“Egoismus First”: Medien warnen, dem gemäßigten Trump in Davos zu glauben

“Egoismus First”: Medien warnen, dem gemäßigten Trump in Davos zu glauben
Der Fremde: Donald Trump

  • US-Präsident Donald Trump hat bei seinem Auftritt in Davos mit einer moderaten Rede überrascht
  • Deutsche Medien warnen allerdings davor, nun einen weniger egoistischen Präsidenten zu erwarten

Es war vor allem ein Satz, der am Freitag die Schlagzeigen bestimmte: ”‘America First” bedeutet nicht ‘America Alone’”.

Gesagt hatte diesen Satz der US-Präsident Donald Trumpbeim Weltwirtschaftsgipfel in Davos. Seine knallharte “Amerika zuerst”-Doktrin solle nicht als purer Egoismus verstanden werden, wollte Trump damit mitteilen.

Deutsche Medien schenken diesen überraschend gemäßigten Worten des Präsidenten allerdings keinen Glauben. 

3 Lehren aus dem Auftritt des Präsidenten in Davos.

1. Der Dealmaker

In einem sind sich alle Kommentatoren einig: Trump hat seinen Besuch in der Schweiz vor allem zur Eigenwerbung genutzt. 

Trump habe den “world leaders” sein “Amerika zuerst”-Programm schmackhaft machen wollen, kommentiert die “Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung”.

► “Denn was er vor allem tat, war, Werbung zu machen: für den Wirtschaftsstandort Amerika; dafür, dort zu investieren, Arbeitsplätze zu schaffen, Geld zu verdienen.”

Vermutlich sogar mit Erfolg. Einige Unternehmer schienen ganz angetan zu sein.

Auch die “Welt” schreibt: “Die Rede des US-Präsidenten in Davos war nicht die eines Staatsmanns, der auch die Weltbelange im Blick behält.”

► Sondern der Immobilienmogul habe als eben jener Geschäftsmann gesprochen, “der er immer war und der er immer bleiben wird”.

2. Kaum verhüllter Egoismus

Einige Besucher mochten von dem handzahmen Präsidenten zunächst überrascht gewesen sein. 

► Aber, gibt die “Welt” zu bedenken: “Amerika zuerst, aber nicht allein – das hört sich gut an, heißt aber eben auch: die anderen immer an zweiter Stelle.”

Die ARD-“Tagesschau” zitiert einen Schweizer Unternehmer, der Trumps Rede einfach nur “schlimm” fand. Denn Trump fördere den globalen Egoismus.

Trump habe nicht verstanden, dass es in Davos um Dialog, nicht um Alleingänge gehe, kommentiert die “Tagesschau”.

► Und spitzt seinen Besuch zu auf die Formel: “Egoismus first”.

3. Der wahre Trump zeigt sich, wenn der Teleprompter aus ist

Dass die Rede von Trump so zahm ausfiel, habe auch am Redenschreiber gelegen, berichtet “Spiegel Online”. Nach dem Abgang des nationalistischen Beraters Steve Bannon sorgt normalerweise Stephen Miller, ebenfalls ein Hardliner, für Trumps Knallhart-Ansagen.

Doch Miller habe keine Zeit gehabt. “Darum hatte Gary Cohn, nationaler Wirtschaftsberater, die Davoser Rede verfasst”, heißt es auf “Spiegel Online”.

► Cohn wisse, was die Unternehmer in Davos hören wollen, denn er war einst bei der Investmentbank Goldman Sachs.

Der wahre Trump habe sich dann ohnehin erst nach der Rede, die er vom Manuskript abgelesen hatte, gezeigt, kommentiert die “Welt”.

► “Nur Minuten dauerte es, bis der alte, der gewohnte Trump wieder unverkennbar durchschien”, heißt es in dem Bericht.

Dann attackierte Trump nicht nur mit haltlosen Vorwürfen seine einstige Konkurrentin im Wahlkampf, Hillary Clinton, sondern beschimpfte einmal mehr die in seinen Augen verlogenen Medien. 

Es setzte Buhrufe aus dem Publikum.   

www.huffingtonpost.de/entry/donald-trump-davos_de_5a6c15e8e4b01fbbefb1fa68

SZA On How She Plans To Follow ‘Ctrl’ And Using Her New-Found ‘Loud Voice’ To Create Cultural ‘Ripples’

SZA On How She Plans To Follow ‘Ctrl’ And Using Her New-Found ‘Loud Voice’ To Create Cultural ‘Ripples’

SZA’s debut album, ‘Ctrl’, was one of 2017′s most critically acclaimed releases, and she’s showing no signs of slowing down. Ahead of her performance at this year’s Grammys, the singer spoke to us about what she plans to do differently second time around, and her new collaboration with Gap.

If you’re not up to speed with SZA, now would be the ideal time to catch up.

Having previously penned tracks for artists including Beyoncé, Travis Scott and Rihanna, last year saw the singer/songwriter release her much-awaited debut album ‘Ctrl’ which was met with universal critical acclaim, followed by an impressive five Grammy nominations (for perspective, that’s more than Ed Sheeran, Coldplay or any other female artist managed this year).

