Дорогие студенты Mathshub!
Спасибо за поддержку идеи помогать друг другу❤️
Мы получили уже более 20 заявок от более продвинутых студентов, желающих помочь начинающим с нуля✨
В ближайшее время мы присвоим вам в Discord роль «helpers», которая будет отображаться в вашем профиле.
А теперь хотим понять, кому нужна помощь и поддержка хелпера — если вам нужна помощь более продвинутого студента, то, пожалуйста:
1. Зайдите в Discord на наш канал #python-и-математика-интенсив
2. Найдите последний закрепленный пост про набор в мини-группы
3. Оставьте под этим постом реакцию "палец вверх👍🏻"
4. Ожидайте от нас распределения на группы)
Идея объединяться в группы не обязательна для всех.
Она актуальна только для желающих поддержку от более продвинутых студентов. Если вам не актуально, то можете не обращать внимание на это сообщение😌
Спасибо!
🇨🇦#Canada - Il premier Mark #Carney afferma che la Repubblica Islamica dell'Iran è la principale fonte di instabilità e terrore in tutto il Medio Oriente, compie gravi violazioni dei diritti umani e non deve essere autorizzata a ottenere armi nucleari; ribadisce il sostegno del Canada agli Stati Uniti per impedirne l'acquisizione e si dice al fianco del popolo iraniano.
@UltimoraPolitics24
🇨🇦#Canada – Il premier Mark #Carney sospende il viaggio programmato alla Conferenza sulla Sicurezza di Monaco dopo la sparatoria in una scuola a Tumbler Ridge che ha provocato almeno dieci morti, compreso l'attentatore. Lo riferisce il suo ufficio, che annuncia la sospensione temporanea del viaggio.
@UltimoraPolitics24
#Canada🇨🇦
#Parlamentari#Federali
❗️Il Partito Liberale (#LPC|Centro-sinistra) vince le elezioni parlamentari federali. Il leader Mark #Carney verrà riconfermato alla carica di Primo Ministro.
@TuttoElezioni
🇨🇦#Canada, oggi le elezioni anticipate. Favorito il partito liberale del primo ministro #Carney, che dopo l'insediamento di #Trump ha rimontato e superato i conservatori di #Poilievre, prima nettamente in vantaggio.
(Grafico The Economist)
@UltimoraPolitics
#Canada#Palestina
Primo Ministro Mark #Carney (#LPC|Centro-sinistra): "Il Canada ha intenzione di riconoscere lo Stato di Palestina durante la riunione dell'#ONU di settembre".
@OsservatorioEsteri
Trump to Carney : Get the Fuck Out of My Board of Peace
Trump withdrew on Thursday an invitation for Canada to join his “board of peace” initiative aimed at resolving global conflicts.
“Please let this Letter serve to represent that the Board of Peace is withdrawing its invitation to you regarding Canada’s joining, what will be, the most prestigious Board of Leaders ever assembled, at any time,” Trump wrote in a Truth Social post directed at the Canadian prime minister, Mark Carney.
Trump launched his “board of peace” initiative at the World Economic Forum in Davos, claiming it would be “one of the most consequential bodies ever created in the history of the world”.
The board, which will be chaired by Trump, was originally described as a temporary body to oversee the governance and reconstruction of Gaza.
Permanent members must help fund the board with a payment of $1bn each, according to Trump.
When he arrived in Davos, Trump made it clear that he had heard or at least heard of Carney’s viral speech.
“Canada lives because of the United States,” Trump said in his own address on Wednesday. “Remember that, Mark, the next time you make your statements.”
“Canada doesn’t live because of the United States,” Carney responded Thursday. “Canada thrives because we are Canadian.”
Neither Carney’s office nor the White House immediately responded to Reuters requests for comment on Thursday evening.
“Once this board is completely formed, we can do pretty much whatever we want to do,” Trump said in Switzerland on Thursday. “And we’ll do it in conjunction with the United Nations.”
#board#peace#trump#carney
📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events
🇺🇸
Mark Carney Meets Xi. Canada Suits in Favor of China
Canada’s prime minister, Mark Carney, has hailed a “new strategic partnership” with China as he held talks in Beijing with Xi Jinping, the first visit by a Canadian leader in eight years.
Addressing Xi in the Great Hall of the People, Carney said: “Together we can build on the best of what this relationship has been in the past to create a new one adapted to new global realities.”
Carney announced on Friday that Canada and China had reached a preliminary trade deal aimed at reducing tariffs, including a commitment to import 49,000 electric vehicles from China at preferential tariff rates.
Engagement and cooperation would form “the foundation of our new strategic partnership”, Carney said, adding that agriculture, energy, finance offered opportunities for the most immediate progress.
Canada and China had been locked in years of diplomatic spats after the retaliatory arrests of each other’s citizens and a series of tit-for-tat trade disputes.
