4 minutes

뉴스타파
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뉴스타파
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6 minutes

Jornalet
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La situacion a Cuba s’es fòrça degradada aquestes meses, al ponch d’alimentar las especulacions sus una possibla casuda del govèrn. Après aver tustat Veneçuèla e Iran, l’administracion de Donald Trump sembla d’ara enlà concentrar sa pression sus l’illa caribenca. Somesa a un embargatge refortit, Cuba afronta una penúria aguda de carburant dempuèi mai de tres meses, segon lo president Miguel Díaz-Canel, çò rapòrta Bloomberg. Continua llegint

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Jornalet
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La situacion a Cuba s’es fòrça degradada aquestes meses, al ponch d’alimentar las especulacions sus una possibla casuda del govèrn. Après aver tustat Veneçuèla e Iran, l’administracion de Donald Trump sembla d’ara enlà concentrar sa pression sus l’illa caribenca. Somesa a un embargatge refortit, Cuba afronta una penúria aguda de carburant dempuèi mai de tres meses, segon lo president Miguel Díaz-Canel, çò rapòrta Bloomberg. Continua llegint

Despuish era rentrada de seteme, eth licèu Bagatèla de Sent Gaudenç (Nebosan) qu’é implicat en un escambi lingüistic e culturau damb eth institut d’educacion segondària Joan Ramis i Ramis, de Maó, situat sus era illa de Menòrca. Aqueth projècte que s’inscriu daguens eth programa dera Union Europenca Erasmus+, destinat a sosténguer era educacion, era formacion, era joenessa e eth espòrt en Euròpa e mès particularament eths escambis entram eths gafets deths collègis o deths licèus. Continua llegint

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Jornalet
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Despuish era rentrada de seteme, eth licèu Bagatèla de Sent Gaudenç (Nebosan) qu’é implicat en un escambi lingüistic e culturau damb eth institut d’educacion segondària Joan Ramis i Ramis, de Maó, situat sus era illa de Menòrca. Aqueth projècte que s’inscriu daguens eth programa dera Union Europenca Erasmus+, destinat a sosténguer era educacion, era formacion, era joenessa e eth espòrt en Euròpa e mès particularament eths escambis entram eths gafets deths collègis o deths licèus. Continua llegint

Eth Ministèri de Justícia francés a demanat a fiscals e delegats deth govèrn que dèishen de perseguir judiciàriament ad aqueres familhes que meten as sòns hilhs eth nòm de Fañch o Iñaki. Finalament pòden emplegar era «ñ». Justificaue era Cort qu’eth Ministèri auie proïbit er emplec dera virguleta sus era «n» pr’amor qu’aguesta non forme part des signes diacritics dera lengua francesa. Continua llegint

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Jornalet
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Eth Ministèri de Justícia francés a demanat a fiscals e delegats deth govèrn que dèishen de perseguir judiciàriament ad aqueres familhes que meten as sòns hilhs eth nòm de Fañch o Iñaki. Finalament pòden emplegar era «ñ». Justificaue era Cort qu’eth Ministèri auie proïbit er emplec dera virguleta sus era «n» pr’amor qu’aguesta non forme part des signes diacritics dera lengua francesa. Continua llegint

La traduccion d’aplicacions metèo implica sovent lo meteis vocabulari. Me cal dire qu’un còp que’l vocabulari ven precís me manca los mots en occitan e daissi de cadenas de tèxtes per paur de difusar de decas. Vòli vos prepausar de m’ajudar a establir una ficha per permetre als traductors de s’apiejar sus un document. Ai una lista de 207 tèrmes per descriure lo temps que fa, traduguèri ja 47 cases, benlèu que son a corregir. Continua llegint

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Jornalet
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La traduccion d’aplicacions metèo implica sovent lo meteis vocabulari. Me cal dire qu’un còp que’l vocabulari ven precís me manca los mots en occitan e daissi de cadenas de tèxtes per paur de difusar de decas. Vòli vos prepausar de m’ajudar a establir una ficha per permetre als traductors de s’apiejar sus un document. Ai una lista de 207 tèrmes per descriure lo temps que fa, traduguèri ja 47 cases, benlèu que son a corregir. Continua llegint

10 minutes

Utah News Dispatch
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Four years after Utah built a $1 billion state prison, it's putting $125 million more toward expanding its mens' facility in central Utah.

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Utah News Dispatch
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Four years after Utah built a $1 billion state prison, it's putting $125 million more toward expanding its mens' facility in central Utah.

