13 minutes
വിശ്വാസിസമൂഹത്തിന്റെയും സാമൂഹ്യപരിഷ്കർത്താക്കളുടെയും താൽപര്യങ്ങൾ സമതുലനം ചെയ്തിട്ടാണ് കേസിൽ സംസ്ഥാന സർക്കാർ മുൻപ് സത്യവാങ്മൂലം നൽകിയത്
വിശ്വാസിസമൂഹത്തിന്റെയും സാമൂഹ്യപരിഷ്കർത്താക്കളുടെയും താൽപര്യങ്ങൾ സമതുലനം ചെയ്തിട്ടാണ് കേസിൽ സംസ്ഥാന സർക്കാർ മുൻപ് സത്യവാങ്മൂലം നൽകിയത്
17 minutes
Au Sahel, le départ des troupes françaises et les difficultés d’approvisionnement russes ont laissé un vide sécuritaire que Pékin s’emploie à combler - sans soldats, mais avec des armes, des formations et des financements.
Au Sahel, le départ des troupes françaises et les difficultés d’approvisionnement russes ont laissé un vide sécuritaire que Pékin s’emploie à combler - sans soldats, mais avec des armes, des formations et des financements.
19 minutes

Det är nu officiellt att finalen i den internationella funktionell fitness-turnén, The 2026 World Fitness Tour (WFT) kommer att avgöras i Köpenhamn i vinter. Det uppger arrangören World Fitness Project på sin hemsida. Toppatleter inom funktionell fitness från hela världen har anmält sig till turnén, vars första deltävling hålls i maj i Mexiko. Bland deltagarna […]

Det är nu officiellt att finalen i den internationella funktionell fitness-turnén, The 2026 World Fitness Tour (WFT) kommer att avgöras i Köpenhamn i vinter. Det uppger arrangören World Fitness Project på sin hemsida. Toppatleter inom funktionell fitness från hela världen har anmält sig till turnén, vars första deltävling hålls i maj i Mexiko. Bland deltagarna […]
19 minutes

20 minutes
« Fear Of Missing Out » (FOMO) contre « Fear Of Becoming Obsolete » (FOBO), chaque génération doit faire face à des facteurs spécifiques de dégradation de la santé mentale en entreprise.
« Fear Of Missing Out » (FOMO) contre « Fear Of Becoming Obsolete » (FOBO), chaque génération doit faire face à des facteurs spécifiques de dégradation de la santé mentale en entreprise.
20 minutes
Le secteur du luxe doit relever de nombreux défis. Sa raison d’être mérite un nouvel examen pour aller vers un luxe moins tape-à-l’oeil et davantage conscient. Des exemples existent.
Le secteur du luxe doit relever de nombreux défis. Sa raison d’être mérite un nouvel examen pour aller vers un luxe moins tape-à-l’oeil et davantage conscient. Des exemples existent.
20 minutes
L’arrivée sur le marché français des comics « Made in USA » va profondément bouleverser l’économie du secteur. À lui seul, le « Journal de Mickey » atteint un tirage de 350 000 exemplaires par semaine dès 1935.
20 minutes
L’arrivée sur le marché français des comics « Made in USA » va profondément bouleverser l’économie du secteur. À lui seul, le « Journal de Mickey » atteint un tirage de 350 000 exemplaires par semaine dès 1935.
20 minutes
Si les nombres ont pris une telle place au sein des entreprises, c’est qu’ils sont d’excellents remparts contre les angoisses existentielles qui nous traversent.
Si les nombres ont pris une telle place au sein des entreprises, c’est qu’ils sont d’excellents remparts contre les angoisses existentielles qui nous traversent.
21 minutes

According to the health care advocacy group Protect Our Care, more than 113,000 Ohioans are forgoing health care coverage on the federal Marketplace because of a congressional decision requested by the Trump administration to let tax credits expire on Affordable Care Act premiums. An Ohio legislator, a fellow doctor, and a retired Ohioan all said […]