But Carney has sought to reset ties as part of a broader effort to reduce Canada’s reliance on the US, its principal economic partner, after Trump sharply raised tariffs on Canadian goods.
During the visit, the two sides signed an agreement to cooperate on clean energy and fossil fuels, reopening ministerial-level talks that had reportedly been frozen for nearly a decade.
The agreement opens the door to Canada importing more clean-energy technology from China and raises the prospect of increased Canadian fossil fuel exports to the Chinese market, part of Carney’s push to double non-US exports. In 2024, only 2% of Canada’s crude oil was exported to China.
Additional agreements were signed covering forestry, culture and tourism.
Welcoming Carney, Xi said China-Canada relations had reached a turning point at their previous meeting on the sidelines of the Apec summit in October 2025.
“It can be said that our meeting last year opened a new chapter in turning China-Canada relations toward improvement,” Xi told the Canadian prime minister.
#carney#xi#canada#china#trump
📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events
🇺🇸
🔤🔤🔤🔤2️⃣
Another perspective on the matter comes from Ryan Haas, a senior fellow at Brookings. In a post on X, he wrote: “In viewing Trump’s efforts to gain control of Greenland, Beijing appears to be following Napoleon’s maxim: ‘Never interrupt your adversary when he’s making a mistake.’”
Because although China pledges allegiance to the international rules-based order, Xi has long talked of the world undergoing “great changes unseen in a century”, echoing Carney’s sentiment of global “rupture”.
Seiwert says: “Beijing could use Carney’s language rhetorically to suggest a shared diagnosis of US-centric instability, even if there is no convergence on values, interests or outcomes.”
Rather than kowtow to the southern neighbour, Carney is trying to lessen his country’s dependence on the US.
In Beijing, he agreed to lower tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles from 100% to 6.1%, diverting from an alignment with Washington that had left one of China’s key exports in effect blocked from the North American market.
Ukraine may be particularly high on the agenda for Petteri Orpo, Finland’s prime minister, who lands in Beijing on Sunday.
“China’s support for Russia has definitely strained relations with the Nordic states and Finland is no exception,” says Patrik Andersson, an analyst at the Swedish Institute of International Affairs.
But Andersson notes that Finland’s China relations have typically been more stable than those of Sweden and Norway, and this visit is likely to bolster those ties.
In the months after Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, European countries wrestled with the fact that many were dependent on Russia for key commodities such as fossil fuels.
There were calls to avoid falling into a similar situation with China, the world’s most important supplier of clean energy technology. Even back in 2020, the chair of the UK’s joint intelligence committee, Simon Gass, said: “China represents a risk on a pretty wide scale.”
Such concerns may be fading into the rearview mirror as middle powers seek to cling on to a world of multilateralism in the face of a wrecking ball swung by the country that was once its greatest defender. China insists Trump’s behaviour is nothing to celebrate.
But the outcome may nevertheless strengthen Beijing’s position on the world stage.
#trump#beijing#china#russia#xi#carney
📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events
🇺🇸
Trump Has Taken a Tumble in an Economic Tug of War With Xi Jinping
🔤🔤🔤🔤1️⃣
If geopolitics relies at least in part on bonhomie between global leaders, China made an unexpected play for Ireland’s good graces when the taoiseach visited Beijing this month.
Meeting Ireland’s leader, Micheál Martin, in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China’s president, Xi Jinping, said a favourite book of his as a teenager was The Gadfly, by the Irish author Ethel Voynich, a novel set in the revolutionary fervour of Italy in the 1840s.
“It was unusual that we ended up discussing The Gadfly and its impact on both of us but there you are,” Martin told reporters in Beijing.
China is on a charm offensive with western leaders, a path cleared by Trump’s increasingly erratic and destabilising power grabs on the global stage.
Although Europe breathed a sigh of relief this week when Trump withdrew the threat of using military force in Greenland and said he would not impose tariffs on opponents of his plans in the Arctic, the US no longer seems like a reliable partner.
An editorial in the Chinese newspaper the Global Times made Beijing’s pitch clear: headlined “Europe should seriously consider building a China-EU community with a shared future”, the state media article said the world risked “returning to the law of the jungle” and that China and the EU should cooperate in building “a shared future for mankind”.
No country can afford to cut ties or truly antagonise the world’s biggest economy. But in the search for stability, US allies are turning to the country that many in Washington see as an existential threat: China.
“With US policy again looking unpredictable – underscored by tensions and tariff threats over Greenland – European leaders are making sure to keep channels with Beijing open,” says Eva Seiwert, a senior analyst at the Mercator Institute for China Studies.
“The risk is that this approach sustains or even deepens existing dependencies on China at a moment when Europe’s stated goal is de-risking.”
#trump#beijing#china#russia#xi#carney
📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events
🇺🇸