OMAHA — To help respond to a Nebraska rural nurse shortage, the University of Nebraska Medical Center plans to award 30 full scholarships with federal funding it secured for its new Rural Nebraska Nursing Fellowship. The awards will cover tuition, fees and books for a two-year Bachelor of Science degree in nursing at UNMC’s Scottsbluff, Kearney […]

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Nebraska Examiner
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OMAHA — To help respond to a Nebraska rural nurse shortage, the University of Nebraska Medical Center plans to award 30 full scholarships with federal funding it secured for its new Rural Nebraska Nursing Fellowship. The awards will cover tuition, fees and books for a two-year Bachelor of Science degree in nursing at UNMC’s Scottsbluff, Kearney […]

Violonista Alexandra Tirsu a debutat pe prestigioasa scenă Cadogan Hall din Londra, interpretând concertul de vioară numărul 1 de Serghei Prokofiev. Originară din Republica Moldova, cu studii muzicale în Austria și Eleveția, câștigătoare a numeroase concursuri muzicale, Alexandra Tirsu este la fel de confortabilă atât cu muzică clasică, dar și cu muzica modernă, inclusiv cea de film.

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Radio France Internationale
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Violonista Alexandra Tirsu a debutat pe prestigioasa scenă Cadogan Hall din Londra, interpretând concertul de vioară numărul 1 de Serghei Prokofiev. Originară din Republica Moldova, cu studii muzicale în Austria și Eleveția, câștigătoare a numeroase concursuri muzicale, Alexandra Tirsu este la fel de confortabilă atât cu muzică clasică, dar și cu muzica modernă, inclusiv cea de film.

LINCOLN — Nebraska’s tourism agency has announced this season’s 70 featured sight-seeing destinations in the popular Visit Nebraska “Passport” program. The program guides Nebraskans and out-of-state visitors to “hidden gems” across the state, while supporting tourism destinations and local businesses. Jenn Gjerde, executive director of Visit Nebraska, another name for the state tourism commission, calls Passport […]

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Nebraska Examiner
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LINCOLN — Nebraska’s tourism agency has announced this season’s 70 featured sight-seeing destinations in the popular Visit Nebraska “Passport” program. The program guides Nebraskans and out-of-state visitors to “hidden gems” across the state, while supporting tourism destinations and local businesses. Jenn Gjerde, executive director of Visit Nebraska, another name for the state tourism commission, calls Passport […]

Milwaukee County Executive David Crowley announced the release of draft recommendations aimed at strengthening the County’s services, policies, practices, and organizational structure. The post Post From Community: Milwaukee County invites community input on newly released draft recommendations for future state project appeared first on Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service.

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Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service
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Milwaukee County Executive David Crowley announced the release of draft recommendations aimed at strengthening the County’s services, policies, practices, and organizational structure. The post Post From Community: Milwaukee County invites community input on newly released draft recommendations for future state project appeared first on Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service.

Un jour après l’attaque du site de Lusinga dans le parc national de l’Upemba, au nord du Katanga en RDC, attribuée à des miliciens Maï-Maï, la situation est revenue calme mercredi 4 mars. L’armée a pris le contrôle de ce site qui abrite tous les services du parc et quelques agents sont de retour. Selon l'Institut congolais pour la conservation de la nature, cinq agents du parc ont été tués et plusieurs biens ont été emportés par des assaillants. Le parc national de l’Upemba regorge d'une faune sauvage riche, dont des zèbres sauvages, des derniers buffles du Katanga et des éléphants.

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Radio France Internationale
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Un jour après l’attaque du site de Lusinga dans le parc national de l’Upemba, au nord du Katanga en RDC, attribuée à des miliciens Maï-Maï, la situation est revenue calme mercredi 4 mars. L’armée a pris le contrôle de ce site qui abrite tous les services du parc et quelques agents sont de retour. Selon l'Institut congolais pour la conservation de la nature, cinq agents du parc ont été tués et plusieurs biens ont été emportés par des assaillants. Le parc national de l’Upemba regorge d'une faune sauvage riche, dont des zèbres sauvages, des derniers buffles du Katanga et des éléphants.

