"La conclusión que se impone es sencilla: no habrá fin de la opresión de género sin fin del capitalismo", escribe Lucía Casado. La entrada Contra el machismo y el fascismo, las mujeres trabajadoras a primera línea se publicó primero en lamarea.com.

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La Marea
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"La conclusión que se impone es sencilla: no habrá fin de la opresión de género sin fin del capitalismo", escribe Lucía Casado. La entrada Contra el machismo y el fascismo, las mujeres trabajadoras a primera línea se publicó primero en lamarea.com.

6 minutes

Fort Worth Report
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Six Daxbot robots study sidewalks and trails in Burleson as part of an American with Disabilities Act assessment.

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Fort Worth Report
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Six Daxbot robots study sidewalks and trails in Burleson as part of an American with Disabilities Act assessment.

"Si alguien cree que EE. UU. o Israel quieren defender a las mujeres musulmanas, la democracia o los DDHH, sólo tiene que preguntarse por qué no bombardean Arabia Saudí", analiza Arantxa Tirado. La entrada La guerra contra Irán y el derecho a la legítima defensa se publicó primero en lamarea.com.

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La Marea
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"Si alguien cree que EE. UU. o Israel quieren defender a las mujeres musulmanas, la democracia o los DDHH, sólo tiene que preguntarse por qué no bombardean Arabia Saudí", analiza Arantxa Tirado. La entrada La guerra contra Irán y el derecho a la legítima defensa se publicó primero en lamarea.com.

Francia ha reclamado al Gobierno de Netanyahu que evite una ofensiva terrestre y que proteja a la población civil, en un contexto de creciente riesgo de expansión regional vinculado al conflicto con Irán.

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Mundiario
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Francia ha reclamado al Gobierno de Netanyahu que evite una ofensiva terrestre y que proteja a la población civil, en un contexto de creciente riesgo de expansión regional vinculado al conflicto con Irán.

Albares rechaza “tajantemente” que Gobierno vaya a “cooperar militarmente” con EE UU después de las amenazas de Trump de cortar todo el comercio con España por su rechazo a facilitar el uso de las bases militares en la operación contra Irán.

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Mundiario
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Albares rechaza “tajantemente” que Gobierno vaya a “cooperar militarmente” con EE UU después de las amenazas de Trump de cortar todo el comercio con España por su rechazo a facilitar el uso de las bases militares en la operación contra Irán.

9 minutes

Fort Worth Report
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United Way of Tarrant County is hosting its 16th community tax assistance event with free resources and financial counseling to community members.

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Fort Worth Report
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United Way of Tarrant County is hosting its 16th community tax assistance event with free resources and financial counseling to community members.

Two bills seek to regulate hidden fees and predatory sales tactics.

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Capitol News Illinois
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Two bills seek to regulate hidden fees and predatory sales tactics.

10 minutes

Dengê Amerîka
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Fermandarîya Navendî ya Amerîkayê (CENTCOM) bersiva nûçeyên şaş ên Komara Îslamî ya Îranê da. CENTCOMê roja Çarşemê raportên rejîma Îranê yên ku dibêjin hêzên Amerîkî vedikişin an keştîyek Amerîkî binav kirine, red kirin. Her wiha îdî'ayên Pasdaran ên ku dibêjin wan balafireke şer a Amerîkî xistiye xwarê, an jî ku rejîm dibêje wan 100 leşkerên deryayî yên Amerîkî kuştine, red dike. CENTCOM dibêje ku ev hemû derew in. Li şûna nûçeyên şaş, CENTCOM rastiyên jêrîn ragihandin: Hêzên Amerîkî...

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Dengê Amerîka
Public Domain

Fermandarîya Navendî ya Amerîkayê (CENTCOM) bersiva nûçeyên şaş ên Komara Îslamî ya Îranê da. CENTCOMê roja Çarşemê raportên rejîma Îranê yên ku dibêjin hêzên Amerîkî vedikişin an keştîyek Amerîkî binav kirine, red kirin. Her wiha îdî'ayên Pasdaran ên ku dibêjin wan balafireke şer a Amerîkî xistiye xwarê, an jî ku rejîm dibêje wan 100 leşkerên deryayî yên Amerîkî kuştine, red dike. CENTCOM dibêje ku ev hemû derew in. Li şûna nûçeyên şaş, CENTCOM rastiyên jêrîn ragihandin: Hêzên Amerîkî...

