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Ein chinesisches Unternehmen ließ eine 60 Meter lange heliumgefüllte Windturbine in 2000 Meter Höhe aufsteigen. Das System lieferte im Schnitt 385 Kilowatt während 30 Minuten und hat zahlreiche Vorteile. Der Beitrag China testet riesiges fliegendes Kraftwerk erschien zuerst auf globalmagazin.

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Ein chinesisches Unternehmen ließ eine 60 Meter lange heliumgefüllte Windturbine in 2000 Meter Höhe aufsteigen. Das System lieferte im Schnitt 385 Kilowatt während 30 Minuten und hat zahlreiche Vorteile. Der Beitrag China testet riesiges fliegendes Kraftwerk erschien zuerst auf globalmagazin.

Để bảo đảm cho sự sống còn của chế độ, Iran hôm 02/03/2026 thông báo đóng cửa eo biển Hormuz. Cắt nguồn thu nhập của chính mình và bẩy quốc gia xuất khẩu dầu khí trong Vùng Vịnh, đe dọa cỗ máy sản xuất từ Trung Quốc, Nhật Bản đến châu Âu và nhất là « đè nặng lên túi tiền » của dân Mỹ là một « sự tự sát về kinh tế và chiến lược ».

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Radio France Internationale
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Để bảo đảm cho sự sống còn của chế độ, Iran hôm 02/03/2026 thông báo đóng cửa eo biển Hormuz. Cắt nguồn thu nhập của chính mình và bẩy quốc gia xuất khẩu dầu khí trong Vùng Vịnh, đe dọa cỗ máy sản xuất từ Trung Quốc, Nhật Bản đến châu Âu và nhất là « đè nặng lên túi tiền » của dân Mỹ là một « sự tự sát về kinh tế và chiến lược ».

В иранском городе Кум под ракетный удар попало здание Совета экспертов, который избирает верховного лидера Ирана, сообщает агентство Tasnim, связанное с Корпусом стражей Исламской революции.

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Медуза
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В иранском городе Кум под ракетный удар попало здание Совета экспертов, который избирает верховного лидера Ирана, сообщает агентство Tasnim, связанное с Корпусом стражей Исламской революции.

Au Cameroun, les producteurs de cacao vivent le chaud, depuis quelques semaines. Le prix du kilogramme de fèves de cacao, ayant connu une évolution contrastée ces dernières années, et ayant atteint un pic de 6 000 francs CFA (11 USD) en juin 2024, s’est effondré à 1 200 francs CFA (2 USD) au 27 février […] The post Cameroun : Les agriculteurs retournent aux cultures vivrières face à baisse des prix du cacao appeared first on Nouvelles de l'environnement.

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Au Cameroun, les producteurs de cacao vivent le chaud, depuis quelques semaines. Le prix du kilogramme de fèves de cacao, ayant connu une évolution contrastée ces dernières années, et ayant atteint un pic de 6 000 francs CFA (11 USD) en juin 2024, s’est effondré à 1 200 francs CFA (2 USD) au 27 février […] The post Cameroun : Les agriculteurs retournent aux cultures vivrières face à baisse des prix du cacao appeared first on Nouvelles de l'environnement.

In our ongoing Q&A series with California Insurance Commissioner candidates, this week we bring you answers provided to us by insurance agent Stacy Korsgaden.

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Capitol Weekly
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In our ongoing Q&A series with California Insurance Commissioner candidates, this week we bring you answers provided to us by insurance agent Stacy Korsgaden.

