Everything posted by Deii
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Music Title: Jhay Cortez - Sensual Bebé (Official Video) Signer: - Release Date: 22/08/22 Official Youtube Link: Informations About The Signer:- Your Opinion About The Track (Music Video):10/10
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The bet covers other countries in the region and seeks to ensure that there is no discrimination against these people in electoral processes, as well as regulations that give them real guarantees of participation. This Thursday, the Latin American and Caribbean Observatory of political and electoral rights of trans people was launched in Bogotá. The initiative seeks to put an end to political discrimination against this community in the region and to work to pay off the historical debt that the different States have with them. The idea is that through the observatory the obstacles that trans people have when exercising their political rights can be identified and established. Likewise, it seeks the construction of proposals and measures that allow them to guarantee their rights "in conditions of equality and without discrimination." In this sense, the observatory seeks to be a guide that helps the States of the region to promote favorable conditions so that the trans po[CENSORED]tion can exercise their rights without being violated. What the observatory, created by Caribe Afirmativo, the Electoral Observation Mission (MOE), and the Trans People Action and Support Group Foundation (GAAT), also aims at becoming an open platform for organizations and activists to contribute your knowledge. https://www.elespectador.com/politica/lanzan-observatorio-de-derechos-politicos-y-electorales-de-las-personas-trans/
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Communication between a dog and a human is based, most of the time, on non-verbal and bodily forms of expression. In fact, according to the study Evolutionary approach to communication between humans and dogs, dogs have evolved the ability to read the movements of humans to better adapt to communities. In this context, the movement of the canine tail is one of the most relevant signs when it comes to analyzing communication between dogs and their owners. Neuroscientists at the University of Trento, Italy, discovered that these movements contain meanings that go beyond happiness or emotion. Moreover, dogs shake their tails to one side or the other depending on the stimulus that triggers that reaction. If the dog's rear leans to the right while wagging its tail, this means that the animal wants to get closer to an object or a person. While if a canine moves its tail to the left, it is likely that it is facing another dog that is showing aggressive behavior or, on the other hand, it is a reaction that denotes a stimulus that causes them fear. Additionally, the researchers concluded that movement speed is also linked to stimuli. The faster the dog wags its tail, the more excited it is to approach an individual. Tail wagging is a behavior that dogs develop between three and four weeks of age. https://www.semana.com/4patas/perros/articulo/perros-por-que-motivos-mueven-la-cola/202219/
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Odessa is the decisive territory of the war not only because it is the access point to the Black Sea, but also because it is where the battle between Russian and Ukrainian identity The National Museum of Fine Arts in Odessa, a 19th-century palace, is nearly empty. At the start of the Russian war against Ukraine, staff members removed more than 12,000 works for safekeeping. An enormous portrait was left in its place, that of Catherine the Great, the Russian empress and founder of Odessa, depicted as a just and victorious goddess. Seen from below, in Dmitry Levitzky's painting, the empress is an imposing figure in a pale dress with a golden train. The ships behind her symbolize Russia's victory over the Ottoman Turks in 1792. "She is the personification of Russian imperial propaganda that you read about in history books," said Gera Grudev, an art curator. "The painting is too big to move, and besides, leaving it in her place shows the Russian invaders that we don't care." The decision to leave Catherine's portrait hanging alone in the first room of the closed museum reflects a cunning Odesan audacity: an empress who stands by to contemplate the brutality with which Vladimir Putin, the Russian president who compares himself to a modern tsar, has displaced the mostly Russian-speaking po[CENSORED]tion of this Black Sea port, which she established in 1794 as Moscow's much-coveted conduit from the steppe to the Mediterranean. Odessa, the world's bulk port, a city of creative integration, a metropolis with past wounds rooted in Jewish history, is the biggest prize of the war and a personal obsession for Putin. In a speech he gave three days before ordering the Russian invasion, Putin singled out Odessa with particular resentment and made clear his intention to capture the "criminals" living there to "bring them to justice." At the beginning of the war, Putin believed that he could decapitate the Ukrainian government and take kyiv, but then he discovered that Ukraine was a nation prepared to fight for the sovereignty that he dismisses. Now that the focus of the battles has shifted to southern Ukraine, Putin knows that Ukrainians' access to the sea and, to some degree, the world's access to food depends on what happens in Odessa. Without this city, Ukraine is reduced to a dismembered landlocked state. “Odessa is the key, in my opinion,” said François Delattre, the secretary general of the French foreign ministry. “In military terms, it is the most valuable territory. If they control it, they control the Black Sea.” https://www.elespectador.com/mundo/europa/en-ucrania-la-desafiante-odesa-es-la-obsesion-de-putin-noticias-hoy/