The Georgia General Assembly passed a bill to lift the limit on THC content in medical marijuana and allow registered patients to vape the drug, providing faster relief, with the bill now awaiting Gov. Brian Kemp's signature. The Current is an inclusive nonprofit, non-partisan news organization providing in-depth watchdog journalism for Savannah and Coastal Georgia’s communities.

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The Current
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The Georgia General Assembly passed a bill to lift the limit on THC content in medical marijuana and allow registered patients to vape the drug, providing faster relief, with the bill now awaiting Gov. Brian Kemp's signature. The Current is an inclusive nonprofit, non-partisan news organization providing in-depth watchdog journalism for Savannah and Coastal Georgia’s communities.

13 minutes

El Diari de l'Educació
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El discurs d’odi no és un fenomen aliè a l’alumnat. Forma part del seu entorn quotidià i, inevitablement, també es cola dins les aules. Segons un informe de l’Oficina del Parlament Europeu a Espanya i Fad Juventud, un de cada dos joves d’entre 15 i 29 anys assegura haver-ne patit durant l’últim any, i un [...] L'entrada Discurs d’odi: de les xarxes a l’aula a través de mems i codis compartits ha aparegut primer a El Diari de l'Educació.

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El Diari de l'Educació
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El discurs d’odi no és un fenomen aliè a l’alumnat. Forma part del seu entorn quotidià i, inevitablement, també es cola dins les aules. Segons un informe de l’Oficina del Parlament Europeu a Espanya i Fad Juventud, un de cada dos joves d’entre 15 i 29 anys assegura haver-ne patit durant l’últim any, i un [...] L'entrada Discurs d’odi: de les xarxes a l’aula a través de mems i codis compartits ha aparegut primer a El Diari de l'Educació.

The Georgia Senate has passed a bill to move the state from the Eastern to the Atlantic time zone, eliminating the need for daylight saving time and requiring permission from the U.S. Transportation secretary. The Current is an inclusive nonprofit, non-partisan news organization providing in-depth watchdog journalism for Savannah and Coastal Georgia’s communities.

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The Current
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The Georgia Senate has passed a bill to move the state from the Eastern to the Atlantic time zone, eliminating the need for daylight saving time and requiring permission from the U.S. Transportation secretary. The Current is an inclusive nonprofit, non-partisan news organization providing in-depth watchdog journalism for Savannah and Coastal Georgia’s communities.

25 minutes

Stocktonia News
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Roughly 20 demonstrators supporting Rocco Robinson family coursed through Stockton’s downtown that day, starting at the Cesar Chavez Central Library, before making their way to the command center and the San Joaquin County District Attorney’s Office. Supporters of slain teen Rocco Robinson hold downtown demonstration is a story from Stocktonia News, a rigorous and factual newsroom covering Greater Stockton, California. Please consider making a charitable contribution to support our journalism.

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Stocktonia News
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Roughly 20 demonstrators supporting Rocco Robinson family coursed through Stockton’s downtown that day, starting at the Cesar Chavez Central Library, before making their way to the command center and the San Joaquin County District Attorney’s Office. Supporters of slain teen Rocco Robinson hold downtown demonstration is a story from Stocktonia News, a rigorous and factual newsroom covering Greater Stockton, California. Please consider making a charitable contribution to support our journalism.

The Georgia Senate passed a bill banning cellphone use in public high schools from the morning bell to the dismissal bell, with the goal of reducing distractions and increasing student interaction. The Current is an inclusive nonprofit, non-partisan news organization providing in-depth watchdog journalism for Savannah and Coastal Georgia’s communities.

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The Current
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The Georgia Senate passed a bill banning cellphone use in public high schools from the morning bell to the dismissal bell, with the goal of reducing distractions and increasing student interaction. The Current is an inclusive nonprofit, non-partisan news organization providing in-depth watchdog journalism for Savannah and Coastal Georgia’s communities.

33 minutes

Prensa Comunitaria
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Tiempo de lectura: 3 minutosLos integrantes de la Comisión Postuladora a fiscal general 2026-2030 se reunieron para revisar las pruebas de descargo de los candidatos que recibieron tachas.  Los comisionados aceptaron por mayoría todos los documentos, entre estos los presentados por la fiscal general Consuelo Porras. Por Prensa Comunitaria Qué solo el autor de la tesis puede alegar fraude, ... Read more The post Las respuestas de Consuelo Porras sobre sus tachas appeared first on Prensa Comunitaria.

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Prensa Comunitaria
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Tiempo de lectura: 3 minutosLos integrantes de la Comisión Postuladora a fiscal general 2026-2030 se reunieron para revisar las pruebas de descargo de los candidatos que recibieron tachas.  Los comisionados aceptaron por mayoría todos los documentos, entre estos los presentados por la fiscal general Consuelo Porras. Por Prensa Comunitaria Qué solo el autor de la tesis puede alegar fraude, ... Read more The post Las respuestas de Consuelo Porras sobre sus tachas appeared first on Prensa Comunitaria.

