A practical guide to understanding, testing, and protecting your family’s water If you’ve ever filled a sippy cup or run a bath and wondered, Is this water actually okay?, you’re not alone, and you’re not being paranoid. For Metro Detroit families, the honest answer is: it depends on your home. This guide won’t tell you […]

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Planet Detroit
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A practical guide to understanding, testing, and protecting your family’s water If you’ve ever filled a sippy cup or run a bath and wondered, Is this water actually okay?, you’re not alone, and you’re not being paranoid. For Metro Detroit families, the honest answer is: it depends on your home. This guide won’t tell you […]

The study is a collaboration between Methodist Mansfield Medical Center, Texas A&M AgrilLife and the city of Mansfield.

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Fort Worth Report
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The study is a collaboration between Methodist Mansfield Medical Center, Texas A&M AgrilLife and the city of Mansfield.

Las grandes formaciones del Reino Unido han decidido no participar en las elecciones forzadas por Reform UK para evitar una investigación del Parlamento; por ello, un candidato satírico se ha convertido en la opción de voto protesta con posibilidades de arrebatarle el escaño.

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Mundiario
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Las grandes formaciones del Reino Unido han decidido no participar en las elecciones forzadas por Reform UK para evitar una investigación del Parlamento; por ello, un candidato satírico se ha convertido en la opción de voto protesta con posibilidades de arrebatarle el escaño.

دو منبع آگاه به شبکه سی‌ان‌ان گفته‌اند اسرائیل اطلاعاتی را در اختیار ایالات متحده قرار داده است که نشان می‌دهد جمهوری اسلامی به‌ تازگی طرح جدیدی برای ترور دونالد ترامپ، رئیس جمهوری آمریکا، تهیه کرده است.

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صدای آمریکا
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دو منبع آگاه به شبکه سی‌ان‌ان گفته‌اند اسرائیل اطلاعاتی را در اختیار ایالات متحده قرار داده است که نشان می‌دهد جمهوری اسلامی به‌ تازگی طرح جدیدی برای ترور دونالد ترامپ، رئیس جمهوری آمریکا، تهیه کرده است.

مارکو روبیو، وزیر امور خارجه ایالات متحده، از مقام‌های ارشد بیش از ۶۰ کشور برای شرکت در نشستی در واشنگتن با محوریت مقابله با آنچه دولت پرزیدنت ترامپ «تهدید فزاینده تروریسم فراملی چپ افراطی» توصیف می‌کند دعوت کرده است.

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صدای آمریکا
Public Domain

مارکو روبیو، وزیر امور خارجه ایالات متحده، از مقام‌های ارشد بیش از ۶۰ کشور برای شرکت در نشستی در واشنگتن با محوریت مقابله با آنچه دولت پرزیدنت ترامپ «تهدید فزاینده تروریسم فراملی چپ افراطی» توصیف می‌کند دعوت کرده است.

The Supreme Court of Maryland has agreed to hear the state's challenge to the Child Victims Act in a case that could end hundreds of sexual abuse lawsuits and save the state and its taxpayers more than $1 billion, while denying some plaintiffs their day in court.

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Maryland Matters
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The Supreme Court of Maryland has agreed to hear the state's challenge to the Child Victims Act in a case that could end hundreds of sexual abuse lawsuits and save the state and its taxpayers more than $1 billion, while denying some plaintiffs their day in court.