Teoría de la conspiración - Usuarios de distintas plataformas compararon retratos antiguos con fotografías recientes y señalaron cambios en facciones concretas, lo que dio pie a mensajes que insinuaban un posible reemplazo durante su paso por Francia La última película en la que apareció Robert Redford es una de las más taquilleras de la historia y casi nadie lo sabe famosos cambian rasgos con cirugía, maquillaje extremo o filtros digitales, parte de la audiencia empieza a dudar y surgen teorías que hablan incluso de sustituciones. Esas sospechas suelen apoyarse en comparaciones de fotos antiguas con imágenes recientes, donde se señalan diferencias en pómulos, mandíbula o sonrisa. Jim Carrey ha sido uno de los nombres que más comentarios ha provocado en este sentido en los últimos días. Su aspecto reciente ha servido de base para especulaciones que circularon con rapidez en redes sociales, alimentando la idea de que no era la misma persona sobre la alfombra roja. La organización francesa respondió y confirmó que todo estaba previsto desde meses antes Ese clima de sospecha tuvo una respuesta clara por parte de la organización de los galardones franceses. Gregory Caulier, delegado general de los Premios César, explicó a Variety que la presencia de Jim Carrey estaba prevista desde meses antes y negó cualquier suplantación. El actor acudió a la ceremonia celebrada el jueves 26 de febrero en el teatro L’Olympia y recibió un César Honorífico por su trayectoria. no había motivo para sospechas y cerró la cuestión con una afirmación tajante. Una publicación de Alexis Stone disparó los comentarios y multiplicó la sospecha La imagen que avivó los comentarios surgió tras una publicación del maquillador de efectos especiales Alexis Stone. En su cuenta compartió una imagen de la noche con el texto “Alexis Stone como Jim Carrey en París”, una frase que no confirmaba nada pero que alimentó las dudas porque su trabajo consiste en caracterizaciones que transforman por completo el aspecto de una persona. Cosmopolitan, miles de usuarios reaccionaron en pocos minutos y la actriz Megan Fox escribió “no puedo soportar más estrés ahora mismo necesito saber si esto es real”. Esa intervención multiplicó el alcance de esta teoría y situó la sospecha en primer plano. La representante del actor salió al paso y defendió que acudió personalmente a la gala Frente a esa ola de comentarios, la publicista del actor, Marleah Leslie, habló con TMZ y dejó clara su versión. Leslie, que trabaja desde hace años con Carrey y le acompañó en la gala, afirmó en ese medio que “Jim Carrey asistió a los Premios César, donde aceptó su Premio César Honorario”. Con esa frase buscó zanjar cualquier teoría sobre dobles o prótesis. Además, su presencia en el teatro formaba parte del grupo cercano que viajó con él a la capital francesa. El propio Caulier aportó más detalles sobre esa comitiva cuando explicó en Variety que el intérprete acudió con su pareja, su hija, su nieto y doce amigos y familiares. También señaló que su publicista le acompañó durante la estancia y que Michel Gondry, director con el que ha rodado una película y dos series, estuvo presente y celebró el reencuentro. En relación con el aspecto físico del actor, que es lo que más polvareda ha levantado en redes, Caulier restó importancia a los comentarios y afirmó que “para mí no es un problema”. En la misma conversación añadió que se quedaba con “su generosidad, su amabilidad, su benevolencia y su elegancia”. El discurso en francés y la presencia de su equipo reforzaron la versión oficial La entrega del galardón se produjo en la 51ª edición de los Premios César, bajo las lámparas del histórico L’Olympia, un escenario que atrajo a fotógrafos y asistentes habituales de la industria francesa. Carrey posó ante las cámaras, saludó y pronunció un discurso que había preparado en francés durante meses, según detalló Caulier, que contó que el actor le consultaba la pronunciación exacta de ciertas palabras. Esa preparación previa contradice la idea de una aparición improvisada o fingida y muestra un trabajo real antes de la ceremonia. cambios radicales en su rostro y de posibles sustituciones. Sin embargo, las declaraciones de los organizadores y de su entorno profesional apuntaron en la misma dirección y coincidieron en que se trataba del propio actor que acudía a recoger un reconocimiento previsto con antelación.