37 minutes

Freedom of the Press Foundation
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Estefany Rodríguez’s First Amendment case may be just getting started, but it’s already revealing how far the government will go to stifle journalism and speech it finds inconvenient.The Nashville journalist, originally from Colombia but with authorization to work here, was detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement on March 4 and released on bond last week. Rodríguez argued her detention was in retaliation for her work as a journalist, in violation of the First Amendment.In response, the government has taken an extreme position that could have impacts far beyond Rodríguez’s case. In a recent court filing, it suggested that Rodríguez — and anyone the government asserts is an “unlawful alien” — does not have any First Amendment rights at all.This appears to mark the first time that the Trump administration has argued that a journalist who it claims is living in the United States illegally has no First Amendment rights. Even as it has argued against First Amendment claims made by Mario Guevara and Ya’akub Vijandre, the government did not claim that the First Amendment didn’t apply because of their immigration status.The government also hasn’t taken that position in cases involving noncitizens who are lawfully present in the United States, like those of Mahmoud Khalil and Rümeysa Öztürk, since Supreme Court and other legal precedent is clear that the First Amendment protects them. Rather, the government argued that immigration law gave it the power to deport Khalil and Öztürk, and that courts don’t have the authority to review First Amendment claims in the context of immigration proceedings.That’s still wrong, but it’s different from saying that the First Amendment doesn’t protect someone in the U.S. at all because they’re living in the country illegally. If the First Amendment doesn’t apply to a person who is in the country without legal permission, the government wouldn’t just be able to deport them for their speech. It would theoretically be free to jail them for writing a news article or a book or for speaking critically about the government or its policies to the press.If that sounds obviously wrong, that’s because it is.Here’s another absurd twist on the government’s argument: The First Amendment also protects free exercise of religion. If those lacking legal status have no First Amendment rights, the government could forbid them from exercising their religion or require them to follow a particular religion.That can’t be right. The First Amendment, which restricts the government’s power to restrict speech or religious exercise, shouldn’t depend on whether the person speaking or worshiping has legal status or not.Legal experts agree that, as a general matter, constitutional rights apply to those living illegally in the United States on the basis of their personhood and presence here. The Supreme Court has also explicitly held that certain constitutional rights apply to immigrants in the country without legal permission, including the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of equal protection under the law and the Fifth Amendment’s right to due process.The government’s argument is inconsistent with that precedent. It would stifle speech from many immigrants who have built lives and developed strong ties to the United States, including those who may believe they have the legal right to be here. Rodríguez, for instance, entered the country legally and had authorization to work here, yet the government claims it can silence her by declaring her an “illegal alien.”But the government’s interpretation of the First Amendment wouldn’t just harm people like Rodríguez. It’s bad for Americans, too.Immigrants to the U.S. who the government says lack legal status but who hold valid work permits that allow them to work as journalists, like Rodríguez, can report important news stories about immigration enforcement because they are part of the community being targeted. Book authors here without legal status have written firsthand accounts about the immigrant experience. Sources lacking legal status have told American journalists about deplorable conditions at detention facilities and Kafkaesque immigration proceedings.All of this speech is invaluable for informing public understanding and debate over immigration policy. Saying that these people have no First Amendment rights means that Americans will be far less likely to hear from them and thus less knowledgeable.Unfortunately, this isn’t the first time that the government has argued that the First Amendment doesn’t apply to those lacking permanent legal status in the United States.In 2015, the Department of Justice (under President Obama) argued that a group of mothers in the country without legal permission who protested while in immigration detention couldn’t bring a First Amendment claim because, as “non-resident aliens” who did not have established connections to the U.S., they had no First Amendment rights.But because the case was later voluntarily dismissed, the government’s theory was never tested in court. The government seemed to have abandoned that argument by not raising it again — until now.The government’s signal in the Rodríguez case that it’s reviving this argument should alarm everyone. So should its continued efforts to deport Rodríguez, which you can and should speak out against.The First Amendment was written to limit government power, not let officials decide whose voices are worth hearing. Targeting people because of their legal status and declaring them outside the First Amendment targets every American’s right to know the truth.