17 minutes

法國國際廣播電台
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美以伊戰爭進入第五天,美以強化對伊朗轟炸,德黑蘭上空濃煙滾滾,而伊朗在反擊以色列的同時,繼續向設有美軍基地的海灣國家發射導彈。特朗普指望儘快結束戰爭,而別無選擇的德黑蘭似已準備打持久戰,並以轟炸周邊富裕的海灣國家來消蝕華盛頓的耐心。

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法國國際廣播電台
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美以伊戰爭進入第五天,美以強化對伊朗轟炸,德黑蘭上空濃煙滾滾,而伊朗在反擊以色列的同時,繼續向設有美軍基地的海灣國家發射導彈。特朗普指望儘快結束戰爭,而別無選擇的德黑蘭似已準備打持久戰,並以轟炸周邊富裕的海灣國家來消蝕華盛頓的耐心。

18 minutes

Mississippi Today
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On Tuesday, a three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed former Hinds County interim sheriff Marshand Crisler's bribery conviction.

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Mississippi Today
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On Tuesday, a three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed former Hinds County interim sheriff Marshand Crisler's bribery conviction.

L'Équateur a ordonné mercredi 4 mars l'expulsion de l'ambassadeur de Cuba à Quito, Basilio Gutiérrez, lui donnant un délai de 48 heures pour quitter le pays avec l'ensemble de sa mission diplomatique, a annoncé le ministère des Affaires étrangères. Une « décision arbitraire et injustifiée », selon Cuba, qui établit un lien entre la décision de l'Équateur quelques jours avant le sommet de Miami le 7 mars et les « pressions exercées par le gouvernement américain sur les États tiers pour qu'ils se rallient à cette politique ».

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Radio France Internationale
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L'Équateur a ordonné mercredi 4 mars l'expulsion de l'ambassadeur de Cuba à Quito, Basilio Gutiérrez, lui donnant un délai de 48 heures pour quitter le pays avec l'ensemble de sa mission diplomatique, a annoncé le ministère des Affaires étrangères. Une « décision arbitraire et injustifiée », selon Cuba, qui établit un lien entre la décision de l'Équateur quelques jours avant le sommet de Miami le 7 mars et les « pressions exercées par le gouvernement américain sur les États tiers pour qu'ils se rallient à cette politique ».

Comment Macky Sall défend-il sa candidature au secrétariat général des Nations unies ? L'ancien président sénégalais a envoyé une lettre de motivation et un curriculum vitae à l'institution, par l'entremise du représentant du Burundi à l'ONU. RFI a pris connaissance de ce courrier dans lequel il présente ses motivations pour le poste et sa vision du futur de l'ONU.

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Radio France Internationale
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Comment Macky Sall défend-il sa candidature au secrétariat général des Nations unies ? L'ancien président sénégalais a envoyé une lettre de motivation et un curriculum vitae à l'institution, par l'entremise du représentant du Burundi à l'ONU. RFI a pris connaissance de ce courrier dans lequel il présente ses motivations pour le poste et sa vision du futur de l'ONU.

23 minutes

Fort Worth Report
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The collaboration begins with an online entrepreneurship program designed for biotech startups.

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Fort Worth Report
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The collaboration begins with an online entrepreneurship program designed for biotech startups.

