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Facebook bans Holocaust denial content

Mark Zuckerberg says his “thinking has evolved” as the social network changes strategy.

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David Remfry: Hollywood puppy love at the Chelsea Hotel

Portraits by the British-born painter celebrate the relationship between dogs and their owners


One-Minute Read

Alexandra Zagalsky

Monday, October 12, 2020 – 12:56pm

Having housed some of history’s most famed writers, poets, musicians and artists, New York’s legendary Chelsea Hotel is remembered for its wild, creatively fecund and often tragic past.

Andy Warhol famously threw up on the hotel’s dining room carpet during a fundraising luncheon organised by his patron Peggy Guggenheim. Leonard Cohen and Janis Joplin enjoyed a secret tryst here, as did Jack Kerouac and Gore Vidal. Stanley Kubrick penned 2001: A Space Odyssey at the hotel while Nancy Spungen met a grizzly end in Room 100 when she was stabbed by her lover Sid Vicious. From bohemian love-ins and spells of creative genius to decadent parties and death – the Chelsea Hotel has seen it all.

The hotel was closed to guests in 2011 for extensive renovation works which are still ongoing. Many of the 100 long-term residents who were allowed to stay have since moved on, but despite this exodus, it’s hard to associate the iconic address with a quieter tempo or as a place where A-listers might have curled up with a cup of tea, as opposed to drunkenly stagger around the place in a hedonistic whiskey haze – though perhaps that was just Dylan Thomas. The poet apparently drank 18 straight drams in his Chelsea Hotel room before slipping into a coma.

And yet – in more recent times at least – the Chelsea Hotel has possessed a softer, more relaxed identity, thanks to this one-time artistic community of residents, among them British-born painter David Remfry who occupied an apartment at the hotel from 1996-2016. Best know for his life-sized watercolours of urban scenes and night clubs, Remfry spent 15 years on a series of portraits that celebrate the relationship between dogs and their owners. Among his sitters are a string of high-profile names, including the actress Susan Sarandon who posed for the artist with her pups Penny and Rigby.

“I think there’s a little bit of a softness that comes into [the sitters’] demeanour when they’re with their dogs,” explains the 77-year-old Royal Academician. “Dogs have canny way of knowing how you are feeling and responding to people. They are floozies most of them! They just want you to love them and it’s not too difficult.”

Remfry’s portrait of a reclining Alan Cumming with his dog Honey (below) summons a sense of calm and reassurance. The artist has deftly captured the special language of trust that exists between the actor and his pet; in that moment, they are a unit: companions and inseparable sofa slobs.

His etching of a languid Ethan Hawke and his dog Nina (below) is similarly touching, The actor looks like he’s chatting to his furry friend while she is only half listening, her rigid pose betokening a sense of protectiveness.

The exhibition, titled We Think the World of You: People and Dogs Drawn Together by David Remfry is currently on show until 3 January 2021 at Woking’s Lightbox gallery. The show includes 18 portraits completed at the Chelsea Hotel.

Wouldn’t it be nice to think that one of these canine tributes might one day find its way home? While it’s clear that the Chelsea Hotel will never be the same again, the barking mad antics that went on behind its walls will surely never be forgotten.

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Central Europe engulfed by Covid cases after dodging first wave

Two ladies cross the road in Prague, Czech Republic wearing face masks
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Czech Republic tops EU infection rates as neighbouring nations also set daily case records

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Michael Cizek/AFP via Getty Images

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Two ladies cross the road in Prague, Czech Republic wearing face masks

Czech Republic tops EU infection rates as neighbouring nations also set daily case records


In Depth

Joe Evans

Monday, October 12, 2020 – 3:32pm

As the first wave of coronavirus swept across Europe earlier this year, one region of the continent remained relatively untouched by the global pandemic.

Central Europe spends less on healthcare than its western neighbours yet reported significantly lower infections rates after clamping down “hard and fast” to prevent outbreaks, says Politico. Slovakia was even cited alongside New Zealand as a nation setting an example for the rest of the world to follow.

But now, as a second wave threatens Europe, the continent’s central countries are seeing “a huge surge in infections” that threatens “to overwhelm the medical systems of many of the EU’s poorer member countries”, the news site reports.

Czech the numbers

Another country previously hailed as a success story in the battle against Covid, the Czech Republic now has the highest rate of infections in the EU, according to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC).

Infection rates among the nation’s 10.9 million-strong population lingered at around 200 new cases a day through the summer, but began rising in September and hit a record high of 8,618 cases on Friday.

The Czech Republic has now “surpassed a previous worst-case scenario advanced by the health minister, Roman Prymula, an epidemiologist who was appointed last month with a brief to combat soaring infection rates”, The Guardian reports.

Prymula “said when he took office that without tougher measures, numbers could reach between 6,000 and 8,000 a day, which would would be beyond the health system’s capacity to cope”, the newspaper adds.