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Live Performance Title: KAROL G - EL BARCO Signer Name:- Live Performance Location: - Official YouTube Link: Your Opinion About the Track (Music Video):-
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Music Title: KAROL G - PROVENZA (Official Video) Signer: - Release Date: 21/08/22 Official Youtube Link: Informations About The Signer:- Your Opinion About The Track (Music Video):10/10
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For the Argentine writer and historian, there is no counterpart to the level of confrontation and the violently critical ideas promoted by the right regarding social, racial and political sectors. Every Argentine who lives abroad long enough for the country to be in the news at some point has to answer a couple of commonplaces about Argentina: why so much conflict, how come there isn't widespread prosperity? if they have it all cows rivers mountains fields climates? To the Argentine writer and historian Ernesto Semán, who has lived abroad for 22 years (18 in the United States and four in Norway), these questions seem, frankly, “nonsense”. But when they appear, before giving in to rejection, he resorts to the teaching habit of pulling the string of questions. To see what they say about the perceptions that people have about themselves and about the place where they live. "Everyone talks as if they had solved the distribution problem, right?" That kind of moral panic about what is happening in the country, says Semán, "has to do with naturalizing that there is no distributive conflict that justifies the unleashing of political, social or economic crises." Or, in another way: it is not understanding why a group, a political movement, can paralyze a country or a sector to fight for salaries, for subsidies, to defend acquired benefits. That is not understanding the unique relationship that an Argentine can have with what he considers his basic rights, an idea that in political traditions such as Peronism —but not exclusively— includes the “need to attend or pay attention to material achievements”. Populist identities in Argentina and Latin America, says Semán, suppose particular ways of thinking about equality and struggles for income distribution, but that escapes a view that only sees populism as a sort of crisis of the rule of law. Ernesto Semán is a professor of Latin American History at the University of Bergen, in Norway, and before that he was a professor at the University of Richmond, in the United States, and before that he was a journalist for the Argentine newspapers Página/12 and Clarín. As a political reporter, he got to know the Kirchners closely, with whom he forged a relationship that, starting in 2003, would also become a collaboration link with the Argentine government through the consulate in New York, where Semán had gone to live in 2000 to write fiction. Between novels and works on politics and history, he has published seven books. The last one, Brief history of anti-populism, is a journey through the origins and drifts of the idea that Argentina is founded on a threatening plebeian world, a mass of barbarians who must be contained and guided in order to gain access to “ a modern and prosperous future. https://elpais.com/internacional/2022-08-21/ernesto-seman-mas-que-polarizacion-lo-que-hay-en-argentina-es-una-clara-radicalizacion-de-la-derecha.html
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Forest fires claim hundreds of thousands of lives each year among domestic and farm animals, beehives, herds, nests and all kinds of wildlife. According to animal experts, 400,000 living beings have died from the fires in Galicia so far this year Thor's world is a small piece of land with nothing inside but dry grass, food, water, and the cinder block shed that gives him shelter at night or when it's cold. Those same blocks raise the high walls of the plot. So although Thor is still a young and big dog, about 50 kilos, it is impossible for him to jump, or peek over the zipper. His window is that crack, that crack through which everyone who passes can see his precious eyes. That is why when one afternoon last week 10 almost simultaneous outbreaks sowed chaos in the mountains surrounding Verín (Ourense), the residents of Caldeliñas remembered that the huge dog with thick hair is always there. And this shepherd from the Caucasus was saved from burning to death. Between domestic and farm animals, hives, herds, wild horses but with title (and in some cases with stocks) that live in the mountains, nests and all kinds of wildlife, forest fires claim hundreds of thousands of lives a year . There are, however, neither in Spain nor in Galicia (the community that brings together an average of 35% of the country's fires each season) studies that quantify and certify the reality of this bleeding. The Franz Weber Foundation (FFW) takes as its basis the predictive model developed by Christopher Dickman, professor at the University of Sydney (Australia), for the devastating wave of fires in that country in 2020. The animal rights group calculates that so far summer the holocaust of the Galician mountains could have caused the death of more than 310,000 beings, 400,000 if Dickman's lowest estimate is taken literally, which speaks of between 10 and 15 animals living together per hectare. Driven by the wind, the flames had advanced at full speed towards