Patti Smith: ‘As a writer, you can be a pacifist or a murderer’

As she prepares to ring in 2021 with a performance on screens at Piccadilly Circus, the punk poet explains why she’s optimistic amid the ‘debris’ of Trump’s years in office

Patti Smith talks about her first poetry performance – in 1971 at St Mark’s Church in New York’s Bowery – as if it were yesterday. “I remember everything,” she says over the phone from her home in New York. Smith was in her early 20s, working at a bookshop and living in the Chelsea Hotel with her then lover, the playwright Sam Shepard. She had attended poetry readings before, most of which put her into a deep sleep. “I wanted to do something that wasn’t boring,” she recalls. “Sam said that since I sang to myself all the time, I should try singing a song, or maybe do something with a guitar.” And so she called on the musician Lenny Kaye to provide “interpretative” noises on guitar while she half-read, half-sang her poems.

The show was an instant hit. “It seemed to make a big impression on people – which I really didn’t understand,” she says. The producer Sandy Pearlman approached her afterwards and suggested she front a rock band. She eventually took his advice, making the landmark album Horses in 1975, and an icon of American punk was born.

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Australia’s first case of South African virus variant detected in Queensland – as it happened

More contagious variant identified in returned traveller; three shops in Sydney CBD and two supermarkets in eastern suburbs visited by people who tested positive. This blog is now closed

  • Queensland detects case of South African variant
  • NSW records three new coronavirus cases
  • Sydney New Year’s Eve restrictions explainer
  • Covid hotspots NSW
  • Australia border restrictions
  • Follow our global coronavirus live blog
  • And with that, we’ll wrap up the blog. Here’s a summary of everything that happened today:

    Fairfield City has taken the decision to cancel New Year’s Eve celebrations, due both to the pandemic and the weather.

    Mayor Frank Carbone says in a statement he knows people will be disappointed by the decision, but it is the right decision.

    Council has been closely monitoring the escalating Covid situation in Sydney. The decision was made due to the increasing number of unlinked cases announced in the last few days outside of the northern beaches, which potentially means the virus has not been contained.

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    Could Covid lockdown have helped save the planet?

    Slowdown of human activity was too short to reverse years of destruction, but we saw a glimpse of post-fossil fuel world

    When lockdown began, climate scientists were horrified at the unfolding tragedy, but also intrigued to observe what they called an “inadvertent experiment” on a global scale. To what extent, they asked, would the Earth system respond to the steepest slowdown in human activity since the second world war?

    Environmental activists put the question more succinctly: how much would it help to save the planet?

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    My best pandemic shot: Guardian and Observer photographers’ 2020

    We asked our photographers to pick an image that best highlighted an aspect of the coronavirus pandemic

    We asked the Guardian and Observer’s team of photographers to pick an image that represented something interesting about covering the pandemic in 2020. From heatwave swims to anti-racism demonstrations in the summer to lockdown imagery and individual tragedy, these images and the thoughts of the photographers form a very personal take on the experience of covering the coronavirus pandemic in 2020.

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    WHO warns Covid-19 pandemic is ‘not necessarily the big one’

    Experts tell end of year media briefing that virus is likely to become endemic and the world will have to learn to live with it

    World Health Organization experts have warned that even though the coronavirus pandemic has been very severe, it is “not necessarily the big one”, and that the world will have to learn to live with Covid-19.

    The “destiny” of the virus is to become endemic, even as vaccines begin to be rolled out in the US and UK, says Professor David Heymann, the chair of the WHO’s strategic and technical advisory group for infectious hazards.

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    Covid vaccine uptake high despite concerns over hesitancy

    Experts fear misinformation and development worries could undermine efforts to control pandemic

    Uptake of the Covid-19 vaccine has been high among those offered it, doctors say, despite fears that vaccine hesitancy could undermine efforts to control the pandemic.

    Experts have feared mass uptake of the jab could be jeopardised by widespread misinformation, concerns among the public about the speed at which the vaccine has been developed and approved, and lack of trust in vaccines and the pharmaceutical companies and governments calling for it.

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    Through gilets jaunes, strikes and Covid, Paris’s 400-year-old book stalls fight to survive

    With passing trade hit hard by the pandemic, the booksellers on the banks of the Seine are struggling

    Usually, Sundays are good days for the bouquinistes. Legions of strollers – tourists, out-of-towners, Parisians – throng the banks of the Seine, and the open-air booksellers whose green boxes have lined the quays for 400-odd years do good business.