Sign up for Chalkbeat Tennessee’s free newsletter to keep up with statewide education policy and Memphis-Shelby County Schools.Tennessee Republicans continue to advance legislation that would require public schools track and report the immigration status of their students despite heated pushback from local educators. House Bill 793 would require schools to start tracking and reporting anonymized data on students’ immigration status as early as next school year.But an amendment filed Wednesday indicates a controversial 2025 effort to either block undocumented students from enrolling in K-12 schools or charge their families tuition is dead for the year. Bill sponsors previously wanted to use the legislation as a vehicle to challenge the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Plyler v. Doe that protects access to public education for undocumented students.Senate Republicans passed Senate Bill 836, the bill to charge tuition, last spring (Tennessee has two-year legislative sessions). But its House companion bill stalled amid bipartisan concerns that it could have jeopardized more than $1 billion in federal education funding. House Majority Leader William Lamberth, a Republican from Portland who sponsors the HB 793, has repeatedly said he was in discussions with the U.S. Department of Education for further guidance on the bill, including a guarantee it wouldn’t jeopardize Tennessee’s federal funding. That guidance has not materialized, even after Republican leadership said it had worked closely with the Trump White House to develop a hardline immigration package this year. Lamberth has instead dialed back the bill to a documentation bill at odds with the Senate version. “We’ve sent several questions to them to try to get answers to a very straightforward question: Would the bill in the previous form endanger $1.1 billion? We have not been given a guarantee that it would not,” Lamberth said. HB 793 passed out of a House finance subcommittee on Wednesday and is now headed for a hearing in the full committee next week..subtext-iframe{max-width:540px;}iframe#subtext_embed{width:1px;min-width:100%;min-height:256px;}fetch("https://raw.githubusercontent.com/alpha-group/iframe-resizer/master/js/iframeResizer.min.js").then(function(r){return r.text();}).then(function(t){return new Function(t)();}).then(function(){iFrameResize({heightCalculationMethod:"lowestElement"},"#subtext_embed");});The new House bill requires Tennessee public schools to collect documentation on either a student’s citizenship or immigration status. Schools would then be required to report that anonymized data to the Tennessee Department of Education, legislative leaders, and the Tennessee Immigration Enforcement office. That sparked concerns from some immigration advocates about data privacy.It’s not yet clear if Senate Republicans would agree to changes to the bill. But even dialing back the legislation to a documentation effort could lead to a legal challenge to Plyer. In 2012, a federal appeals court ruled a similar Alabama law requiring schools to check students’ immigration status when they enrolled was unconstitutional. Tennessee educators have criticized the legislation, decrying it as both unfair to children and an impractical logistical burden to place on schools whose resources are already stretched thin. The bipartisan Knox County Board of Education late last year voted to formally oppose immigration documentation requirements. On Wednesday, Knox County Board Member Katherine Bike testified against the legislation in a committee room packed with protesters.Bike cited a report released this week by the Immigration Research Initiative that estimated requiring Tennessee schools to verify and track the status of 963,000 students could cost the state up to $55 million and require hundreds of new school employees. The legislature’s fiscal analysis has not determined an estimated cost to local districts. However, the state’s documentation requirements for its recently implemented voucher program, which does not accept undocumented immigrants, show verifying special immigration status such as specialized visa documentation can be complex.“Where are we going to come up with this money? Is that our special education services that are going to be cut ? Is that our Student Support department, our security budget?” Bike asked. “Where is it going to come from? We always make do but don’t make us do this. I urge you to vote no on this harmful bill.”Meanwhile, a separate bill that could also require student tracking is progressing through the General Assembly. House Bill 1711 is set up as a trigger bill, meaning it would not be enforced unless the Supreme Court’s Plyler v. Doe ruling is overturned.A Wednesday committee vote on HB 1711 was delayed until next week. Melissa Brown is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Tennessee. Contact Melissa at mbrown@chalkbeat.org.

