2 hours

Ilmuwan menemukan Sukunaarchaeum mirabile, mikroba laut yang hidup di batas antara makhluk hidup dan tidak hidup karena hanya mampu menggandakan diri tapi tak bisa membuat energi sendiri. Genomnya sangat kecil, hanya 238.000 pasangan basa DNA, separuh lebih kecil dari archaea terkecil yang pernah dikenal, sehingga membuatnya bergantung sepenuhnya pada inang. Penemuan ini menantang definisi kehidupan, […] The post Ilmuwan Temukan Makhluk Misterius di Batas Antara Hidup dan Tidak Hidup appeared first on Mongabay.co.id.

Ilmuwan menemukan Sukunaarchaeum mirabile, mikroba laut yang hidup di batas antara makhluk hidup dan tidak hidup karena hanya mampu menggandakan diri tapi tak bisa membuat energi sendiri. Genomnya sangat kecil, hanya 238.000 pasangan basa DNA, separuh lebih kecil dari archaea terkecil yang pernah dikenal, sehingga membuatnya bergantung sepenuhnya pada inang. Penemuan ini menantang definisi kehidupan, […] The post Ilmuwan Temukan Makhluk Misterius di Batas Antara Hidup dan Tidak Hidup appeared first on Mongabay.co.id.
3 hours
Valentino irrumpe como protagonista inesperado en el escándalo entre su madre y el delantero del Galatasaray, avivando el drama mediático argentino.
Valentino irrumpe como protagonista inesperado en el escándalo entre su madre y el delantero del Galatasaray, avivando el drama mediático argentino.
3 hours

A Pierce County librarian was fired after a book about a transgender child was displayed in the library, sparking political pressure from a group called Alliance for Faith and Freedom. The Current is an inclusive nonprofit, non-partisan news organization providing in-depth watchdog journalism for Savannah and Coastal Georgia’s communities.

3 hours
A Pierce County librarian was fired after a book about a transgender child was displayed in the library, sparking political pressure from a group called Alliance for Faith and Freedom. The Current is an inclusive nonprofit, non-partisan news organization providing in-depth watchdog journalism for Savannah and Coastal Georgia’s communities.
3 hours
မြန်မာစံတော်ချိန် နံနက် ၆ နာရီကနေ ၇ နာရီထိ (၁) နာရီကြာ ထုတ်လွှင့်နေတဲ့ ဒီရေဒီယိုအစီအစဉ်မှာ မြန်မာ၊ ဒေသတွင်းနဲ့ နိုင်ငံတကာသတင်းနဲ့ သတင်းဆောင်းပါးတွေ သီတင်းပတ်စဉ်ကဏ္ဍတွေကို နားဆင်နိုင်ပါတယ်။
3 hours
မြန်မာစံတော်ချိန် နံနက် ၆ နာရီကနေ ၇ နာရီထိ (၁) နာရီကြာ ထုတ်လွှင့်နေတဲ့ ဒီရေဒီယိုအစီအစဉ်မှာ မြန်မာ၊ ဒေသတွင်းနဲ့ နိုင်ငံတကာသတင်းနဲ့ သတင်းဆောင်းပါးတွေ သီတင်းပတ်စဉ်ကဏ္ဍတွေကို နားဆင်နိုင်ပါတယ်။
3 hours

The Trump administration began this week to radically alter how the National Environmental Policy Act is implemented across the federal government, alarming environmentalists. Passed in 1970 and often called the “Magna Carta” of U.S. environmental law, NEPA requires agencies to assess the environmental impacts of their actions during the decision-making process. Its scope is broad, […]