17 minutes

Freedom of the Press Foundation
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Back in February, we filed a disciplinary complaint against Gordon Kromberg, the assistant U.S. attorney who signed the warrant application authorizing the FBI’s raid on the home of Washington Post reporter Hannah Natanson.Our complaint was straightforward: Kromberg’s application never mentioned the Privacy Protection Act of 1980, a federal law that limits searches of journalists’ files and devices. Omitting adverse authority violates a prosecutor’s duty of candor, especially in warrant application proceedings with no one present to speak up for the rights of the warrant’s subject.The Virginia State Bar, however, declined to investigate. It reasoned that it was up to the judge, not the bar, to decide whether Kromberg misled the court by omitting the PPA from his warrant application. That struck us as a strange conclusion — why do the rules the bar is charged with enforcing include a duty of candor, then?But we don’t have to argue the point in the abstract anymore, because the judiciary has since spoken clearly and repeatedly, scolding Kromberg for the omission. But that hasn’t caused the Virginia Bar to revisit the case — or if it has, it won’t tell us.We resubmitted the complaint and explained to the Virginia Bar that its justification for declining to investigate no longer holds water, and asked it to reopen the investigation. But first it ignored our calls and emails for months, then told us it is sworn to secrecy about disciplinary complaints to such an extent it can’t even tell us — the people who filed the complaint — whether it received it, or inform us of whether our new complaint has also been dismissed. Odd, because it did the first time.At least the Virginia Bar’s consistent — it shouldn’t be surprising that an entity so nontransparent would be hesitant to discipline attorneys for lack of candor. But if it wants to build trust in the legal profession — its supposed raison d’être — it needs to explain itself, and if it’s run out of excuses, then it needs to actually investigate. Otherwise, it functions more as a protection racket than a disciplinary office.Soon after our initial complaint was rejected, Magistrate Judge William Porter asked Kromberg and his fellow prosecutors, “Did you not tell me intentionally or did you not know,” in reference to their failure to alert him to a highly relevant federal law like the PPA. Then, in a 22-page opinion, Porter went further, writing that the government’s omission “has seriously undermined the Court’s confidence in the government’s disclosures in this proceeding.”He also made clear that had the government disclosed the law, he might well have rejected the warrant application outright, or at least asked harder questions before signing off. That might have stopped the government from seizing terabytes of data from Natanson — which it has since characterized as “contraband” to retain — and stopping her reporting in its tracks.Then in May, U.S. District Judge Anthony J. Trenga seconded Porter’s assessment, noting “the harassing and chilling effects such a seizure could have on a reporter,” and scolding prosecutors for their failure to mention the PPA in the warrant application.This is precisely the judicial confirmation the bar said it was waiting for. There’s no longer any plausible argument that the bar needs to defer to a judicial process that hasn’t run its course.And yet … crickets, in response to our supplemental complaint, our follow-up emails, and our numerous phone calls and voicemails to Clerk of the Disciplinary System Joanne Fronfelter and Bar Counsel Renu Brennan.We finally got a response on Tuesday from Acting Executive Director Janet Van Cuyk, who told us she can’t tell us anything, per the Rules of the Supreme Court of Virginia. We’ll only know if the resubmitted complaint ever hit the bar association’s inbox if it decides to initiate a public hearing.Van Cuyk suggested we email the general intake email address to which we submitted the complaint. It’s unclear why — if she’s bound to silence, so are they — but we’ve done that repeatedly since February, and we’ve heard nothing.The whole justification for self-regulation is that the bar will hold its own accountable to build public trust. A disciplinary system that manufactures reasons not to look at uncomfortable cases — and then ghosts complainants when it runs out of excuses — isn’t protecting the public. Instead, it’s protecting the lawyers it’s supposed to protect the public from.Particularly when it comes to complaints against attorneys who are public officials at the center of national news, if you think the rules don’t allow for transparency, then change the damn rules.

