Claim: A viral social media post shared by a Facebook page named “GAS.P” claims that popular hip-hop artist

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Dubawa
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Claim: A viral social media post shared by a Facebook page named “GAS.P” claims that popular hip-hop artist

Nueva jornada de protestas exigiendo la renuncia del presidente, pese a la posibilidad de que declare un estado de excepción para frenarlas. Desde hace casi un tienen lugar bloqueos de carreteras por parte de campesinos, obreros y transportistas, que piden medidas contra la crisis económica. El dirigente gremial Toño Siñani explicó a RFI por qué pide el fin de las protestas. El politólogo José Orlando Peralta observa una "narrativa más radicalizada".

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Radio France Internationale
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Nueva jornada de protestas exigiendo la renuncia del presidente, pese a la posibilidad de que declare un estado de excepción para frenarlas. Desde hace casi un tienen lugar bloqueos de carreteras por parte de campesinos, obreros y transportistas, que piden medidas contra la crisis económica. El dirigente gremial Toño Siñani explicó a RFI por qué pide el fin de las protestas. El politólogo José Orlando Peralta observa una "narrativa más radicalizada".

A Organização Meteorológica Mundial alertou, esta quinta-feira, que as temperaturas médias globais se deverão manter “em níveis recorde ou quase recorde” entre 2026 e 2030. Alguns países da Europa estão a viver uma vaga de calor excepcional para um mês de Maio.

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Radio France Internationale
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A Organização Meteorológica Mundial alertou, esta quinta-feira, que as temperaturas médias globais se deverão manter “em níveis recorde ou quase recorde” entre 2026 e 2030. Alguns países da Europa estão a viver uma vaga de calor excepcional para um mês de Maio.

The May 19 primary in the state saw a decrease in Republican turnout from four years ago and an increase in Democratic voting, though a majority of voters chose to vote in the GOP primary.   According to the Alabama Secretary of State’s office, just over 493,000 (57%) Republican ballots were cast in last week’s primary. […]

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Alabama Reflector
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The May 19 primary in the state saw a decrease in Republican turnout from four years ago and an increase in Democratic voting, though a majority of voters chose to vote in the GOP primary.   According to the Alabama Secretary of State’s office, just over 493,000 (57%) Republican ballots were cast in last week’s primary. […]

11 minutes

South Dakota Searchlight
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Today is World Hunger Day. For Pine Ridge, the relevant calendar is somewhere closer to October. That’s when the first compounded effects of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed by President Trump on July 4, 2025, reach the warehouse doors of the Oglala Sioux Tribe’s federal food distribution program. Politicians who vote to cut […]

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South Dakota Searchlight
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Today is World Hunger Day. For Pine Ridge, the relevant calendar is somewhere closer to October. That’s when the first compounded effects of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed by President Trump on July 4, 2025, reach the warehouse doors of the Oglala Sioux Tribe’s federal food distribution program. Politicians who vote to cut […]

Свабода вядзе храналёгію судоў, затрыманьняў, іншага перасьледу з палітычных матываў у Беларусі.

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Радыё Свабода/Радыё Свабодная Эўропа
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Свабода вядзе храналёгію судоў, затрыманьняў, іншага перасьледу з палітычных матываў у Беларусі.

11 minutes

Tennessee Lookout
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A combination of state and federal rules are going to reshape Tennessee’s once-burgeoning hemp industry starting in July. Most of Tennessee’s most popular hemp-derived cannabis products, like THCA, will be illegal to sell as the Tennessee Alcoholic Beverage Commission assumes full regulatory control of hemp and begins enforcing a ban passed in 2025 by state […]

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Tennessee Lookout
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A combination of state and federal rules are going to reshape Tennessee’s once-burgeoning hemp industry starting in July. Most of Tennessee’s most popular hemp-derived cannabis products, like THCA, will be illegal to sell as the Tennessee Alcoholic Beverage Commission assumes full regulatory control of hemp and begins enforcing a ban passed in 2025 by state […]