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Teoría de la conspiración - Usuarios de distintas plataformas compararon retratos antiguos con fotografías recientes y señalaron cambios en facciones concretas, lo que dio pie a mensajes que insinuaban un posible reemplazo durante su paso por Francia La última película en la que apareció Robert Redford es una de las más taquilleras de la historia y casi nadie lo sabe famosos cambian rasgos con cirugía, maquillaje extremo o filtros digitales, parte de la audiencia empieza a dudar y surgen teorías que hablan incluso de sustituciones. Esas sospechas suelen apoyarse en comparaciones de fotos antiguas con imágenes recientes, donde se señalan diferencias en pómulos, mandíbula o sonrisa. Jim Carrey ha sido uno de los nombres que más comentarios ha provocado en este sentido en los últimos días. Su aspecto reciente ha servido de base para especulaciones que circularon con rapidez en redes sociales, alimentando la idea de que no era la misma persona sobre la alfombra roja. La organización francesa respondió y confirmó que todo estaba previsto desde meses antes Ese clima de sospecha tuvo una respuesta clara por parte de la organización de los galardones franceses. Gregory Caulier, delegado general de los Premios César, explicó a Variety que la presencia de Jim Carrey estaba prevista desde meses antes y negó cualquier suplantación. El actor acudió a la ceremonia celebrada el jueves 26 de febrero en el teatro L’Olympia y recibió un César Honorífico por su trayectoria. no había motivo para sospechas y cerró la cuestión con una afirmación tajante. Una publicación de Alexis Stone disparó los comentarios y multiplicó la sospecha La imagen que avivó los comentarios surgió tras una publicación del maquillador de efectos especiales Alexis Stone. En su cuenta compartió una imagen de la noche con el texto “Alexis Stone como Jim Carrey en París”, una frase que no confirmaba nada pero que alimentó las dudas porque su trabajo consiste en caracterizaciones que transforman por completo el aspecto de una persona. Cosmopolitan, miles de usuarios reaccionaron en pocos minutos y la actriz Megan Fox escribió “no puedo soportar más estrés ahora mismo necesito saber si esto es real”. Esa intervención multiplicó el alcance de esta teoría y situó la sospecha en primer plano. La representante del actor salió al paso y defendió que acudió personalmente a la gala Frente a esa ola de comentarios, la publicista del actor, Marleah Leslie, habló con TMZ y dejó clara su versión. Leslie, que trabaja desde hace años con Carrey y le acompañó en la gala, afirmó en ese medio que “Jim Carrey asistió a los Premios César, donde aceptó su Premio César Honorario”. Con esa frase buscó zanjar cualquier teoría sobre dobles o prótesis. Además, su presencia en el teatro formaba parte del grupo cercano que viajó con él a la capital francesa. El propio Caulier aportó más detalles sobre esa comitiva cuando explicó en Variety que el intérprete acudió con su pareja, su hija, su nieto y doce amigos y familiares. También señaló que su publicista le acompañó durante la estancia y que Michel Gondry, director con el que ha rodado una película y dos series, estuvo presente y celebró el reencuentro. En relación con el aspecto físico del actor, que es lo que más polvareda ha levantado en redes, Caulier restó importancia a los comentarios y afirmó que “para mí no es un problema”. En la misma conversación añadió que se quedaba con “su generosidad, su amabilidad, su benevolencia y su elegancia”. El discurso en francés y la presencia de su equipo reforzaron la versión oficial La entrega del galardón se produjo en la 51ª edición de los Premios César, bajo las lámparas del histórico L’Olympia, un escenario que atrajo a fotógrafos y asistentes habituales de la industria francesa. Carrey posó ante las cámaras, saludó y pronunció un discurso que había preparado en francés durante meses, según detalló Caulier, que contó que el actor le consultaba la pronunciación exacta de ciertas palabras. Esa preparación previa contradice la idea de una aparición improvisada o fingida y muestra un trabajo real antes de la ceremonia. cambios radicales en su rostro y de posibles sustituciones. Sin embargo, las declaraciones de los organizadores y de su entorno profesional apuntaron en la misma dirección y coincidieron en que se trataba del propio actor que acudía a recoger un reconocimiento previsto con antelación.

The poll results on Montana’s energy mix come as politicians and policymakers grapple with surging electricity demand spurred by investment in artificial intelligence and the data centers that support it. The post Montanans want more solar, natural gas development, are less interested in new coal plants appeared first on Montana Free Press.

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The poll results on Montana’s energy mix come as politicians and policymakers grapple with surging electricity demand spurred by investment in artificial intelligence and the data centers that support it. The post Montanans want more solar, natural gas development, are less interested in new coal plants appeared first on Montana Free Press.