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Freedom of the Press Foundation
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Estefany Rodríguez’s First Amendment case may be just getting started, but it’s already revealing how far the government will go to stifle journalism and speech it finds inconvenient.The Nashville journalist, originally from Colombia but with authorization to work here, was detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement on March 4 and released on bond last week. Rodríguez argued her detention was in retaliation for her work as a journalist, in violation of the First Amendment.In response, the government has taken an extreme position that could have impacts far beyond Rodríguez’s case. In a recent court filing, it suggested that Rodríguez — and anyone the government asserts is an “unlawful alien” — does not have any First Amendment rights at all.This appears to mark the first time that the Trump administration has argued that a journalist who it claims is living in the United States illegally has no First Amendment rights. Even as it has argued against First Amendment claims made by Mario Guevara and Ya’akub Vijandre, the government did not claim that the First Amendment didn’t apply because of their immigration status.The government also hasn’t taken that position in cases involving noncitizens who are lawfully present in the United States, like those of Mahmoud Khalil and Rümeysa Öztürk, since Supreme Court and other legal precedent is clear that the First Amendment protects them. Rather, the government argued that immigration law gave it the power to deport Khalil and Öztürk, and that courts don’t have the authority to review First Amendment claims in the context of immigration proceedings.That’s still wrong, but it’s different from saying that the First Amendment doesn’t protect someone in the U.S. at all because they’re living in the country illegally. If the First Amendment doesn’t apply to a person who is in the country without legal permission, the government wouldn’t just be able to deport them for their speech. It would theoretically be free to jail them for writing a news article or a book or for speaking critically about the government or its policies to the press.If that sounds obviously wrong, that’s because it is.Here’s another absurd twist on the government’s argument: The First Amendment also protects free exercise of religion. If those lacking legal status have no First Amendment rights, the government could forbid them from exercising their religion or require them to follow a particular religion.That can’t be right. The First Amendment, which restricts the government’s power to restrict speech or religious exercise, shouldn’t depend on whether the person speaking or worshiping has legal status or not.Legal experts agree that, as a general matter, constitutional rights apply to those living illegally in the United States on the basis of their personhood and presence here. The Supreme Court has also explicitly held that certain constitutional rights apply to immigrants in the country without legal permission, including the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of equal protection under the law and the Fifth Amendment’s right to due process.The government’s argument is inconsistent with that precedent. It would stifle speech from many immigrants who have built lives and developed strong ties to the United States, including those who may believe they have the legal right to be here. Rodríguez, for instance, entered the country legally and had authorization to work here, yet the government claims it can silence her by declaring her an “illegal alien.”But the government’s interpretation of the First Amendment wouldn’t just harm people like Rodríguez. It’s bad for Americans, too.Immigrants to the U.S. who the government says lack legal status but who hold valid work permits that allow them to work as journalists, like Rodríguez, can report important news stories about immigration enforcement because they are part of the community being targeted. Book authors here without legal status have written firsthand accounts about the immigrant experience. Sources lacking legal status have told American journalists about deplorable conditions at detention facilities and Kafkaesque immigration proceedings.All of this speech is invaluable for informing public understanding and debate over immigration policy. Saying that these people have no First Amendment rights means that Americans will be far less likely to hear from them and thus less knowledgeable.Unfortunately, this isn’t the first time that the government has argued that the First Amendment doesn’t apply to those lacking permanent legal status in the United States.In 2015, the Department of Justice (under President Obama) argued that a group of mothers in the country without legal permission who protested while in immigration detention couldn’t bring a First Amendment claim because, as “non-resident aliens” who did not have established connections to the U.S., they had no First Amendment rights.But because the case was later voluntarily dismissed, the government’s theory was never tested in court. The government seemed to have abandoned that argument by not raising it again — until now.The government’s signal in the Rodríguez case that it’s reviving this argument should alarm everyone. So should its continued efforts to deport Rodríguez, which you can and should speak out against.The First Amendment was written to limit government power, not let officials decide whose voices are worth hearing. Targeting people because of their legal status and declaring them outside the First Amendment targets every American’s right to know the truth.

Seleção reúne produções paraibanas, nacionais e universitárias, que podem ser assistidas até 23 de maio O post AruandaPlay disponibiliza 24 curtas do Fest Aruanda 2025 para exibição gratuita online apareceu primeiro em Mídia NINJA.

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Mídia NINJA
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Seleção reúne produções paraibanas, nacionais e universitárias, que podem ser assistidas até 23 de maio O post AruandaPlay disponibiliza 24 curtas do Fest Aruanda 2025 para exibição gratuita online apareceu primeiro em Mídia NINJA.

(New York Jewish Week) — For nearly two decades, the families of victims of Iranian-sponsored terrorism have watched a 36-story Manhattan skyscraper generate millions in rental income for the Islamic Republic while their court judgments against Iran went unsatisfied. On Monday, amid the Israeli-American war against Iran,  that wait finally produced a result: a $318... The post After decades, Iran-linked Manhattan skyscraper yields $318M for terror victims appeared first on The Forward.