On the morning of Dec. 30, 2021, a low-pressure zone developed just east of the mountains of Boulder, causing unusually high winds. On its own, the winds might have been a mere inconvenience, but the tinderbox environment they encountered created combustible conditions. Heavy precipitation in the early part of the year was followed by extreme […]

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Colorado Newsline
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On the morning of Dec. 30, 2021, a low-pressure zone developed just east of the mountains of Boulder, causing unusually high winds. On its own, the winds might have been a mere inconvenience, but the tinderbox environment they encountered created combustible conditions. Heavy precipitation in the early part of the year was followed by extreme […]

12 minutes

North Dakota Monitor
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MAPLETON, N.D. – Brian Roach, a retired farmer near Wheatland, North Dakota, has 35 acres of “HEL land,” or highly erodible land, on his property.  But “once it gets some topsoil put back on and you give it a few years to stabilize … we’ll get some root structure from the grass. It’ll become pretty […]

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North Dakota Monitor
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MAPLETON, N.D. – Brian Roach, a retired farmer near Wheatland, North Dakota, has 35 acres of “HEL land,” or highly erodible land, on his property.  But “once it gets some topsoil put back on and you give it a few years to stabilize … we’ll get some root structure from the grass. It’ll become pretty […]

Un homme en situation de handicap a subi une interpellation policière violente fin avril, dans la Drôme. Malgré les alertes de témoins sur son handicap, il a été placé en garde-à-vue pendant 40h, puis libéré sans poursuite. La famille a porté plainte auprès du parquet de Valence. Autour de la table sur la terrasse, entourée de colonnes blanches et baignée par le soleil, tous les visages de la famille se concentrent sur un seul d'entre eux : celui de Toufik, 34 ans. Le jeune homme en (…) - Société / Le Média, Enquêtes, Discriminations, Violences policières, Handicap

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Basta!
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Un homme en situation de handicap a subi une interpellation policière violente fin avril, dans la Drôme. Malgré les alertes de témoins sur son handicap, il a été placé en garde-à-vue pendant 40h, puis libéré sans poursuite. La famille a porté plainte auprès du parquet de Valence. Autour de la table sur la terrasse, entourée de colonnes blanches et baignée par le soleil, tous les visages de la famille se concentrent sur un seul d'entre eux : celui de Toufik, 34 ans. Le jeune homme en (…) - Société / Le Média, Enquêtes, Discriminations, Violences policières, Handicap

У беларускія ВНУ сёлета плянуюць набраць 49,1 тысячы чалавек, а ў вучэльні — 67,9 тысячы. На якія спэцыяльнасьці набяруць найбольш студэнтаў і якія новыя прафэсіі прапануюць моладзі, расказваем.

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Радыё Свабода/Радыё Свабодная Эўропа
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У беларускія ВНУ сёлета плянуюць набраць 49,1 тысячы чалавек, а ў вучэльні — 67,9 тысячы. На якія спэцыяльнасьці набяруць найбольш студэнтаў і якія новыя прафэсіі прапануюць моладзі, расказваем.