Neighbouring countries are also reporting sudden rises in Covid cases.

ECDC figures show that the number of daily new cases in Slovakia is now ten times higher than in the summer, while Poland recorded a national record of 5,300 new cases on Saturday. Hungary has gone from only nine cases at the start of August to 1,374 on Saturday, while Romania’s average daily tally has tripled from the summer to 3,517 on Friday.

Death rates are also rising, and hospitalisations and demand for respirators are increasing significantly too – creating major problems in a region where, with the exception of the Czech Republic, “healthcare spending, and the number of doctors and nurses, is well below levels in Western Europe”, Politico reports.

Extreme measures

When the coronavirus pandemic first began, back in early spring, many central European countries locked down quickly and shut their borders to avoid the spread of the virus.

The Czech authorities imposed a nationwide lockdown on 15 March, when the nation had reported just 293 cases, and made mask-wearing in public mandatory three days later.

This swift response was praised by commentators worldwide including University of Glasgow academics Jan Culik, a senior lecturer in Czech studies, and Mirna Solic, a lecturer in modern languages and cultures.

In an article on The Conversation in June, the pair noted that while the New Zealand authorities had been lauded for their quick intervention, testing was also “freely available from the very beginning, international travel suspended, and travellers requested to self-isolate for 14 days” in the Czech Republic and other Central European countries.

However, as in the UK, the reopening of schools and slow relaxation of restrictions has triggered an upsurge in infections across the central nations.

“This isn’t looking good,” Konstanty Szuldrzynski, a senior doctor at the University Hospital in the Polish city of Krakow, told Politico. “We still have relatively low death rates, but we do have a problem.

“If this starts to grow, we have no tool to handle this.”

Return to lockdown

As over-stretched medical services struggle to cope, many nations in the region are considering the reintroduction of strict measures to curb the spread.

On Sunday, as Boris Johnson prepared to outline his new plan for the UK, Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis introduced “orders to shut pubs at 8pm, limits on restaurant service to four patrons per table, and closing gyms, swimming pools and zoos”, The Guardian reports.

And in Hungary, “authorities have indicated over the past days that they are working to boost testing capacity”, although “it remains unclear how many extra tests will be made available”, adds Politico.

The biggest strain for the central EU nations is a shortage of medical staff. Poland has only 237 doctors per 100,000 people, the lowest level in the EU, while Hungary has 338 and Slovakia has 352, according to Eurostat.

By contrast, Germany has 431, while Italy – which was battered by its first Covid-19 wave – has 398.

“Our system was on the edge of effectiveness even before the pandemic,” Polish medic Szuldrzynski told Politico. “If we devote all of our resources and time to coronavirus, an even bigger problem is that the system will stop curing all the other people.”

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Instant Opinion: ‘there are more vaccine sceptics than we think’

Covid protest
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Your guide to the best columns and commentary on Monday 12 October

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JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP via Getty Images

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Covid protest

Your guide to the best columns and commentary on Monday 12 October


Reaction

The Week Staff

Monday, October 12, 2020 – 3:20pm

The Week’s daily round-up highlights the five best opinion pieces from across the British and international media, with excerpts from each.

1. Clare Foges in The Times

on the rise of quiet vax-sceptics

There are more vaccine sceptics than we think

“We are well acquainted with the anti-vaxxer movement. We have seen their protests in Trafalgar Square, the crackpots chanting ‘Freedom from tyranny!’ and wearing T-shirts bearing 5G conspiracy theories. My concern is that the focus on this noisy but relatively small group has led us to a kind of complacency, because if this rabble of online warriors constituted the total resistance to a vaccine, well, so what?… And so, dismissing the lunatic fringe, we can lazily believe that vaccine refusal is a niche, extreme thing that won’t affect take-up in any meaningful way. But my growing impression is that scepticism about this vaccine is rather widespread.”

2. Benjamin Zephaniah in The Guardian

on the importance of Black History Month

Black people will not be respected until our history is respected

“I wish we didn’t need a Black History Month. But we really do… We need Black History Month now more than ever before. If we really want to understand what’s happening in the world, and change it for the better, we must confront the past and learn from the past. Good or bad. We owe it to ourselves, and future generations. Now, go and listen to some reggae. Go on. Turn up the bass.”

3. Luke Pollard in The Independent

on banning trophy hunting

Trophy hunting is a colonial hangover that should be consigned to the history books

“As we celebrated the many magnificent creatures that walk our earth on World Animal Day on 4 October, an extinction crisis is in our midst. The truth is, in a few years’ time there might not be as many animals to celebrate. A wild lion hunting a gazelle or an African elephant enjoying a mud bath might be something we only see in wildlife documentaries past. Animal exploitation, loss of habitat and the climate emergency have all played their part. Yet even now it is still legal for trophy hunters to travel around the world and kill some of our most iconic species.”