SZA’s 2018 is already off to an exciting start, with Gap having invited her to take part in their star-studded ‘Logo remix’ campaign, naming her as someone who is “remixing culture” with her musical contributions.

“I don’t think that I alone am remixing culture,” the singer – full name Solána Imani Rowe – says, when asked about the campaign, “It’s more like our culture is undergoing a transformation of its own.

“I don’t know what the hell’s going on with our culture. It’s something bizarre. It’s weird it’s, like, digitising and becoming analogue at the same time.

“And I think people are a part of that change, and that shift and that feel… I’m just honoured to be considered anything, like, at all!” 

I never imagined people would relate to my random thoughts… I’m just grateful to not be alone.”

Though the woman herself is clearly reluctant to play up to the impact she’s already having on culture so early in her career, ‘Ctrl’ was one of 2017’s most celebrated debuts, largely thanks to SZA’s frank and confessional songwriting.

But while the honesty of her lyrics is something that has made her one of the most endearing new voices in music in recent years, SZA (pronounced like “sizza”, if you’re wondering) has admitted she “never imagined” people would relate to what she describes as her “random thoughts”.

“Honestly, I didn’t think this album would be well-received at all… I’m honestly just grateful to not be alone,” she reveals, “I’m just grateful that people don’t think I suck, or that my thoughts don’t make any sense.

“I thought I was being way more haphazard than I ended up being to other people. Which is wild.”

Still at an early stage in what looks to be a promising career, SZA’s so-called “random thoughts” have meant a legion of devoted fans are now looking to her as an influential voice, something she’s clearly not taking for granted.

 

Because of her newfound popularity, SZA says she now finds herself thinking more before she speaks, rather than giving “a hyper-emotional response to topics… which doesn’t really push anything forward”.

She explains: “Because I have a loud voice right now, it’s like, damn I have to be careful what kind of waves I create, or even my own thoughts. Because it’s selfish, you know, to be impulsive.

“And even though it’s also important to have carte blanche and be yourself, I just feel super-connected to to the people that… respect me.”

When we speak, SZA is gearing up for the Grammys, where she’s scheduled to perform for the first time (“I’m actually getting my hair and nails done for Grammys evening as I talk to you, and it’s just bizarre to even think about that happening at all”).

She’s reluctant to spill any gossip about what we should expect from her performance, other than she’s “trying something that I’ve always wanted to try, technologically”, but it’s apparent that this signifies a milestone moment in her career, and it’s something she’s determined not to take for granted.

And that’s without even factoring in that she has five chances to bag an award on the night.

“I would be deeply, deeply honoured,” she says, on the subject of winning, “It would mean that I was on the right track.

“I really think that my whole life I’ve always been checking for a sign that I was on the right track.

“But I feel like even being considered is that sign. So I’m happy already! Man, I’m so grateful. I’m so grateful.

“I feel like everything I’ve done until now has prepared me for this moment, this day, this performance, the experience. So… I don’t know what to tell people, because I don’t even know what to expect. I just… expect for it to be a culmination of all my experiences and everything I’ve learned.”

Still riding the wave of ‘Ctrl’, SZA is already looking ahead to her follow-up release, and outright dismisses the notion that the success of her debut has piled on the pressure over what comes next. In fact, the opposite seems to be true. 

Because I have a loud voice right now… I have to be careful what kind of waves I create.”

While SZA has spoken candidly in the past about how difficult she found the process of making ‘Ctrl’ thanks to her own insecurities and struggles with anxiety, it sounds as though she’s way more fired up this time around.

“I’m committed to making this album the best album of my life,” she says, “I know exactly what I did wrong on [‘Ctrl’] and… nobody knows exactly what they did wrong, but I know what I could have done better and I know exactly what I want to do [now].

“I’m not afraid of the kind of things that I was before, I’m way more excited to make an album than I could have ever been.”

And although it’s the personal nature of her lyrics that have helped launch her success, SZA says she’s taking a more outward approach with her follow-up music and writing from a “different perspective and stream of consciousness”.

“I definitely feel like it’s less [about] how I see what’s happened to me and more how I see what’s happening to the world,” she explains, “I’ve read so many crazy ass stories this year that just broke my heart, like things I just couldn’t believe were happening to people in the world. Kids in the world turning up dead with no addresses… just bizarre things.

“So I’m, like, writing from a perspective of… in and out of it. I have a lot of thoughts that I have to get out.”

But while SZA says that she’s definitely up for “taking more risks” with her music as she moves forward, she balks at the idea that this will be her chance to try and “change minds”.

“You can’t change anyone’s mind about anything,” she insists, “You just have to, like, magnify yourself so you can at least create a ripple.

“And then your ripple does what it’s supposed to do, it affects who it’s meant to affect, it connects, and then spreads to other people. But the idea is not to change anyone’s minds, that’s impossible.”

I’ve done the whole yell at other people to make them feel the way I feel about certain things… and it didn’t really get me anywhere.”

She continues: “I’ve done the whole yell at other people to make them feel the way I feel about certain things, and make them feel stupid about believing what they believe. And it didn’t really get me anywhere.

