5⃣ stories you need to know: Ukraine’s interior minister was among at least 14 killed in a helicopter crash outside Kyiv, millions of workers are on the move across China ahead of the Lunar New Year sparking fears of a COVID outbreak, and more pic.twitter.com/mwgE341bfu
— Reuters (@Reuters) January 18, 2023
On the brink of hitting the nation’s legal borrowing limit on Thursday, the government is resorting to “extraordinary measures” to avoid a default. The phrase technically refers to a bunch of accounting workarounds. Yes, accounting.@AP explains. https://t.co/4ypDfpxWEl pic.twitter.com/dKGnfcFhYN
— The Associated Press (@AP) January 18, 2023
France is bracing for a nationwide strike on Thursday over President Emmanuel Macron's widely unpopular pension reform plans. Will he be forced to back down, as then prime minister Alain Juppe (pictured) was in 1995? ▶️ https://t.co/67ym4REuKl 1/3 #AFPArchives pic.twitter.com/gioyy0RKjx
— AFP News Agency (@AFP) January 18, 2023
US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Chinese Vice Premier Liu He said that the two countries need to prevent "competition" from leading to conflict. https://t.co/kSkmh0Gpn3
— DW News (@dwnews) January 18, 2023
Since 2022 marked the year China saw its first population decline in nearly six decades, India is expected to become the world’s most populous country in 2023, according to United Nations projections. pic.twitter.com/yX0mijStXW
— South China Morning Post (@SCMPNews) January 18, 2023
SpaceX fired a new GPS satellite into orbit on behalf of the US military, continuing an effort to bolster the constellation of global positioning and navigation satellites that underpin smartphone apps, wartime operations and more. https://t.co/hCMlbsMFB9
— CNN International (@cnni) January 18, 2023
Will be interesting to see how the Biden administration reacts to this.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) January 18, 2023
They may try to weaponize Federal agencies against Twitter.
No comments:
Post a Comment