What is corona rage ?
Ten months into the coronavirus pandemic, cases of anger, conflict and anxiety see an increase
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Illustration for representational purposes by Siddhant Jumde Impatience over minor things, being overly sensitive, an increase in anger and anxiety these emotions are becoming commonplace after experiencing 10 months of lockdown amid a deadly pandemic. Covid-19 has changed and disrupted people s sense of normalcy routine contact with friends and family, freedom to socialise at will, and daily in-office interactions have been lost. Forced family time and adapting to a “new normal” unwillingly has made things worse. “It s the feeling of distress in one way or another and the rage has been on the rise, especially during the pandemic,” says Pooja Khera, a happiness and wellness coach, certified by the University of Wales.
Educazione civica ed educazione alla pace: un confronto
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She is beautiful but she is Indian : The student who became a Welsh bard at 19
BBC
28th December, 2020 04:45:34
An Indian student won acclaim in Wales as a bard and became the first woman to get a law degree from University College London. And although racial prejudice brought a heartbreaking end to a three-year relationship she never went home, writes Andrew Whitehead.
Dorothy Bonarjee was Indian by birth, English by upbringing, French by marriage - and Welsh at heart.
To put it another way, she was the perpetual outsider, sometimes by chance, and at other times by choice. Even the moment of her greatest achievement in 1914 - winning one of Wales s most prestigious cultural prizes while still a teenager - is notable above all because she was so obviously not Welsh.
Money
From the very start, England s 17th century colonies in America had a problem – a shortage of coins
[T01] The British idea was to grow large amounts of tobacco, cut timber for the ships of their global navy and merchant marine, and so forth, sending in return the supplies they felt were needed to keep the Americans working. In effect, early colonists were supposed to both work for the company and shop at the company store. The investors and the Crown much preferred this to paying in coin what the farmers might ask, letting the farmers themselves buy the supplies – and, heaven forbid, keep some of the profit as well.
BBC News
Published
image copyrightSheela Bonarjee
An Indian student won acclaim in Wales as a bard and became the first woman to get a law degree from University College London. And although racial prejudice brought a heartbreaking end to a three-year relationship she never went home, writes Andrew Whitehead.
Dorothy Bonarjee was Indian by birth, English by upbringing, French by marriage - and Welsh at heart.
To put it another way, she was the perpetual outsider, sometimes by chance, and at other times by choice. Even the moment of her greatest achievement in 1914 - winning one of Wales s most prestigious cultural prizes while still a teenager - is notable above all because she was so obviously not Welsh.
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