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Freedom of the Press Foundation
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Back in February, we filed a disciplinary complaint against Gordon Kromberg, the assistant U.S. attorney who signed the warrant application authorizing the FBI’s raid on the home of Washington Post reporter Hannah Natanson.Our complaint was straightforward: Kromberg’s application never mentioned the Privacy Protection Act of 1980, a federal law that limits searches of journalists’ files and devices. Omitting adverse authority violates a prosecutor’s duty of candor, especially in warrant application proceedings with no one present to speak up for the rights of the warrant’s subject.The Virginia State Bar, however, declined to investigate. It reasoned that it was up to the judge, not the bar, to decide whether Kromberg misled the court by omitting the PPA from his warrant application. That struck us as a strange conclusion — why do the rules the bar is charged with enforcing include a duty of candor, then?But we don’t have to argue the point in the abstract anymore, because the judiciary has since spoken clearly and repeatedly, scolding Kromberg for the omission. But that hasn’t caused the Virginia Bar to revisit the case — or if it has, it won’t tell us.We resubmitted the complaint and explained to the Virginia Bar that its justification for declining to investigate no longer holds water, and asked it to reopen the investigation. But first it ignored our calls and emails for months, then told us it is sworn to secrecy about disciplinary complaints to such an extent it can’t even tell us — the people who filed the complaint — whether it received it, or inform us of whether our new complaint has also been dismissed. Odd, because it did the first time.At least the Virginia Bar’s consistent — it shouldn’t be surprising that an entity so nontransparent would be hesitant to discipline attorneys for lack of candor. But if it wants to build trust in the legal profession — its supposed raison d’être — it needs to explain itself, and if it’s run out of excuses, then it needs to actually investigate. Otherwise, it functions more as a protection racket than a disciplinary office.Soon after our initial complaint was rejected, Magistrate Judge William Porter asked Kromberg and his fellow prosecutors, “Did you not tell me intentionally or did you not know,” in reference to their failure to alert him to a highly relevant federal law like the PPA. Then, in a 22-page opinion, Porter went further, writing that the government’s omission “has seriously undermined the Court’s confidence in the government’s disclosures in this proceeding.”He also made clear that had the government disclosed the law, he might well have rejected the warrant application outright, or at least asked harder questions before signing off. That might have stopped the government from seizing terabytes of data from Natanson — which it has since characterized as “contraband” to retain — and stopping her reporting in its tracks.Then in May, U.S. District Judge Anthony J. Trenga seconded Porter’s assessment, noting “the harassing and chilling effects such a seizure could have on a reporter,” and scolding prosecutors for their failure to mention the PPA in the warrant application.This is precisely the judicial confirmation the bar said it was waiting for. There’s no longer any plausible argument that the bar needs to defer to a judicial process that hasn’t run its course.And yet … crickets, in response to our supplemental complaint, our follow-up emails, and our numerous phone calls and voicemails to Clerk of the Disciplinary System Joanne Fronfelter and Bar Counsel Renu Brennan.We finally got a response on Tuesday from Acting Executive Director Janet Van Cuyk, who told us she can’t tell us anything, per the Rules of the Supreme Court of Virginia. We’ll only know if the resubmitted complaint ever hit the bar association’s inbox if it decides to initiate a public hearing.Van Cuyk suggested we email the general intake email address to which we submitted the complaint. It’s unclear why — if she’s bound to silence, so are they — but we’ve done that repeatedly since February, and we’ve heard nothing.The whole justification for self-regulation is that the bar will hold its own accountable to build public trust. A disciplinary system that manufactures reasons not to look at uncomfortable cases — and then ghosts complainants when it runs out of excuses — isn’t protecting the public. Instead, it’s protecting the lawyers it’s supposed to protect the public from.Particularly when it comes to complaints against attorneys who are public officials at the center of national news, if you think the rules don’t allow for transparency, then change the damn rules.

