Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Gove attacks Labour MPs for "celebrating" as children died | Syria: Obama runs out of friends | How "mummy feminism" can get it wrong

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03 September 2013

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Editor's Choice

Ten must-read blogs

  1. There are too many bodies buried on Britain's moral high ground
    This isn't about Syria. This is, for better or worse, about us - on the left and on the right.
    By Laurie Penny

  2. War in Syria: Barack Obama has run out of friends
    In passing the decision on Syria strikes on to Congress, the President has decided it's better to look like a coward than a hypocrite. By Nicky Woolf

  3. Gove attacks Labour MPs for "celebrating as children had been killed"
    The Education Secretary explains his "heated" response to last week's parliamentary defeat on Syria. By George Eaton

  4. Wonga announces record profits - but should they have them?
    It may be legal, but is it right? By Carl Packman

  5. Homelessness and trafficking: how the desperate are being forced into black market work
    We might not hear about it a lot of the time, but all around us, every day, people are being forced into exploitative and dangerous work. By Alan White

  6. How "mummy feminism" can get it wrong
    The shock of having children can make us pine for our privilege in a way that alienates others. We need to be more vigilant and we need to be more self-aware. By Glosswitch

  7. How remaking government for the digital age could save £70bn
    By leveraging technology, data and the internet, a digital government really could do more with less. By Chris Yiu

  8. The MediaGuardian 100 list goes all 2006 on us
    The paper's annual media power ranking puts "you" at the top of the list. Sound familiar?
    By Media Mole

  9. A third source to boost living standards: the family
    Policymakers should seek to mitigate the barriers to the giving and receiving of financial and practical support between family members. By Ryan Shorthouse

  10. Think of Boston, not Berlin
    Ireland is second only to Greece in terms of the scale and speed of health cutbacks undertaken by "developed" countries. By David Cronin

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