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UK agrees post-Brexit deal over Gibraltar

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Music   来源:India  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:"Such is the competition on other channels - your Netflixs and your YouTubes - we have to cut through, and money is getting shorter in supply, so therefore the greater the sum of the parts when there's more co-production."

"Such is the competition on other channels - your Netflixs and your YouTubes - we have to cut through, and money is getting shorter in supply, so therefore the greater the sum of the parts when there's more co-production."

He also says Musk is "upset" that subsidies for electric vehicles would be cut in his planned bill, affecting the billionaire's Tesla and SpaceX businesses.Musk responds in real-time to the broadcast from the Oval Office, dismissing Trump's assertions.

UK agrees post-Brexit deal over Gibraltar

Back at the White House, Trump tells reporters Musk knew "every aspect of the bill" and says he is "very disappointed in Elon"."False," replies Musk on X. "This bill was never shown to me even once and was passed in the dead of night so fast that almost no-one in Congress would even read it!"Musk resurfaces old Trump posts on X, highlighting moments when the president criticised America's budget deficits. "Where is this guy today??" he asks.

UK agrees post-Brexit deal over Gibraltar

Replying to another user on X, Musk says: "Without me, Trump would have lost the election." He goes on to say: "Such ingratitude".Still going, Musk claims on X that "the Big Ugly Bill will INCREASE the deficit to $2.5 trillion".

UK agrees post-Brexit deal over Gibraltar

Musk continues to quote old Trump posts on X about government spending. He asks: "Where is the man who wrote these words? Was he replaced by a body double!?"

"Is it time to create a new political party in America that actually represents the 80% in the middle?" Musk asks in a poll on X.Contesting international laws on asylum is a trend Denmark is establishing at a more European level, says Sarah Wolff, Professor of International Studies and Global Politics at Leiden University.

"With the topic of migration now politicised, you increasingly see supposedly liberal countries that are signatories to international conventions, like human rights law, coming back on those conventions because the legislation no longer fits the political agenda of the moment," says Ms Wolff.Despite the restrictive migrant legislation, Denmark

continued to admit migrant workers through legal channels. But not enough, considering the rapidly aging population, say critics like Michelle Pace.She predicts Denmark will face a serious labour shortage in the future.

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