19 minutes

The Center Square
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(The Center Square) - In a push for fiscal accountability, members of the King County Metropolitan Council have voted to establish a new Inspector General Division to root out waste, fraud and abuse in county-funded programs. Council members approved the measure on Tuesday in response to an April 2025 audit that found possible fraud and unapproved payments to vendors contracting with the County Department of Community and Human Services. According to the audit, two grantees likely altered or forged supporting documents, which may constitute fraud under county policy. Three grantees’ spending deviated significantly from budgets without written approval and six grantees were paid without consistently submitting detailed expense reports. The County office has a budget of more than $1 billion. Councilmember Rod Dembowski, who introduced the legislation, framed the move as a necessary preventative measure. "This new accountability function is a critical step in strengthening our oversight of county-funded programs," Dembowski said after the vote. "While rare, any waste, fraud or abuse of taxpayer funds is unacceptable. We must work to prevent it, and when it occurs, hold people accountable." Councilmember Reagan Dunn emphasized that the new office shifts the county from a passive observer to an active investigator. "The threat of fraud and waste is not imaginary, and taxpayers deserve to know their hard-earned dollars are protected from it," Dunn said. "This Inspector General Division finally gives the County teeth to conduct rigorous oversight, pursue independent investigations, uncover improper conduct, and ensure meaningful repercussions." The newly created division, housed within the Office of Public Complaints, will wield significant enforcement powers, including the authority to issue subpoenas and directly pursue the recovery of misspent public funds. The division will be led by an Inspector General Director appointed to a five-year term. The director will oversee a dedicated staff of independent investigators and administrative personnel. To maintain transparency, the division must issue written findings whenever misconduct is uncovered and submit an annual report to both the County Council and the Executive. Under the new rules, county agencies will also be mandated to report any suspected financial misconduct through established channels. Beyond investigation, the legislation seeks to modernize how King County defines and tracks government waste. It establishes a centralized King County Fraud Hotline, creating a single point of contact for whistleblowers and the public to report suspicious activity. Additionally, the ordinance updates county policies to clearly define fraud, waste, and abuse, and mandates standardized inspection language in all future county contracts and grants. Those changes will align King County’s oversight mechanisms with federal Office of Inspector General standards. Councilmember Steffanie Fain noted that an upcoming implementation plan will focus heavily on prevention. "Strong oversight isn't just about investigating fraud, waste, and abuse after they occur. It's about helping prevent problems before they happen," Fain said, adding that the framework will provide additional training for employees and clearer reporting expectations. Funding of around $600,000 to launch the Inspector General Division was secured two weeks ago as part of a supplemental budget approved by the Council. The office is expected to begin its operational rollout following the submission of its formal implementation plan.

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) - In a push for fiscal accountability, members of the King County Metropolitan Council have voted to establish a new Inspector General Division to root out waste, fraud and abuse in county-funded programs. Council members approved the measure on Tuesday in response to an April 2025 audit that found possible fraud and unapproved payments to vendors contracting with the County Department of Community and Human Services. According to the audit, two grantees likely altered or forged supporting documents, which may constitute fraud under county policy. Three grantees’ spending deviated significantly from budgets without written approval and six grantees were paid without consistently submitting detailed expense reports. The County office has a budget of more than $1 billion. Councilmember Rod Dembowski, who introduced the legislation, framed the move as a necessary preventative measure. "This new accountability function is a critical step in strengthening our oversight of county-funded programs," Dembowski said after the vote. "While rare, any waste, fraud or abuse of taxpayer funds is unacceptable. We must work to prevent it, and when it occurs, hold people accountable." Councilmember Reagan Dunn emphasized that the new office shifts the county from a passive observer to an active investigator. "The threat of fraud and waste is not imaginary, and taxpayers deserve to know their hard-earned dollars are protected from it," Dunn said. "This Inspector General Division finally gives the County teeth to conduct rigorous oversight, pursue independent investigations, uncover improper conduct, and ensure meaningful repercussions." The newly created division, housed within the Office of Public Complaints, will wield significant enforcement powers, including the authority to issue subpoenas and directly pursue the recovery of misspent public funds. The division will be led by an Inspector General Director appointed to a five-year term. The director will oversee a dedicated staff of independent investigators and administrative personnel. To maintain transparency, the division must issue written findings whenever misconduct is uncovered and submit an annual report to both the County Council and the Executive. Under the new rules, county agencies will also be mandated to report any suspected financial misconduct through established channels. Beyond investigation, the legislation seeks to modernize how King County defines and tracks government waste. It establishes a centralized King County Fraud Hotline, creating a single point of contact for whistleblowers and the public to report suspicious activity. Additionally, the ordinance updates county policies to clearly define fraud, waste, and abuse, and mandates standardized inspection language in all future county contracts and grants. Those changes will align King County’s oversight mechanisms with federal Office of Inspector General standards. Councilmember Steffanie Fain noted that an upcoming implementation plan will focus heavily on prevention. "Strong oversight isn't just about investigating fraud, waste, and abuse after they occur. It's about helping prevent problems before they happen," Fain said, adding that the framework will provide additional training for employees and clearer reporting expectations. Funding of around $600,000 to launch the Inspector General Division was secured two weeks ago as part of a supplemental budget approved by the Council. The office is expected to begin its operational rollout following the submission of its formal implementation plan.