The Trump administration began this week to radically alter how the National Environmental Policy Act is implemented across the federal government, alarming environmentalists. Passed in 1970 and often called the “Magna Carta” of U.S. environmental law, NEPA requires agencies to assess the environmental impacts of their actions during the decision-making process. Its scope is broad, […]
3 hours
El juez de la Audiencia Nacional, que también es instructor de la causa, desestima los recursos de la exesposa del antiguo asesor ministerial y también imputada que pedía anular el allanamiento de la UCO.
El juez de la Audiencia Nacional, que también es instructor de la causa, desestima los recursos de la exesposa del antiguo asesor ministerial y también imputada que pedía anular el allanamiento de la UCO.
3 hours
په دې نیم ساعته خپرونه کې د افغانستان او نړۍ تازه خبرونه، مهم رپوټونه، مطبوعاتو ته کتنه او مرکې شاملې دي.
3 hours
په دې نیم ساعته خپرونه کې د افغانستان او نړۍ تازه خبرونه، مهم رپوټونه، مطبوعاتو ته کتنه او مرکې شاملې دي.
3 hours

Acude Rectora Lilia Cedillo a jornada de salud comunitaria en Azumiatla La entrada CECACVI-BUAP procura mejorar la calidad de vida de la población aparece primero en LADO B.

Acude Rectora Lilia Cedillo a jornada de salud comunitaria en Azumiatla La entrada CECACVI-BUAP procura mejorar la calidad de vida de la población aparece primero en LADO B.
3 hours

Los deportistas reconocieron que el apoyo que han recibido en esta gestión marcó la diferencia La entrada Reconoce la Rectora Lilia Cedillo a los medallistas BUAP de la Universiada Nacional 2025 aparece primero en LADO B.

Los deportistas reconocieron que el apoyo que han recibido en esta gestión marcó la diferencia La entrada Reconoce la Rectora Lilia Cedillo a los medallistas BUAP de la Universiada Nacional 2025 aparece primero en LADO B.
3 hours

A landfill may only process and dispose of solid waste if it meets criteria outlined by the county ordinance.

A landfill may only process and dispose of solid waste if it meets criteria outlined by the county ordinance.
3 hours

Escassez de sementes crioulas, mudança no regime de chuvas e falta de mecanização não impedem celebração de grande venda O post Teste confirma que cuscuz produzido pelo MST em Pernambuco não tem agrotóxicos ou transgênicos apareceu primeiro em Brasil de Fato.

3 hours
Escassez de sementes crioulas, mudança no regime de chuvas e falta de mecanização não impedem celebração de grande venda O post Teste confirma que cuscuz produzido pelo MST em Pernambuco não tem agrotóxicos ou transgênicos apareceu primeiro em Brasil de Fato.
3 hours

Tuesday’s election of Imperial Beach Mayor Paloma Aguirre to fill a vacant seat on the San Diego County Board of Supervisors puts Democrats back in control of San Diego’s most powerful governmental agency – just as the county confronts a range of pressing challenges. The post Aguirre’s Win Puts Democrats in Charge at Pivotal Time appeared first on Voice of San Diego.

Tuesday’s election of Imperial Beach Mayor Paloma Aguirre to fill a vacant seat on the San Diego County Board of Supervisors puts Democrats back in control of San Diego’s most powerful governmental agency – just as the county confronts a range of pressing challenges. The post Aguirre’s Win Puts Democrats in Charge at Pivotal Time appeared first on Voice of San Diego.
3 hours

Ministra do Meio Ambiente participou de audiência na Comissão de Agricultura, onde ouviu ofensas e acusações O post Bancada do agro usa sessão na Câmara para atacar Marina Silva e políticas ambientais apareceu primeiro em Brasil de Fato.

