diverse ecosystem creates a natural barrier against mining operations that require clear-cutting and land disturbance. The Economic Battle: Gold Prices vs. Organic Certification As gold prices surged by more than 64% in 2025, from about $2,000 an ounce in 2020 to record highs above $5,100 an ounce in January, the economic incentive for mining intensified. However, El Ceibo and other co-operatives recognized that mining would threaten their international organic certifications. "Even if small-scale mining were permitted, it's a slippery slope," Mamani warns. "Contamination would be unavoidable, and if we lost our certifications, the price of our cacao would plummet." In 2025, El Ceibo exported 2,000 tonnes of cacao, mostly to Europe and the US, demonstrating the economic viability of their organic approach. The Grassroots Movement: From Protest to Legislation The initiative began in 2017 when a mining dredge appeared on the nearby Boopi River. Communities reacted swiftly with mass protests. "People gathered in mass protest and issued a warning: 'Leave, or we burn your machinery,'" recalls Nancy Chambi, a farmer and Alto Beni councillor. After four years of grassroots pressure, Palos Blancos and Alto Beni passed mining bans in 2021. A 2024 departmental law further legitimized their stance against the national government's support for mining. The Environmental Impact: Preserving Biodiversity About 20 miles from Mamani's protected farm, dredging boats and excavators operate relentlessly along the Kaka River, part of a gold rush that has rerouted waterways and encroached on forests in some of the world's most biodiverse national parks. "I've known Mayaya since I was young, and the river used to be deep and full of fish," says Roberto Gutierrez, a farmer in Alto Beni. "Now the water levels have dropped, pollution has seeped in, and the fish are disappearing." The local mining bans have prevented this environmental devastation in Palos Blancos and Alto Beni. The Future Outlook: A Model for Sustainable Development "We showed people that mining does more harm than good," says Ulises Ariñez, former environment secretary for Palos Blancos. "People have realised that gold is temporary, but agriculture and conservation are for life." As other Bolivian cities face similar mining pressures, these towns are emerging as models for protecting land through local governance. The success of this movement demonstrates how sustainable agriculture can provide both economic resilience and environmental protection in the face of extractive industries.
#Bolivia #cacao farmers #gold mining
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Politics Apr 22, 2026

The Diplomatic Deadlock: Iran's Rejection of US Talks in Islamabad

Iran has officially rejected the invitation for talks in Islamabad, citing US violations of the cea…
Islamabad, Pakistan – Iran has signalled that it has no plans to send negotiators to Islamabad for a new round of talks with the United States, threatening Pakistan’s plans for multiday negotiations between the warring nations less than 48 hours before a fragile ceasefire is set to expire.The Escalation of Hostilities and Diplomatic SilenceIranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei said on Monday Washington had “violated the ceasefire from the beginning of its implementation”, citing the US naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz since April 13, and the overnight capture of an Iranian container ship by the US military as breaches of the truce as well as international law.US Stance: US President Donald Trump announced representatives were heading to Pakistan for a second round of negotiations, accompanied by threats to bomb Iranian energy facilities.Iranian Response: Tehran described the seizure of the Iranian-flagged cargo ship Touska (nearly 900 feet long) as “piracy” and the blockade as “unlawful and criminal”.Delegation: The US team includes Vice President JD Vance, Special Envoy Steve Witkoff, and Jared Kushner.The Strategic Cost of the BlockadeThe immediate trigger for Iran's refusal is the continued enforcement of a naval blockade that began two days after the first round of talks in Islamabad ended on April 11. Analysts suggest this blockade has effectively stalled progress and poisoned the diplomatic atmosphere.Timeline: Blockade started April 13; Ceasefire deadline is Wednesday.Ship Details: The USS Spruance intercepted the Touska in the Gulf of Oman after its crew refused to stop.Analyst View: The gap between public hardline rhetoric and private signals indicates a “dual-track negotiation strategy” aimed at preserving domestic legitimacy while testing conditions.Pakistan's Mediation Under SiegeAs the principal mediator, Pakistan has invested significant diplomatic capital in hosting these talks. Despite sealing off hotels and deploying thousands of police officers to secure the capital, the political will of Tehran appears to be wavering.Preparations: Hotels like the Marriott and Serena were ordered to vacate guests, and roads into the capital's Red Zone were sealed.Leadership Calls: Pakistani PM Shehbaz Sharif spoke with Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian for 45 minutes, discussing regional consensus.Analyst Insight: Diplomats note a stark contrast in negotiation styles: Washington appears to be bringing a “stopwatch” for rapid resolution, while Tehran is armed with a “calendar” for a more measured approach.Outlook: A Ceasefire Extension or Broader Conflict?While a full peace deal remains unlikely this week, the immediate goal is a ceasefire extension. However, the current trajectory suggests a high risk of miscalculation.Immediate Goal: Secure a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to extend the ceasefire by up to 60 days.Risk Factor: Analysts warn that if the US proceeds with threats of destroying Iranian infrastructure while Iran views the blockade as a war crime, the window for diplomacy could close entirely.Conclusion: The most achievable outcome is a limited extension, but the trust deficit is too high for a breakthrough.
#Iran #United States #Pakistan
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Politics Apr 22, 2026

Second Round in Islamabad: Who Are the Main US‑Iran Negotiators?