21 minutes
According to the health care advocacy group Protect Our Care, more than 113,000 Ohioans are forgoing health care coverage on the federal Marketplace because of a congressional decision requested by the Trump administration to let tax credits expire on Affordable Care Act premiums. An Ohio legislator, a fellow doctor, and a retired Ohioan all said […]
22 minutes
A resourceful solution to repurpose waste and nourish farmland, or a poisonous and permanent mistake? Depending on whom you ask, the practice of spreading treated sewage, or sludge, on New Hampshire farmland might be either. For decades, this fertilizer has been a point of contention both locally and nationwide. Now, with renewed attention on sludge’s […]
22 minutes
A resourceful solution to repurpose waste and nourish farmland, or a poisonous and permanent mistake? Depending on whom you ask, the practice of spreading treated sewage, or sludge, on New Hampshire farmland might be either. For decades, this fertilizer has been a point of contention both locally and nationwide. Now, with renewed attention on sludge’s […]
22 minutes
Antes de su enorme éxito, el puertorriqueño daba conciertos en salas de nuestro país por menos 20 de euros “No quiero que hagan contigo lo que le pasó a Hawái”: ¿a qué se refiere Bad Bunny en su canción? aumentar el número de alumnos de español en Duolingo. También hizo historia en la última gala de los Grammy al llevarse el Álbum del año con DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS, siendo el primer disco completamente en español en recibir este galardón. Lo de Bad Bunny está siendo todo un fenómeno. En España, tendremos la oportunidad de vivirlo de cerca entre finales de mayo y mediados de junio de este año, momento en el que el Conejo Malo pondrá en pie dos conciertos en Barcelona y diez en Madrid. Doce shows en directo que reflejan la magnitud que ha alcanzado el puertorriqueño este último año y que mucho tiene que ver con su último disco. Hablamos del álbum más político de toda su carrera. Sin dejar de lado el reguetón, Benito presenta canciones llenas de activismo en las que critica el turismo masivo, la gentrificación, la corrupción política o los apagones eléctricos que sufre Puerto Rico. Tiene tiempo incluso de dar una pequeña lección histórica sobre lo que le pasó a Hawái. Pero para llegar hasta aquí y convertirse en uno de los artistas más importantes de la última década, el compositor de 31 años ha tenido que trabajar duro. Hoy cuelga el cartel de sold-out en estadios de la talla del Riyadh Air Metropolitano o el Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys, pero el cantante empezó como lo hacen muchos: en discotecas y salas pequeñas. Su concierto en Murcia hace casi diez años A raíz de su éxito masivo, han sido muchos los fans que han recordado el pasado de Bad Bunny. Un pasado que lo une directamente a nuestro país y que se ubica lejos de los grandes recintos de Madrid y Barcelona. Uno de esos conciertos en España tuvo lugar nada más y nada menos que en Murcia. “El Conejo Malo viene a romper el Bando” era el lema con el que se anunció al artista, que llevaba muy poco en esto de la música y que entonces pocos conocían en España. Aquel martes por la noche, el público murciano tuvo la oportunidad de ver al reguetonero por apenas 18 euros. En aquel momento, Bunny aún no había publicado su primer álbum de estudio, X 100PRE, que llegaría en diciembre de 2018, aunque ya empezaban a viralizarse algunos de sus temas como Soy Peor, hoy considerado uno de los más emblemáticos de su carrera.
Antes de su enorme éxito, el puertorriqueño daba conciertos en salas de nuestro país por menos 20 de euros “No quiero que hagan contigo lo que le pasó a Hawái”: ¿a qué se refiere Bad Bunny en su canción? aumentar el número de alumnos de español en Duolingo. También hizo historia en la última gala de los Grammy al llevarse el Álbum del año con DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS, siendo el primer disco completamente en español en recibir este galardón. Lo de Bad Bunny está siendo todo un fenómeno. En España, tendremos la oportunidad de vivirlo de cerca entre finales de mayo y mediados de junio de este año, momento en el que el Conejo Malo pondrá en pie dos conciertos en Barcelona y diez en Madrid. Doce shows en directo que reflejan la magnitud que ha alcanzado el puertorriqueño este último año y que mucho tiene que ver con su último disco. Hablamos del álbum más político de toda su carrera. Sin dejar de lado el reguetón, Benito presenta canciones llenas de activismo en las que critica el turismo masivo, la gentrificación, la corrupción política o los apagones eléctricos que sufre Puerto Rico. Tiene tiempo incluso de dar una pequeña lección histórica sobre lo que le pasó a Hawái. Pero para llegar hasta aquí y convertirse en uno de los artistas más importantes de la última década, el compositor de 31 años ha tenido que trabajar duro. Hoy cuelga el cartel de sold-out en estadios de la talla del Riyadh Air Metropolitano o el Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys, pero el cantante empezó como lo hacen muchos: en discotecas y salas pequeñas. Su concierto en Murcia hace casi diez años A raíz de su éxito masivo, han sido muchos los fans que han recordado el pasado de Bad Bunny. Un pasado que lo une directamente a nuestro país y que se ubica lejos de los grandes recintos de Madrid y Barcelona. Uno de esos conciertos en España tuvo lugar nada más y nada menos que en Murcia. “El Conejo Malo viene a romper el Bando” era el lema con el que se anunció al artista, que llevaba muy poco en esto de la música y que entonces pocos conocían en España. Aquel martes por la noche, el público murciano tuvo la oportunidad de ver al reguetonero por apenas 18 euros. En aquel momento, Bunny aún no había publicado su primer álbum de estudio, X 100PRE, que llegaría en diciembre de 2018, aunque ya empezaban a viralizarse algunos de sus temas como Soy Peor, hoy considerado uno de los más emblemáticos de su carrera.
22 minutes
A partir de hoy y durante cuatro días, la capital india se convierte en el centro de gravedad del planeta tecnológico al acoger la cuarta cumbre mundial sobre inteligencia artificial. Más de cien países están representados. India es el segundo mayor mercado de OpenAI después de Estados Unidos, con cerca de cien millones de usuarios semanales.
A partir de hoy y durante cuatro días, la capital india se convierte en el centro de gravedad del planeta tecnológico al acoger la cuarta cumbre mundial sobre inteligencia artificial. Más de cien países están representados. India es el segundo mayor mercado de OpenAI después de Estados Unidos, con cerca de cien millones de usuarios semanales.
22 minutes