20 minutes

Inside Climate News
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Maryland’s second largest county is the latest jurisdiction in the state to slam the brakes on data centers. Prince George’s County on Tuesday adopted a two-year moratorium on development of the server farms, the longest such pause in the state. It is intended to shield residents from the AI boom’s economic and environmental consequences while […]

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Inside Climate News
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Maryland’s second largest county is the latest jurisdiction in the state to slam the brakes on data centers. Prince George’s County on Tuesday adopted a two-year moratorium on development of the server farms, the longest such pause in the state. It is intended to shield residents from the AI boom’s economic and environmental consequences while […]

Officials and residents in Alaska’s capital city are preparing for what has become an annual summer glacial outburst flooding event that threatens the densely-populated Mendenhall Valley. Similar to past years, flooding is expected in early August. Federal, state, tribal and local agencies are closely monitoring the Mendehall Glacier, where an ice-dammed lake known as Suicide […]

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Alaska Beacon
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Officials and residents in Alaska’s capital city are preparing for what has become an annual summer glacial outburst flooding event that threatens the densely-populated Mendenhall Valley. Similar to past years, flooding is expected in early August. Federal, state, tribal and local agencies are closely monitoring the Mendehall Glacier, where an ice-dammed lake known as Suicide […]

Tras un primer tiempo frustrante, la selección de Francia se impuso este jueves 9 de julio a Marruecos en los cuartos de final de la Copa del Mundo 2026. Kylian Mbappé y Ousmane Dembélé anotaron los goles de la victoria de Les Bleus (2-0), que fueron demasiado para unos Leones del Atlas sin recursos. Francia está en semifinales y espera por España o Bélgica. Se trata de la tercera semifinal consecutiva para el equipo francés, que ya había eliminado a Suecia en dieciseisavos y a Paraguay en octavos, antes de vencer a Marruecos en el Gillette Stadium de Boston.

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Radio France Internationale
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Tras un primer tiempo frustrante, la selección de Francia se impuso este jueves 9 de julio a Marruecos en los cuartos de final de la Copa del Mundo 2026. Kylian Mbappé y Ousmane Dembélé anotaron los goles de la victoria de Les Bleus (2-0), que fueron demasiado para unos Leones del Atlas sin recursos. Francia está en semifinales y espera por España o Bélgica. Se trata de la tercera semifinal consecutiva para el equipo francés, que ya había eliminado a Suecia en dieciseisavos y a Paraguay en octavos, antes de vencer a Marruecos en el Gillette Stadium de Boston.

The movement, created by nonprofit United Against Fentanyl, is in its second year. The downtown event will offer education and resources.

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Fort Worth Report
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The movement, created by nonprofit United Against Fentanyl, is in its second year. The downtown event will offer education and resources.

El regalo personalizado de Erdogan en la cumbre de la OTAN, un arma personalizada con sus balas y el nombre grabado de cada jefe de Estado y de Gobierno, obliga a la mayoría de países a activar protocolos de seguridad y decidir su destino definitivo.

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Mundiario
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El regalo personalizado de Erdogan en la cumbre de la OTAN, un arma personalizada con sus balas y el nombre grabado de cada jefe de Estado y de Gobierno, obliga a la mayoría de países a activar protocolos de seguridad y decidir su destino definitivo.