the village. The people from the nearest houses hoisted the children into the vans and took the vehicles to the road, at the other end of Caldeliñas, in case they had to escape. But immediately the adults returned to defend their houses and in that sigh some flames higher than the walls had already surrounded Thor's corral, turned into a deadly trap, a real oven, less than 50 meters from the last house in the town. There, witnessing the fight by the fire brigades, Mr. Quino Veiga, one of the few usual residents left in the place, and the young Ismael, from the O Castelo bar, coincided there. Also the extensive Suárez family, which is the one that lives closest to Thor and asks that one thing be clear in the press: "We must put that we are of gypsy ethnicity and that we help rescue the dog." https://elpais.com/espana/galicia/2022-08-17/el-holocausto-animal-de-los-montes-gallegos.html?rel=buscador_noticias
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The article of the citizen security law that allows the Police access to surveillance services should be declared enforceable. This was requested by the Attorney General's Office to the Constitutional Court in one concept. During the week, the Attorney General's Office, headed by Margarita Cabello, delivered a six-page concept to the Constitutional Court on the citizen security law, asking it to declare one of its articles conditional. In other words, leave it as established by the legislature, but with some reservations. This law, which was the flag of the outgoing government of Iván Duque, contains several controversial articles, specifically article 48. The rule gives the National Police powers to access surveillance circuits for identification, prevention and prosecution actions. The concept that rests in the offices of the Court was brought by the Public Ministry after the citizen Juan Manuel López Molina demanded the norm because he considers that with it the right to privacy is ignored. “Congress incurred in a legislative omission relative to regulating access to private surveillance and security circuits by the National Police. This, because it did not include the necessary budgets for the protection of private information captured by the respective cameras”, explained the plaintiff. The Attorney General's Office said in its document that it will ask the Court to declare the norm conditionally enforceable. “Following the jurisprudential scope given to the right to privacy, the Attorney General’s Office will request that the accused norm be declared exequible under the understanding that the access of the National Police to the surveillance and private security circuits located in places where they can capture images or videos related to semi-private, private or reserved information of people will require the prior authorization that corresponds by virtue of the nature of the data, except in exceptional cases of flagrante delicto or imperative necessity in which the corresponding jurisdictional control must be resorted to ”, highlights the document of the Attorney. For the Public Prosecutor's Office, it is clear that said rule, when regulating access to surveillance and security circuits by the Police, did not include any restriction or authorization to guarantee respect for the right to privacy, which, in its opinion, can be affected by the review by the agents of the images captured by the cameras. This is not the first criticism that the controversial law receives. At the beginning of August, several organizations demanded the regulation, including the article, because it violates citizen rights and encourages the abuse of authority. https://www.elespectador.com/judicial/procuraduria-pide-a-la-corte-dejar-en-firme-ley-de-seguridad-ciudadana/
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Deputy Foreign Minister Laura Gil is a political scientist, internationalist, columnist and expert in Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law, Álvaro Leyva said in a meeting with some diplomats. The Colombian-Uruguayan internationalist and political scientist Laura Gil will hold the position of deputy minister for multilateral affairs in the Colombian Foreign Ministry, which, as is known, will be led by Álvaro Leyva. This was communicated in the last few hours by Leyva himself in a meeting with some diplomats. Leyva will lead Colombia's international policy in the Petro government with the mandate to exercise diplomacy for peace, a purpose in which good relations with the neighborhood are a fundamental piece. The appointment of the political scientist Gil will be key, given her experience in human rights and international humanitarian law, matters in which she is a renowned academic and opinion columnist. Gil was part of the campaign for the inter-party consultation of the Hope Center Coalition and publicly expressed her support for former Minister Juan Fernando Cristo, who before the second presidential round notified her support for Gustavo Petro. There are 8 days left before the inauguration of President-elect Gustavo Petro and Colombians are still waiting for the appointments that are pending in his cabinet. In recent days, the president - who will occupy the Casa de Nariño on August 7 - announced that his Minister of Education will be Alejandro Gaviria, who was a candidate for the presidency by the Centro Esperanza Coalition. The economist José Antonio Ocampo will be his Minister of Finance and the also economist Cecilia López will be in charge of the Ministry of Agriculture. Who is Laura Gil? This journalist, political scientist and internationalist is an expert in Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law. She