GEORGE TOWN: After more than two years of muted celebrations, people came out in droves on the first day of Chinese New Year to visit temples and relatives.
A strong undersea earthquake shook Indonesia’s northernmost province of Aceh on Saturday, but there were no immediate reports of serious damage or casualties and officials said there was no threat of a tsunami.
activities in a war zone, and lo and behold, we said we re nerve going to do it again. we did it in iraq. we ve done itin in afghanistan. we ve done it three times in the last 50 years, and all three times, it s been pretty poorly handled. and we re doing something similar to this but on a smaller scale, but as our report says, it s a slippery slope that it s at small scale before it becom as big scale. i ve heard people talking about sendingeo troops and massive ai similarly to a war-torn or not safe country of haiti that may deserve it, but if we do it in haiti or these other countries without learning the lessons, we re going to repeat the same mistakes. and that s what this report is all about. it s trying to look forward to improve how we do things like this. and when you step back from this from your work, from
Harvard Economics Professor: Governments Will Not Allow Bitcoin on a Big Scale and They Will Win
Harvard Professor of Economics and former Chief Economist at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) Kenneth Rogoff believes that governments will not allow bitcoin to flourish on a large scale. “The regulation will come in. The government will win,” he said. The professor also discussed the likelihood of a bitcoin bubble.
Harvard Professor Warns of Strict Crypto Regulation
Harvard University Professor Kenneth Rogoff shared some thoughts about bitcoin regulation during an interview on Bloomberg Surveillance last week. Rogoff is the Thomas D. Cabot Professor of Public Policy and a professor of economics at Harvard University. He also served as Chief Economist at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) from 2001–2003.
we have to defend against these things. reduce the likelihood of the big, big-scale attacks. and then be really resilient. and we ve heard that from people, first responders and bystanders about how they re not going to let them affect their lives. this is a tragedy. but we shouldn t take this as the system has failed, we re not safer. we are. but things are still going to get through and we re going to have tragedies like twe saw today. one of the things, one of the only ways we as civilians can help frustrate the aims of people who do things like this is to show how resilient we are and this won t change our lives in fundamental ways. that we ll press on. michael leiter, former director of national counterterrorism center. good to have you here. thank you, sir. thank you, rachel. i want to tell you the fbi has set up a phone number for anybody to call with information on today s attack. they are describing their call for tips in terms of people who may know anything about what