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Welcome
… to our weekly roundup, featuring highlights from our coverage over the past seven days. If you like it, why not pass it on? New readers can subscribe by following the very simple steps right here.
The best of the week
Olympics  
Highs, lows and Snoop Dogg: our writers' most memorable moments
Highs, lows and Snoop Dogg: our writers' most memorable moments
David Squires on …  
The Premier League circus rolling back into town
The Premier League circus rolling back into town
Olympics  
Shoot like a pro: how the best photos of Paris 2024 were taken
Shoot like a pro: how the best photos of Paris 2024 were taken
Olympics  
Digging out the memorable moments you might have missed
Digging out the memorable moments you might have missed
Football  
The loss and loneliness of the unemployed manager
The loss and loneliness of the unemployed manager
The Spin  
On a hat-trick? Listen to Botham, bowl full and straight
On a hat-trick? Listen to Botham, bowl full and straight
Comment and analysis
Less is more: Los Angeles Games do not need every sport so let’s cut your favourite
Less is more: Los Angeles Games do not need every sport so let’s cut your favourite
With five extra sports at LA 2028, events that feel peripheral, repetitive or involve horses should face the chop
City’s charges, Arne Slot and new stars: will this Premier League season surprise us?
France’s far right goes quiet as Paris shows what patriotism is
Watch and listen
Australian breaker Raygun responds to 'devastating' online hate
'I worked my butt off'  
Australian breaker Raygun responds to 'devastating' online hate
Olympic breaker who went viral attacks critics and thanks those who have defended her: 'I’m glad I was able to bring some joy into your lives'
Football Weekly  
Premier League season preview, part one: Arsenal to Ipswich
More from our newsletters
More from our newsletters
Try our other sports emails: there’s daily football news and gossip in Football Daily, our weekly women's football roundup Moving the Goalposts, and weekly catch-ups for cricket in The Spin and rugby union in The Breakdown.
From the vault
From the vault  
Premier League: 1992, the start of a whole new ball game
Premier League: 1992, the start of a whole new ball game
Coming up this weekend
Our live slate begins with the Premier League opener on Friday evening as Manchester United take on Fulham at Old Trafford at 8pm (all times BST).

On Saturday, there's something for rugby union fans as Australia and South Africa do battle in the Rugby Championship at 10.45am before the football really gets going, with Ipswich's meeting with Liverpool (12.30pm), West Ham's claret-and-blue clash with Aston Villa (5.30pm) and our all-action clockwatch on the agenda. We'll also have coverage of stage seven of the Tour de France Femmes, a mountainous melee running from Champagnole to Le Grand-Bornand in the Alps.

Then, on Sunday, we'll have blow-by-blow updates from Manchester City's trip to Chelsea at 4.30pm. There will also be more Tour de France Femmes, with the finale running from Le Grand-Bornand to Alpe d’Huez. Last but not least, come Monday, there will be minute-by-minute coverage of Leicester's first game back in the top flight, against Tottenham at the King Power Stadium, which gets under way at 8pm.
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A staple of dystopian science fictions is an inner sanctum of privilege and an outer world peopled by the desperate poor. The insiders, living off the exploited labour of the outlands, are indifferent to the horrors beyond their walls.

As environmental breakdown accelerates, the planet itself is being treated as the outer world. A rich core extracts wealth from the periphery, often with horrendous cruelty, while the insiders turn their eyes from the human and environmental costs. The periphery becomes a sacrifice zone. Those in the core shrink to their air-conditioned offices.

At the Guardian, we seek to break out of the core and the mindset it cultivates. Guardian journalists tell the stories the rest of the media scarcely touch: stories from the periphery, such as David Azevedo, who died as a result of working on a construction site during an extreme heat wave in France. Or the people living in forgotten, “redlined” parts of US cities that, without the trees and green spaces of more prosperous suburbs, suffer worst from the urban heat island effect.

Exposing the threat of the climate emergency – and the greed of those who enable it – is central to the Guardian’s mission. But this is a collective effort – and we need your help.

If you can afford to fund the Guardian’s reporting, as a one-off payment or from just £4 per month, it will help us to share the truth about the influence of the fossil fuel giants and those that do their bidding.

Among the duties of journalism is to break down the perceptual walls between core and periphery, inside and outside, to confront power with its impacts, however remote they may seem. This is what we strive to do. Thank you.

George Monbiot,
Guardian columnist

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