Washington’s proposed income tax (AKA “millionaires’ income tax,” Senate Bill 6346) is being promoted as a measure aimed at the ultra-wealthy. But for many small and mid-sized construction contractors, it would function as something very different: a direct tax on the cash flow that keeps their businesses operating. Most construction firms in Washington are not large, publicly traded corporations. They are locally owned LLCs, partnerships, and S corporations — pass-through entities where business income flows to the owner’s individual tax return. On paper, that income may appear to be personal wealth. In practice, it is often the company’s operating capital. Construction is a cyclical, capital-intensive, and low-margin industry. Construction margins are significantly lower than those of the high-tech, financial, pharmaceutical, and other industries. And contractors routinely reinvest earnings into equipment, bonding capacity, payroll, insurance, and safety programs. Income is frequently recognized at the completion of a major project, which can create a temporary spike in reported income after years of reinvestment, borrowing, and risk. That spike may push an owner’s reported income above $1 million in a single year. But that does not mean there is $1 million in idle cash sitting in a bank account. It often means the company finally closed out a large project and now must fund the next one. Under this proposal, pass-through construction firms would be forced to either pay a 9.9% tax at the entity level or pass the liability through to the owner’s personal return (which also includes a spouse’s income). Either option removes cash from the business. And timing matters. Contractors front payroll every week for skilled workers and apprentices. They purchase materials months before they are reimbursed. They invest heavily in equipment that must be financed and maintained. They maintain bonding capacity that is directly tied to working capital and retained earnings. At the same time, payment delays are routine. Contractors can wait weeks or months to be paid. Retainage is often held long after a project is complete. During that time, it is the contractor, not the project owner, financing the job. Cash flow gaps are already a constant reality in construction. When the state layers an additional 9.9% tax on what is effectively operating capital, it shrinks the cushion companies rely on to meet payroll, secure bonding, and bid on the next project. When working capital declines, bonding capacity declines. When bonding capacity declines, firms cannot compete for larger projects. Hiring slows. Expansion pauses. Risk tolerance narrows. The ripple effects are immediate. Small and mid-sized firms feel this most acutely. Disadvantaged and minority-owned businesses, which often operate with tighter margins and more limited access to credit, are particularly vulnerable to cash flow disruptions. For these firms, losing working capital can mean losing opportunities. This proposal is described as a tax on “millionaires.” But in the construction industry, it functions as a tax on the cash reserves that allow contractors to bridge payment delays, absorb cost increases, and keep people employed between billing cycles. It does not distinguish between accumulated personal wealth and the operating capital required to run a job site. Washington’s construction industry builds the schools, hospitals, roads, bridges, and infrastructure that support our communities and economy. Sound tax policy should recognize how these businesses actually operate. In construction, cash flow is survival. Taxing it as though it were idle wealth risks slowing projects, constraining growth, and undermining the very businesses that keep our state building. For many small and mid-sized contractors, this proposal is not a tax on millionaires. It is a tax on the cash flow that keeps their doors open and their workers employed.

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The Center Square
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Washington’s proposed income tax (AKA “millionaires’ income tax,” Senate Bill 6346) is being promoted as a measure aimed at the ultra-wealthy. But for many small and mid-sized construction contractors, it would function as something very different: a direct tax on the cash flow that keeps their businesses operating. Most construction firms in Washington are not large, publicly traded corporations. They are locally owned LLCs, partnerships, and S corporations — pass-through entities where business income flows to the owner’s individual tax return. On paper, that income may appear to be personal wealth. In practice, it is often the company’s operating capital. Construction is a cyclical, capital-intensive, and low-margin industry. Construction margins are significantly lower than those of the high-tech, financial, pharmaceutical, and other industries. And contractors routinely reinvest earnings into equipment, bonding capacity, payroll, insurance, and safety programs. Income is frequently recognized at the completion of a major project, which can create a temporary spike in reported income after years of reinvestment, borrowing, and risk. That spike may push an owner’s reported income above $1 million in a single year. But that does not mean there is $1 million in idle cash sitting in a bank account. It often means the company finally closed out a large project and now must fund the next one. Under this proposal, pass-through construction firms would be forced to either pay a 9.9% tax at the entity level or pass the liability through to the owner’s personal return (which also includes a spouse’s income). Either option removes cash from the business. And timing matters. Contractors front payroll every week for skilled workers and apprentices. They purchase materials months before they are reimbursed. They invest heavily in equipment that must be financed and maintained. They maintain bonding capacity that is directly tied to working capital and retained earnings. At the same time, payment delays are routine. Contractors can wait weeks or months to be paid. Retainage is often held long after a project is complete. During that time, it is the contractor, not the project owner, financing the job. Cash flow gaps are already a constant reality in construction. When the state layers an additional 9.9% tax on what is effectively operating capital, it shrinks the cushion companies rely on to meet payroll, secure bonding, and bid on the next project. When working capital declines, bonding capacity declines. When bonding capacity declines, firms cannot compete for larger projects. Hiring slows. Expansion pauses. Risk tolerance narrows. The ripple effects are immediate. Small and mid-sized firms feel this most acutely. Disadvantaged and minority-owned businesses, which often operate with tighter margins and more limited access to credit, are particularly vulnerable to cash flow disruptions. For these firms, losing working capital can mean losing opportunities. This proposal is described as a tax on “millionaires.” But in the construction industry, it functions as a tax on the cash reserves that allow contractors to bridge payment delays, absorb cost increases, and keep people employed between billing cycles. It does not distinguish between accumulated personal wealth and the operating capital required to run a job site. Washington’s construction industry builds the schools, hospitals, roads, bridges, and infrastructure that support our communities and economy. Sound tax policy should recognize how these businesses actually operate. In construction, cash flow is survival. Taxing it as though it were idle wealth risks slowing projects, constraining growth, and undermining the very businesses that keep our state building. For many small and mid-sized contractors, this proposal is not a tax on millionaires. It is a tax on the cash flow that keeps their doors open and their workers employed.