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Chalkbeat
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Sign up for Chalkbeat Tennessee’s free newsletter to keep up with statewide education policy and Memphis-Shelby County Schools.Tennessee Republicans continue to advance legislation that would require public schools track and report the immigration status of their students despite heated pushback from local educators. House Bill 793 would require schools to start tracking and reporting anonymized data on students’ immigration status as early as next school year.But an amendment filed Wednesday indicates a controversial 2025 effort to either block undocumented students from enrolling in K-12 schools or charge their families tuition is dead for the year. Bill sponsors previously wanted to use the legislation as a vehicle to challenge the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Plyler v. Doe that protects access to public education for undocumented students.Senate Republicans passed Senate Bill 836, the bill to charge tuition, last spring (Tennessee has two-year legislative sessions). But its House companion bill stalled amid bipartisan concerns that it could have jeopardized more than $1 billion in federal education funding. House Majority Leader William Lamberth, a Republican from Portland who sponsors the HB 793, has repeatedly said he was in discussions with the U.S. Department of Education for further guidance on the bill, including a guarantee it wouldn’t jeopardize Tennessee’s federal funding. That guidance has not materialized, even after Republican leadership said it had worked closely with the Trump White House to develop a hardline immigration package this year. Lamberth has instead dialed back the bill to a documentation bill at odds with the Senate version. “We’ve sent several questions to them to try to get answers to a very straightforward question: Would the bill in the previous form endanger $1.1 billion? We have not been given a guarantee that it would not,” Lamberth said. HB 793 passed out of a House finance subcommittee on Wednesday and is now headed for a hearing in the full committee next week..subtext-iframe{max-width:540px;}iframe#subtext_embed{width:1px;min-width:100%;min-height:256px;}fetch("https://raw.githubusercontent.com/alpha-group/iframe-resizer/master/js/iframeResizer.min.js").then(function(r){return r.text();}).then(function(t){return new Function(t)();}).then(function(){iFrameResize({heightCalculationMethod:"lowestElement"},"#subtext_embed");});The new House bill requires Tennessee public schools to collect documentation on either a student’s citizenship or immigration status. Schools would then be required to report that anonymized data to the Tennessee Department of Education, legislative leaders, and the Tennessee Immigration Enforcement office. That sparked concerns from some immigration advocates about data privacy.It’s not yet clear if Senate Republicans would agree to changes to the bill. But even dialing back the legislation to a documentation effort could lead to a legal challenge to Plyer. In 2012, a federal appeals court ruled a similar Alabama law requiring schools to check students’ immigration status when they enrolled was unconstitutional. Tennessee educators have criticized the legislation, decrying it as both unfair to children and an impractical logistical burden to place on schools whose resources are already stretched thin. The bipartisan Knox County Board of Education late last year voted to formally oppose immigration documentation requirements. On Wednesday, Knox County Board Member Katherine Bike testified against the legislation in a committee room packed with protesters.Bike cited a report released this week by the Immigration Research Initiative that estimated requiring Tennessee schools to verify and track the status of 963,000 students could cost the state up to $55 million and require hundreds of new school employees. The legislature’s fiscal analysis has not determined an estimated cost to local districts. However, the state’s documentation requirements for its recently implemented voucher program, which does not accept undocumented immigrants, show verifying special immigration status such as specialized visa documentation can be complex.“Where are we going to come up with this money? Is that our special education services that are going to be cut ? Is that our Student Support department, our security budget?” Bike asked. “Where is it going to come from? We always make do but don’t make us do this. I urge you to vote no on this harmful bill.”Meanwhile, a separate bill that could also require student tracking is progressing through the General Assembly. House Bill 1711 is set up as a trigger bill, meaning it would not be enforced unless the Supreme Court’s Plyler v. Doe ruling is overturned.A Wednesday committee vote on HB 1711 was delayed until next week. Melissa Brown is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Tennessee. Contact Melissa at mbrown@chalkbeat.org.