“I feel like the things that I feel passionately about, I’m down to feel passionately about, publicly, I’m down to be a face, or whatever it calls for, but I don’t feel like I need to design a purpose.

“I feel like everybody has a purpose designed already… you, me, everyone. You just have to really magnify yourself and have that confidence in yourself to really unlock your purpose. And I feel like I just figured out that’s what you’re even supposed to do.”

“So, I don’t even know where I’m supposed to go from here,” she concludes, “But we’ll see.”

Watch the GAP Logo Remix film below:

www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/sza-ctrl-gap-new-album-grammys_uk_5a68c02de4b0dc592a0eb9e1

UK Firms Will Move Abroad If Brexit Trade Deal Not Agreed Soon, Lords Warn

UK Firms Will Move Abroad If Brexit Trade Deal Not Agreed Soon, Lords Warn
UK firms will begin to activate their ‘Brexit contingency plans’ and move abroad if a trade deal with the EU is not agreed soon, a House of Lords committee has warned.

In their latest report, members of the EU financial affairs committee say both Britain and Europe risk market fragmentation and financial instability if they can’t agree a deal on market access once the UK has left the bloc.

Peers have called on the government to clarify what outcome it wants from phase two of Brexit negotiations and on transitional arrangements post-March 2019, or face companies putting in place “costly and potentially irreversible” contingency plans.

Committee chair and Lib Dem Baroness Falkner of Margravine said: “There is a risk of market fragmentation and financial instability if the UK loses access to the EU, as well as harm to customers and businesses. The UK’s financial services sector is a global asset and both sides should want it to continue serving clients throughout Europe.

“The financial services sector needs greater clarity from the government about what it wants after Brexit, and it needs it now. A transition period is meaningless without a destination.

“Brexit is an opportunity to tailor the regulatory regime to strengthen the UK’s financial services sector, but the UK must remain committed to the international standards put in place following the financial crisis and continue to shape them to ensure a robust regulatory regime.”

Several firms from a variety of industries, including financiers Goldman Sachs, have warned they are fast-approaching a point when they will have no choice but to leave the UK.

The European Medicines Agency announced late last year that it would move its headquarters from London to Amsterdam.

Lib Dem leader Vince Cable said the Lords’ report should act as a “serious warning” to Theresa May’s cabinet following ructions within the Conservative Party this week.

Philip Hammond angered Tory Brexiteers by suggesting Britain and the EU would move only “very modestly” apart after the UK exits the union, but Downing Street insisted the PM still had “full confidence” in the chancellor on Friday.

Cable said: “This is a serious warning from a respected committee. Philip Hammond’s comments this week that the UK and EU economies will diverge only ‘very modestly’ shows he is desperate to reassure the City that nothing is really  going to change.

“But obviously things will. Serious business people will, therefore, be assessing their options, including whether or not to relocate to other EU countries.

“The Conservatives must stop their infighting and at least draw up some kind of coherent plan on what they want from Brexit talks.”

www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/uk-firms-will-move-abroad-if-brexit-trade-deal-not-agreed-soon-lords-warn_uk_5a6b47b1e4b06e253266efdf

Gay Journalist Facing Persecution in Uzbekistan Avoids Deportation From Russia

Gay Journalist Facing Persecution in Uzbekistan Avoids Deportation From Russia

Russia’s Supreme Court has overturned the decision to deport Uzbekistani gay journalist Khudoberdi Nurmatov.

Nurmatov, who writes under the pen name Ali Feruz for the investigative independent newspaper Novaya Gazeta, faces torture at the hands of the security services and possibly death if he returns to Uzbekistan.

He has spent the last six months in a detention centre near Moscow. According to MPN News, in 2015, eight people held there opened their veins in protest at the inhumane conditions.

We welcome #Russian Supreme Court ruling not to extradite #journalist Khudoberdi Nurmatov (aka Ali Feruz) to Uzbekistan. We hope he will be released and allowed to travel and work unobstructed very soon t.co/xZEuYUyGuY

— CPJ Eurasia (@CPJ_Eurasia) January 25, 2018

The Moscow Times reports:

A Moscow city court ruled in August to forcibly deport Nurmatov to Uzbekistan, where he holds citizenship, for violating migration law, while his Russian asylum application was turned down by a court in October. The journalist’s supporters say that he risks persecution and torture in Uzbekistan and have launched an international campaign in his defense titled: “We Don’t Have the Right Not to Save Him.”

Russia’s Supreme Court overturned Nurmatov’s deportation order Monday, ruling that his case “had not received the necessary legal evaluation.”

It urged the Moscow City Court to review a letter sent from the German Embassy confirming that Nurbatov has permission to reside in Germany.

The Supreme Court also said that the city court’s indefinite extension of Nurmatov’s stay in a temporary holding facility for foreigners was “an unjustified restriction on his freedom.”

In April last year, the Russian journalist who broke the story regarding Chechnya’s recent crackdown on gay and bisexual men went into hiding following a number of death threats.

The post Gay Journalist Facing Persecution in Uzbekistan Avoids Deportation From Russia appeared first on Towleroad.


Gay Journalist Facing Persecution in Uzbekistan Avoids Deportation From Russia