Friday 17 September 2021

Clippers break ground on new arena in Inglewood

https://damjanovicgidra.blogspot.com/2021/09/clippers-break-ground-on-new-arena-in.html

The Clippers will play in the Intuit Dome in 2024 when it opens (photo via Intuit Dome).

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — The design meetings have been going on for years. Technology has evolved throughout the process. Painstaking decisions were made time and time again, right down to what an inch or two difference in leg room between rows would mean or where cupholders should be affixed to the seats.

Finally, Steve Ballmer and the LA Clippers are ready to build their new home.

The Clippers’ long-awaited, $1.8 billion, privately funded arena officially got a name Friday — Intuit Dome, it’ll be called when it opens in 2024, the team making that announcement on the day of the formal groundbreaking ceremony. The practice facility, team offices for both business and basketball operations, retail space and more will all be on the site.

Ballmer, the team’s owner, simply believes it’ll be like no other building in the NBA.

“Basketball mecca! Basketball palazzo!” Ballmer, in his usual excitable way, said in an interview with The Associated Press.

He might be right.

Every detail — from the huge halo video screen that will hover over the court, to how the bathrooms will be designed to get fans back in their seats as quickly as possible — has a purpose. The halo will include 44,000 square feet of LED lighting, slightly more than one full acre and roughly six times the average size of other “big” screens in NBA buildings. The roof of the dome was designed to accommodate the halo, not the other way around.

Things the Clippers have seen in play at German soccer stadiums, other NBA buildings, NFL stadiums, even the Amazon Go checkout-free convenience stores all sparked various ideas that will be put into play at Intuit Dome.

“I had a lot of my own opinions … and most of the things had some inspiration that came from someplace else,” Ballmer said.

The Clippers currently play at Staples Center, also the home of the Los Angeles Lakers and the NHL’s Los Angeles Kings. Ballmer began plotting a Clippers-only home years ago and formally unveiled the project in 2019, saying then that the Clippers would break ground in 2021 and open in 2024.

So far, even with a pandemic and following some legal challenges, he’s right on schedule.

“When we started the questions were ‘Do you want it to be the best for sponsors? Do you want it to be the best for musicians? Do you want it to be the best for fans? And if you want it to be the best for fans, then for the fancy seats or the fans in the back?’” Clippers President of Business Operations Gillian Zucker said. “And he said, ‘yes.’ That’s what this place is all about.”

Technology will be everywhere, such as some that would allow fans to leave their seat, walk to a concession stand in the concourse, grab a beverage or snack and then — if they do as Ballmer hopes — get right back to their seat. There would be no cashier, nobody to take the order, and the customer’s account would be charged automatically. Other than the paying-for-it part, it would be akin to opening the refrigerator at home, getting a drink and going back to the couch.

Even the best suites won’t have big televisions. The reason is simple: Ballmer wants fans watching the game from their seat and being part of a home-court advantage.

“It’s about the game of basketball … and we’re trying to get you back in your seat as quickly as we can,” Ballmer said.

He wants them comfortable in those seats, too. The leg room — which will be a constant throughout the arena, from the lowest rows all the way to the very top — is going to far exceed the standard in most buildings.

“We treated like the upper bowl like the lower bowl,” Ballmer said. “Nobody gets a bad seat, no matter where you sit in the building.”

His favorite feature: It’ll be known as The Wall.

Beyond the end of the court where Clippers’ opponents will have their bench will be 51 uninterrupted rows of seats, room for about 4,700 fans, with a standing-room-only section in the middle of it all. There’s no upper or lower deck there, just row after row after row of what Ballmer hopes is a bunch of fans that, well, act like he does during games.

Again, it was designed with a purpose. Acoustics experts were brought in to ensure that The Wall generates as much sound as possible.

“I mean, if we’ve got to do it right, we’ve got to get the fans there activated,” Ballmer said.

Put simply, one of the league’s best-known fans, and one of the world’s wealthiest men — the former Microsoft CEO is generally believed to be worth around $100 billion — may be building the coolest possible basketball hangout for himself and 18,000 of his closest friends.

“That’s a very well-put statement,” Ballmer said.

10 key questions: Does addition of Kyle Lowry make Miami better?

 


What does the addition of Kyle Lowry mean for Miami’s overall success?


