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Author Topic: well researched journalism highbrow, what was school all about then?  (Read 787 times)

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SydneyRover

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''The Brexit deal was astonishingly bad, and every day the evidence piles up''

''The Sun, Daily Mail, Daily Express and Daily Telegraph barely cover the EU trade fiascos, says Dr Andrew Jones, part of an Exeter University team monitoring Brexit media stories since the referendum. Currently, Jones says, those papers’ main Brexit story is Britain’s triumph over the EU on vaccines. That trope always omits the fact the UK could have purchased the same volume while in the EU, but it has become the Brexiters’ clinching case''

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/mar/16/brexit-deal-bad-evidence-trade

Feel free to point out any errors you may find with the content.



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drfchound

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Part of being at school was learning about starting sentences with capital letters and using punctuation.
That would include new article titles.
« Last Edit: March 17, 2021, 09:33:55 am by drfchound »

SydneyRover

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my school obviously wasn't highbrow hound

drfchound

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my school obviously wasn't highbrow hound




Very obviously.

SydneyRover

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  • Posts: 13716
my school obviously wasn't highbrow hound




Very obviously.

Alert .......... warning warning 'highbrow' news!

''Lack of British steel in Dreadnought nuclear subs underlines procurement failure
Government could ensure millions of tonnes of steel for infrastructure plans comes from UK where possible''

''The replacement for the Vanguard class, lurking beneath the waves with its terrifying cargo since 1994, is being built by BAE Systems at a projected lifetime cost of £31bn.

Yet while the UK’s nuclear capability may be seen by some as emblematic of British military steel, the reality is that the steel inside the subs will be anything but British.

The most recent government disclosures, for 2018-19, offer greater insight.

That year, BAE Systems bought £7.7m worth of steel for the dreadnought project, yet none of it was produced in the UK.

That is not BAE’s fault so much as a facet of the way the global steel industry looks today. As fast as capability and capacity abroad has skyrocketed, the UK industry has declined, limiting the domestic options for buyers of specialty products''

''The 2018-19 figures show that UK producers missed out on millions of pounds of contracts, in everything from school building to NHS accommodation facilities, to the decommissioning of the Sellafield nuclear power plant''

''Now the government is under pressure from Labour and the UK Steel to support the wider industry. Key to this is ensuring British producers are not crippled by energy costs that are sky high when compared with those enjoyed by overseas rivals. Business rates are another key factor.

But the government could also ensure that millions of tonnes of steel going into upcoming infrastructure projects comes from Britain wherever possible.

Projects such as the dreadnought will not move the needle on that. Beefing up procurement rules for vast initiatives such as HS2 and the Hinkley Point C just might''

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2021/mar/30/why-vast-projects-like-hs2-uk-steel-industry-procurement-rules-british-producers

Axholme Lion

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''The Brexit deal was astonishingly bad, and every day the evidence piles up''

''The Sun, Daily Mail, Daily Express and Daily Telegraph barely cover the EU trade fiascos, says Dr Andrew Jones, part of an Exeter University team monitoring Brexit media stories since the referendum. Currently, Jones says, those papers’ main Brexit story is Britain’s triumph over the EU on vaccines. That trope always omits the fact the UK could have purchased the same volume while in the EU, but it has become the Brexiters’ clinching case''

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/mar/16/brexit-deal-bad-evidence-trade

Feel free to point out any errors you may find with the content.

Why are the EU nations up the creek with their vaccination programme then?

SydneyRover

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It's a exerpt about the media on a thread about the media

 

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