Votebeat is a nonprofit news organization reporting on voting access and election administration across the U.S. Sign up for Votebeat Texas’ free newsletter here.The Texas Secretary of State’s Office is now checking whether 2,724 registered voters it flagged as potential noncitizens may have already provided proof of citizenship to the Texas Department of Public Safety, elections division director Christina Adkins said during a meeting with county election administrators earlier this month. That check comes after county elections officials found the federal database used to generate the list flagged some voters who had already given citizenship documentation to DPS when they registered to vote.Texas officials in October sent counties the list of potential noncitizens generated by checking the state’s voter roll of more than 18 million registered voters against a federal database used to verify citizenship. Soon after the state released the list, counties began to investigate the flagged registrants and mail notices asking them to provide documented proof of citizenship. County election officials have since confirmed some of the flagged voters were citizens, though a total number was not immediately available. In addition, they found that hundreds of the flagged voters had registered through DPS, which requires proof of citizenship, such as a passport, and keeps copies of such documents on file. In Travis County, for example, voter registrar Celia Israel asked the state to check the registrants flagged as potential noncitizens in the county against DPS records. The Texas Secretary of State’s Office did so, and found that out of the 97 individuals flagged as potential noncitizens in the county, 11 had already provided proof of citizenship. Adkins during the meeting said that Travis County officials were the only ones who had requested that the state conduct the check of the records through DPS, according to a recording of the Secretary of State Office’s meeting with county election officials obtained by Votebeat. Now, the state is conducting these checks for flagged voters statewide.The Texas Secretary of State’s Office had previously told Votebeat and the Texas Tribune that it did not initially check the registrants flagged as potential noncitizens against DPS’ records before sending the list to county election officials to investigate. That decision prompted a March lawsuit from voting rights groups and some Texas voters who said the state should have done so. The lawsuit is still pending in federal court. In the meantime, local election officials in some counties have already removed some flagged voters from the voter rolls after they did not respond to requests to provide proof of citizenship. It’s not clear why the Texas Secretary of State’s Office is checking the list of potential noncitizens against DPS records now and how county election officials will be directed to respond to the findings. The Secretary of State’s Office declined to comment for this story.Officials push for additional safeguards to use the SAVE databaseThe federal database state election officials used to identify potential noncitizens is known as the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements, or SAVE, database. The Trump administration overhauled SAVE last year, making it free for states to use and easier to search, and it has urged election officials around the country to use it to search for potential noncitizens on their voter rolls.Experts and election officials have raised concerns about the SAVE database’s accuracy and reliability, and advocacy groups have filed a federal lawsuit challenging the administration’s changes and how SAVE is being used.According to the recording, Adkins said the state did not initially check the list of potential noncitizens identified by SAVE against DPS records because that agency already uses the SAVE database. “Initially, we didn’t think that there would be any kind of substantial difference, but obviously, we have found that there are some discrepancies,” Adkins said in the meeting. Adkins said the discrepancies affected a “small fraction” of the total list and could be a result of outdated information kept by the SAVE database or by DPS — for example, some of the individuals flagged by the SAVE database may have recently become naturalized citizens — or due to clerical errors. “No dataset is going to be 100% perfect,” she told county officials. “That’s why we can’t cancel voters outright” without additional investigation. Adkins said another reason the state didn’t check DPS records before sending the lists to counties in October is because DPS must manually check each record, which takes a long time, and would have left counties with less time to investigate ahead of the March 3 primary election. Federal law restricts election officials’ ability to conduct systematic voter list maintenance within 90 days of a federal election, meaning the window for counties to investigate ahead of the primary ended in early December.“We wanted to get that data in your hands, where you could at least address some of the kind of low-hanging fruit, is the way I would say it,” Adkins said.DPS did not respond to a request for comment.During an interim House Elections Committee hearing earlier this month, state lawmakers discussed how the state can ensure that only U.S. citizens are registered to vote. At that hearing, Travis County election officials told lawmakers the state’s move to cross-check the results from the SAVE database with DPS data should be the standard moving forward. Others told lawmakers to consider the amount of time and resources it takes election officials — in counties already strapped for funding — to investigate whether a registrant is a potential noncitizen. Last year, Texas lawmakers proposed a bill that would require Texans to provide documented proof of citizenship to register to vote, but it failed to pass before the end of the legislative session. The bill was among the most sweeping proof-of-citizenship proposals introduced anywhere in the country, applying not only to new applicants for voter registration but also retroactively to 18.6 million voters already registered in the state. Natalia Contreras is a reporter for Votebeat in partnership with The Texas Tribune. She is based in Corpus Christi. Contact Natalia at ncontreras@votebeat.org.

