Germany: Bavarian State Buildings Can Display Crosses
Top court rejects claim that the cross infringes on religious freedom.
Top court rejects claim that the cross infringes on religious freedom.
EU countries blame Brussels for purchasing excessive doses at a high cost.
Tensions escalate ahead of elections in Poland and Slovakia
Zelensky is done playing Mr. Nice Guy.
The new Irish hate speech law will carry a penalty of five years in prison, potentially even for memes, thanks to the hard work of Soros-funded NGOs skewing the data to present one of the most tolerant societies as anything but.
Singer Brian Molko called the Italian prime minister a fascist and racist “piece of s**t,” leading to the defamation suit.
The U.S. Virgin Islands have sued JP Morgan Chase over the bank’s relationship with notorious paedophile Jeffrey Epstein, alleging some in the bank knew full well of Epstein’s sordid activities.
The case has been brought forward by a professor of competition policy who said Apple’s charges for developers are “excessive and only possible due to its monopoly on the distribution of apps.”
“Publicly available” is not the same as “free to use,” the law firm behind the class-action suit argues, seeking to temporarily halt the development of Google’s entire AI structure.
The crux of the matter for the PSOE was the high number of votes the polls predicted the rival party, the centre-right Partido Popular (PP) would win.
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