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Brisbane – Điểm sáng mới của thị trường bất động sản Australia

Vượt qua hai đối thủ nặng ký là Sydney và Melbourne, thành phố Brisbane thuộc bang Queensland gây bất ngờ khi ghi nhận tăng trưởng giá nhà đạt mốc kỷ lục tại thời điểm thị trường bất động sản Australia nói chung đang trong tình trạng ảm đạm.




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Sống trên du thuyền cũng phải nộp thuế bất động sản

Ở nhiều bang của Mỹ, người sở hữu du thuyền cũng phải chịu thuế bất động sản cá nhân, cho dù loại tài sản này không hề bất động!




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Nhà đầu tư chờ London giảm thuế để “nhảy vào” thị trường bất động sản

Thay vì xuống tiền ngay để tận dụng lợi thế đồng bảng giảm giá, các nhà đầu tư bất động sản nhắm tới thị trường London nên chờ đợi quyết định giảm thuế có thể được chính phủ Anh công bố vào đầu năm sau để hưởng lợi nhiều hơn.




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Những thị trường bất động sản toàn cầu đang đối mặt nguy cơ bong bóng

Theo báo cáo của ngân hàng UBS, giá bất động sản tại các thành phố Munich (Đức), Toronto (Canada) và Hồng Kông (Trung Quốc) đang tăng trưởng không bền vững, tiềm ẩn nguy cơ bong bóng cao nhất toàn cầu.




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80% thành phố lớn trên toàn cầu ghi nhận giá bất động sản tăng

Giá bất động sản tại các thành phố trọng điểm trên toàn cầu tăng trung bình 3,5% trong quý 2/2019, trong đó thành phố Tây An (Trung Quốc) dẫn đầu với mức tăng trưởng lên tới 25% so với cùng kỳ năm ngoái.




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Tăng trưởng ổn định, chính sách pháp lý minh bạch và cơ chế rõ ràng luôn là những yếu tố thôi thúc giới thượng lưu/các nhà đầu tư Việt Nam quyết định “xuống tiền” sở hữu bất động sản tại Úc.




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Singapore: Giá bất động sản để ở bắt đầu tăng trở lại

Ngân hàng trung ương Singapore gần đây đã đưa ra lời cảnh báo trước tình trạng “ế hàng” của thị trường bất động sản cũng như sự sụt giảm của thị trường lao động. Giá bất động sản để ở trước đó giảm mạnh sau khi chính phủ thực hiện các biện pháp kiểm soát tài sản từ tháng 7 năm ngoái, nhưng gần đây đã bắt đầu tăng trở lại.




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Chấm dứt 21 tháng tăng trưởng chậm, giá trị nhà ở tại Mỹ đã tăng tốc trở lại vào tháng 2, tăng tới 3.9% so với cùng kỳ năm ngoái, theo báo cáo thị trường bất động sản của Zillow. Tuy nhiên, những tác động từ đại dịch Corona có thể khiến đà tăng này chỉ diễn ra trong một thời gian ngắn.




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Doanh số bán bất động sản trong tháng 3/2020 của 100 nhà phát triển bất động sản lớn được khảo sát tại Trung Quốc đã tăng 136,2% so với tháng trước đó.




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Doanh nghiệp bất động sản ít mặn mà với công trình xanh

Các dự án bất động sản ứng dụng công nghệ xanh, hướng tới sự phát triển bền vững được coi là giải pháp hiệu quả nhằm ngăn chặn tình trạng ô nhiễm môi trường ngày càng trầm trọng trên thế giới. Tuy nhiên, không nhiều doanh nghiệp bất động sản muốn đi theo hướng này vì lo ngại vấn đề chi phí.




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BÁN ĐẤT THỔ CƯ 100%, NGAY RESORT BIỂN DỐC LẾT.XÂY KHÁCH SẠN, NHÀ HÀNG RẤT TỐT.

BÁN ĐẤT THỔ CƯ 100%, NGAY RESORT BIỂN DỐC LẾT. **Dốc Lết là 1 trong những bãi biển ĐẸP nhất hành tinh. -DIỆN TÍCH: 245.3m2 - NGANG 12M - DÀI 22M. -VỊ TRÍ: Mặt tiền đường Mê Linh - Rộng 12 mét. Đường nhựa. ***Giá bán: 7,5 TRIỆU/M2 . Bao sang tên sổ hồng. CAM KẾT GIÁ THẤP HƠN THỊ T...