U.S. officials arrive in Islamabad for a second round of talks with Iran as a two‑week cease‑fire n…
The High‑Stakes Second Round in IslamabadNegotiators from the United States are expected in Pakistan’s capital on April 22, 2026 for a follow‑up to the first session held on April 11. The talks aim to extend a two‑week cease‑fire that is set to expire on Wednesday, while the region reels from the recent capture of the Iranian‑flagged container ship Touska (294 m long) by the U.S. Navy in the Gulf of Oman.Key Figures Steering the US DelegationJD Vance: The 41‑year‑old U.S. vice‑presidential candidate leads the delegation, having headed the first round. A former Marine and Yale Law graduate, Vance is known for his staunch “America First” stance.Jared Kushner: The 45‑year‑old former senior adviser, though without an official title, remains an influential back‑channel player. He co‑led indirect talks in Oman earlier this year.Steve Witkoff: The 69‑year‑old Special Envoy to the Middle East, a real‑estate investor and longtime Trump confidant, partners with Kushner on pre‑war negotiations.Iranian Team and the Void Left by Ali LarijaniMohammad Bagher Ghalibaf: Iran’s 64‑year‑old parliament speaker, a conservative heavyweight with a military background, heads the Iranian side.Abbas Araghchi: The 63‑year‑old foreign minister, a veteran diplomat who helped craft the 2015 nuclear deal, serves as Tehran’s chief negotiator.The team is missing Ali Larijani, the former secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, who was killed in an Israeli airstrike in early March. His death removes a pragmatic bridge between Iran’s security and political establishments.Ceasefire Deadline and Maritime Tensions: The Numbers Behind the CrisisCease‑fire length: 14 days, ending Wednesday.Captured vessel: Touska, 294 m (965 ft) long, seized on April 19, 2026.US‑Iran escalation: The naval incident follows a series of threats, including President Donald Trump's vow to destroy Iranian power infrastructure if a deal is not reached.Regional Implications of a Potential Deal or CollapseA renewed cease‑fire could stabilize Gulf shipping lanes, limit civilian casualties, and open space for broader diplomatic engagement. Conversely, a breakdown may trigger wider military escalation, threaten oil markets, and deepen humanitarian crises across the Middle East.What Comes Next: Scenarios for the Next WeekAnalysts see three likely outcomes: (1) a short‑term extension of the cease‑fire, buying time for a more comprehensive agreement; (2) a stalemate, leaving the Touska seizure unresolved and heightening naval posturing; or (3) a rapid collapse, potentially drawing regional powers into direct conflict. The next 48 hours will be critical as both sides gauge domestic pressures and the willingness of allies to intervene.
#United States #Iran #JD Vance
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Politics Apr 22, 2026

Carney Calls US Dependence a ‘Weakness’ as Canada Eyes Trade Diversification

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney warned that decades‑long economic reliance on the United States…
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney warned that the long‑standing economic partnership with the United States has turned into a strategic “weakness” that must be corrected.Carney Labels US Dependence a Strategic WeaknessIn a ten‑minute video released on Sunday, Carney said Canada must move away from “excessive reliance on any one country.” He cited recent U.S. tariff hikes – levels “last seen during the Great Depression” – as evidence that the relationship is no longer a guaranteed advantage.Economic Stakes: Trade Tariffs and Free‑Trade ReviewU.S. tariffs on Canadian goods have risen sharply under President Donald Trump, prompting concerns in key sectors such as agriculture and manufacturing.A formal review of the United States‑Mexico‑Canada Agreement (USMCA) is scheduled for July 2026, providing a policy window to renegotiate terms.Carney’s Liberal government secured a parliamentary majority in a special election earlier this month, giving it leeway to pursue diversification.Shifting North American Trade DynamicsThe comments signal a broader re‑evaluation of North American integration. While some tariffs have been rolled back, the lingering threat of further protectionism has pushed Canada to explore deeper ties with partners such as China and other Pacific‑rim economies.What Canada’s Diversification Strategy Could Mean Going ForwardAnalysts predict that Canada will accelerate negotiations for bilateral agreements outside the U.S. corridor, potentially boosting exports to Asia by 5‑7% over the next two years. Domestically, the Liberal Party may leverage its new majority to enact policies that reduce supply‑chain vulnerabilities and promote “economic self‑reliance.”
#Mark Carney #Canada #United States
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