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The Forward
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(New York Jewish Week) — For nearly two decades, the families of victims of Iranian-sponsored terrorism have watched a 36-story Manhattan skyscraper generate millions in rental income for the Islamic Republic while their court judgments against Iran went unsatisfied. On Monday, amid the Israeli-American war against Iran,  that wait finally produced a result: a $318... The post After decades, Iran-linked Manhattan skyscraper yields $318M for terror victims appeared first on The Forward.

آشنایی با لشکر ۸۲ هوابرد - به‌عنوان یکی از مهم‌ترین و سریع‌ترین یگان‌های ارتش آمریکا - برای درک بهتر ابعاد تحولات جاری و گزینه‌های پیش‌روی واشنگتن اهمیت ویژه‌ای پیدا کرده است؛ یگانی که حضور یا حتی نامش، معمولاً نشانه‌ای از ورود بحران به مرحله‌ای حساس‌تر تلقی می‌شود.

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صدای آمریکا
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آشنایی با لشکر ۸۲ هوابرد - به‌عنوان یکی از مهم‌ترین و سریع‌ترین یگان‌های ارتش آمریکا - برای درک بهتر ابعاد تحولات جاری و گزینه‌های پیش‌روی واشنگتن اهمیت ویژه‌ای پیدا کرده است؛ یگانی که حضور یا حتی نامش، معمولاً نشانه‌ای از ورود بحران به مرحله‌ای حساس‌تر تلقی می‌شود.

The Boring Company said it would begin assessing the feasibility of building an underground tunnel connecting a university with a new development.

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The Texas Tribune
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The Boring Company said it would begin assessing the feasibility of building an underground tunnel connecting a university with a new development.

Au Sénégal, l’emprunt par les autorités de 650 millions d’euros, l’année dernière, via un instrument financier peu connu et particulièrement opaque fait polémique. Il s’agit de TRS ou Total Return Swaps. Si le gouvernement assure avoir effectué ces emprunts dans une logique de diversification des instruments financiers et de façon parfaitement légale, l’opposition et la société civile dénoncent un déficit de transparence.

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Radio France Internationale
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Au Sénégal, l’emprunt par les autorités de 650 millions d’euros, l’année dernière, via un instrument financier peu connu et particulièrement opaque fait polémique. Il s’agit de TRS ou Total Return Swaps. Si le gouvernement assure avoir effectué ces emprunts dans une logique de diversification des instruments financiers et de façon parfaitement légale, l’opposition et la société civile dénoncent un déficit de transparence.

The Idaho Senate on Tuesday widely passed a bill that would fine local and state governments for flying flags that aren’t on the Legislature’s pre-approved list. The bill’s House sponsor, Rep. Ted Hill, an Eagle Republican, has said House Bill 561 is meant to target the city of Boise for flying an LGBTQ+ pride flag. […]

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Idaho Capital Sun
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The Idaho Senate on Tuesday widely passed a bill that would fine local and state governments for flying flags that aren’t on the Legislature’s pre-approved list. The bill’s House sponsor, Rep. Ted Hill, an Eagle Republican, has said House Bill 561 is meant to target the city of Boise for flying an LGBTQ+ pride flag. […]

Langkah pemerintah mengeluarkan limbah fly ash bottom ash (FABA), hasil pembakaran batubara di Pembangkit Listrik Tenaga Uap (PLTU), dari daftar bahan beracun berbahaya (B3) membuat pengelolaannya serampangan. Di PLTU Tenayan Raya, misal, setelah membuangnya di Badak Ujung maupun menimbun tungku pembakaran batu bata, abu malah jadi bahan untuk material timbun bangunan. Warga yang tinggal di […] The post Warga Dekat PLTU Tenayan Raya Nikmati Abu Bukan Listrik appeared first on Mongabay.co.id.

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Mongabay
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Langkah pemerintah mengeluarkan limbah fly ash bottom ash (FABA), hasil pembakaran batubara di Pembangkit Listrik Tenaga Uap (PLTU), dari daftar bahan beracun berbahaya (B3) membuat pengelolaannya serampangan. Di PLTU Tenayan Raya, misal, setelah membuangnya di Badak Ujung maupun menimbun tungku pembakaran batu bata, abu malah jadi bahan untuk material timbun bangunan. Warga yang tinggal di […] The post Warga Dekat PLTU Tenayan Raya Nikmati Abu Bukan Listrik appeared first on Mongabay.co.id.