has a Master of Arts in Law and Diplomacy from the Fletcher School of Tufts University (United States) and has extensive experience as a political analyst in the media. Currently, she is director of the opinion portal 'La Línea del Medio' and has worked in the private sector as director of the company Dialogues and Strategies dedicated to improving peace, public policy on victims and human rights. She has been a consultant for international organizations, non-governmental organizations and research centers. Among the recognitions he has received is the Bogotá Journalists Association Award in opinion in 2014, Law and Democracy Medal of the Colombian Press Society in 2015, Álvaro Gómez Hurtado Award in 2017, Simón Bolívar Award 2019, Draper Hills Fellow Stanford University 2015 and National Endowment for Democracy Fellow 2019-2020. https://www.elespectador.com/politica/laura-gil-nueva-viceministra-de-relaciones-exteriores-de-colombia/
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Sharks have scared the hell out of us this summer, mainly because of their alleged attacks on humans. However, humans are a greater threat to sharks than they are to us. There are more than 500 species of sharks. They are as diverse as the dwarf lantern shark, which is smaller than a human hand, and the whale shark, which can grow as big as a school bus, said marine biologist Michael Heithaus, professor and dean of the College of Arts, Sciences and Education. from Florida International University in Miami. Since there are a large number of unique species, some characteristics may be true for one species but not for another. Sharks have been around for hundreds of millions of years, and although they continue to evolve, they are also in serious danger. Due in large part to overfishing, shark and ray po[CENSORED]tions declined by 71.1% between 1970 and 2018, according to a 2021 study published in the academic journal Nature. Greenland sharks are the longest-living vertebrates known on Earth, according to a 2016 study published in the journal Science. Researchers using radiocarbon dating determined that the North Atlantic species likely lives an average of at least 272 years, often not reaching maturity until 150 years of age. Scientists have calculated that Greenland sharks can live at least 400 years. The earliest evidence of shark fossils dates back 450 million years, meaning these creatures came into existence at least 90 million years before the trees and 190 million years before the dinosaurs. Sharks have been around since before Pangea broke apart, said Catherine Macdonald, director of the Field School and professor at the Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Miami. (About 250 million years ago there was a single, gigantic continent called Pangea.) Furthermore, sharks have survived five mass extinctions, one of which wiped out 96% of marine life. Tiger sharks, one of Australia's top predators, can help ecosystems respond to extreme weather events. Prey for this species, including green sea turtles, seabirds, and rays, avoid shallow waters, often seagrass areas. As a result, the seagrass can grow like a bush and create a safe nursery area for young fish, shrimp and crabs, Heithaus said. https://cnnespanol.cnn.com/2022/07/27/tiburones-antiguos-cinco-datos-sorprendentes-trax/
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A robot created at Stanford University in California dives into shipwrecks and sunken planes in a way that humans can't. Known as OceanOneK, the robot lets its operators feel like underwater explorers, too. OceanOneK resembles a human diver from the front, with arms, hands and eyes that have 3D vision, capturing the underwater world in full color. The back of the robot has computers and eight multi-directional thrusters that help it carefully maneuver around the fragile sunken ships. When an operator on the ocean surface uses controls to steer OceanOneK, the robot's haptic (touch-based) feedback system makes the person feel the resistance of the water, as well as the contours of the artifacts. OceanOneK's realistic tactile and visual capabilities are enough for people to feel like they're diving into the depths, without the dangers or immense underwater pressure that a human diver would experience. Stanford University roboticist Oussama Khatib and his students teamed up with deep-sea archaeologists and in September began sending the robot on dives. The team just finished another underwater expedition in July. So far, OceanOneK has explored a sunken Beechcraft Baron F-GDPV aircraft, the Italian steamship Le Francesco Crispi, a 2nd-century Roman ship off Corsica, a WWII P-38 Lightning aircraft, and a submarine named Le Protect. The Crispi lies about 500 meters (1,640 feet) below the surface of the Mediterranean Sea. "You're moving very close to this amazing structure, and something amazing happens when you touch it: You really feel it," said Khatib, the Weichai Professor in the Stanford School of Engineering and director of the Stanford Robotics Laboratory. "I have never experienced anything like this in my life. I can say that it was I who touched the Crispi at 500 (meters). And I did it, I touched it, I felt it." OceanOneK could be just the beginning of a future where robots take on underwater exploration too dangerous for humans, helping us see the oceans in a whole new way. https://cnnespanol.cnn.com/2022/07/30/un-robot-buceador-humanoide-explora-naufragios-en-el-fondo-del-oceano/
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Music Title: DUKI - GIVENCHY (Video Oficial) Signer: - Release Date: 30/07/22 Official Youtube Link: Informations About The Signer:- Your Opinion About The Track (Music Video):10/10