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Votebeat
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Votebeat is a nonprofit news organization reporting on voting access and election administration across the U.S. Sign up for Votebeat Texas’ free newsletter here.The Texas Secretary of State’s Office is now checking whether 2,724 registered voters it flagged as potential noncitizens may have already provided proof of citizenship to the Texas Department of Public Safety, elections division director Christina Adkins said during a meeting with county election administrators earlier this month. That check comes after county elections officials found the federal database used to generate the list flagged some voters who had already given citizenship documentation to DPS when they registered to vote.Texas officials in October sent counties the list of potential noncitizens generated by checking the state’s voter roll of more than 18 million registered voters against a federal database used to verify citizenship. Soon after the state released the list, counties began to investigate the flagged registrants and mail notices asking them to provide documented proof of citizenship. County election officials have since confirmed some of the flagged voters were citizens, though a total number was not immediately available. In addition, they found that hundreds of the flagged voters had registered through DPS, which requires proof of citizenship, such as a passport, and keeps copies of such documents on file. In Travis County, for example, voter registrar Celia Israel asked the state to check the registrants flagged as potential noncitizens in the county against DPS records. The Texas Secretary of State’s Office did so, and found that out of the 97 individuals flagged as potential noncitizens in the county, 11 had already provided proof of citizenship. Adkins during the meeting said that Travis County officials were the only ones who had requested that the state conduct the check of the records through DPS, according to a recording of the Secretary of State Office’s meeting with county election officials obtained by Votebeat. Now, the state is conducting these checks for flagged voters statewide.The Texas Secretary of State’s Office had previously told Votebeat and the Texas Tribune that it did not initially check the registrants flagged as potential noncitizens against DPS’ records before sending the list to county election officials to investigate. That decision prompted a March lawsuit from voting rights groups and some Texas voters who said the state should have done so. The lawsuit is still pending in federal court. In the meantime, local election officials in some counties have already removed some flagged voters from the voter rolls after they did not respond to requests to provide proof of citizenship. It’s not clear why the Texas Secretary of State’s Office is checking the list of potential noncitizens against DPS records now and how county election officials will be directed to respond to the findings. The Secretary of State’s Office declined to comment for this story.Officials push for additional safeguards to use the SAVE databaseThe federal database state election officials used to identify potential noncitizens is known as the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements, or SAVE, database. The Trump administration overhauled SAVE last year, making it free for states to use and easier to search, and it has urged election officials around the country to use it to search for potential noncitizens on their voter rolls.Experts and election officials have raised concerns about the SAVE database’s accuracy and reliability, and advocacy groups have filed a federal lawsuit challenging the administration’s changes and how SAVE is being used.According to the recording, Adkins said the state did not initially check the list of potential noncitizens identified by SAVE against DPS records because that agency already uses the SAVE database. “Initially, we didn’t think that there would be any kind of substantial difference, but obviously, we have found that there are some discrepancies,” Adkins said in the meeting. Adkins said the discrepancies affected a “small fraction” of the total list and could be a result of outdated information kept by the SAVE database or by DPS — for example, some of the individuals flagged by the SAVE database may have recently become naturalized citizens — or due to clerical errors. “No dataset is going to be 100% perfect,” she told county officials. “That’s why we can’t cancel voters outright” without additional investigation. Adkins said another reason the state didn’t check DPS records before sending the lists to counties in October is because DPS must manually check each record, which takes a long time, and would have left counties with less time to investigate ahead of the March 3 primary election. Federal law restricts election officials’ ability to conduct systematic voter list maintenance within 90 days of a federal election, meaning the window for counties to investigate ahead of the primary ended in early December.“We wanted to get that data in your hands, where you could at least address some of the kind of low-hanging fruit, is the way I would say it,” Adkins said.DPS did not respond to a request for comment.During an interim House Elections Committee hearing earlier this month, state lawmakers discussed how the state can ensure that only U.S. citizens are registered to vote. At that hearing, Travis County election officials told lawmakers the state’s move to cross-check the results from the SAVE database with DPS data should be the standard moving forward. Others told lawmakers to consider the amount of time and resources it takes election officials — in counties already strapped for funding — to investigate whether a registrant is a potential noncitizen. Last year, Texas lawmakers proposed a bill that would require Texans to provide documented proof of citizenship to register to vote, but it failed to pass before the end of the legislative session. The bill was among the most sweeping proof-of-citizenship proposals introduced anywhere in the country, applying not only to new applicants for voter registration but also retroactively to 18.6 million voters already registered in the state. Natalia Contreras is a reporter for Votebeat in partnership with The Texas Tribune. She is based in Corpus Christi. Contact Natalia at ncontreras@votebeat.org.

