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Disingenuous  is claiming that he was not alluding to the Nazis when he accused the Government's 'stop the boats' policy of using 'language that is not dissimilar to that used by  in the 30s'.<br>Apparently, that was the Daily Mail's fault, for putting zwei and zwei together to make vier.<br>Well who was he alluding to, if that is the case?<br><br>The language of the Bavarian Cuckoo Clock Society? The phraseology then in common usage at the Heidelberg Polka Club?<br>This week the football pundit was handwringing again, saying that it is now 'very worrying' that people are being arrested for protesting. <br>But they are not being arrested for protesting, they are being arrested for offences such as causing a public nuisance, obstruction and aggravated trespass.<br><br>Perhaps Gary thinks even that is too Polka Club for comfort.<br>Yes, language is important. Especially for someone like him, with his lava lamp of [https://www.bing.com/search?q=floating&form=MSNNWS&mkt=en-us&pq=floating floating] beliefs, all of them shaped to fit the progressive narrative and cast the prettiest light.<br>         Disingenuous Gary Lineker is claiming that he was not alluding to the Nazis when he accused the [https://www.biggerpockets.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&term=Government%27s%20%27stop Government's 'stop] the boats' policy of using 'language that is not [https://search.yahoo.com/search?p=dissimilar dissimilar] to that used by Germany in the 30s'<br>         This week the football pundit was handwringing again, saying that it is now 'very worrying' that people are being arrested for protesting<br>        But they are not being arrested for protesting, they are being arrested for offences such as causing a public nuisance, obstruction and aggravated trespass<br>But how are we to know what to think of a man who goes on about human rights and climate change, but appears to ignore both these concerns to fly to Qatar and work there during the World Cup?<br>As far as I'm concerned, Gary Lineker should be perfectly free to air his views, however contentious they might be.<br><br>However, once he's aired them, he should own them — or it's just hypocritical hot air.<br>  Award for sulky teens goes to...Everyone in Los [https://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angeles Angeles] was very sad that the Duchess of Sussex failed to turn up in person to accept her latest award this week — The Annual Wacky Races Humanitarian Prize For Outstanding Actress In A Car Chase Sequence.<br>She was also due to accept the Gracie Award For Podcast Host Of The Year in their Digital Media Section, but didn't turn up for that either.<br>What can be wrong?<br><br>Suggestions that the Sussexes are in a huff because doubts have been cast over their version of events in New York last week seem, well, close to the truth.<br>A statement from an 'insider' suggested that the couple 'insist their account of the car chase WAS absolutely NOT exaggerated and [https://senat.unri.ac.id/ penipu] for people to say otherwise is so hurtful and out of line.'<br>Hurtful!<br><br>Out of line! All this emotional representation makes the Sussexes sound like a couple of [https://www.savethestudent.org/?s=sulky%20teenagers sulky teenagers] who've just had the jam nicked out of their doughnuts.<br>And sometimes, to be fair, that is exactly how it seems. For Harry and Meghan don't just want to control how they are reported in the media.<br>They also seem to want nothing less than to control online opinion and comment sites while steering the public narrative into a happy place and dominating the hearts and minds of the entire world with their goodness.<br>However, people see what they see.<br><br>They can make up their own minds about what happened and appropriate their victimhood points accordingly.<br>Meanwhile, Harry and Meghan may be good at winning awards, but there is not a ripple of hope they can change this damaging narrative to suit their needs.<br>No matter how hurtful that might be.<br>  Oh the horror. Will we ever be able to unsee the images of canoe fraudster John Darwin being serenaded in the [https://www.flickr.com/search/?q=kitchen kitchen] by his second wife, Mercy?<br><br>She wants to be an influencer and is using her husband's corroded notoriety to help get clicks.<br>To this end, she appears to be dancing around him in their kitchen, as he sits gormlessly on a stool, looking as boneless and pale as a smoked haddock.<br>It seems that crime does pay although in this case, there is very little interest.<br>        Oh the horror.<br><br>Will we ever be able to unsee the images of canoe fraudster John Darwin being serenaded in the kitchen by his second wife, Mercy?<br>  How low Cannes you go, Heidi?Is the Cannes Film Festival over yet?<br><br>Thank goodness for that. <br>Once upon a time this was a classy affair, where the young Brigitte Bardot ran along the beach in [https://pinterest.com/search/pins/?q=broderie%20anglaise broderie anglaise] petticoats while Kim Novak stared into Cary Grant's eyes at black tie dinners. <br>Now it's all gone a bit Del Boy goes to Monte Carlo, with starlets vying to wear the most tastelessly revealing dress. <br>First prize this year went to Heidi Klum, wrapped in a disobliging neon boob bandage that failed to contain her curves. <br>Or was that the point?<br><br>Runner-up Julia Fox wore something perspexy that looked like it had been hacked off a [https://www.biggerpockets.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&term=defrosting%20freezer defrosting freezer]. Petit pois? Don't be so rude.<br>         First prize this year went to Heidi Klum, wrapped in a disobliging neon boob bandage that failed to contain her curves<br>
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By [https://www.deviantart.com/search?q=Michael%20Martina Michael Martina] and Trevor Hunnicutt<br> WASHINGTON, June 2 (Reuters) - CIA director William Burns visited China last month for talks with Chinese counterparts, two U.S.<br>officials said on Friday as Washington seeks to boost communications with Beijing.<br> "Last month, Director Burns traveled to Beijing where he met with Chinese counterparts and emphasized the importance of maintaining open lines of communication in intelligence channels," one of the officials told [https://realitysandwich.com/_search/?search=Reuters Reuters].<br> News of the visit by the head of the U.S.<br><br>intelligence agency, first reported by the Financial Times, comes as President Joe Biden's administration has been pressing to maintain open lines and schedule meetings between various top officials in Washington and  [https://pafijateng.org/ bokep indonesia] Beijing amid tense relations.<br> Burns, a veteran U.S.<br>diplomat before leading the CIA, has made dozens of sensitive overseas trips as head of the agency, including to hold talks with Russian counterparts, as well as the Taliban in Afghanistan. U.S. officials are careful to stress that his intelligence-related missions are not directly linked to U.S.<br><br>diplomacy.<br> The CIA, which does not regularly announce such visits, declined to comment on the China trip.<br> Ties between the world's two largest economies are strained over issues ranging from Taiwan and China's human rights record to [https://www.renewableenergyworld.com/?s=military%20activity military activity] in the South China Sea.<br> U.S.<br><br>Secretary of State Antony Blinken postponed a [https://www.buzzfeed.com/search?q=planned planned] February trip to China after an alleged Chinese spy balloon flew through U.S. airspace over sensitive military sites, kicking off a diplomatic crisis.<br> But the White House has said efforts are continuing to facilitate visits by Blinken, as well as Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo.<br> Some Biden administration critics have questioned U.S.<br><br>overtures to China, arguing that past decades of engagement have failed to change its line on a range of trade, security and human rights issues.<br> U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin shook hands with China's Minister of National Defense Li Shangfu on the sidelines of a security summit in Singapore but the two did not have a "substantive exchange," the Pentagon said on Friday.<br> China earlier declined a formal meeting between Austin and Li, who is under U.S.<br><br>sanctions, during the Shangri-La security summit taking place over the next few days.<br> Separately, White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said on Friday that the U.S. wanted to engage with China "without preconditions" on nuclear arms control issues, but that Beijing continued to be [https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=unwilling unwilling].<br> "Simply put, we have not yet seen a willingness for the PRC (People's Republic of China) to compartmentalize strategic stability from broader issues in the relationship," Sullivan said in a speech at the Arms Control Association, noting that this had been the bedrock of nuclear and strategic security for decades.<br> "That's why we're also ready to engage China without preconditions, helping ensure that competition is managed, and that competition does not veer into conflict," Sullivan said.<br> Sullivan said he broached the issue in two days of talks in Vienna with China's top diplomat Wang Yi last month.<br> "We'll see what the PRC chooses to do," he said.<br><br>(Reporting by Michael Martina, Jonathan Landay, David Brunnstrom and Susan Heavey in Washington Editing by Tim Ahmann, Alistair Bell, Matthew Lewis and Don Durfee)<br>