28 minutes

Washington State Standard
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A Washington state senator is fending off questions about where she lives as her opponent works to distance himself from a man facing stalking allegations stemming from lengthy stakeouts of a home owned by the lawmaker. Sen. Nikki Torres, R-Pasco, who overcame a challenge to her voter registration this week, on Thursday said Gabe Galbraith, […]

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Washington State Standard
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A Washington state senator is fending off questions about where she lives as her opponent works to distance himself from a man facing stalking allegations stemming from lengthy stakeouts of a home owned by the lawmaker. Sen. Nikki Torres, R-Pasco, who overcame a challenge to her voter registration this week, on Thursday said Gabe Galbraith, […]

COVID-era housing vouchers will run out of funding at the end of the year. But L.A. officials say they now have a plan to keep 4,000 families in their homes.

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LAist
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COVID-era housing vouchers will run out of funding at the end of the year. But L.A. officials say they now have a plan to keep 4,000 families in their homes.

29 minutes

Santa Barbara News Press
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There are many questionable statements in the article about the current SBCC budget mess.  Certainly the odd way the President’s salary was finagled is one.   But the overwhelming issue is the refusal of the Board and other college leadership to adhere to restraint and academic principles. This is particularly obvious in statements from the Board Chair, […] The post Opinion: SBCC budget is biased toward athletics appeared first on Santa Barbara News-Press.

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Santa Barbara News Press
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There are many questionable statements in the article about the current SBCC budget mess.  Certainly the odd way the President’s salary was finagled is one.   But the overwhelming issue is the refusal of the Board and other college leadership to adhere to restraint and academic principles. This is particularly obvious in statements from the Board Chair, […] The post Opinion: SBCC budget is biased toward athletics appeared first on Santa Barbara News-Press.

30 minutes

Santa Barbara News Press
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It will be a consequential summer for energy policy in Santa Barbara County. Currently, you can drill for oil, but you can’t put a solar farm in the same industrial site. That is set to reverse with a Solar Ordinance to allow solar in industrial and agricultural zones coming to County Supervisors on July 14, […] The post Opinion: SB loosens restrictions on solar energy appeared first on Santa Barbara News-Press.

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Santa Barbara News Press
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It will be a consequential summer for energy policy in Santa Barbara County. Currently, you can drill for oil, but you can’t put a solar farm in the same industrial site. That is set to reverse with a Solar Ordinance to allow solar in industrial and agricultural zones coming to County Supervisors on July 14, […] The post Opinion: SB loosens restrictions on solar energy appeared first on Santa Barbara News-Press.

Si la surveillance, les abus et les fortes concentrations et déséquilibres de pouvoir sont très préoccupants, on retrouve aussi des aspects encourageants dans ces études de cas sur les technologies.

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Global Voices
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Si la surveillance, les abus et les fortes concentrations et déséquilibres de pouvoir sont très préoccupants, on retrouve aussi des aspects encourageants dans ces études de cas sur les technologies.

Existe-t-il une version de cette technologie qui nous permette de l'utiliser sans compromettre nos convictions politiques ni notre engagement en faveur de la défense des droits humains intersectionnels ?

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Global Voices
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Existe-t-il une version de cette technologie qui nous permette de l'utiliser sans compromettre nos convictions politiques ni notre engagement en faveur de la défense des droits humains intersectionnels ?

Une loi anti-LGBTQ+ après avoir été saluée pour sa défense des droits humains exposerait le Ghana à des accusations d'hypocrisie flagrante, compromettant le dialogue sur les réparations que le gouvernement prétend privilégier.

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Global Voices
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Une loi anti-LGBTQ+ après avoir été saluée pour sa défense des droits humains exposerait le Ghana à des accusations d'hypocrisie flagrante, compromettant le dialogue sur les réparations que le gouvernement prétend privilégier.