    One recent Sunday, though, Jérôme Callais made €32. And there was a day that week when he made €4: a single paperback, he can’t even recall which. It has not, Callais said, sheltering from driving rain on an all but deserted Quai de Conti, been easy.

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    Covid vaccines and $600 payments: key provisions in the US stimulus bill

    The coronavirus relief bill has finally been signed into law by Donald Trump. Here’s a look at what’s in the 5,000-page package

    Donald Trump signed the new Covid-19 stimulus package into law on Sunday night, suddenly giving into pressure from Congress after calling the legislation a “disgrace” days earlier.

    Related: Dow hits record high after Trump belatedly signs Covid relief bill

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    Australia insists WHO inquiry into Covid origin must be robust, despite China tensions

    Australia, whose early call for inquiry sparked furious Chinese response, says it expects ‘robust, independent and comprehensive’ report

    Australia is pushing to ensure the global inquiry it helped trigger into the early handling of the Covid-19 pandemic doesn’t pull any punches – a move that has the potential to risk further recriminations from China.

    Amid scepticism among several government backbenchers that the inquiry will fully address Chinese authorities’ early missteps and reporting delays, Australia is using its final months on a top World Health Organization board to press for the investigation to remain robust and independent.

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    Only about 12 Britons stay in quarantine in Swiss ski resort after hundreds flee

    Hundreds left Verbier after discovery of new Covid variant despite order to self-isolate

    Only about a dozen British tourists out of about 420 appear to be left in the Swiss ski resort of Verbier after an undisclosed number fled a mandatory quarantine, many under cover of darkness, risking a 10,000 Swiss franc fine (£8,300) and drawing widespread condemnation on social media.

    Asked about the runaway tourists, the Swiss health minister, Alain Berset, said: “We are aware of that. It’s obviously a problem. There was an order to quarantine that has not been respected.”

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    Coronavirus live news: Trump passes Covid aid package; Indonesia to ban foreign travellers for two weeks

    Latest updates: Trump passes $900bn aid bill to support the US economy; Jakarta cities concerns around the new strains of coronavirus for ban

    The new variant of the virus circulating in the UK has been detected in Finland in two people, while a separate variant spreading in South Africa has been detected in one other person, local health officials have said.

    Finland imposed travel restrictions earlier this month on passengers from the UK amid concerns over the new variant, which is thought to be more contagious than previous ones.

    Ukraine’s biggest ski resort, Bukovel in the Carpathian mountains, is fully booked until the end of year as Ukrainians have sped to it instead of other foreign resorts that have been shut due to coronavirus-linked restrictions across Europe.

    Bukovel’s management said the resort had already been booked at 80% capacity through January. Bukovel, which sits 920 metres above sea level and covers five mountains in western Ukraine, attracts 2 million visitors each year. A tourist from Kyiv, Anton Luzhnyh, told Reuters he used to go to France to ski.

    Why am I here? Because foreign ski resorts are closed. It is lockdown there. Maybe they will be reopened in February, then we will go there.

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    Analysis of Covid search terms reveals Britons’ hopes and fears in 2020

    Although preoccupations changed over year, Britons’ thirst for Covid-related information continued to outstrip that for all other health topics

    At the peak of the pandemic, Britons were searching for coronavirus-related information six times a day on average, an analysis of search engine data reveals. And although our preoccupations have changed over the months, our thirst for Covid-related information continues to outstrip that for all other health and social care-related topics.

    2020 has been an extraordinary year. Never before have we been so united in our concerns and interests as we roller-coasted through the months. To better understand what that psychological journey looked like, Kaiasm, a Somerset-based data intelligence company, crunches the searches people make on Google, Bing and other internet sites. But rather than analysing the top search terms people use, it groups these together into underlying concepts, to better understand people’s needs and interests.

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    Nine people from Sydney’s northern beaches fined $1,000 after allegedly attending inner city wedding

    Police say three more guests face the same fine for breaching Covid restrictions at the wedding in Pyrmont on Sunday

    Nine people have been fined and three others face the same treatment after allegedly leaving Sydney’s coronavirus-hit northern beaches to attend a wedding in inner Sydney’s Pyrmont.