The Heat got a lot out of Goran Dragic the last few seasons, even as he played beyond his prime. But Lowry is a straight-up, hard-nosed point guard, the closest thing in the East to Phoenix’s Chris Paul with a championship ring in his possession to boot.

The 6-foot playmaker is 35 but he’s been more productive since turning 30 than before. After averaging 13.5 points and 5.7 assists per game in his first 10 seasons, with a 48.9 effective field-goal percentage and two All-Star selections, Lowry has averaged 17.8 ppg and 7.5 apg since 2016-17 with an effective shooting rate of 54.2% and four All-Star berths.

Defensively, he can pester his ball-handling counterpart and no organization drools more over guys taking charges, a Lowry annoyance, er, specialty. Ideally, his decision-making will get more discipline into Miami’s offense, most notably Jimmy Butler and Tyler Herro. And it won’t be for lack of trying if he and Bam Adebayo don’t develop a nice alley-oop chemistry.

Lowry isn’t alone in bringing added toughness, with P.J. Tucker and Markieff Morris added to the frontcourt. He isn’t the threat to reach and finish at the rim they way he used to, and he averaged just 3.6 foul shots per 36 minutes, second-fewest of his career. Still, Lowry is central to Miami’s win-now mission and he should be fresh after playing his fewest games (46) and the second-fewest minutes (1,601) since his rookie year.

Uncontrollable vomiting due to marijuana use on rise, study finds

 

A man smokes a marijuana cigarette.

An unusual illness is on the rise in the United States, especially in states that have legalized marijuana. Habitual users of cannabis, including teenagers, are showing up in emergency rooms complaining of severe intestinal distress.

"They are writhing, holding their stomach, complaining of really bad abdominal pain and nausea," said Dr. Sam Wang, a pediatric emergency medicine specialist and toxicologist at Children's Hospital Colorado, who treats adolescents with the condition.
    "They vomit and then just continue to vomit whatever they have in their stomach, which can go on for hours," said Wang. "They often say they took a scalding hot shower before they came to the ER but it didn't help.
      "That's when we know we may have a case of cannabis hyperemesis syndrome, or CHS."

      A bizarre condition

      Cannabis hyperemesis syndrome burst upon the medical scene in 2004, when a group of Australian researchers wrote about 19 chronic marijuana users who had repeated episodes of abdominal pain and retching. The researchers followed nine of the patients over time and found symptoms went away when cannabis use was stopped but returned when it was restarted.
      Oddly, over half of the 19 reported using extremely hot baths or showers to self-treat their symptoms. As more and more cases of CHS began to appear, hot bathing as a home treatment became a recurring theme.
      "Patients often say, 'You know, it's always in the evening when I get this nausea, vomiting,'" Wang said. "So they tell me, 'I go take a hot shower, and it gets better, then it happens again the next night.'
      "It's pretty universal for these patients to say they need a really, really hot shower, or a really hot bath, to improve their symptoms," he said.
      Why hot? "That's not entirely clear," said Wang, who is also an associate professor of pediatrics at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora, Colorado.
      Tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, the main psychoactive compound in weed, has access to the body's pain receptors, so one theory is that the distracting sensation of the extreme heat interrupts the pain cycle, thus easing symptoms.
      To compound the strangeness of the new disorder, THC and other cannabinoids in the marijuana plant have been used for pain relief -- paradoxically relieving nausea and vomiting in cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy. However, despite the popularity of marijuana as a pain killer, study results on its effectiveness have been mixed.
      Still, why would the same compound relieve and also cause pain? Among a myriad of possibilities: dosage levels. Wang points to the ever increasing potency of THC in today's marijuana products.
      "It's been well documented that the amount of THC that now comes in cannabis is increasing substantially," Wang said. "In the '90s the average was like 4% or 5%. Now in Colorado, it's anywhere from 15% to 20%."
      Another mystery: Not all heavy users of weed are affected by CHS.
      "It's not entirely clear who is predisposed to getting it," Wang said. "Is it a certain frequency or duration of use? Is it a specific potency? Or is it a specific type of product? We don't have that data."
      Dr. Sanjay Gupta: Your brain on marijuana 01:39