Ministra do Meio Ambiente participou de audiência na Comissão de Agricultura, onde ouviu ofensas e acusações O post Bancada do agro usa sessão na Câmara para atacar Marina Silva e políticas ambientais apareceu primeiro em Brasil de Fato.
3 hours
(The Center Square) — When Californians hit the road for the Fourth of July holiday, they will see lower gas prices than this time last year. Drivers were expected to experience an increase in gas prices starting Tuesday due to the state’s annual gas tax adjustment. But instead, drivers are seeing the numbers at the pump decrease. As gas prices continue to stay down, an expected record-breaking number of Californian holiday travelers will be paying less money for gas per gallon than last year. “In California, gasoline prices at the pump (on average) are cheaper than yesterday, cheaper than it was on Monday, cheaper than a week ago, cheaper than a month ago, and cheaper than a year ago,” California Gov. Gavin Newsom said in a press release Wednesday. The average regular price for regular gas in California on Wednesday was $4.57 per gallon, according to the American Automobile Association. This time last year the average regular gas price in California was $4.79 per gallon. Other average prices Wednesday were $4.80 for mid-grade gas, $4.99 for premium gas and $5.12 for diesel gas, according to AAA. Last year at this time, the average prices were $5 for mid-grade gas, $5.18 for premium gas and $5.116 for diesel. On Wednesday, the average price per gallon for regular gas in San Diego County was $4.63. In Los Angeles County, it was $4.58, and in San Francisco County, it was $4.80. All three counties also have lower average gas prices compared to last year's rates. Oil prices are currently lower, which is an important factor in why gas prices are lower, Anlleyn Venegas, senior public affairs specialist for Auto Club of Southern California (part of AAA), told The Center Square Wednesday. “As of now, gas prices are lower, oil prices are lower, and that always helps with gas prices,” Venegas said. Venegas also said many people usually travel for the Fourth of July, but this year AAA expects record travel numbers in California. Venegas added that 4.3 million Southern Californias are expected to be driving to their destinations during the Fourth of July holiday period, which runs June 29 to July 7. And she said 750,000 Southern Californias are expected to fly to their destinations. "What AAA SoCal is seeing is that people are prioritizing their vacation more than ever," Venegas said. in a press release, San Diego International Airport said it is expecting to see as many as 700,000 people arriving and departing during the holiday period, with an average of 80,000 people at the airport each day.
(The Center Square) — When Californians hit the road for the Fourth of July holiday, they will see lower gas prices than this time last year. Drivers were expected to experience an increase in gas prices starting Tuesday due to the state’s annual gas tax adjustment. But instead, drivers are seeing the numbers at the pump decrease. As gas prices continue to stay down, an expected record-breaking number of Californian holiday travelers will be paying less money for gas per gallon than last year. “In California, gasoline prices at the pump (on average) are cheaper than yesterday, cheaper than it was on Monday, cheaper than a week ago, cheaper than a month ago, and cheaper than a year ago,” California Gov. Gavin Newsom said in a press release Wednesday. The average regular price for regular gas in California on Wednesday was $4.57 per gallon, according to the American Automobile Association. This time last year the average regular gas price in California was $4.79 per gallon. Other average prices Wednesday were $4.80 for mid-grade gas, $4.99 for premium gas and $5.12 for diesel gas, according to AAA. Last year at this time, the average prices were $5 for mid-grade gas, $5.18 for premium gas and $5.116 for diesel. On Wednesday, the average price per gallon for regular gas in San Diego County was $4.63. In Los Angeles County, it was $4.58, and in San Francisco County, it was $4.80. All three counties also have lower average gas prices compared to last year's rates. Oil prices are currently lower, which is an important factor in why gas prices are lower, Anlleyn Venegas, senior public affairs specialist for Auto Club of Southern California (part of AAA), told The Center Square Wednesday. “As of now, gas prices are lower, oil prices are lower, and that always helps with gas prices,” Venegas said. Venegas also said many people usually travel for the Fourth of July, but this year AAA expects record travel numbers in California. Venegas added that 4.3 million Southern Californias are expected to be driving to their destinations during the Fourth of July holiday period, which runs June 29 to July 7. And she said 750,000 Southern Californias are expected to fly to their destinations. "What AAA SoCal is seeing is that people are prioritizing their vacation more than ever," Venegas said. in a press release, San Diego International Airport said it is expecting to see as many as 700,000 people arriving and departing during the holiday period, with an average of 80,000 people at the airport each day.
3 hours

Chatham County District Attorney Shalena Jones has formed a civilian review board to evaluate complaints about law enforcement agencies in the county, in response to a series of incidents involving excessive force by Savannah police officers. The Current is an inclusive nonprofit, non-partisan news organization providing in-depth watchdog journalism for Savannah and Coastal Georgia’s communities.