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Chính chủ cần bán khách sạn Thuần Hà bờ hồ Sa Pa có view cực đẹp, giá 12 tỷ LH: 0972572987

Tôi cần bán khách sạn Thuần Hà diện tích 80m2 mặt sàn. - Địa chỉ: Tổ 3, phường Sa Pa. - Gồm 5 tầng và 1 Tum. - Diện tích 80m2 (5x16) với đầy đủ nội thất được ốp gỗ Pơ mu 100%. - Khách sạn năm giữa trung tâm thị trấn Sa Pa cách nhà thờ Đá 200m, vị trí đắc địa có 1 không 2. Mặt tiề...




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BÁN 9 NỀN ĐẤT DỰ ÁN LUX HOME GARDEN MT AN DƯƠNG VƯƠNG SANG TÊN NGAY 4.1-4,2TY/NỀN LH: 0901467886

Bán 9 nền đất đã có sổ trong dự án Lux home garden giá 4.1-4.2ty/nền Tỗng khu 50 nền nhưng chỉ xây nhà phố còn 9 nền này không xây mà bán sổ đỏ cho khách khi nào xây thì hoàn công. Các nền xây nhà thì bán giá 7-8ty/căn. Tiện ích dự án đầy đủ: trường học, bệnh viện, chợ, siêu th...




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Nissan कंपनी ने बंद की Terrano एसयूवी! वेबसाइट से भी हटाया, जल्द लॉन्च होंगी ये नई कारें

नए मानक लागू होने के बाद कई ऑटोमोबाइल कंपनियों ने अपने व्हीकल बीएस 4 से बीएस 6 में अपडेट कर लिए हैं जबिक कुछ कंपनियों ने अपने बीएस 4 वहानों को बंद करना ही बेहतर समझा है।




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Justin Trudeau should lift Canada's economic sanctions now

Ken Stone

On March 23, UN Secretary-General António Guterres appealed to G20 leaders: "I am encouraging the waiving of (economic) sanctions imposed on countries to ensure access to food, essential health supplies, and COVID-19 medical support. This is the time for solidarity not exclusion ... Let us remember that we are only as strong as the weakest health system in our interconnected world." At the same time, AP News reported, ambassadors of eight countries currently affected by economic sanctions -- namely, Cuba, Iran, Venezuela, Syria, Nicaragua, China, Russia and North Korea -- petitioned the secretary-general for "the immediate and complete lifting of those measures to enable nations to respond to the coronavirus pandemic." 

Regrettably, so far the wealthy and powerful countries of the world haven't heeded the secretary-general's call to loosen the screws on the weaker and poorer ones. They also ignored a similar appeal by Pope Francis in his Easter address. On the contrary, President Trump actually weaponized the pandemic by instituting further sanctions on both Iran and Venezuela, countries already targeted for regime change. 

In Canada, however, two peace groups, the Hamilton Coalition to Stop the War and le Mouvement Québécois pour la paix, sent an open letter signed by 100 prominent Canadians to Trudeau asking him to lift all of Canada's economic sanctions now. 

Unknown to most Canadians, Trudeau's government maintains economic sanctions regimes against 20 countries of the world, including nine African countries. In fact, under the Harper government in Ottawa in June 2013, Canada co-ordinated economic sanctions for the U.S.-led coalition of countries participating in the regime change operation against Syria. Similarly, under the Trudeau government, Canada helped lead the Lima Group in organizing multilateral sanctions against Venezuela. 

Canada typically applies five types of sanctions: arms embargoes, asset freezes, import-export restrictions, financial prohibitions and technical assistance prohibitions. Not all sanctioned countries feel the full weight of all five. However, some countries do: Iran, Syria, North Korea and Libya. 

The effect on the targeted country is crippling. The first result is usually a drastic decline in its currency's value, which translates into ordinary people being unable to put food on the table for their children. Then follow other crises for working people: unemployment due to closing markets for the country's exports and the inability to get spare parts; inability to receive payments from relatives abroad because the international banking system excludes the targeted country; the closing down of whole industries, such as tourism, because access to credit cards or even air access to national airports, as in the case of Syria, is turned off by the sanctioners.