      Research is spotty

      To fully understand, treat and prevent the new disorder, researchers need to document cases and compare symptoms. But CHS is so new that it doesn't have a medical diagnosis or insurance billing code, Wang said, making it "a moving target."
      To do research, scientists look at medical records for reported cases of repetitive vomiting and compare those to marijuana usage in an area. Wang and his colleagues did just that in Colorado, where recreational marijuana was legalized in 2014. The use of medical marijuana had been legal since 2009.
      Wang's analysis, published Friday in the journal JAMA Network Open, found over 800,000 cases of reported vomiting in Colorado between 2013 and 2018. That was an approximate 29% increase since marijuana was legalized in the state. The rate was highest in counties with no prior marijuana dispensaries.
      Nearly one in five people seen for vomiting disorders used marijuana between 2005 and 2014.
      More than a third of the vomiting cases were in people 25 years of age and younger.
      "This is not a rare problem," Wang said. "When an adolescent comes in with cyclical abdominal pain and vomiting, my colleagues know to ask about cannabis use. It's a pretty common practice to see this and diagnose and treat it."
      Immediate treatment consists of anti-nausea medications and IV fluids to combat dehydration from the vomiting. But patients also undergo a battery of tests to rule out other causes: blood and urine tests, expensive CT scans, unpleasant upper GI endoscopy and gastric emptying tests, to name a few.
      For some children, those tests could be repeated again and again.
      "For some of our kids, this is their fifth ER visit in the past two months, with symptoms that they can't control," Wang said.
      And if they wait too long to come in, CHS can be life-threatening.
      "Regardless of whether it's cannabis hyperemesis syndrome or another virus that makes you vomit a lot," Wang said, "if you let it go too long, you can have electrolyte disturbances, go into shock and have organ failure. CHS is no different."

      Concerns for the future

      Data show CHS is a national problem. Between 2005 and 2014 when only medical marijuana was legal in most states, a 2020 study found nearly one in five people hospitalized for cyclical vomiting in the US reported concurrent cannabis use.
      As of April, 17 states and the District of Columbia have legalized recreational marijuana for adults, while three dozen states and several territories have medical marijuana laws on the books, according to the Pew Research Center.
      A Pew survey found the majority of US adults (60%) say marijuana should be legal for medical and recreational use. With support like that, it's likely that even more states will legalize weed in the years to come.
        When they do, Wang said he hopes people will also take into account the potential dangers of cannabis, especially for the young.
        "In adolescents and young adults, that's where there's growing concern about habitual use and its effect on physical and mental health," Wang said.

        Separated from his parents, an infected 4-year-old highlights the human cost of China's zero-Covid policy

         Covered from head to toe in a white hazmat suit, a small child carrying a backpack half the size of his body toddles down a hospital corridor and arrives at a CT scan room -- all by himself.