    The 12 people were found at a wedding at a Pirrama Road venue on Sunday afternoon after police were tipped off about their whereabouts.

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    South Africa hits 1 million coronavirus cases as new variant spreads rapidly

    President Cyril Ramaphosa expected to announce new restrictions in attempt to slow the surge

    South Africa’s Covid-19 surge has taken the country to more than 1 million confirmed cases as president Cyril Ramaphosa called an emergency meeting of the national coronavirus command council.

    The country’s new variant of the coronavirus, 501.V2, is more contagious and has quickly become dominant in many areas of the resurgence, according to experts.

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    Donald Trump signs Covid-19 relief and spending bill

    Move comes after Republicans voiced anger over the delay, which resulted in millions of Americans losing unemployment aid

    Donald Trump has signed the Covid-19 relief and spending bill after days of delays, preventing a mid-pandemic government shutdown.

    The announcement on Sunday night came after Republicans urged him to act following his refusal to sign the bill, a decision that meant millions of Americans lost unemployment aid.

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    Australia news live: race on to solve Sydney’s mystery Covid cases; NSW police fine North Bondi partygoers

    Contract tracers work to find source of five coronavirus cases as more hotspots named outside northern beaches. Follow all the latest news and updates, live

    Good morning, and welcome to the Australia news live blog for 28 December. I’m Elias Visontay. Here’s what’s making news this morning.

    -Health authorities in New South Wales are racing to uncover the source behind a mystery case they hope will shine light on the initial northern beaches outbreak, as further cases with unknown transmission threaten Sydney’s new year’s eve. Five of the nine locally-acquired cases in NSW under investigation are people who live outside the northern beaches.

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    Coronavirus live news: British tourists flee Swiss ski resort quarantine; inoculation in EU begins

    Latest updates: first vaccine doses administered across Europe; Germany rollout delayed after potential irregularities in cooling of Pfizer shot

    Dr Anthony Fauci, the head of the US coronavirus taskforce said that he believes the Covid-19 variant detected in the UK must be taken “very seriously” but is not likely to cause more serious illness or be resistant to vaccines.

    He said: “Does it make someone more ill? Is it [a] more serious virus in the sense of virulence? And the answer is, it doesn’t appear to be that way.”

    The UK’s coronavirus vaccination programme will resume on Monday, after a pause on Christmas Day and the weekend.

    The latest figures show that a total of 70,572 people in the UK have died from Covid-19. The number is likely to rise further on Tuesday, as authorities in both Scotland and Northern Ireland have not released data over the festive period.

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    Millions lose benefits as Trump refuses to sign Covid relief package

    11 million people will lose aid from expiration of unemployment programs as Trump heads to the golf course instead of signing bill

    Millions of Americans battling the financial hardships of the coronavirus pandemic lost their unemployment benefits on Sunday as Donald Trump continued to refuse to sign a relief package agreed in Congress and headed instead to the golf course.

    The president’s belligerence over the bipartisan Covid relief and spending bill, that would have extended the benefits and given direct cash payments to most American families, drew the ire of senior Republicans, who accused Trump of inflicting more misery on citizens.

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    Hundreds of UK tourists flee Covid quarantine in Swiss ski resort

    About half of the 420 visitors ordered to self-isolate left Verbier in ‘cloak and dagger’ operation

    Hundreds of British tourists fled the upmarket Swiss ski resort of Verbier in a “cloak-and-dagger operation” this week, breaking quarantine rules retroactively put in place to contain the spread of the coronavirus variant first discovered in the UK.

    Following the detection of the new mutation of Covid-19 in Britain, Swiss authorities announced on 21 December that all people who had arrived from the UK since 14 December would need to self-isolate for 10 days from their date of arrival.

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    Covid poses ‘greatest threat to mental health since second world war’

    UK’s leading psychiatrist predicts impact will be felt for years after pandemic ends

    The coronavirus crisis poses the greatest threat to mental health since the second world war, with the impact to be felt for years after the virus has been brought under control, the country’s leading psychiatrist has said.

    Dr Adrian James, the president of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, said a combination of the disease, its social consequences and the economic fallout were having a profound effect on mental health that would continue long after the epidemic is reined in.

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