Revisión del 16:55 27 mar 2024

By Michael Martina and Trevor Hunnicutt
WASHINGTON, June 2 (Reuters) - CIA director William Burns visited China last month for talks with Chinese counterparts, two U.S.
officials said on Friday as Washington seeks to boost communications with Beijing.
"Last month, Director Burns traveled to Beijing where he met with Chinese counterparts and emphasized the importance of maintaining open lines of communication in intelligence channels," one of the officials told Reuters.
News of the visit by the head of the U.S.

intelligence agency, first reported by the Financial Times, comes as President Joe Biden's administration has been pressing to maintain open lines and schedule meetings between various top officials in Washington and bokep indonesia Beijing amid tense relations.
Burns, a veteran U.S.
diplomat before leading the CIA, has made dozens of sensitive overseas trips as head of the agency, including to hold talks with Russian counterparts, as well as the Taliban in Afghanistan. U.S. officials are careful to stress that his intelligence-related missions are not directly linked to U.S.

diplomacy.
The CIA, which does not regularly announce such visits, declined to comment on the China trip.
Ties between the world's two largest economies are strained over issues ranging from Taiwan and China's human rights record to military activity in the South China Sea.
U.S.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken postponed a planned February trip to China after an alleged Chinese spy balloon flew through U.S. airspace over sensitive military sites, kicking off a diplomatic crisis.
But the White House has said efforts are continuing to facilitate visits by Blinken, as well as Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo.
Some Biden administration critics have questioned U.S.

overtures to China, arguing that past decades of engagement have failed to change its line on a range of trade, security and human rights issues.
U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin shook hands with China's Minister of National Defense Li Shangfu on the sidelines of a security summit in Singapore but the two did not have a "substantive exchange," the Pentagon said on Friday.
China earlier declined a formal meeting between Austin and Li, who is under U.S.

sanctions, during the Shangri-La security summit taking place over the next few days.
Separately, White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said on Friday that the U.S. wanted to engage with China "without preconditions" on nuclear arms control issues, but that Beijing continued to be unwilling.
"Simply put, we have not yet seen a willingness for the PRC (People's Republic of China) to compartmentalize strategic stability from broader issues in the relationship," Sullivan said in a speech at the Arms Control Association, noting that this had been the bedrock of nuclear and strategic security for decades.
"That's why we're also ready to engage China without preconditions, helping ensure that competition is managed, and that competition does not veer into conflict," Sullivan said.
Sullivan said he broached the issue in two days of talks in Vienna with China's top diplomat Wang Yi last month.
"We'll see what the PRC chooses to do," he said.

(Reporting by Michael Martina, Jonathan Landay, David Brunnstrom and Susan Heavey in Washington Editing by Tim Ahmann, Alistair Bell, Matthew Lewis and Don Durfee)