COLUMBIA — Sgt. Warren Cavanagh still remembers every smell, sound, and gun shot from Dec. 16, 2011. That’s the day his police dog Fargo was shot and killed by an armed robbery suspect, the Richland County Sheriff’s officer told a House panel Wednesday. Cavanagh said he sat with his beloved dog in the back of […]

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South Carolina Daily Gazette
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COLUMBIA — Sgt. Warren Cavanagh still remembers every smell, sound, and gun shot from Dec. 16, 2011. That’s the day his police dog Fargo was shot and killed by an armed robbery suspect, the Richland County Sheriff’s officer told a House panel Wednesday. Cavanagh said he sat with his beloved dog in the back of […]

Award-winning author Eva Hornung’s time-travelling new novel explores Australia’s tensions around land ownership and belonging.

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The Conversation
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Award-winning author Eva Hornung’s time-travelling new novel explores Australia’s tensions around land ownership and belonging.

19 minutes

Iowa Capital Dispatch
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Iowa House lawmakers unanimously approved legislation Wednesday that would provide certain military members with a waiver for their public university education. House File 2491 would require the University of Iowa, Iowa State University and the University of Northern Iowa to waive tuition and mandatory fees for veterans with a “permanent service-connected disability rating” of 100%, […]

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Iowa Capital Dispatch
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Iowa House lawmakers unanimously approved legislation Wednesday that would provide certain military members with a waiver for their public university education. House File 2491 would require the University of Iowa, Iowa State University and the University of Northern Iowa to waive tuition and mandatory fees for veterans with a “permanent service-connected disability rating” of 100%, […]

Şeva Çarşemê, êrîşek li ser baregeha Komeleya Zehmetkêşên Kurdistanê li Sûrdeşê ya nêzîkî Silêmanîyê, hatiye kirin. Emced Hisên Panahî, endamê Komeleya Zehmetkêşên Kurdistanê, êrîşe bo Dengê Amerîka piştrast kir û got, “Êrîş bi mûşekan rasterast li ser çeperên me yên Pêşmerge hatiye kirin." Wî got, "Me berî niha û ji ber gefên êrîşan çeperên xwe vala kiribûn, ji ber vê yekê ti qurbanî çênebûn." Di dema êrîşên Amerîka û Îsraîlê yên dijî rejîma Îranê de, Îranê gelek caran baregehên partîyên...

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Dengê Amerîka
Public Domain

Şeva Çarşemê, êrîşek li ser baregeha Komeleya Zehmetkêşên Kurdistanê li Sûrdeşê ya nêzîkî Silêmanîyê, hatiye kirin. Emced Hisên Panahî, endamê Komeleya Zehmetkêşên Kurdistanê, êrîşe bo Dengê Amerîka piştrast kir û got, “Êrîş bi mûşekan rasterast li ser çeperên me yên Pêşmerge hatiye kirin." Wî got, "Me berî niha û ji ber gefên êrîşan çeperên xwe vala kiribûn, ji ber vê yekê ti qurbanî çênebûn." Di dema êrîşên Amerîka û Îsraîlê yên dijî rejîma Îranê de, Îranê gelek caran baregehên partîyên...

Pexels.com","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"close up photo of a stethoscope","orientation":"0"}" data-image-title="medical-appointment-doctor-healthcare-40568" data-image-description="" data-image-caption="Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com " data-medium-file="https://i0.wp.com/mirrorindy.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/medical-appointment-doctor-healthcare-40568.jpeg?fit=300%2C200&ssl=1" data-large-file="https://i0.wp.com/mirrorindy.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/medical-appointment-doctor-healthcare-40568.jpeg?fit=780%2C519&ssl=1" /> As March marks National Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month, public health advocates and national cancer organizations are urging Hoosiers — and especially Black residents, who face higher risks and mortality — to take advantage of screening options and community resources. The post Black Hoosiers urged to get screened as colorectal cancer awareness month begins appeared first on Mirror Indy.

