AUSTRALIA - Global warming is the new religion of First World urban elites. Geologist Ian Plimer takes a contrary view, arguing that man-made climate change is a con trick perpetuated by environmentalists
BEIJING - Some 13 million abortions are carried out in China each year, in part because there is little education about contraception or disease for the rising numbers of young people who are having sex, state media said on Thursday.
WASHINGTON - Despite his public-relations blitz over the past two weeks to promote his plans to reform the nation's health-care system — including holding two town halls on Wednesday — President Barack Obama has lost ground on this issue with the American public, according to the latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll.
UK - After a long day at work many people enjoy a sociable pint in their local. With a £10 note you could buy two or three pints of beer and still get some change from the barman. But that £10 could also buy you Class A drugs on some streets of the UK.
UK - Police should take a "smarter" approach to tackling drugs to reduce levels of violent crime, a think tank has said. The UK Drug Policy Commission's report says the government's strategy focuses too much on seizures and arrests and not enough on reducing harm.
ISRAEL - Legions of senior American officials have descended on Jerusalem recently, but the most important of them has been Defense Secretary Robert Gates. His central objective was to dissuade Israel from carrying out military strikes against Iran's nuclear weapons facilities.
UK - Organic food is no healthier than ordinary food, a large independent review has concluded. There is little difference in nutritional value and no evidence of any extra health benefits from eating organic produce, UK researchers found.
USA - "Are globalist fearmongers driving the media to panic the public into universal health care solutions? Or federally-mandated vaccinations?"
USA - Is history repeating itself at Goldman Sachs? In late 2006, Goldman shrewdly began backing away from the residential mortgage market. With little fanfare, the firm began aggressively hedging its exposure to home loans, in particular mortgages to borrowers with shaky credit histories.
UK - The Pope has condemned as 'disgusting' a taxpayer-funded exhibition in which visitors are urged to deface the Bible. Visitors were offered pens by gallery bosses so they could scrawl comments on the text - leading to a host of puerile and obscene remarks.
GERMANY - Investment banks, of all things, are making serious money again, thanks in part to government aid. Ironically, they are benefiting from the crisis they helped to create. As profits go up, so do salaries - only this time, it's the taxpayers who are shouldering the risks.
CHINA - China allowed foreign reporters a rare glimpse inside an army base on Tuesday, part of a charm offensive apparently aimed at countering foreign fears over the nation's military build-up.
WASHINGTON - The United States and China are striking a conciliatory tone in their public comments during economic talks, although that hasn't stopped China from posing some pointed questions behind closed doors about such issues as America's soaring budget deficit.
USA/UK - A concerted effort to start unprecedented talks between Taliban and British and American envoys was outlined yesterday in a significant change in tactics designed to bring about a breakthrough in the attritional, eight-year conflict in Afghanistan.
UK - Most Britons believe the increasingly bloody war in Afghanistan is "unwinnable" and want troops pulled out, a poll suggested on Tuesday, as more soldiers' bodies were flown home.