Supporters will point out that sanction regimes generally exclude food and medical supplies. However, international trade requires financing through banks which are subject to penalties in the U.S., for example for trading with Iran, even though the participating bank may be domiciled in a country that has lifted its sanctions on Iran. This practice by the U.S. is called extraterritoriality.

Some have likened economic sanctions to acts of war and compared them to sieges of medieval towns in which the besiegers hope to make life so difficult for the besieged that they rise up against their feudal lords and open the gates. The comparison isn't far off since the brunt of sanctions aren't felt so much by the targeted countries' ruling elites but rather their civilian populations. A monstrous example was the decade of UN sanctions against Iraq between the First and Second Gulf Wars. Between 1992 and 2000, 500,000 Iraqi children perished from lack of food and medicines. But Madeleine Albright, former U.S. secretary of state in the Clinton administration, famously quipped that it was "worth it."  It was worth it to Albright because sanctions were part of U.S. foreign policy to soften up Iraq in preparation for the Anglo-American invasion and occupation of 2003 which continues today.

Notably, coercive economic measures are not levelled against U.S. client states, no matter the enormity of their crimes. Israel, which turned Gaza into the world’s largest open air prison and is annexing the West Bank, and Saudi Arabia, which wages a bloody war on Yemen and murdered journalist Jamal Khashoggi, don't worry about sanctions.

Under international law, economic sanctions are acts of war. That's why the UN charter restricts the power to level sanctions exclusively to the UN Security Council. That also explains why Canada's unilateral sanctions against 19 countries are illegal. Only in the case of North Korea are Canada's regime of a full spectrum of coercive measures explicable under international law.

While Trudeau tries to play the competent caring leader in his daily COVID-19 press conferences, he cannot ignore the damage he is doing to the efforts to fight the novel coronavirus in 20 of the world's poorest countries, and indeed to the global effort.

Ken Stone is a longtime peace, social justice, labour, anti-racist and environmental activist-resident in Hamilton, Ontario. He is treasurer of the Hamilton Coalition To Stop The War and executive member of the Syria Solidarity Movement.

Image: CanadianPM/Video Screenshot/Twitter




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Ignoring plea from UN, Justin Trudeau refuses to lift sanctions on poor nations during pandemic

These days, any national leader not actively urging their citizens to drink disinfectant is managing to look (relatively) good on the world stage.

Certainly, compared to the neurotic leadership south of the border, Justin Trudeau has emerged as a steady hand on the tiller, quickly providing Canadians with a wide economic safety net and behaving like an adult in the crisis.

So it's all the more disappointing that, out of the limelight, he's doing a great deal to make the situation worse during this pandemic for some of the most vulnerable people on the planet.

I'm referring to the prime minister's decision to ignore a plea last month from United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres -- and the Pope -- for nations to lift sanctions against other nations in order to help some of the weakest and poorest countries cope with the coronavirus crisis.

That sounds like a reasonable request, under the circumstances.

Indeed, even if we don't care about the world's vulnerable people, helping them deal with the crisis is in our interests too. As the UN leader noted: "Let us remember that we are only as strong as the weakest health system in our interconnected world."

Yet Canada, ignoring the plea from the UN's highest official, continues in the midst of the pandemic to impose sanctions on 20 nations, including Lebanon, Venezuela, Syria, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Nicaragua and Yemen.

While Canada's sanctions are typically aimed at punishing the regimes running these countries, the impact of the sanctions falls primarily on ordinary citizens, according to Atif Kubursi, professor emeritus of economics at McMaster University.

Kubursi, who also served as a UN under-secretary-general and has extensive UN experience in the Middle East and Asia, says the impact of Canada's sanctions on the people in these countries is devastating.

While the sanctions often appear to be directed exclusively at military items, they frequently end up being applied to virtually all goods -- including spare parts needed to operate machinery in hospitals and pharmaceutical companies, notes Kubursi, who signed a letter from prominent Canadians to Trudeau requesting the lifting of sanctions.

For instance, if a Syrian businessman wants to buy Canadian products, he has to open an account for the transaction. But Kubursi says the Canadian government instructs Canadian banks not to allow such accounts for the purposes of trade with Syria -- no matter how benign the Canadian product may be, or how urgently it might be needed in Syria.

