comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - பியுங் சுல் ஹான் - Page 4 : comparemela.com

Doctor Draghi, Strong Medicine Or Just Another Painkiller?

Doctor Draghi, Strong Medicine Or Just Another Painkiller? Italy s new Prime Minister Mario Draghi, the highly respected former head of the European Central Bank, is tasked with fixing festering systemic failures. -Analysis- ROME Mario Draghi is finally the new Italian Prime Minister. On Thursday, the Lower House of Parliament voted him in with a staggering 535 votes in favor, 56 against, and 5 abstentions. Such a wide majority is a telling detail: Italians have huge confidence and sky-high expectations, seeing in Draghi a man who can rescue the country a kind of superdoctor to cure the sickness eating Italy from inside.. The situation reminds me of the latest work by Seoul-born German philosopher Byung-Chul Han, an intriguing little book titled

Everybody Hates Millennials: Gen Z and the TikTok Generation Wars

Illustration by Yazmin Butcher, Published 15:11, Feb. 9, 2021 I downloaded TikTok in the first lonely months of self-isolation. The internet of millennials had grown stale, populated by overly posed pictures, inane hashtags, and SEO-friendly self-branding. TikTok promised something different: a space where a younger generation of users embraced idiosyncrasy and irreverence over conformity and overwrought styling. Initially, I was skeptical. I knew TikTok mostly as the home of lip-syncing videos and dance challenges performed by floppy-haired teenagers in LA mansions. Also: Did I really need yet another social media app, especially one with seemingly dubious privacy commitments? But what I discovered was irresistible an unruly playground populated by a generation whose modes of expression struck me as refreshingly honest and hilarious, a new way of imagining our online lives.

What Does Back to Normal Mean? | Peter J Leithart

Modernization involves multiple accelerations, says the German sociologist Hartmut Rosa in his 2010 book, Acceleration and Alienation. Advanced technology speeds up movement and communication, and the rate of technological change increases with Moore’s-Law regularity. Social change happens faster, as fashions and fads come and go. Daily life picks up pace.  Acceleration dashes the hopes of modernity. Many modern practices can’t run on technology’s schedule, and this de-synchronization leaves us politically dislocated and psychically disoriented. Modernity, for example, promises participatory government. Real democracy takes time, especially in modern pluralist societies without rooted norms and conventions. Ironically, Rosa says, “the same processes that accelerate social, cultural, and economic changes, slow down democratic will-formation and decision-making.” Politics cannot govern social change because it can’t keep up with the technology that drives social change.

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.