Opinion Columnist, The New York Times
Thomas Friedman, an internationally known author and journalist, has won the Pulitzer Prize three times for his work at
The New York Times. His foreign affairs column in
The New York Times reports on US domestic politics and foreign policy, Middle East conflicts, international economics, environment, biodiversity and energy. Friedman is the author of seven bestselling books including
From Beirut to Jerusalem and
The World Is Flat. His latest bestseller,
Thank you For Being Late: An Optimist s Guide to Thriving in the Age of Accelerations, was updated and released October, 2017. For more information, see his website.
ISLAMABAD: Adviser to the Prime Minister on Accountability and Interior Barrister Shahzad Akbar on Saturday said a British judge, in the preliminary hearing of defamation lawsuit against Daily Mail,.
ISLAMABAD: Adviser to the Prime Minister on Accountability and Interior Barrister Shahzad Akbar on Saturday said a British judge, in the preliminary hearing of defamation lawsuit against Daily Mail,.
Late last year, FT deputy news editor Alice Ross published Investing To Save The Planet, one of the most thought-provoking books to emerge from our enforced lockdown. Noting that life’s slower, more considered pace, had had a discernible impact, Ms Ross writes that “People started to notice how companies were handling the coronavirus. Some were firing their workers. Others were guaranteeing jobs. The investors in these companies started to notice too.
“Our collective experience of the [pandemic] drew comparisons with climate change: both were a common enemy that would best be fought through co-operation… ‘Build Back Better’ became a catchphrase as governments tried to figure out how to emerge from the economic crisis in the right way.”
Late last year, FT deputy news editor Alice Ross published Investing To Save The Planet, one of the most thought-provoking books to emerge from our enforced lockdown. Noting that life’s slower, more considered pace, had had a discernible impact, Ms Ross writes that “People started to notice how companies were handling the coronavirus. Some were firing their workers. Others were guaranteeing jobs. The investors in these companies started to notice too.
“Our collective experience of the [pandemic] drew comparisons with climate change: both were a common enemy that would best be fought through co-operation… ‘Build Back Better’ became a catchphrase as governments tried to figure out how to emerge from the economic crisis in the right way.”