(The Center Square) — A number of U.S. representatives like to be driven in style, billing taxpayers tens of thousands of dollars for limo service from their office accounts, an investigation by The Center Square found. Six U.S. representatives charged taxpayers nearly $30,000 to hire chauffeured limousines in the latest twelve months for which figures are available. Since January 2019, U.S. representatives spent more than $160,000 out of their office accounts with companies that had the word limo or limousine in their name, according to figures come from the U.S. House’s quarterly disbursement reports. U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters, a California Democrat, spent the most on limo services, according to the data. She charged taxpayers $25,950 for transportation from Limousine House LLC from July 1, 2024, to June 30, according to House disbursement reports. A spokesperson did not immediately return requests for comment. Since 2019, Waters spent $111,000 on limo services. U.S. Rep. Ed Perlmutter, a Colorado Democrat who retired in 2023, came in second with nearly $20,000 in rides from limousine services. The records do not indicate the type of vehicle the lawmakers used for transportation, such as a Lincoln Town Car, Cadillac Escalade, or stretch limousine. While Waters regularly hired the company, five other lawmakers charged taxpayers $3,963 to hire a driver of a limousine service once or twice. U.S. Rep. Jim Himes, a Connecticut Democrat, took the two most expensive trips. Himes billed taxpayers $1,100 for the use of Elite Limousine Service on May 30. That came two days after he spent $850 to hire the same company. Cara Camacho, Himes’ chief of staff, did not return requests for comment. Daniel Schuman, executive director of American Governance Institute, a non-profit, said the spending totals raise questions. “Some of those trips are more expensive than airfare,” Schuman said in an interview. “It’s hard to imagine how that makes sense even in an expensive place like D.C. Are they ferrying staff around to an event?” Water's service, Limousine House LLC, which House records show she has paid since August 2021, has little readily available information. The company has no identifiable official website, no established online presence, and does not appear in corporate registries in California, Washington, D.C., Virginia, Maryland, and Delaware. Its principal address is a residential apartment unit in Alexandria, Va. In 2014, the company was granted passenger carrier authority by the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Commission. Three years later, WMATC suspended the company’s operating certificate and began revoking it because Limousine House LLC failed to maintain required filings and fees. In September 2024, the company was deemed inactive or defunct for lack of payment, according to records from the Virginia State Corporation Commission, an independent state agency. Limo company officials could not be reached for comment. A reporter knocked on the door and rang the doorbell twice on Monday afternoon at the condominium owned by Omar Bouzid, the former company's director, in Springfield, Va., but no one answered. Growing budgets The 440 members of the U.S. House of Representatives and delegates receive roughly $2 million a year for travel, staff, equipment, and the operations of their offices in Washington, D.C., and their home districts through the Members’ Representational Allowance. Lawmakers are required to disclose their use of taxpayer dollars. As The Center Square reported, spending on lawmakers’ office accounts jumped to $810 million in 2024 from $360.5 million in 1996. Many lawmakers press junior staff members into service as their drivers in and around the Capitol, Schuman said. “It’s an unpoliced area, so members can largely do what they want,” he added. Rank-and-file members earn $174,000 a year. Their annual salary has been frozen for 17 years, resulting in a 31% drop in income when adjusted for inflation. One-day trips Lawmakers’ transportation spending varied. U.S. Rep. Timothy M. Kennedy, a New York Democrat, billed taxpayers for the use of a limousine rather than a limousine service. Kennedy spent $220 for an unspecified limousine on Thursday, August 22, and $848 on Friday, September 6. Congress was out of session both days. Kennedy spokeswoman Jala Hooks did not immediately return an email for comment. Rep. Kevin Mullin, a California Democrat, billed taxpayers for $209 for Premiere Limousine on March 12, 2025. Communications Director Samantha Weigel did not respond to an email request for comment. Two Florida lawmakers charged taxpayers for out-of-state limousine services. U.S. Rep. Scott Franklin, a Republican, spent $442 for the use of New Orleans-based Fleur De Lis Limousine LLC on August 10. Franklin’s chief of staff, Melissa Kelly, said he used a recommended car service, a limousine company, because Uber services were not available late at night. “It wasn’t a limo, it was a Honda Odyssey van,” Kelly said in an interview. “He had just gotten back at 2 a.m. from a Codel (Congressional delegation trip), and at that hour from the Tampa airport, you can’t get an Uber back to his home in Lakeland. It definitely cost a lot, but it was a one-off thing.” U.S. Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, a Democrat, spent $294 for Echo Limousine, a Chicago-based company, on August 18, 2024. Her chief of staff, Naomi Pierre-Louis, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In late January, the House Ethics Committee released a 59-page report that concluded "there is substantial reason to believe" that Rep. Cherfilus-McCormick violated criminal laws by laundering money from a $5 million overpayment the federal government gave to her family business in 2021 to her congressional campaign. She denies the charges.