25 minutes

Freedom of the Press Foundation
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Journalists covering the U.S. and Israel’s war on Iran should be telling their audiences not only what they know but what they were prevented from finding out, and by whom. That doesn’t just mean an occasional editorial bemoaning threats to press freedom. Those are valuable, but on their own, they turn speech suppression into a side issue. The reporting itself should include acknowledgment and explanation of how censorship impacts what the public sees and reads.The censorship infrastructure surrounding this war is extraordinary. On the American side, self-proclaimed Secretary of War Pete Hegseth has virtually eliminated press access to the military and limited press credentialing to journalists who pledge to remain official stenographers. As a result of his policy, the press corps covering the Pentagon is composed of Trump-aligned outlets like One America News, Turning Point USA’s Frontlines, and MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell’s LindellTV streaming service.It’s arguably not the worst outcome for serious reporters to get their time back so they can dig through public records instead of listening to Hegseth’s lies and weird pep talks. But if they try, they’re sure to run into problems caused by the Trump administration’s widespread gutting of public records and transparency mechanisms, elimination of government websites, and blatant noncompliance with the Freedom of Information Act.Some of the same outlets excluded from the Pentagon are likely to face harassment from Brendan Carr’s Federal Communications Commission and others within the administration eager to use their leverage over corporate transactions to deter criticism. Trump has claimed that kitchen cabinets threaten national security during peacetime — imagine what he’ll say about investigative journalism while at war. The administration’s war on leaks is sure to accelerate as whistleblowers seek to expose the embarrassing mistakes and awful human rights abuses that the war is almost certain to bring. After the raid of Washington Post reporter Hannah Natanson’s home over her source’s alleged Espionage Act violations, further intrusions on newsgathering seem inevitable. Trump has reportedly been looking for an opportunity to take it one step further and prosecute a journalist under the same archaic law.The congressional subpoena of journalist Seth Harp, for identifying a military official leading Trump’s attack on Venezuela, likely foreshadows what’s to come for journalists who publish news the administration seeks to conceal about the war.The administration’s efforts to distort the concept of “doxxing” to criminalize reporting on Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s abduction spree may prove to have been a practice run for tactics to silence war correspondents. President Donald Trump has claimed that kitchen cabinets threaten national security during peacetime — imagine what he’ll say about investigative journalism while at war.Attacks that don’t silence critics directly are apt to lead to self-censorship. Sources won’t come forward at risk of federal investigation. Corporate news moguls will tone down their coverage to avoid government threats to their more lucrative holdings. Smaller outlets and independent journalists will hesitate to risk incurring life-altering legal fees.Sure, some journalists and whistleblowers are courageous enough to risk everything to tell the truth, but we shouldn’t be dependent on heroism for uncensored reporting.On the Israeli side, the censorship is often even more direct. Israel’s military censor, which reportedly banned publication of 1,635 articles and partially censored another 6,265 in 2024, will be back at it — likely emboldened by U.S. backsliding under Trump. Journalists who disobey the censor — which also prohibits them from reporting they’ve been silenced — risk arrest.Stories that aren’t killed by the censor are deterred with the threat of being blown to bits. Israel has systematically targeted news outlets and individual journalists in Gaza, as well as Iran. There’s no reason to assume Iran will be any different — an Iranian state media complex has reportedly already been bombed. Add to that the “accidental” killings of journalists resulting from unwillingness to take basic measures to protect civilians.And then there’s Iran itself, which, to paraphrase Hegseth, didn’t start this war but is sure going to censor it. The remnants of the regime are likely to lash out to violently stifle all sorts of dissent, including journalism that doesn’t parrot their narratives. Stories that aren’t killed by the censor are deterred with the threat of being blown to bits. Iran — which ranked 176th out of 180 on Reporters Without Borders’ global Press Freedom Index last year — is intolerant of adversarial journalism during peacetime and will surely escalate censorship now, as we saw during the Israel-Iran war last year.Since the start of the current war, Iran has already blacked out phone and internet access, as it did during its horrifically violent suppression of January’s uprisings. It will almost certainly continue to do so, thereby severely limiting the information that comes out of the war’s primary battleground, and leaving journalists and news consumers to gauge the credibility of competing government narratives.None of this is unprecedented in isolation — the George W. Bush administration used highly restricted embed access in Iraq as a propaganda tool, subpoenaed reporters, and floated prosecuting them under the Espionage Act. The Obama administration pursued more Espionage Act cases against whistleblowers than all prior administrations combined. The Biden administration extracted a plea deal from Julian Assange over WikiLeaks’ exposure of Iraq war crimes. But all of that is going to be on steroids now, in terms of both scale and brazenness.Journalists will find a way to report the news and investigate government abuses and lies, despite it all. Lawyers and activists will do what they can to help. But it’s unrealistic to expect reporters to overcome this multipronged attack entirely.What they can and should do, even if it feels awkward, is let the public in on the obstacles they are dealing with and how the lack of reliable information during modern conflicts harms us all, allowing politicians to lie their way into wars that enrich their friends while killing schoolchildren.If reporters are going to quote Pentagon spokespeople or news releases, the public deserves to know who the reporter was not allowed to interview and what documents they were not permitted to review. It’s vital context without which the reporting is arguably misleading. And reporters from the U.S. — which is somehow still the least censored of the three main parties to this war — may be the only ones who can provide it.It might not fix the secrecy surrounding this war, but it could lead to greater demand for transparency and greater skepticism of official narratives in the run-up to the next “forever war.” Maybe it could even help avoid the next one altogether.