For that matter, Ottawa's sanctions prevent Canadians from using our banks or financial services to transfer money to Syria -- for instance, to family members living in Syria.

The impact of sanctions, while always painful, is particularly deadly during the pandemic, when even advanced nations have struggled to obtain life-saving equipment.

While Canada's sanctions mostly date back to the Harper era or earlier, the Trudeau government has generally maintained them and even added new ones against Venezuela.

Ottawa's sanctions appear primarily aimed at appeasing the U.S., which ruthlessly enforces sanctions against regimes it wishes to destabilize or overthrow. Washington also punishes countries and companies that don't co-operate with its sanctions.

Ottawa's willingness to fall in line behind Washington is reflected in the fact it doesn't impose sanctions against U.S allies Saudi Arabia or Israel, despite Saudi Arabia's brutal murder of dissident Jamal Khashoggi and Israel's illegal occupation of the West Bank. Even Israel's announcement that it plans to annex the West Bank in July has produced no sanctions or criticism from Canada.

Trudeau's decision to continue sanctioning 20 nations seems quite out of sync with the spirit of the times, when it's hard to find a TV commercial that doesn't proclaim the sentiment that "we're all in this together."

That spirit of international togetherness has been amply demonstrated by Cuba, which sent Cuban doctors to Italy to help its overwhelmed health care system and has offered similar medical help to First Nations in Canada.

When 36 Cuban doctors arrived in Milan last month, a grateful Italy thanked them and Italians at the airport cheered.

Meanwhile, Canada, in the spirit of the international togetherness, rebuffs Cuban doctors, ignores the UN and imposes sanctions on some of the world's poorest nations.

Linda McQuaig is an author and journalist. This column, which appeared in The Toronto Star, is based on research from her new book The Sport & Prey of Capitalists.

Image: CanadianPM/Video Screenshot/Twitter

May 8, 2020




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So merch for all that: how Bernie Sanders became politics’ least likely style icon

Never has one man in inexpensive rumpled suits been so loved by the style set - but Sanders’ clothes signal an authenticity other politicians can only dream of

Of all the things we’ll miss about Bernie Sanders, now that he has dropped out of the Democratic race, his style should be the least of it. Not only because his politics are so right on – this is the man who believes in free education and Medicare for all and who has had many Americans, who until recently felt disenfranchised by mainstream politics, feeling activated by it. But also because his clothes are so seemingly unremarkable.

He wears crumpled suits that look borrowed from a slightly larger man and creased shirts with straight-lace striped ties. The inconspicuousness of his geography teacher shoes are matched only by his inoffensive navy round-neck jumpers.

Continue reading...




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‘Of course I smoked marijuana!’ Elliott Gould on stardom, Streisand and Elvis Presley

The star of M*A*S*H, The Long Goodbye – and more recently, Friends – talks about drugs, his fiery marriage to Barbra Streisand and getting his best reviews from Groucho Marx and Muhammad Ali

The best review ever received by Elliott Gould – renowned actor and star of M*A*S*H and The Long Goodbye; not to mention, Ross and Monica’s dad on Friends – was from Groucho Marx. The two of them had become close in the comedian’s latter years – so close, Gould says, “he used to let me shave him”. One day Marx asked Gould to change a lightbulb in his bedroom. Gould took off his shoes, stood on the bed and replaced the broken bulb. Marx told him: “That was the best acting I’ve ever seen you do.”

Gould, now 81, has been telling the story for decades – but it is clear even in our pixelated video call that it still delights him. “Isn’t that great?” he says, his distinctive nasal, New York baritone now deepened with age. As we speak he is sitting at a computer at a friend’s house in Los Angeles, relaxed in a blue hoodie, with a seemingly bottomless mug of coffee before him. In isolation on either side of the Atlantic, neither of us has anywhere to be. And after more than half a century in Hollywood, in which he went from leading man to exile and, eventually, fixture – Gould could fill days, not just hours, with his stories. Even without his eight-year marriage to Barbra Streisand.

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California Gov. Newsom Endorses Biden, Despite Attempts to Avoid Partisan Politics

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London's hospitals discharge thousands of virus patients

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