Chatham County District Attorney Shalena Jones has formed a civilian review board to evaluate complaints about law enforcement agencies in the county, in response to a series of incidents involving excessive force by Savannah police officers. The Current is an inclusive nonprofit, non-partisan news organization providing in-depth watchdog journalism for Savannah and Coastal Georgia’s communities.
3 hours
The country has seen a consistent crackdown on political opposition, civil society, and independent media.
The country has seen a consistent crackdown on political opposition, civil society, and independent media.
3 hours
Australia is experiencing a housing crisis. But for many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, the challenge runs deeper than high rents and limited supply. A major problem is that housing in Australia is rarely designed with Indigenous communities in mind. In 2021, roughly 13% of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander households faced unmet housing needs. This equated to around 45,700 low-income Indigenous households lacking suitable accommodation. Overcrowding remains a significant issue, with only 81.4% of Indigenous Australians living in appropriately sized housing in 2021, falling short of the 88% target set for 2031 under Closing The Gap. Cultural obligations, such as caring for extended family and accommodating kinship networks, are often at odds with standard tenancy agreements that limit guest numbers and occupancy terms. These mismatches contribute to stress, overcrowding and, in some cases, eviction. Housing that works Housing is often described as a human right. In reality, housing policy is shaped by market forces, supply targets and regulatory compliance. While these may meet administrative goals, they frequently fail to reflect the cultural, social and emotional needs of First Nations people. But there are programs that work. Our research examines how community-led, culturally safe housing can support long-term improvements in health, stability and inclusion for Indigenous and marginalised communities One compelling example is the Ngalang Moort Wangkiny project in Western Australia. Led by Aboriginal researchers, this project explored the experiences of Aboriginal families living in social housing. Through yarning circles, tenants shared how housing design and tenancy rules often work against their cultural needs. Many homes are built for small families and do not accommodate extended kinship networks. Tenancy agreements may limit guests or require the names of all residents. These arrangements create tension for Aboriginal families who have a strong cultural obligation to care for relatives and host kin. Policies that ignore these responsibilities are stressful and often produce in unsuitable results. The research demonstrated many of these issues can be avoided through co-design. Aboriginal families who are involved in planning, decision-making and service delivery are more likely to experience positive housing outcomes. They feel a sense of safety, support and community ownership. With models like these, housing can be a stable foundation, not a point of vulnerability. The benefits of culturally safe housing extend beyond comfort or cultural fit. Evidence shows strong links between stable housing and improvements in education, employment and health. People who feel respected and secure in their homes are more likely to access services, remain in school and sustain employment. Planning with, not planning for Across Australia, Aboriginal Community-Controlled Organisations (ACCOs) are at the forefront of culturally safe housing. These organisations are governed by Aboriginal communities and grounded in local knowledge and values. In housing, they provide tenancy support, manage properties, and deliver wraparound services such as mental health care and employment programs. Some receive government support. Many of these organisations continue to operate under pressure. Funding is often short-term, rigid and inconsistent, with recent findings showing governments are leaving the financial heavy lifting to under-resourced Aboriginal groups. But policies are designed remotely with little input from communities. Tenancy frameworks still reflect assumptions based on Western models of home life, which may not align with Indigenous ways of living. Standard house layouts with separate, enclosed rooms may not support communal living or outdoor gathering spaces that are central to many Indigenous households. Addressing these gaps requires national policy reform recognising housing as essential social infrastructure. Long-term funding, flexible tenancy arrangements and support for Indigenous-led organisations would all help. A more inclusive planning system would ensure co-design becomes standard practice rather than the exception. Doing more to meet goals We can also draw valuable lessons from international models. Globally, community land trusts have enabled low-income and racially marginalised communities to secure long-term control of housing and land. These trusts work by holding land in a nonprofit trust while allowing residents to own or rent homes on it through long-term, renewable leases. This structure removes land from the speculative market, keeps housing costs stable and ensures decisions remain in the hands of the local community. In Chile, the Half a House model gives families a solid, expandable foundation to grow their homes as their resources allow. A growing number of Australian policymakers have acknowledged this need for change. The National Agreement on Closing the Gap includes targets for improved housing outcomes and increased community control. The 2024 Implementation Plan outlines steps toward reducing overcrowding and strengthening Aboriginal-controlled service delivery. Turning these goals into practice requires sustained effort. Indigenous communities must be seen as partners in decision-making, not simply as service recipients. Their insights and lived experiences should shape every stage of the housing process. Uniform solutions will not meet diverse local needs. Place-based approaches, developed in collaboration with communities, are essential. Housing is more than shelter. For Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities, it is a space to practise culture, strengthen kinship, and pass on knowledge. It is where identity is lived and preserved. Proven models already exist. Communities across Australia are leading the way. What is required now is a policy environment that listens, invests and follows their lead. Giles Gunesekera OAM works for Global Impact Initiative, an organisation that constructs impact investments with the dual focus of sustainable financial return and measurable, actionable, social impact. Dr Allan Teale receives funding from UTS. In 2023, he received a Churchill Fellowship that enabled him to travel to Canada and the United States to study Indigenous community housing. My report can be found at this link: https://www.churchilltrust.com.au/fellow/allan-teale-nsw-2022/