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Freedom of the Press Foundation
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Journalists covering the U.S. and Israel’s war on Iran should be telling their audiences not only what they know but what they were prevented from finding out, and by whom. That doesn’t just mean an occasional editorial bemoaning threats to press freedom. Those are valuable, but on their own, they turn speech suppression into a side issue. The reporting itself should include acknowledgment and explanation of how censorship impacts what the public sees and reads.The censorship infrastructure surrounding this war is extraordinary. On the American side, self-proclaimed Secretary of War Pete Hegseth has virtually eliminated press access to the military and limited press credentialing to journalists who pledge to remain official stenographers. As a result of his policy, the press corps covering the Pentagon is composed of Trump-aligned outlets like One America News, Turning Point USA’s Frontlines, and MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell’s LindellTV streaming service.It’s arguably not the worst outcome for serious reporters to get their time back so they can dig through public records instead of listening to Hegseth’s lies and weird pep talks. But if they try, they’re sure to run into problems caused by the Trump administration’s widespread gutting of public records and transparency mechanisms, elimination of government websites, and blatant noncompliance with the Freedom of Information Act.Some of the same outlets excluded from the Pentagon are likely to face harassment from Brendan Carr’s Federal Communications Commission and others within the administration eager to use their leverage over corporate transactions to deter criticism. Trump has claimed that kitchen cabinets threaten national security during peacetime — imagine what he’ll say about investigative journalism while at war. The administration’s war on leaks is sure to accelerate as whistleblowers seek to expose the embarrassing mistakes and awful human rights abuses that the war is almost certain to bring. After the raid of Washington Post reporter Hannah Natanson’s home over her source’s alleged Espionage Act violations, further intrusions on newsgathering seem inevitable. Trump has reportedly been looking for an opportunity to take it one step further and prosecute a journalist under the same archaic law.The congressional subpoena of journalist Seth Harp, for identifying a military official leading Trump’s attack on Venezuela, likely foreshadows what’s to come for journalists who publish news the administration seeks to conceal about the war.The administration’s efforts to distort the concept of “doxxing” to criminalize reporting on Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s abduction spree may prove to have been a practice run for tactics to silence war correspondents. President Donald Trump has claimed that kitchen cabinets threaten national security during peacetime — imagine what he’ll say about investigative journalism while at war.Attacks that don’t silence critics directly are apt to lead to self-censorship. Sources won’t come forward at risk of federal investigation. Corporate news moguls will tone down their coverage to avoid government threats to their more lucrative holdings. Smaller outlets and independent journalists will hesitate to risk incurring life-altering legal fees.Sure, some journalists and whistleblowers are courageous enough to risk everything to tell the truth, but we shouldn’t be dependent on heroism for uncensored reporting.On the Israeli side, the censorship is often even more direct. Israel’s military censor, which reportedly banned publication of 1,635 articles and partially censored another 6,265 in 2024, will be back at it — likely emboldened by U.S. backsliding under Trump. Journalists who disobey the censor — which also prohibits them from reporting they’ve been silenced — risk arrest.Stories that aren’t killed by the censor are deterred with the threat of being blown to bits. Israel has systematically targeted news outlets and individual journalists in Gaza, as well as Iran. There’s no reason to assume Iran will be any different — an Iranian state media complex has reportedly already been bombed. Add to that the “accidental” killings of journalists resulting from unwillingness to take basic measures to protect civilians.And then there’s Iran itself, which, to paraphrase Hegseth, didn’t start this war but is sure going to censor it. The remnants of the regime are likely to lash out to violently stifle all sorts of dissent, including journalism that doesn’t parrot their narratives. Stories that aren’t killed by the censor are deterred with the threat of being blown to bits. Iran — which ranked 176th out of 180 on Reporters Without Borders’ global Press Freedom Index last year — is intolerant of adversarial journalism during peacetime and will surely escalate censorship now, as we saw during the Israel-Iran war last year.Since the start of the current war, Iran has already blacked out phone and internet access, as it did during its horrifically violent suppression of January’s uprisings. It will almost certainly continue to do so, thereby severely limiting the information that comes out of the war’s primary battleground, and leaving journalists and news consumers to gauge the credibility of competing government narratives.None of this is unprecedented in isolation — the George W. Bush administration used highly restricted embed access in Iraq as a propaganda tool, subpoenaed reporters, and floated prosecuting them under the Espionage Act. The Obama administration pursued more Espionage Act cases against whistleblowers than all prior administrations combined. The Biden administration extracted a plea deal from Julian Assange over WikiLeaks’ exposure of Iraq war crimes. But all of that is going to be on steroids now, in terms of both scale and brazenness.Journalists will find a way to report the news and investigate government abuses and lies, despite it all. Lawyers and activists will do what they can to help. But it’s unrealistic to expect reporters to overcome this multipronged attack entirely.What they can and should do, even if it feels awkward, is let the public in on the obstacles they are dealing with and how the lack of reliable information during modern conflicts harms us all, allowing politicians to lie their way into wars that enrich their friends while killing schoolchildren.If reporters are going to quote Pentagon spokespeople or news releases, the public deserves to know who the reporter was not allowed to interview and what documents they were not permitted to review. It’s vital context without which the reporting is arguably misleading. And reporters from the U.S. — which is somehow still the least censored of the three main parties to this war — may be the only ones who can provide it.It might not fix the secrecy surrounding this war, but it could lead to greater demand for transparency and greater skepticism of official narratives in the run-up to the next “forever war.” Maybe it could even help avoid the next one altogether.