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article. The Republican-led House of Representatives voted Feb. 11, 2026 to approve the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act – or SAVE America Act. The bill would require individuals to provide proof of citizenship when they register to vote and present […]

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article. The Republican-led House of Representatives voted Feb. 11, 2026 to approve the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act – or SAVE America Act. The bill would require individuals to provide proof of citizenship when they register to vote and present […]
22 minutes

Tools for detainees to seek release or appeal cases are disappearing, even as migrant detention numbers fall from recent highs and conservative judges reject President Donald Trump’s mass detention policy and release more detainees.

Tools for detainees to seek release or appeal cases are disappearing, even as migrant detention numbers fall from recent highs and conservative judges reject President Donald Trump’s mass detention policy and release more detainees.
22 minutes

As North Carolina works to meet its statewide attainment goal — 2 million adults with a degree or credential by 2030 — initiatives across the state are advancing efforts to strengthen education-to-workforce pipelines. On Feb. 12, myFutureNC — the statewide nonprofit organization... The post myFutureNC announces 2026 Champions for Attainment appeared first on EdNC.

As North Carolina works to meet its statewide attainment goal — 2 million adults with a degree or credential by 2030 — initiatives across the state are advancing efforts to strengthen education-to-workforce pipelines. On Feb. 12, myFutureNC — the statewide nonprofit organization... The post myFutureNC announces 2026 Champions for Attainment appeared first on EdNC.
22 minutes

This article was originally published by the North Carolina Coalition for Charter Schools. Stephanie Lane, a first grade teacher at Lake Norman Charter School (LNC) in Huntersville, is the 2026 North Carolina Charter School Teacher of the Year. In this role, she is... The post Meet the 2026 NC Charter School Teacher of the Year appeared first on EdNC.