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[DH-Battle] Seuong Vs Meh Rez vM [ Winner Seuong ]
Deii replied to S e u o n g's topic in Battles 1v1
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President Joe Biden received an unpleasant wake-up call for his still recent presidency on Wednesday, arriving in Washington from a visit to Europe and suddenly facing a transformed political landscape. Republican Glenn Youngkin's projected victory over former Democratic Gov. Terry McAuliffe in Virginia, which Biden won by 10 points, and an all-too-close race in New Jersey (where Democrat Phil Murphy ultimately won re-election by a narrow margin according to CNN's projection) ) was discouraging news for the Democratic president as he flew over the Atlantic. Returning to the White House in the dark, Biden declined to answer questions about the election contest, which he had incorrectly predicted Democrats would win eight hours earlier. The results were released half an hour before Biden landed at Joint Base Andrews. Aboard Air Force One, people familiar with the matter said the mood was somber as a weary crew returned to what has become a maelstrom of recrimination and doubt. Questions remain about how the changing dynamics will play out in the coming days, weeks and months. Biden has been locked in a weeks-long cycle of pressure for months on his legislative agenda, as his party has failed to pass his broad national agenda, comprised of a $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure plan and a $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill. $1.75 trillion social safety net expansion. These priorities remain unfulfilled, with a possible government shutdown and a default on the national debt looming in early December. All this represents a potential turning point in Biden's presidency before he has completed a year in office. Already the White House is throbbing with a new sense of urgency to pass the agenda and provide direction to a panicked party, with one official telling CNN that Biden may speak directly to the American people on Wednesday. "I think it's wrong to overreact here," a senior administration official told CNN, but added, "Clearly voters are frustrated by the pace of the action and we have to pick up that pace." After months of infighting over Biden's multibillion-dollar legislative agenda, exposing divisions in the Democratic Party, it wasn't long before the finger pointing and panic among Biden allies began. A source close to the White House argued that the results showed voters are frustrated with the lack of action in Washington. "Voters have made it clear that they are not happy with inaction and pedantry," the source said. "And Democrats broadly agree there is more momentum to move forward, more quickly, with bills that will change the economic landscape for middle-class families and ensure the economy delivers for the working people in their lives." daily, not just for those at the top." "If voters are frustrated by inaction, the obvious response is to be more decisive and pass bills based on a middle-class agenda that received a record 81 million votes last year," the source added. "And there's a strong consensus on that across the party. Doing less is clearly the opposite of what people want." On Wednesday morning, a source close to House progressives countered criticism from moderate Democrats that McAuliffe lost because they held back Biden's agenda. "That doesn't even come close to passing the test. Voters didn't base their choice between McAuliffe and Youngkin on infrastructure negotiations in Washington. A state hasn't pivoted more than 10 points in a single year because of a bill." in Congress," the source said. Still, during the final weeks of the campaign, McAuliffe and his allies repeatedly warned that Biden's inability to pass a far-reaching expansion of the social safety net was hampering his race. Some of Biden's advisers have dismissed the idea that the impasse in the president's domestic agenda is to blame, pointing instead to the lingering pandemic and its economic effects. Some Democrats close to Biden have also privately lamented McAuliffe's blunders, like the comment about education that he came to define the final weeks of the race. "Virginia is just the first step," says GOP leader The Virginia gubernatorial race, in particular, was seen as a referendum on the first year of Biden's presidency, although the president said he did not see it that way, and Tuesday's defeat could lead to questioning the strategy of the Democrats on Biden's economic agenda. More moderate Democrats could join Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia in raising concerns about Biden's huge economic and climate spending bill, further dragging out the process and complicating the way forward. Biden, who campaigned for McAuliffe in Virginia, had on Tuesday expressed his confidence that McAuliffe would win. "We're going to win. I think we're going to win Virginia," Biden said during a news conference in Glasgow, though he also acknowledged it would be a very close contest. However, the president said the results would not be a reflection of his agenda. "I don't think, and I haven't seen any evidence, that whether I do well or poorly, whether my agenda passes or not, is going to have any real impact on whether I win or lose," Biden said during the Press conference. "Even if we had passed my agenda, I would not claim that we have won because Biden's agenda passed." https://cnnespanol.cnn.com/2021/11/03/biden-pesadilla-politica-trax/