
Spanish Actress Puts Surrogacy in Limelight
Last year, the Spanish supreme court again condemned both surrogacy and attempts by Spaniards to sidestep their country’s legal and ethical rules by contracting surrogacy abroad.

Last year, the Spanish supreme court again condemned both surrogacy and attempts by Spaniards to sidestep their country’s legal and ethical rules by contracting surrogacy abroad.

The advertising campaign was daring and illegal, but fully endorsed by the organisation that wants another voice to be heard on the matter of life defence in the public sphere.

Moscow has made another diplomatic move against Berlin.

The former BfV chief’s statement comes after German police last week raided 15 homes of members of the Last Generation who are suspected of helping to finance a criminal enterprise.

MP Thiériot, who proposed the bill, believes that decisions to rewrite were made because of “pressure from the ‘wokist’ movement and ‘cancel culture.’”

Security quickly intervened but not before orange powder had been scattered over players and pitch.

The strikes came on the heels of a slickly produced video, meant to rally Ukraine and its allies, which strongly hinted at an imminent Ukrainian counteroffensive.

The opposition’s democratization plans might be postponed, but analysts say that since President Erdoğan only won by a narrow margin, he may end up adopting some of the liberal reforms himself.

In Spain, the turn to the Right has aimed closer to center, bypassing VOX.

“Someone needs to understand that what [Kosovo’s prime minister] Albin Kurti is doing is leading us to red lines and to a complete collapse of dialogue and an escalation on the ground,” Serbia’s defense minister warned.
The postponement of the Franco-German Council of Ministers scheduled for Fontainebleau on October 26th is the culmination of a long series of disagreements on key subjects such as energy and defence.
Attacks on churches in Leipzig, a city that’s well known for being a left-wing extremist stronghold, have occurred in frequent intervals over the past several years.
Together, Bannon, Orbán, and Trump, perhaps more than any other conservative political figures, have consistently been the subjects of vicious attacks from globalist forces.
To Chris Janssens of Vlaams Belang, the disinformation campaign targets “right-wing opinions” for fact-checking, while “left-wing opinions would be given free rein.”
The organisation also advocated that the G7 and the U.S.—not the EU Commission—lead in managing international support for Ukraine’s recovery “because Brussels has neither the necessary political nor the financial heft.”
The first new coins bearing the likeness of King Charles III have been presented by the British Royal Mint. To make them more ‘accessible,’ the Latin name of the monarch has been dropped from the inscription.
The French government did not officially congratulate Meloni on her appointment. The first official communiqué emphasised French “vigilance,” particularly on the issue of human rights, the rule of law, and ‘values.’
The smooth and unassuming Sunak is nothing if not a product of the globalist ethos. It is to be expected, then, that he will lead and fashion a Tory party that will—as it has done for some time now—compromise on key conservative issues.
Responding to the attack, Lega chief Matteo Salvini said: “Rape and attempted murder on a policewoman in Naples, foreign citizen arrested. Anyone who rapes a woman or a child must be put in a position not to do it again, for the rest of his days.”
According to NRK, the agreement between the center-left government and the socialist party will pay out a total of 1.2 billion Norwegian kronas (€115 million) in electric-bill support “to the most vulnerable groups in society.”
After Johnson’s bow out, Penny Mordaunt will be attempting to woo his backers. It is only when she sails past the 100-mark by Monday, 2 p.m., that she can go head to head with Sunak.
According to Futura Inteligência, Lula would win with 46.9% of the vote, compared to Bolsonaro’s 46.5%.