27 minutes

Iowa Capital Dispatch
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State regulators have suspended for 90 days the license of a former central Iowa physician who allegedly admitted using cocaine daily before entering treatment. According to the Iowa Board of Medicine, Dr. Chad Becker “routinely worked in the hospital of a major healthcare network” after acquiring his Iowa medical license. Some board records indicate Becker […]

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Iowa Capital Dispatch
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State regulators have suspended for 90 days the license of a former central Iowa physician who allegedly admitted using cocaine daily before entering treatment. According to the Iowa Board of Medicine, Dr. Chad Becker “routinely worked in the hospital of a major healthcare network” after acquiring his Iowa medical license. Some board records indicate Becker […]

"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.

The Navajo Nation Human Rights Commission issued a report on Gallup-McKinley school discipline following public hearings at chapter houses last fall.

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Source NM
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The Navajo Nation Human Rights Commission issued a report on Gallup-McKinley school discipline following public hearings at chapter houses last fall.

State Medicaid budgets will be reduced by a total of $665 billion over the next decade, after President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act cuts federal investment in the health insurance program, according to a new analysis. Researchers from RAND Health, a policy and research nonprofit, analyzed state and federal data to estimate how […]

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Stateline News
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State Medicaid budgets will be reduced by a total of $665 billion over the next decade, after President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act cuts federal investment in the health insurance program, according to a new analysis. Researchers from RAND Health, a policy and research nonprofit, analyzed state and federal data to estimate how […]

FRANKFORT — A Republican committee chair defended making it harder for Kentuckians to be heard in utility regulatory cases by blaming “outside groups” for causing delays, an apparent reference to debunked claims that Russia has funded the Sierra Club through a third-party foundation. “Russia and China have gone through other organizations to fund groups that […]

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Kentucky Lantern
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FRANKFORT — A Republican committee chair defended making it harder for Kentuckians to be heard in utility regulatory cases by blaming “outside groups” for causing delays, an apparent reference to debunked claims that Russia has funded the Sierra Club through a third-party foundation. “Russia and China have gone through other organizations to fund groups that […]

گفت‌وگوی صدای آمریکا با ساریت زهاوی، سرهنگ دوم (ذخیره)، مؤسس و رئیس آلما (مؤسسه اسرائیلی متخصص در چالش‌های امنیتی در امتداد مرز لبنان) با سابقه ۱۵ سال خدمت در بخش اطلاعات ارتش اسرائیل.

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صدای آمریکا
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گفت‌وگوی صدای آمریکا با ساریت زهاوی، سرهنگ دوم (ذخیره)، مؤسس و رئیس آلما (مؤسسه اسرائیلی متخصص در چالش‌های امنیتی در امتداد مرز لبنان) با سابقه ۱۵ سال خدمت در بخش اطلاعات ارتش اسرائیل.

32 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.