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) — A number of U.S. representatives like to be driven in style, billing taxpayers tens of thousands of dollars for limo service from their office accounts, an investigation by The Center Square found. Six U.S. representatives charged taxpayers nearly $30,000 to hire chauffeured limousines in the latest twelve months for which figures are available. Since January 2019, U.S. representatives spent more than $160,000 out of their office accounts with companies that had the word limo or limousine in their name, according to figures come from the U.S. House’s quarterly disbursement reports. U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters, a California Democrat, spent the most on limo services, according to the data. She charged taxpayers $25,950 for transportation from Limousine House LLC from July 1, 2024, to June 30, according to House disbursement reports. A spokesperson did not immediately return requests for comment. Since 2019, Waters spent $111,000 on limo services. U.S. Rep. Ed Perlmutter, a Colorado Democrat who retired in 2023, came in second with nearly $20,000 in rides from limousine services. The records do not indicate the type of vehicle the lawmakers used for transportation, such as a Lincoln Town Car, Cadillac Escalade, or stretch limousine. While Waters regularly hired the company, five other lawmakers charged taxpayers $3,963 to hire a driver of a limousine service once or twice. U.S. Rep. Jim Himes, a Connecticut Democrat, took the two most expensive trips. Himes billed taxpayers $1,100 for the use of Elite Limousine Service on May 30. That came two days after he spent $850 to hire the same company. Cara Camacho, Himes’ chief of staff, did not return requests for comment. Daniel Schuman, executive director of American Governance Institute, a non-profit, said the spending totals raise questions. “Some of those trips are more expensive than airfare,” Schuman said in an interview. “It’s hard to imagine how that makes sense even in an expensive place like D.C. Are they ferrying staff around to an event?” Water's service, Limousine House LLC, which House records show she has paid since August 2021, has little readily available information. The company has no identifiable official website, no established online presence, and does not appear in corporate registries in California, Washington, D.C., Virginia, Maryland, and Delaware. Its principal address is a residential apartment unit in Alexandria, Va. In 2014, the company was granted passenger carrier authority by the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Commission. Three years later, WMATC suspended the company’s operating certificate and began revoking it because Limousine House LLC failed to maintain required filings and fees. In September 2024, the company was deemed inactive or defunct for lack of payment, according to records from the Virginia State Corporation Commission, an independent state agency. Limo company officials could not be reached for comment. A reporter knocked on the door and rang the doorbell twice on Monday afternoon at the condominium owned by Omar Bouzid, the former company's director, in Springfield, Va., but no one answered. Growing budgets The 440 members of the U.S. House of Representatives and delegates receive roughly $2 million a year for travel, staff, equipment, and the operations of their offices in Washington, D.C., and their home districts through the Members’ Representational Allowance. Lawmakers are required to disclose their use of taxpayer dollars. As The Center Square reported, spending on lawmakers’ office accounts jumped to $810 million in 2024 from $360.5 million in 1996. Many lawmakers press junior staff members into service as their drivers in and around the Capitol, Schuman said. “It’s an unpoliced area, so members can largely do what they want,” he added. Rank-and-file members earn $174,000 a year. Their annual salary has been frozen for 17 years, resulting in a 31% drop in income when adjusted for inflation. One-day trips Lawmakers’ transportation spending varied. U.S. Rep. Timothy M. Kennedy, a New York Democrat, billed taxpayers for the use of a limousine rather than a limousine service. Kennedy spent $220 for an unspecified limousine on Thursday, August 22, and $848 on Friday, September 6. Congress was out of session both days. Kennedy spokeswoman Jala Hooks did not immediately return an email for comment. Rep. Kevin Mullin, a California Democrat, billed taxpayers for $209 for Premiere Limousine on March 12, 2025. Communications Director Samantha Weigel did not respond to an email request for comment. Two Florida lawmakers charged taxpayers for out-of-state limousine services. U.S. Rep. Scott Franklin, a Republican, spent $442 for the use of New Orleans-based Fleur De Lis Limousine LLC on August 10. Franklin’s chief of staff, Melissa Kelly, said he used a recommended car service, a limousine company, because Uber services were not available late at night. “It wasn’t a limo, it was a Honda Odyssey van,” Kelly said in an interview. “He had just gotten back at 2 a.m. from a Codel (Congressional delegation trip), and at that hour from the Tampa airport, you can’t get an Uber back to his home in Lakeland. It definitely cost a lot, but it was a one-off thing.” U.S. Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, a Democrat, spent $294 for Echo Limousine, a Chicago-based company, on August 18, 2024. Her chief of staff, Naomi Pierre-Louis, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In late January, the House Ethics Committee released a 59-page report that concluded "there is substantial reason to believe" that Rep. Cherfilus-McCormick violated criminal laws by laundering money from a $5 million overpayment the federal government gave to her family business in 2021 to her congressional campaign. She denies the charges.