This article was originally published by the North Carolina Coalition for Charter Schools. Stephanie Lane, a first grade teacher at Lake Norman Charter School (LNC) in Huntersville, is the 2026 North Carolina Charter School Teacher of the Year. In this role, she is... The post Meet the 2026 NC Charter School Teacher of the Year appeared first on EdNC.
22 minutes
Badirudi Xbox bete-betean barneratuko dela PCaren ekosisteman, kontsolen eredua eguneratuta.
Badirudi Xbox bete-betean barneratuko dela PCaren ekosisteman, kontsolen eredua eguneratuta.
22 minutes
Votebeat is a nonprofit news organization reporting on voting access and election administration across the U.S. This news analysis was originally distributed in Votebeat’s free weekly newsletter. Sign up to get future editions, including the latest reporting from Votebeat bureaus and curated news from other publications, delivered to your inbox every Saturday. Presidents’ Day is always the hardest holiday to shop for; it’s hard to know what to get the president in your life. But the U.S. House of Representatives got President Donald Trump exactly what he wanted when it passed the SAVE America Act on Wednesday. The act, which passed with the support of all 217 House Republicans but only one Democrat, is a centerpiece of Trump’s agenda to exercise more federal oversight over elections and prevent illegal voting, which is already very rare. It’s essentially version 2.0 of the SAVE Act, which passed the House last year. Like its predecessor, the SAVE America Act would require people who are registering to vote to provide proof of their U.S. citizenship. (Currently, new registrants only have to attest under penalty of perjury that they are citizens.) This version of the bill also adds a photo ID requirement for voters and requires states to run their voter rolls through the Department of Homeland Security’s Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements database to scan for noncitizens. All provisions of the bill would take effect immediately upon enactment. But enactment is unlikely. The filibuster rule effectively means that legislation needs 60 votes to pass the Senate, and Republicans hold only a 53-47 majority in the upper chamber. Some Republicans are pushing to turn the filibuster from a procedural formality into a literal requirement that Democrats hold the floor and talk indefinitely in order to block the bill, which could allow the bill to pass with a simple majority if Democrats run out of steam. But that would derail the Senate for weeks, and Senate Majority Leader John Thune isn’t making encouraging noises. If the bill does somehow become law, though, it would dramatically shake up how the 2026 elections run. Only three states currently require all newly registering voters to prove their citizenship, and 27 states don’t require photo IDs to vote, so the bill would suddenly impose new requirements on millions of Americans. And there are serious questions about whether it’s even practically possible to implement them all in time for the midterm elections. Election officials are sounding the alarm about how the bill would force them to build out entirely new procedures without the time or money to do so. The SAVE America Act could stymie potential voters The proof-of-citizenship requirement in particular would be a hassle for potential voters and election officials alike. According to a 2023 survey conducted by SSRS on behalf of the University of Maryland and three voting-rights groups, 9% of voting-age citizens don’t have easy access to a document that proves their citizenship, such as a passport, birth certificate, or naturalization certificate. Even people with the correct paperwork could be confused or inconvenienced too. Several election officials have compared a proof-of-citizenship requirement to the Transportation Security Administration’s slow rollout of REAL ID requirements. That policy was repeatedly delayed amid confusion over what documents were necessary to get a REAL ID and bottlenecks at driver’s license agencies. The SAVE America Act would also effectively neuter the option to register to vote by mail or online, since new registrants would have to show up in person with their documentation. In states that have already tried to implement proof-of-citizenship requirements, many eligible voters ended up getting disenfranchised. After Kansas started requiring proof of citizenship in 2013, 31,089 people were unable to register because they couldn’t prove their citizenship. That amounted to 12% of all the people who tried to register to vote in Kansas during that period. By contrast, the state could identify only 39 confirmed noncitizens who had registered to vote in the previous 14 years. A court struck down Kansas’ proof-of-citizenship law in 2018. An election administration ‘nightmare’ “This is bad for voters, but this will be a nightmare for election administrators,” Minnesota Secretary of State Steve Simon, a Democrat, told Votebeat. Multiple election officials said that adding document verification to their already very full plates was a logistical burden that they were not prepared to assume. Many felt that it was simply not possible to implement a proof-of-citizenship requirement in time for the midterms, especially since the SAVE America Act does not provide them with additional funding to, for example, hire more staff to review documents. “We are going to have significant challenges training all of our clerks and registrars to uniformly verify citizenship,” said Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows, a Democrat. “We will have to create the training from scratch, and we don’t have the personnel to travel to all 487 municipalities [in Maine] to make sure that they’re doing it right.” “If Congress wants to