        "A 4-year-old boy has been infected (with Covid-19), unfortunately," a caption in the video reads. "No accomp anying parents. Going to quarantine alone."
        The scene, captured by a nurse at a quarantine hospital in the city of Putian, the epicenter of China's latest Delta variant outbreak, gripped millions of people when it went viral on Chinese social media this week.
          "It makes my heart ache," said one of the top comments on Weibo, China's Twitter-like platform. "My eyes are getting teary," said another.
            The video serves as a poignant reminder of the human cost of China's prized zero-Covid policy, which has helped the country quell multiple resurgences of the virus. The elimination playbook consists of placing entire neighborhoods under lockdown, testing millions of residents in a matter of days, and swiftly isolating infected people and their close contacts in designated facilities.
            This time, the strict measures were applied to schoolchildren -- among whom the outbreak was first detected and spread quickly. In Putian, 57 of its recently reported 129 cases are under the age of 12, according to the government. To prevent further transmission, infected children as young as kindergarten age are separated from their parents and put in hospital isolation.
            In a news conference Thursday, the Putian government said China's epidemic control rules bar Covid patients from any company during isolation and treatment. But if a child and their parent are both infected, the hospital would try to arrange them to stay in the same ward, an official said.
            Initially, some children who came into contact with the infected but tested negative were also quarantined away from their parents. That policy was later relaxed, with children under 14 allowed to stay with their parents or other family members in quarantine -- but isolation for infected children remains.
            Zhu Xiaqing, the nurse who took the video at the quarantine hospital, told the local Fujian Health Daily newspaper her eyes were wet with tears when she saw an ambulance full of children arriving, all sealed up in hazmat suits. They had arrived late because a child didn't want to leave home and was crying for two hours before being coaxed into the ambulance, she said.
            Upon arrival, the children had CT scans by themselves. Some were so young they couldn't climb onto the scanning table and had to be picked up by a doctor, Zhu said.
            "Seeing little children all alone by themselves, without parents by their sides, in a hospital (they are) unfamiliar and scared of -- at that moment my heart really ached," she added.
            On Weibo, some users questioned why children this young couldn't be accompanied by their parents. Others pointed out their parents were likely put in centralized quarantine in other facilities as close contacts of the infected.
            "It's basically a strategy of 'rather killing a thousand by mistake than letting one go,'" said Jin Dongyan, a virologist at the University of Hong Kong. "Children shouldn't have needed to undergo such extreme quarantine measures. This is the social cost of the zero-tolerance approach."
            Government workers stop a biker at the entrance to a residential block under lockdown in Xiamen in southeast China's Fujian province on September 14.
            The strict -- and often hectic -- implementation of containment measures has sparked discontent before. In June, hundreds of residents in Foshan, Guangdong province, protested against weeks of prolonged lockdowns on their neighborhoods. Footage of the rally was swiftly scrubbed from the internet, while on social media, those who criticized or questioned the zero-Covid policy were attacked and muffled by online nationalists.
            The zero-Covid strategy still enjoys broad support among the wider Chinese public, many of whom have grown accustomed to the benefits associated with Covid-free living and remain fearful of the virus -- partly due to unrelenting state media coverage on the devastation the pandemic has caused abroad.
            "The success of the stringent approach is partly built on public fear. This is not ideal," Jin said. "The correct way is to tell the public the truth (about the need to coexist with the virus), which is the only sustainable way going forward."
            Across the world, a growing list of countries have opened up after mass vaccinations. Others, such as Singapore and Australia, are also shifting away from the zero-Covid strategy to a new approach of learning to live with the virus.
            But the Chinese government has remained reluctant to lift border restrictions, despite huge achievements in its vaccination drive. On Thursday, China said it had fully inoculated 1 billion people with domestically made vaccines -- accounting for 71% of its population of 1.4 billion. The vaccination rate is higher than that of many countries which have opened their borders, including the United Kingdom (64.8%) and the United States (53.4%).
            Jin, the expert at the University of Hong Kong, said authorities are worried about the efficacy of the vaccines. Chinese officials have revealed that some of the early cases in a previous Delta outbreak were fully vaccinated.
            "(They're concerned) that the social immunity is not strong enough. They don't have enough confidence in the vaccines," he said.
            China is now offering booster shots to fully vaccinated people working at borders, customs, quarantine facilities, Covid hospitals and the aviation industry, according to the National Health Commission, but it remains to be seen how long the effect of that extra shot will last.
            For the time being, the Chinese government is likely to stick to its zero-tolerance approach as it attempts to boost public immunity, but it will eventually need to learn to live with Covid, Jin said.
            "It might go on for another year or two. But China can't shut its doors forever," he said.
            At the quarantine hospital in Putian, medical workers have come up with various ways to comfort the infected children. They decorated the isolation wards and corridors with cartoon paintings, and provided the kids with children's books, toys and stationary. Nurses also looked after their daily needs and played games with them, according to state media.
            But some worry that's not enough.
            "During the day, it might be okay, but at night the kids will still be scared!" said a comment on Weibo.

            Astronauts start the journey home

            Astronauts in the Tiangong space station on video call with researchers on Earth via video link on September 3.
            The three Chinese astronauts living in space for 90 days have returned to Earth, marking an end to China's longest-ever crewed mission.
            The astronauts -- Nie Haisheng, Liu Boming and Tang Hongbo -- were sent in June to the core module of China's planned space station, called Tiangong or Heavenly Palace, which is still under construction in a low-Earth orbit.
            The crew boarded the Shenzhou-12 spacecraft on Thursday and touched down at the Gobi desert in Inner Mongolia on Friday afternoon, state news agency Xinhua reported.
            During their three months at the space station, the astronauts conducted two spacewalks to test their equipment, new-generation spacesuits and life maintenance systems. Their mission is a major step in China's plan to complete the space station by December 2022, when it's expected to be fully crewed and operational.
            Before then, China plans to send three more manned spacecraft and two laboratory modules to the space station.
            It's an ambitious target for China's rapidly expanding space program, which has received billions of dollars in government investment and achieved a litany of other milestones in recent years -- including landing a lunar probe in a previously unexplored area of the moon last December, and landing a rover on Mars in May.
            Their ambitions don't end there. Earlier this year, the Chinese government signed an agreement with Russia to work together to build a moon base. China is also planning to launch crewed missions to Mars and deploy a massive space-based, commercial-scale solar power plant by 2050.
            -- By Jessie Yeung