Australia is experiencing a housing crisis. But for many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, the challenge runs deeper than high rents and limited supply. A major problem is that housing in Australia is rarely designed with Indigenous communities in mind. In 2021, roughly 13% of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander households faced unmet housing needs. This equated to around 45,700 low-income Indigenous households lacking suitable accommodation. Overcrowding remains a significant issue, with only 81.4% of Indigenous Australians living in appropriately sized housing in 2021, falling short of the 88% target set for 2031 under Closing The Gap. Cultural obligations, such as caring for extended family and accommodating kinship networks, are often at odds with standard tenancy agreements that limit guest numbers and occupancy terms. These mismatches contribute to stress, overcrowding and, in some cases, eviction. Housing that works Housing is often described as a human right. In reality, housing policy is shaped by market forces, supply targets and regulatory compliance. While these may meet administrative goals, they frequently fail to reflect the cultural, social and emotional needs of First Nations people. But there are programs that work. Our research examines how community-led, culturally safe housing can support long-term improvements in health, stability and inclusion for Indigenous and marginalised communities One compelling example is the Ngalang Moort Wangkiny project in Western Australia. Led by Aboriginal researchers, this project explored the experiences of Aboriginal families living in social housing. Through yarning circles, tenants shared how housing design and tenancy rules often work against their cultural needs. Many homes are built for small families and do not accommodate extended kinship networks. Tenancy agreements may limit guests or require the names of all residents. These arrangements create tension for Aboriginal families who have a strong cultural obligation to care for relatives and host kin. Policies that ignore these responsibilities are stressful and often produce in unsuitable results. The research demonstrated many of these issues can be avoided through co-design. Aboriginal families who are involved in planning, decision-making and service delivery are more likely to experience positive housing outcomes. They feel a sense of safety, support and community ownership. With models like these, housing can be a stable foundation, not a point of vulnerability. The benefits of culturally safe housing extend beyond comfort or cultural fit. Evidence shows strong links between stable housing and improvements in education, employment and health. People who feel respected and secure in their homes are more likely to access services, remain in school and sustain employment. Planning with, not planning for Across Australia, Aboriginal Community-Controlled Organisations (ACCOs) are at the forefront of culturally safe housing. These organisations are governed by Aboriginal communities and grounded in local knowledge and values. In housing, they provide tenancy support, manage properties, and deliver wraparound services such as mental health care and employment programs. Some receive government support. Many of these organisations continue to operate under pressure. Funding is often short-term, rigid and inconsistent, with recent findings showing governments are leaving the financial heavy lifting to under-resourced Aboriginal groups. But policies are designed remotely with little input from communities. Tenancy frameworks still reflect assumptions based on Western models of home life, which may not align with Indigenous ways of living. Standard house layouts with separate, enclosed rooms may not support communal living or outdoor gathering spaces that are central to many Indigenous households. Addressing these gaps requires national policy reform recognising housing as essential social infrastructure. Long-term funding, flexible tenancy arrangements and support for Indigenous-led organisations would all help. A more inclusive planning system would ensure co-design becomes standard practice rather than the exception. Doing more to meet goals We can also draw valuable lessons from international models. Globally, community land trusts have enabled low-income and racially marginalised communities to secure long-term control of housing and land. These trusts work by holding land in a nonprofit trust while allowing residents to own or rent homes on it through long-term, renewable leases. This structure removes land from the speculative market, keeps housing costs stable and ensures decisions remain in the hands of the local community. In Chile, the Half a House model gives families a solid, expandable foundation to grow their homes as their resources allow. A growing number of Australian policymakers have acknowledged this need for change. The National Agreement on Closing the Gap includes targets for improved housing outcomes and increased community control. The 2024 Implementation Plan outlines steps toward reducing overcrowding and strengthening Aboriginal-controlled service delivery. Turning these goals into practice requires sustained effort. Indigenous communities must be seen as partners in decision-making, not simply as service recipients. Their insights and lived experiences should shape every stage of the housing process. Uniform solutions will not meet diverse local needs. Place-based approaches, developed in collaboration with communities, are essential. Housing is more than shelter. For Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities, it is a space to practise culture, strengthen kinship, and pass on knowledge. It is where identity is lived and preserved. Proven models already exist. Communities across Australia are leading the way. What is required now is a policy environment that listens, invests and follows their lead. Giles Gunesekera OAM works for Global Impact Initiative, an organisation that constructs impact investments with the dual focus of sustainable financial return and measurable, actionable, social impact. Dr Allan Teale receives funding from UTS. In 2023, he received a Churchill Fellowship that enabled him to travel to Canada and the United States to study Indigenous community housing. My report can be found at this link: https://www.churchilltrust.com.au/fellow/allan-teale-nsw-2022/
3 hours