8 minutes

The 19th News
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A third of American workers now have access to some form of government-issued paid leave — the biggest share ever.  The United States is one of only a handful of countries that doesn’t have a federal paid leave policy offering workers paid time off after the birth of a child or to seek medical care, […]

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The 19th News
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A third of American workers now have access to some form of government-issued paid leave — the biggest share ever.  The United States is one of only a handful of countries that doesn’t have a federal paid leave policy offering workers paid time off after the birth of a child or to seek medical care, […]

Атаки США и Израиля на Иран и смерть аятоллы Али Хаменеи, вероятно, не окажут большого непосредственного влияния на ход боевых действий в Украине. Однако они могут сделать президента России Владимира Путина еще более непреклонным в своем стремлении одержать победу в полномасштабной войне, которую Кремль уже пятый год ведет против Украины. Реакция Москвы на американо-израильскую операцию против Ирана была достаточно жесткой – во всяком случае, куда более жесткой, чем в начале января, когда в...

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Радио Свобода
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Атаки США и Израиля на Иран и смерть аятоллы Али Хаменеи, вероятно, не окажут большого непосредственного влияния на ход боевых действий в Украине. Однако они могут сделать президента России Владимира Путина еще более непреклонным в своем стремлении одержать победу в полномасштабной войне, которую Кремль уже пятый год ведет против Украины. Реакция Москвы на американо-израильскую операцию против Ирана была достаточно жесткой – во всяком случае, куда более жесткой, чем в начале января, когда в...

La Alianza Europea de Academias lanza un proyecto de cuatro años que coincide con la polémica por la drástica reducción de la subvención de la Comunidad de Madrid al Círculo.

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Mundiario
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La Alianza Europea de Academias lanza un proyecto de cuatro años que coincide con la polémica por la drástica reducción de la subvención de la Comunidad de Madrid al Círculo.

بر اساس تصاویر منتشر شده، در روز سه‌شنبه ۱۲ اسفند ساختمان مجلس خبرگان در میدان رسالت شهر قم، مورد هدف قرار گرفت و تخریب شد

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صدای آمریکا
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بر اساس تصاویر منتشر شده، در روز سه‌شنبه ۱۲ اسفند ساختمان مجلس خبرگان در میدان رسالت شهر قم، مورد هدف قرار گرفت و تخریب شد

În Liban, circa 700 de militari francezi contribuie la Forţa interimară a ONU (FINUL) desfăşurată în sudul ţării, la frontiera cu Israel. În total, FINUL înseamnă undeva la 7.500 de soldaţi din 48 de ţări. Este vorba de căştile albastre, Forţa de menţinere a păcii a Naţiunilor Unite.

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Radio France Internationale
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În Liban, circa 700 de militari francezi contribuie la Forţa interimară a ONU (FINUL) desfăşurată în sudul ţării, la frontiera cu Israel. În total, FINUL înseamnă undeva la 7.500 de soldaţi din 48 de ţări. Este vorba de căştile albastre, Forţa de menţinere a păcii a Naţiunilor Unite.

