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US health deal: The MoU included provisions that would allow drugs approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to enter the Ghanaian market without undergoing test by the FDA -JoyNews Sources say
Follow our WhatsApp channel for all the breaking stories: tinyurl.com/JoyNews-WhatsA…
#JoyNews #Viral #Explorepage #Ghana #JoyFM #GhanaNews #Ghana #NewsUpdate #Africa #GhPolitics #News #AfricaNews #CurrentAffairs #vlog

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Game theory explains why working harder inside a broken system is the worst response to that system. Because a system is never truly broken. It's just producing exactly the outcomes its own incentive structures were designed to produce, whether intentional or not. Working harder inside this system increases your output in the payoff matrix, but it simply won't change the actual structure of the system's matrix. Thus, the correct response is not more effort. Instead, you must aim to identify whose interests the current structure serves and position yourself in favor of those interests rather than against them. Change the game, or play the game that is actually being played. Either way, you must stop optimizing for the game you wish it to be and start acting realistically.
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MIT engineers have developed “mini livers” that could be injected into the body and take over the functions of the failing liver. This would help patients who are on a waitlist for a liver transplant or those who aren’t healthy enough to tolerate surgery.
news.mit.edu/2026/injectabl…
GIF
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ReasoningBank, a novel agent memory framework, enables LLM agents to continuously learn from both successful & failed experiences. Our evaluation shows that it enhances agent effectiveness, boosting success rates and efficiency. Learn more: goo.gle/4dWrPGb

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Build Robots
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My predictions for Today’s UN Vote. Fear Delegates!
1. Today, the United Nations General Assembly votes on Ghana’s resolution declaring the Transatlantic Slave Trade the gravest crime against humanity.
2. I have spent years working in these UN halls and in the spaces that have shaped international law. Believe me when I tell you that today feels different.
3. The moment is even more significant than anything I have ever worked on. Because this has been for Ghana.
4. Now Here is my honest prediction on our chances.
I am hopeful that the Resolution will pass. Perhaps somewhere around 120 Yes votes, 40 abstentions, 10 against.
5. Here is how I arrived at that prediction:
a. The African Union is expected to deliver unanimously. All 54 member states. That alone is historic and should not be understated. If any of those stubborn cats should fail to show up; unless we lass them.
b. I am watching the Caribbean vote closely. Because today is also a test of Caribbean solidarity. The CARICOM Reparations Commission has produced some of the finest legal and moral argumentation for reparatory justice anywhere in the world. The intellectual case for this resolution was built in significant part in Kingston, in Bridgetown, in Georgetown. If that bloc fractures today, even partially, opponents of reparatory justice will use it as a weapon for years to come.
c. And then there is Western Europe. I know how these governments think. I know how they instruct their missions. They will not vote No. I believe the domestic cost of that is too high. But an abstention is its own answer. Every country that built a slave fort, that wrote a slave code, that turned a human being into a line of taxable commerce, and today walks to the middle of the room and says nothing. That silence will echo.
6. My hope is simple. I hope I am wrong about the abstentions. I hope the number is smaller than I fear. I hope that when governments cast their votes this morning, they remember that history is taking names.
7. The resolution will pass. Of that I am confident.
Whether it passes with the weight of a genuine global moral reckoning, or merely as a procedural victory won by numbers, that will be decided in the next few minutes. In this room, by votes I am about to witness with my own eyes.
8. I am hopeful. And I am here. But in all things Fear Delegates.
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The 'anti-LGBTQ' bill may be crude & out of touch, but the University’s late-stage realization of Mahama's public track record, after weeks of event coordination , is inexcusable.
Joy 99.7 FM@Joy997FM
Lincoln University makes last-minute u-turn on planned conferment of honorary degree on President Mahama over anti-LGBTQ bill in Ghana's Parliament Follow our WhatsApp channel for all the breaking stories: tinyurl.com/JoyNews-WhatsA… #JoyNews #Viral #Explorepage #Ghana #JoyFM #GhanaNews #Ghana #NewsUpdate #Africa #GhPolitics #News #AfricaNews #CurrentAffairs #Vlog
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@barkervogues Exactly my thought! Not forgetting that his chief received one from Macron 2 years ago, immediately after he left office: graphic.com.gh/news/general-n…
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@python_xi Nice work! Important to have localised solutions. How's this different from valhalla.github.io/valhalla (already handles multiple transport profiles, custom costing models, and turn-by-turn on OSM data. Curious what Atlas does that Valhalla doesn't, especially for the our context)
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Ivorian farmers are being forced to store unsold cocoa beans in their homes and accept low prices for their harvest as demand slumps and prices fall reut.rs/4avEXyA
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@lordcudjoe I’m confused by constant debate about whether or not Nkrumah was a dictator as though that was the ultimate goal of the independence struggle. Shouldn’t we treat the form of governance as a means to an end & that question ought not be how the goal was achieve..
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Thanks everyone who attempted to debate my position that Nkrumah was a dictator. To all those who were emotional rather than provide rational arguments against my position, please do you deny answers to the following questions?
1. Did Nkrumah make himself a president for life?
Answer: Yes he did through a flawed and rigged Referendum on January 31,1964 with 99.91% of the votes.
2. Did Nkrumah make Ghana a one-party state by banning all political parties except his CPP from existing?
Yes, he did on February 1, 1964.
3. Did Nkrumah suppress freedom by arresting and detaining political opponents and banning media and even threatening Judges who ruled against him?
Yes, Nkrumah suppressed freedom with laws like the Preventive Detention Act (1958) to imprison political rivals, including figures like J.B. Danquah who was fed, Garri, Salt and Water, got dehydrated and later died.
You think these were not enough grounds to remove him from power? Nkrumah was visionary when it came to African unity and perhaps the only reason we eulogise him.in Ghana is simply because successive governments after his had been poorer.
Let me add that Nkrumah mismanaged Ghana's economy and most of his state-owned enterprises were running at a loss.
By 1966, more than fifty state enterprises set up were badly managed, weighed down by inefficient bureaucracies and run at a huge loss. Ghana’s official external debt reached £184 million in 1963. A year later, it stood at £349 million. It was clear that Nkrumah’s handling of the economy was frightening. He had within a relatively short time plunged Ghana, a beacon of hope to the rest of Africa and one of the most prosperous countries in the tropical world into bankruptcy. Historian Martin Meredith explains that a spending spree of £430 million between 1959 and 1964 left Ghana “scores of loss-making industries and a fast-shrinking agricultural sector.”



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