4. Christopher Orr in The Atlantic

on the UK’s new golden age of police dramas

Why British Police Shows Are Better

“The British detective story is enjoying a golden age unparalleled since the days of Agatha Christie or perhaps even Sir Arthur Conan Doyle… While American viewers shake off the hangover from our long bender of forensic TV franchises (did I only imagine Law & Order: Special Veterinary Unit and CSI: Wichita?), Britain has been doing a booming export business in tidy, ruminative detective series: Broadchurch, Happy Valley, Shetland, Unforgotten, River, Vera, The Loch, Hinterland, and more. Reliable viewership numbers are hard to come by, but if you begin questioning friends and family, before long you’re likely to discover a semi-fanatical devotee of the genre among them.”

5. Yanzhong Huang in the New York Times

on souring Sino-US relations

When the U.S. and China Fight, It Is the Environment That Suffers

“President Trump likes to cast U.S.-China relations as a zero-sum game: During the 2015 presidential campaign he said, ‘I beat the people from China. I win against China. You can win against China if you’re smart.’ But when it comes to environmental protection, decoupling is a lose-lose proposition for both countries.”

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US election: can Joe Biden do the impossible and win Texas for the Democrats?

Joe Biden campaigning in Texas
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Former vice president targets traditionally Republican state with $6m ad spend – and sends his wife to win over undecided voters

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Callaghan O’Hare/Getty Images

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Joe Biden campaigning in Texas

Former vice president targets traditionally Republican state with $6m ad spend


In Depth

Arion McNicoll

Monday, October 12, 2020 – 2:17pm

Jill Biden is set to visit Texas this week as part of a major push by her husband’s party to win the traditionally Republican-voting state in the presidential election.

The would-be first lady is set to make stops in Houston, Dallas and El Paso on Tuesday, the first day of early voting, as the Democrats look to do the unthinkable and flip the state from red to blue.

Joe Biden’s campaign is targeting Texas with an advertising blitz reportedly worth $6m (£4.6m) – “the biggest investment from a Democratic presidential nominee in the last 25 years” in the state, according to The Texas Tribune.

The Lincoln Project – a group led by former Republican strategists now working to defeat Trump – has also launched a $1m (£768,000) pro-Biden digital ad campaign in the state.

Doug Emhoff, the husband of Biden’s running mate Kamala Harris, has joined the Texas campaigning push too, visiting Edinburg, San Antonio and Dallas last week, as polls showed that the battle for the Lone Star state was looking unusually close.

Donald Trump has insisted the Republicans have nothing to worry, however. In a tweet on Friday, the incumbent said: “Biden is against Oil, Guns and Religion, a very bad combination to be fighting in the Great State of Texas. We are Winning Big, in the Real Polls, all over the Country!!! NOVEMBER 3rd. VOTE!!!”

What are the numbers saying?

Though his claim to be ahead nationally is incorrect, Trump does currently lead in Texas. The president commands 50% of the state’s likely voters to Biden’s 45%, according to the latest University of Texas/Texas Tribune poll. A Yougov poll from 8 October also shows Trump ahead by 5%.

Some analysts see Texans’ voting intentions as an indication of their negative attitude towards Trump, rather than a clear endorsement of Biden.

In the University of Texas poll, 55% of respondents who identified as Democrats said they were voting for Biden because they want him to be president, while 45% said he was their choice simply because they don’t want his rival to remain in the White House.

By contrast, a vast majority of Trump’s supporters – 81% – said they want him as president, while 19% said their main motivation was to stop Barack Obama’s former vice president from securing the top job.

“What it really shows you is just how much of this is about Trump,” said Daron Shaw, a professor of government at the university and co-director of the poll. “The race is a marker for attitudes towards Trump. It really is a referendum.”

Kind of blue?

Democrats have already made great strides in Texas since Trump first assumed the presidency.

In 2014, Democratic nominee Wendy Davis lost her bid for governor to Republican Greg Abbott by 20 points. But just four years later, former Texas congressman Beto O’Rourke mounted an “insurgent campaign” against Senator Ted Cruz, losing by only 2.5 points – “an implausible jump” forward in terms of support, says The Texas Tribune‘s Washington bureau chief Abby Livingston.

O’Rourke went on to become a candidate in the race to become the Democratic presidential nominee, before dropping out and throwing his support behind Biden.

In a recent op-ed for The Washington Post, O’Rourke and Tory Gavito, president and co-founder of the progressive donor network Way to Win, urged Biden to aggressively fight for and win the state.

“Democrats have historically failed to invest in Texas, despite the size of this prize, because they believed the door is closed to Democratic presidential candidates,” they wrote.

“But, like many things in 2020, this year is different – Biden has his foot in the door and needs to kick it open for a quick end to the election.”

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