14 minutes

رادیو بین‌المللی فرانسه
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عباس میلانی، مدیر برنامۀ مطالعات ایران در دانشگاه استنفورد، در گفتگویی با هفتۀ نامۀ فرانسوی «اکسپرس» تأکید می‌کند که پس از کشته شدن علی خامنه‌ای، مسئله نه انتخاب جانشین، بلکه اساساً امکان جانشینی است. به گفتۀ او، تمرکز بی‌ سابقۀ قدرت در دست رهبر پیشین جمهوری اسلامی، شکاف‌های عمیق درون حاکمیت و فرسایش مشروعیت ایدئولوژیک نظام و مهمتر از همه مخالفت جامعه، ساختاری پدید آورده که در آن انتقال باثبات قدرت تقریباً ناممکن به نظر می‌رسد.

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رادیو بین‌المللی فرانسه
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عباس میلانی، مدیر برنامۀ مطالعات ایران در دانشگاه استنفورد، در گفتگویی با هفتۀ نامۀ فرانسوی «اکسپرس» تأکید می‌کند که پس از کشته شدن علی خامنه‌ای، مسئله نه انتخاب جانشین، بلکه اساساً امکان جانشینی است. به گفتۀ او، تمرکز بی‌ سابقۀ قدرت در دست رهبر پیشین جمهوری اسلامی، شکاف‌های عمیق درون حاکمیت و فرسایش مشروعیت ایدئولوژیک نظام و مهمتر از همه مخالفت جامعه، ساختاری پدید آورده که در آن انتقال باثبات قدرت تقریباً ناممکن به نظر می‌رسد.

14 minutes

Berria
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Pertsiar golkoko petrolioaren eta gasaren garraioan Ormuzeko itsasartea giltzarri da, baina inguruan eraikitako hodiek eta AEBen gas esportazioek tentsioa arindu dute.

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Berria
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Pertsiar golkoko petrolioaren eta gasaren garraioan Ormuzeko itsasartea giltzarri da, baina inguruan eraikitako hodiek eta AEBen gas esportazioek tentsioa arindu dute.

On hazy winter mornings in Delhi, the air people breathe at street level may not tell the full story. A new peer-reviewed study published in Nature npj Clean Air reports that PM2.5 concentrations were up to 60% higher at around 100 metres above ground compared to surface levels during severe haze episodes. The findings suggest […]

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Mongabay
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On hazy winter mornings in Delhi, the air people breathe at street level may not tell the full story. A new peer-reviewed study published in Nature npj Clean Air reports that PM2.5 concentrations were up to 60% higher at around 100 metres above ground compared to surface levels during severe haze episodes. The findings suggest […]

Ministria e Punëve të Jashtme dhe Diasporës e Kosovës ka thënë se në ambientet e jashtme të Ambasadës së Kosovës në Berlin janë vendosur etiketa fyese me përmbajtje shoviniste në gjuhën serbe mbi pllakatin identifikues të objektit diplomatik, transmeton Radio Evropa e Lirë. Sipas njoftimit, mbishkrimet përmbajnë slogane nacionaliste dhe nxitëse, përfshirë mesazhe si “Nuk […]

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Portalb
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Ministria e Punëve të Jashtme dhe Diasporës e Kosovës ka thënë se në ambientet e jashtme të Ambasadës së Kosovës në Berlin janë vendosur etiketa fyese me përmbajtje shoviniste në gjuhën serbe mbi pllakatin identifikues të objektit diplomatik, transmeton Radio Evropa e Lirë. Sipas njoftimit, mbishkrimet përmbajnë slogane nacionaliste dhe nxitëse, përfshirë mesazhe si “Nuk […]

Varias decenas de personas murieron en la noche del sábado 28 de febrero al domingo 1 de marzo en Abiemnhom, en la zona administrativa de Ruweng, en la frontera con Sudán. Aunque el número de muertos sigue siendo provisional y las razones de esta tragedia siguen siendo desconocidas en esta fase, las autoridades locales hablan de violencia intercomunal en un contexto de creciente inestabilidad política en el país.

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Radio France Internationale
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Varias decenas de personas murieron en la noche del sábado 28 de febrero al domingo 1 de marzo en Abiemnhom, en la zona administrativa de Ruweng, en la frontera con Sudán. Aunque el número de muertos sigue siendo provisional y las razones de esta tragedia siguen siendo desconocidas en esta fase, las autoridades locales hablan de violencia intercomunal en un contexto de creciente inestabilidad política en el país.

Employees of Rosatom have lost contact with the leadership of Iran’s nuclear industry amid the war in the Middle East, the head of the Russian state-owned atomic energy corporation, Alexey Likhachev, said Tuesday.

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Meduza
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Employees of Rosatom have lost contact with the leadership of Iran’s nuclear industry amid the war in the Middle East, the head of the Russian state-owned atomic energy corporation, Alexey Likhachev, said Tuesday.