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Mirror Indy
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Pexels.com","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"close up photo of a stethoscope","orientation":"0"}" data-image-title="medical-appointment-doctor-healthcare-40568" data-image-description="" data-image-caption="Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com " data-medium-file="https://i0.wp.com/mirrorindy.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/medical-appointment-doctor-healthcare-40568.jpeg?fit=300%2C200&ssl=1" data-large-file="https://i0.wp.com/mirrorindy.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/medical-appointment-doctor-healthcare-40568.jpeg?fit=780%2C519&ssl=1" /> As March marks National Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month, public health advocates and national cancer organizations are urging Hoosiers — and especially Black residents, who face higher risks and mortality — to take advantage of screening options and community resources. The post Black Hoosiers urged to get screened as colorectal cancer awareness month begins appeared first on Mirror Indy.

A Michigan mother whose 12-year-old daughter died by suicide after being exposed to self-harm content online urged lawmakers Wednesday to pass a package of bills aimed at curbing what supporters call addictive and exploitative social media practices targeting children. Charay Gadd told members of the Senate Finance, Insurance and Consumer Protection Committee that her daughter, […]

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Michigan Advance
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A Michigan mother whose 12-year-old daughter died by suicide after being exposed to self-harm content online urged lawmakers Wednesday to pass a package of bills aimed at curbing what supporters call addictive and exploitative social media practices targeting children. Charay Gadd told members of the Senate Finance, Insurance and Consumer Protection Committee that her daughter, […]

24 minutes

Bridge Michigan
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A bill would make water safety instruction part of the PE curriculum. Advocates say schools play a vital role in keeping children and teens safe in and around water.

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Bridge Michigan
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A bill would make water safety instruction part of the PE curriculum. Advocates say schools play a vital role in keeping children and teens safe in and around water.

25 minutes

Montana Free Press
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The Center for Biological Diversity and Montana Environmental Information Center sued the U.S. Interior Department on March 3 over its authorization of a 247-acre expansion of the Bull Mountains Mine, arguing that it was authorized without proper environmental review and with the help of an “energy emergency” that doesn’t exist. The post Lawsuit challenges feds’ authorization of Bull Mountains Mine expansion appeared first on Montana Free Press.

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Montana Free Press
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The Center for Biological Diversity and Montana Environmental Information Center sued the U.S. Interior Department on March 3 over its authorization of a 247-acre expansion of the Bull Mountains Mine, arguing that it was authorized without proper environmental review and with the help of an “energy emergency” that doesn’t exist. The post Lawsuit challenges feds’ authorization of Bull Mountains Mine expansion appeared first on Montana Free Press.

25 minutes

法国国际广播电台
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在美国总统特朗普威胁要断绝与西班牙的贸易关系后,西班牙首相桑切斯周三发表强硬讲话,拒绝向特朗普让步,明确表示西班牙反对特朗普发动的这场战争,西班牙不接受战争。

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法国国际广播电台
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在美国总统特朗普威胁要断绝与西班牙的贸易关系后,西班牙首相桑切斯周三发表强硬讲话,拒绝向特朗普让步,明确表示西班牙反对特朗普发动的这场战争,西班牙不接受战争。

25 minutes

法國國際廣播電台
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在美國總統特朗普威脅要斷絕與西班牙的貿易關係後,西班牙首相桑切斯周三發表強硬講話,拒絕向特朗普讓步,明確表示西班牙反對特朗普發動的這場戰爭,西班牙不接受戰爭。

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法國國際廣播電台
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在美國總統特朗普威脅要斷絕與西班牙的貿易關係後,西班牙首相桑切斯周三發表強硬講話,拒絕向特朗普讓步,明確表示西班牙反對特朗普發動的這場戰爭,西班牙不接受戰爭。

26 minutes

Louisiana Illuminator
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Standing just a few feet from each other Tuesday, Gov. Jeff Landry said he hopes to convince Senate President Cameron Henry, R-Metairie, to spend more state money on a private school voucher program.  “​​I am trying to convince him that we can do it in a way that is sustainable,” the governor said while glancing […]

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Louisiana Illuminator
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Standing just a few feet from each other Tuesday, Gov. Jeff Landry said he hopes to convince Senate President Cameron Henry, R-Metairie, to spend more state money on a private school voucher program.  “​​I am trying to convince him that we can do it in a way that is sustainable,” the governor said while glancing […]