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In fact

All the coronavirus in the world could fit inside a Coca-Cola can, with plenty of room to spare. The Conversation, 10th February 2021

In a recent poll, 84 per cent of black Britons rejected toppling statues as a form of protest. Times, 24th February 2021

Public records for 125 people facing charges related to the US Capitol riot show that nearly 60 per cent had financial troubles: 18 per cent had been bankrupt (twice the national average) and a quarter had been sued for owing money. Washington Post, 10th February 2021

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Prospect Magazine
April 2021
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Other Articles in this Issue


Prospect
Borderland
If you tried to explain to a Martian why countries
Letters
Your piece on the UK’s failures in managing the pandemic
Up front
Tax
You won’t repair a broken economy without taxing the rich more. This is how to do it, says James K Galbraith
QAnon
An unhinged conspiracy leapt from a wacky corner of the internet to the seat of democracy. Emily Lawford explains how
Open borders
Politics treats national boundaries as sacred. But let’s erase these arbitrary, vicious and divisive lines, argues Maya Goodfellow
Lawyers and their consciences
That everyone is entitled to legal advice is a proposition
Salvation by Banker
A new technocratic government will only deepen the crisis of Italian democracy, says Lucia Rubinelli
…And thanks for all the fish
What exactly does Britain’s “so long” to the European Union mean for the average fisherman, asks David McAllister
The Duel
Is the pandemic killing God?
Essays
Break-up Britain
All the lurking existential questions about the future of our kingdom are about to burst into the open
J’Accuse…!
How Emmanuel Macron is crushing the French liberalism he promised
RIP PLC
The rise and fall of the listed company, and where-for better or worse-private equity will lead business next
How is Brexit for you?
A couple of months after Britain finally took its great leap into the unknown, many businesses are still waiting to see where they will land. Others fear they have lost their footing for good
Island Apart
Brexit correspondent Lisa O’Carroll distils a few of the post-Brexit bumps facing individual British firms that she has investigated for the Guardian
We reap what we sow
Industrial farming has fed the world. But as it destroys our ecology, it runs into diminishing returns. Brexit Britain has a rare chance to rewrite the rules-but only if we can find the will to seize it
Facts on the ground
Israel may, for now, have backed off from the outright annexation of Palestinian land it has occupied for half a century. But it is burying any hope for a negotiated peace in concrete and tarmac
Critical thinking
Present imperfect
Homeschooling parents are discovering how much time in class is taken up with educational jargon. When did the National Curriculum become so rigid?
Out of the cage
Filmmaker Adam Curtis says the tyranny of state control has led to the hollowing out of democracy
The myth of civilisation
Dividing the world into the civilised and the barbarians is no way to understand the appalling destruction of Palmyra
Pigeon
Most people will walk past these birds without a thought. But some of their abilities far outstrip our own, writes Cal Flyn
Electric dreams, revisited
Kazuo Ishiguro’s new novel is narrated by a robot companion who looks after a sick teenager. But the real drama is at the edge of the story, finds Miranda France
Back to basics
After decades of domination by free-market thinking, conservative parties are finding electoral success by emphasising stability and order, writes David Willetts
The mind of God
A new biography of Stephen Hawking argues the iconic physicist was shamelessly self-promoting and his reputation overrated, finds Philip Ball
Books in brief
Law in a Time of Crisis by Jonathan Sumption (Profile
Recommends
Academy of Ancient Music, West Road, Cambridge, 14th
Policy & Money
Economics and investment
Starting with the Dutch tulip mania of the 1630s, bubbles
Policy report: Trade
For a newly independent Britain, the challenges of international commerce now go beyond economics
And finally…
The generalist by Didymus
Last month’s solutions. Across: 1 Maenad, 4 Tripoli
Enigma & puzzles Strawberries and crime
Professor Neuron and his nephew Trifle have been out
Capital letters
The pandemic has unlocked the forgotten delights of the handwritten note
Brief encounter
Val McDermid, Author