El Salvador vs. MS-13
El Salvador’s iconoclastic purge of MS-13’s occult symbols reminds us that these gangs transcend crime: they are upstart tribes looking to swallow nations.
El Salvador’s iconoclastic purge of MS-13’s occult symbols reminds us that these gangs transcend crime: they are upstart tribes looking to swallow nations.
“Europeans, you’ll have to change your sneakers to military boots in the coming decades,” a senior security expert said at the conference aimed to decipher the geopolitical shift of the coming decades.
This year’s International Women’s Day events displayed, more than ever, divisions and ratcheting tensions within Spain’s feminist movement, evident politically and in the general public.
Demonstrators are calling for the government to urgently address railroad safety, which they claim had been ignored for years.
Democrats see Russia as the devil, Republicans don’t, indicating how ‘America First’ transformed into a modern anti-war movement.
The evaluation is another test of the EU’s controversial antitrust legislation, which has previously been used for Big Tech regulation. This new probe affects a total of four Swiss-based companies.
Bug diets and climate lockdowns must step aside; climate rationing is what’s needed to save the planet.
In contrast to Bern’s apparent reluctance to allow arms exports to Ukraine, a recent poll showed that half the country supported more flexible rules regarding neutrality.
The November referendum will remove from the Irish constitution the state’s obligation to support women as homemakers.
The bill is progressing in the Senate but is more unpopular than ever in public opinion. It crystallises a certain number of resentments plied against the president and his government.
El Salvador’s iconoclastic purge of MS-13’s occult symbols reminds us that these gangs transcend crime: they are upstart tribes looking to swallow nations.
“Europeans, you’ll have to change your sneakers to military boots in the coming decades,” a senior security expert said at the conference aimed to decipher the geopolitical shift of the coming decades.
This year’s International Women’s Day events displayed, more than ever, divisions and ratcheting tensions within Spain’s feminist movement, evident politically and in the general public.
Demonstrators are calling for the government to urgently address railroad safety, which they claim had been ignored for years.
Democrats see Russia as the devil, Republicans don’t, indicating how ‘America First’ transformed into a modern anti-war movement.
The evaluation is another test of the EU’s controversial antitrust legislation, which has previously been used for Big Tech regulation. This new probe affects a total of four Swiss-based companies.
Bug diets and climate lockdowns must step aside; climate rationing is what’s needed to save the planet.
In contrast to Bern’s apparent reluctance to allow arms exports to Ukraine, a recent poll showed that half the country supported more flexible rules regarding neutrality.
The November referendum will remove from the Irish constitution the state’s obligation to support women as homemakers.
The bill is progressing in the Senate but is more unpopular than ever in public opinion. It crystallises a certain number of resentments plied against the president and his government.