            China faces a potential Lehman moment. Wall Street is unfazed

            The implosion of Lehman Brothers, 13 years ago this week, showed how the collapse of a single entity can send shockwaves around the world.
            Echoes from that event are resounding today as a massive property developer on the other side of the world teeters on the brink of default.
            The risk is the collapse of Evergrande, a Chinese real estate company with a staggering $300 billion of debt outstanding, could set off a chain reaction that spreads overseas.
            "Some fear an Evergrande meltdown will have systemic risks on par with the impact Lehman Brothers' demise had on the US stock market," Ed Yardeni, president of Yardeni Research, wrote in a note to clients Thursday.
            Like Lehman in its heyday, Evergrande is massive, suggesting a default would be felt widely. The company has 200,000 employees, raked in more than $110 billion in sales last year and has more than 1,300 developments, according to Reuters.
            Wall Street is keeping close tabs on the Evergrande situation, which highlights the extraordinary amount of borrowing Chinese companies and families have taken on over the years. Yet there are no signs that investors think an Evergrande default will infect US markets or the domestic economy.
            For now, investors seem confident authorities in Beijing would use their vast control over the Chinese economy to limit the damage. And there is no evidence, at least so far, of contagion in US markets.
            "I don't think the Evergrande meltdown, and the financial problems of Chinese property companies more broadly, will reverberate back on the US economy or markets," Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics, told CNN.
            "We think that the 'China's Lehman moment' narrative is wide of the mark," Simon MacAdam, senior global economist at Capital Economics, wrote in a note on Thursday.
            David Kotok, co-founder and chief investment officer of Cumberland Advisors, agrees, dismissing Evergrande as a "Chinese domestic credit problem."
            "It does not look as if it has any contagion effects on American companies or American financial markets," Kotok said. "We see no credit spread widening."
            Credit spreads, the difference between corporate bonds and ultra-safe Treasury rates, remain very narrow. That's a sign that investors aren't worried -- especially given the Federal Reserve's unprecedented support for the economy and markets. Of course, that can change in a heartbeat.
            "I would change my view at once if I saw any contagion or spillover" into the world's biggest economies, Kotok said.

            Thursday 16 September 2021

            America's deal with UK and Australia leaves France bruised and Europe in the cold on China

             The surprise announcement that the United States, United Kingdom and Australia have agreed a defense pact that will go some way toward countering China in the Indo-Pacific region sparked an array of emotions. In Europe, it left the French government furious and European Union officials somewhat confused as to what the bloc should do about China.