Michigan private and public school students could benefit from a federal tax credit scholarship program. Here’s what to know.

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BridgeDetroit
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Michigan private and public school students could benefit from a federal tax credit scholarship program. Here’s what to know.

12 minutes

MinnPost
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Two art exhibitions on view in Minneapolis showcase the pioneering feminists who demanded visibility for the state’s female artists. The post Before DEI, there were the women artists of WARM appeared first on MinnPost.

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MinnPost
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Two art exhibitions on view in Minneapolis showcase the pioneering feminists who demanded visibility for the state’s female artists. The post Before DEI, there were the women artists of WARM appeared first on MinnPost.

MPD chief’s abrupt departure lands amid an ongoing battle between Mayor Frey and the Council to confirm the city’s community safety commissioner. The post O’Hara resignation unsettles already shaky ground for Minneapolis law enforcement appeared first on MinnPost.

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MinnPost
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MPD chief’s abrupt departure lands amid an ongoing battle between Mayor Frey and the Council to confirm the city’s community safety commissioner. The post O’Hara resignation unsettles already shaky ground for Minneapolis law enforcement appeared first on MinnPost.

A persistent government strategy to sow fear through punitive measures has corroded freedom and democracy. The post Chilling effects of Trump’s war on free speech extend far beyond campus walls – and that’s the point appeared first on MinnPost.

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MinnPost
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A persistent government strategy to sow fear through punitive measures has corroded freedom and democracy. The post Chilling effects of Trump’s war on free speech extend far beyond campus walls – and that’s the point appeared first on MinnPost.

In subway stations and under the shade of trees across New York City, Allison Julien met with domestic workers. She wanted to talk to them about their basic rights — the ones they’d been denied for decades. It was the early 2000s, and nannies, home cleaners and home health aides across the state were in […]

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The 19th News
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In subway stations and under the shade of trees across New York City, Allison Julien met with domestic workers. She wanted to talk to them about their basic rights — the ones they’d been denied for decades. It was the early 2000s, and nannies, home cleaners and home health aides across the state were in […]

12 minutes

Outlier Media
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Our methods aren’t scientific, but we’re here to help you narrow down spend your summer weekends. Outlier Media · SaMya Overall · Plan your perfect Detroit summer: Music festivals, food fests and more

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Outlier Media
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Our methods aren’t scientific, but we’re here to help you narrow down spend your summer weekends. Outlier Media · SaMya Overall · Plan your perfect Detroit summer: Music festivals, food fests and more

13 minutes

Tennessee Lookout
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If Mississippi was ground zero for Freedom Summer in 1964, Tennessee may well be ground zero for Freedom Summer 2.0 and the fight to redeem democratic possibility in America. That claim may sound improbable in a state too often caricatured as “ruby red.” But caricatures are often convenient political fictions. Tennessee is not nearly as […]

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Tennessee Lookout
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If Mississippi was ground zero for Freedom Summer in 1964, Tennessee may well be ground zero for Freedom Summer 2.0 and the fight to redeem democratic possibility in America. That claim may sound improbable in a state too often caricatured as “ruby red.” But caricatures are often convenient political fictions. Tennessee is not nearly as […]

13 minutes

Daily Yonder
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This family-friendly feature is a small-town mystery with emotional depth. The post Don’t Underestimate “The Sheep Detectives”  appeared first on The Daily Yonder.

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Daily Yonder
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This family-friendly feature is a small-town mystery with emotional depth. The post Don’t Underestimate “The Sheep Detectives”  appeared first on The Daily Yonder.