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Articles Published in 2020
Online Sport Editor Harry Scott-Munro takes a look at the return to politics of Nigel Farage and his newly rebranded Reform UK party.
Contributor Sofia Gallucci-Giles discusses the $10 million sale of Shakespeare’s first folio and whether such literary gold should be in the hands of the public domain
Not only does crippling poverty mean that once a vaccine is rolled out, those will be the last to make use of it: but before one is approved, many lower classes will see deaths from failed trial products, and there will be little international notice. Russia is using their poor as guinea pigs when there is little evidence promoting their vaccine, and India 'pharmacy of the world' has a reputation for lacking bureaucracy and a lack of controversy and attention. If the developing world continuous racing with the same rigour as in the Cold War, the international community had better start paying attention.
Work from home has not been the decline of productivity that every big business had predicted it to be. It has hurt normal human habits and mental health, but studies have shown that employees are not unmotivated. The age-old narrative of employees solely being motivated by material gains and self-interest, and that they won't work without supervision from higher-ups, is but a myth. It does not justify widespread breach of privacy.
Online Sport Editor Harry Scott-Munro assesses whether Lewis Hamilton should be considered Formula 1’s greatest ever driver.
Don’t Shush a President: A (Film-Style) Review of the First Presidential Debate