do this,” she said, “they should give the states the proper runway of multiple years and millions of dollars of funding per state.” Justin Riemer, the president of the group Restoring Integrity and Trust in Elections, which has advocated for proof-of-citizenship requirements, was more optimistic that states were up to the task. “States will undoubtedly have to move very quickly to implement this legislation,” he said, “but there is precedent, as states did [quickly change their voting procedures] during the COVID-19 pandemic.” Riemer pointed out that a plurality of new voters already register through their state department of motor vehicles, whose staffs are already well trained in document verification thanks to the REAL ID requirements. A proof-of-citizenship requirement would undeniably cost election officials more time and money, though. According to a social media post by Bob Page, the registrar of voters in Orange County, California, the county conducted an analysis last year of what it would have taken to prove the citizenship of the 633,568 people who registered to vote or updated their voter registration in 2024. The study found that, at an average of 10 minutes per applicant whose documentation needed to be verified, the county would have needed to hire 59 additional staffers at a cost of $6 million. And according to a report from the Campaign Legal Center, proof-of-citizenship laws cost Kansas and Arizona (one of the three states where the requirement is currently in place) millions of dollars — in additional staffing, voter-education efforts, system upgrades, fixing errors, and defending against lawsuits over the requirements. Ultimately, as long as the filibuster remains in place in the Senate, the SAVE America Act has little chance of becoming law before the midterms. But that may be the point: The bill wasn’t introduced with the goal of making elections run more smoothly; it was introduced to make the point that elections aren’t as secure as they could be. If, as expected, the bill fails and voters don’t have to prove their citizenship or show photo ID in 2026, it could make it easier for Trump and his allies to claim that the results are tainted by fraud. That could be a different type of nightmare scenario. Nathaniel Rakich is Votebeat’s managing editor and is based in Washington, D.C. Contact Nathaniel at nrakich@votebeat.org. Votebeat editor-in-chief Carrie Levine contributed.
Votebeat is a nonprofit news organization reporting on voting access and election administration across the U.S. This news analysis was originally distributed in Votebeat’s free weekly newsletter. Sign up to get future editions, including the latest reporting from Votebeat bureaus and curated news from other publications, delivered to your inbox every Saturday. Presidents’ Day is always the hardest holiday to shop for; it’s hard to know what to get the president in your life. But the U.S. House of Representatives got President Donald Trump exactly what he wanted when it passed the SAVE America Act on Wednesday. The act, which passed with the support of all 217 House Republicans but only one Democrat, is a centerpiece of Trump’s agenda to exercise more federal oversight over elections and prevent illegal voting, which is already very rare. It’s essentially version 2.0 of the SAVE Act, which passed the House last year. Like its predecessor, the SAVE America Act would require people who are registering to vote to provide proof of their U.S. citizenship. (Currently, new registrants only have to attest under penalty of perjury that they are citizens.) This version of the bill also adds a photo ID requirement for voters and requires states to run their voter rolls through the Department of Homeland Security’s Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements database to scan for noncitizens. All provisions of the bill would take effect immediately upon enactment. But enactment is unlikely. The filibuster rule effectively means that legislation needs 60 votes to pass the Senate, and Republicans hold only a 53-47 majority in the upper chamber. Some Republicans are pushing to turn the filibuster from a procedural formality into a literal requirement that Democrats hold the floor and talk indefinitely in order to block the bill, which could allow the bill to pass with a simple majority if Democrats run out of steam. But that would derail the Senate for weeks, and Senate Majority Leader John Thune isn’t making encouraging noises. If the bill does somehow become law, though, it would dramatically shake up how the 2026 elections run. Only three states currently require all newly registering voters to prove their citizenship, and 27 states don’t require photo IDs to vote, so the bill would suddenly impose new requirements on millions of Americans. And there are serious questions about whether it’s even practically possible to implement them all in time for the midterm elections. Election officials are sounding the alarm about how the bill would force them to build out entirely new procedures without the time or money to do so. The SAVE America Act could stymie potential voters The proof-of-citizenship requirement in particular would be a hassle for potential voters and election officials alike. According to a 2023 survey conducted by SSRS on behalf of the University of Maryland and three voting-rights groups, 9% of voting-age citizens don’t have easy access to a document that proves their citizenship, such as a passport, birth certificate, or naturalization certificate. Even people with the correct paperwork could be confused or inconvenienced too. Several election officials have compared a proof-of-citizenship requirement to the Transportation Security Administration’s slow rollout of REAL ID requirements. That policy was