            The deal, which was unveiled on Wednesday, will see the US and UK send strategic and technical teams to Australia to help the country procure nuclear-powered submarines. It also meant that the Australian government cancelled a multi-billion contract for non-nuclear submarines with a French manufacturer.
            French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian described this as a "real stab in the back" from Australia. He also fired a shot at US President Joe Biden, saying that the sudden announcement of this deal without consulting other allies was a "brutal and unilateral decision" that "resembles a lot of what Mr. Trump was doing."
              Leaving aside France's wounded pride, the new geopolitical pact between English-speaking maritime powers (known as AUKUS and pronounced "aw-kiss") presents a strategic headscratcher for the EU.
                Officials in Brussels told CNN that the timing of the AUKUS announcement was viewed dimly, as the EU's high representative on foreign affairs was set to deliver his own strategy for the Indo-Pacific on Thursday afternoon.
                At best, it was considered a bit rude; at worst, it confirmed that, despite Brussels' global ambitions, it is not taken seriously as a geopolitical player.
                Sailors assigned to the Australian Collins-class submarine HMAS Sheean (SSG 77) prepare to receive hotel services and supplies during bilateral training event with USS Emory S. Land (AS 39) on September 13, 2019.
                Either way, Brussels is feeling scarred. A senior EU official told CNN that this was "English-speaking countries" who are "very belligerent" forming an alliance "against China." The official noted that these were the same nations who took the lead in invading Afghanistan and Iraq. "And we all know the results," they added.
                The EU's strategy for handling China differs from the US in one major way: the EU actively seeks cooperation with China, and sees it as an economic and strategic partner.
                Brussels officials believe that by trading and working with China, not only can they lean on Beijing to reform their human rights and energy policies, but also use a good relationship with China to act as a buffer between Beijing and Washington, thus giving the EU a clear and important geopolitical role.
                The AUKUS deal has, in the eyes of some, undermined any real claim that Brussels had as an influential presence on the world stage.
                "The fact that the US is willing to spend more political capital and invest in security and defense ties with the UK and Australia before reaching out to EU powers is quite revealing," said Velina Tchakarova, director of the Austrian Institute for European and Security Policy.
                She added that despite many positive developments in understanding the importance of this region, "it is obvious that the EU must first become a security actor in the Indo-Pacific in order to be taken seriously by the partners in the Anglosphere."
                President Joe Biden, listens as he is joined virtually by Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison, left, and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, speaks about a national security initiative in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Wednesday, Sept. 15, 2021.
                So how can the EU do this?
                This is the million-dollar question and the source of a lot of disagreement between member states. There is no consensus on what European defense means or should look like. France, the only major military power in the bloc, has been pushing for a coordinated defense policy that provides the bloc with real capabilities.
                One EU official familiar with the matter told CNN that the recent developments in Afghanistan and the AUKUS announcement has only solidified France's view that the EU needs the capacity to defend its interests and build a presence in the Indo-Pacific region.
                However, France really is an outlier on this matter.
                "When I see [French President Emmanuel] Macron and his team talk about standing troops, I just can't see it ever happening," said one EU diplomat. "National leaders have to send troops into battle. It won't be the EU blamed when people come back in body bags."
                Other diplomats and officials see potential for member states working together on more efficient procurement, meaning each country buys specific things that play to their military strengths. However, they still draw the line at the idea of deploying troops.
                "Neutral countries like Austria, Ireland, Finland and Sweden will never be comfortable with deploying troops to conflict zones," said one diplomat. "What we could work with EU partners on, however, are things like training troops in third countries and peacekeeping on borders."
                Beneficial as this would be for Europe, it's a far cry from asserting serious military heft in a world where that seems to matter enormously.
                Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson and his wife Carrie Johnson walk with US President Joe Biden and US First Lady Jill Biden at Carbis Bay, Cornwall on June 10, 2021, ahead of the three-day G7 summit.
                Steven Blockmans, director of research at the Centre for European Policy studies, explained that as Europe's defensestrategy develops, it will probably lean further toward these smaller acts of cooperation than the French ideal.
                "The other big member state, Germany, has always been very clear that any such integration policy, especially in the field of defense and security, needs to be as inclusive as possible and bring as many of the 27 member states along with it," Blockmans said.
                "The AUKUS announcement therefore forces France to rethink its defense relationship with the Anglosphere and work harder with fellow member states to raise the level of ambition in European defense cooperation," he added.
                That rethink could be instructive for those wondering where Europe's foreign policy goes next.
                Tchakarova said that hard decisions will need to be made by the major European powers on how much they want to isolate themselves from "their most significant transatlantic partner in their approach to the region and to China in particular."
                She added that as the US-China battle for soft power escalates, Brussels' plan of "oscillating between Washington and Beijing will not work for the EU in the long run," if countries like France and Germany decide they want a closer relationship with their Anglosphere allies.
                The EU has spent years devising a complicated plan to sit somewhere between the US and China, and in doing so hold huge amounts of soft power. Instead, the AUKUS plan, which rests on traditional hard power, was agreed with Brussels left in the dark and France hung out to dry.
                  No matter how much EU officials try to spin this as being somehow separate from its lofty ambitions for the next few years, Biden's decision to work with his traditional allies using traditional hard power on the biggest issue facing the democratic world gives a clear story of where serious geopolitical power will lie over the next few years.
                  While the EU holds huge economic power, the events of the past 24 hours have been a nasty reminder that, in certain areas, Brussels still has a long way to go if it wants to sit between China and the US without getting squashed.

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