A massive explosion at a fireworks warehouse in Yolo County destroyed pyrotechnics for several Fourth of July shows, including one scheduled at Lodi Lake. Fireworks show at Lodi Lake canceled due to warehouse explosion is a story from Stocktonia News, a rigorous and factual newsroom covering Greater Stockton, California. Please consider making a charitable contribution to support our journalism.

A massive explosion at a fireworks warehouse in Yolo County destroyed pyrotechnics for several Fourth of July shows, including one scheduled at Lodi Lake. Fireworks show at Lodi Lake canceled due to warehouse explosion is a story from Stocktonia News, a rigorous and factual newsroom covering Greater Stockton, California. Please consider making a charitable contribution to support our journalism.
3 hours

ഓമനപ്പുഴ കൊലപാതകത്തിൽ കൂടുതൽ വിവരങ്ങൾ പുറത്ത്. ജോസ് മകൾ ഏയ്ഞ്ചൽ ജാസ്മിനെ കഴുത്തു മുറുക്കി കൊലപ്പെടുത്തുമ്പേൾ ബന്ധുക്കൾ വീട്ടിലുണ്ടായിരുന്നതായി വിവരം.

ഓമനപ്പുഴ കൊലപാതകത്തിൽ കൂടുതൽ വിവരങ്ങൾ പുറത്ത്. ജോസ് മകൾ ഏയ്ഞ്ചൽ ജാസ്മിനെ കഴുത്തു മുറുക്കി കൊലപ്പെടുത്തുമ്പേൾ ബന്ധുക്കൾ വീട്ടിലുണ്ടായിരുന്നതായി വിവരം.
3 hours

പാർലമെന്റിന്റെ വർഷകാല സമ്മേളനം ജൂലൈ 21 മുതൽ ആഗസ്ത് 21 വരെ ചേരും.

പാർലമെന്റിന്റെ വർഷകാല സമ്മേളനം ജൂലൈ 21 മുതൽ ആഗസ്ത് 21 വരെ ചേരും.