repeatedly delayed amid confusion over what documents were necessary to get a REAL ID and bottlenecks at driver’s license agencies. The SAVE America Act would also effectively neuter the option to register to vote by mail or online, since new registrants would have to show up in person with their documentation. In states that have already tried to implement proof-of-citizenship requirements, many eligible voters ended up getting disenfranchised. After Kansas started requiring proof of citizenship in 2013, 31,089 people were unable to register because they couldn’t prove their citizenship. That amounted to 12% of all the people who tried to register to vote in Kansas during that period. By contrast, the state could identify only 39 confirmed noncitizens who had registered to vote in the previous 14 years. A court struck down Kansas’ proof-of-citizenship law in 2018. An election administration ‘nightmare’ “This is bad for voters, but this will be a nightmare for election administrators,” Minnesota Secretary of State Steve Simon, a Democrat, told Votebeat. Multiple election officials said that adding document verification to their already very full plates was a logistical burden that they were not prepared to assume. Many felt that it was simply not possible to implement a proof-of-citizenship requirement in time for the midterms, especially since the SAVE America Act does not provide them with additional funding to, for example, hire more staff to review documents. “We are going to have significant challenges training all of our clerks and registrars to uniformly verify citizenship,” said Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows, a Democrat. “We will have to create the training from scratch, and we don’t have the personnel to travel to all 487 municipalities [in Maine] to make sure that they’re doing it right.” “If Congress wants to do this,” she said, “they should give the states the proper runway of multiple years and millions of dollars of funding per state.” Justin Riemer, the president of the group Restoring Integrity and Trust in Elections, which has advocated for proof-of-citizenship requirements, was more optimistic that states were up to the task. “States will undoubtedly have to move very quickly to implement this legislation,” he said, “but there is precedent, as states did [quickly change their voting procedures] during the COVID-19 pandemic.” Riemer pointed out that a plurality of new voters already register through their state department of motor vehicles, whose staffs are already well trained in document verification thanks to the REAL ID requirements. A proof-of-citizenship requirement would undeniably cost election officials more time and money, though. According to a social media post by Bob Page, the registrar of voters in Orange County, California, the county conducted an analysis last year of what it would have taken to prove the citizenship of the 633,568 people who registered to vote or updated their voter registration in 2024. The study found that, at an average of 10 minutes per applicant whose documentation needed to be verified, the county would have needed to hire 59 additional staffers at a cost of $6 million. And according to a report from the Campaign Legal Center, proof-of-citizenship laws cost Kansas and Arizona (one of the three states where the requirement is currently in place) millions of dollars — in additional staffing, voter-education efforts, system upgrades, fixing errors, and defending against lawsuits over the requirements. Ultimately, as long as the filibuster remains in place in the Senate, the SAVE America Act has little chance of becoming law before the midterms. But that may be the point: The bill wasn’t introduced with the goal of making elections run more smoothly; it was introduced to make the point that elections aren’t as secure as they could be. If, as expected, the bill fails and voters don’t have to prove their citizenship or show photo ID in 2026, it could make it easier for Trump and his allies to claim that the results are tainted by fraud. That could be a different type of nightmare scenario. Nathaniel Rakich is Votebeat’s managing editor and is based in Washington, D.C. Contact Nathaniel at nrakich@votebeat.org. Votebeat editor-in-chief Carrie Levine contributed.
22 minutes
Nearly every Monday morning, five restorationists with Conserving Carolina guide volunteers through the steep hills of Norman Wilder Forest in Tryon, North Carolina. Armed with chainsaws, thick gloves and a pickaxe-like mattock, the group goes hunting for a wily prey: kudzu. The forest’s most prominent features have been overtaken by the invasive vine. The “Kudzu […]
Nearly every Monday morning, five restorationists with Conserving Carolina guide volunteers through the steep hills of Norman Wilder Forest in Tryon, North Carolina. Armed with chainsaws, thick gloves and a pickaxe-like mattock, the group goes hunting for a wily prey: kudzu. The forest’s most prominent features have been overtaken by the invasive vine. The “Kudzu […]
23 minutes

Det er nu officielt, at finalen i den internationale funktionel fitness-turné, World Fitness Tour 2026 (WFT), vil blive afholdt i København denne vinter. Dette fremgår af arrangøren World Fitness Project på deres hjemmeside. Topatleter i funktionel fitness fra hele verden har tilmeldt sig turnéen, hvor første runde afholdes til maj i Mexico. Blandt deltagerne er […]

Det er nu officielt, at finalen i den internationale funktionel fitness-turné, World Fitness Tour 2026 (WFT), vil blive afholdt i København denne vinter. Dette fremgår af arrangøren World Fitness Project på deres hjemmeside. Topatleter i funktionel fitness fra hele verden har tilmeldt sig turnéen, hvor første runde afholdes til maj i Mexico. Blandt deltagerne er […]