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activeComprobar el Sueldazo de la ONCE: resultados
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Impactantes imágenes de efectos de Therese en Canarias: una carretera se hunde en un acantilado, una roca gigante en la calzada...
La borrasca Therese sigue causando estragos en Canarias con carreteras cortadas, vuelos cancelados y alertas activadas por riesgo de inundaciones y desprendimientos. Algunos de los efectos, además , están dejando imágenes verdaderamente impactantes. Una de ellas se ha producido en la isla de La Gomera , en la carretera de acceso a los caseríos de Erque y Erquito, en Vallehermoso, donde la vía se ha venido completamente abajo tras las fuertes lluvias. Con ello, diez personas, entre ellas cinco menores, han quedado aisladas en sus domicilios, aunque después de que las autoridades se pusieran en contacto con ellos han pedido no ser evacuadas. En esta misma isla, además, también se han producido incidencias en otras carreteras. El consejero de Emergencias, Héctor Cabrera, detalló este sábado que desde la tarde del viernes se han producido desprendimientos en la GM-1 , en los tramos de Tamargada y Macayo (Vallehermoso), así como en Las Orijamas y Vueltas (Valle Gran Rey), y en la zona previa al acceso a El Rejo, tras el túnel de la Cumbre. Por otro lado, otra de las imágenes más impactantes del temporal es la que se ha producido en la carretera GC-60, entre el barranco de Tejeda y Ayacata, en Gran Canaria, donde una piedra de más de 15 toneladas ha caído a la vía a consecuencia de las fuertes lluvias. Por el momento, la vía ha sido cerrada el tráfico y el servicio de carreteras trabaja para mantener la seguridad en la zona . Por otro lado, también continúan cerradas la GC-608, en su totalidad, que da acceso a La Culata; la GC-400, a la altura de Ariñez; la GC-210, entre Tejeda y Artenara y entre la Aldea y Artenara y la GC-505, entre Las Crucitas y Cercado de Espino, en el Barranco de Arguineguín. La corporación insular solicita a la población evitar desplazamientos innecesarios , extremar la precaución en caso de que sea esencial circular con vehículo, y no subir a la cumbre ni acceder a las presas por el riesgo que supone tras las lluvias

Ferrero vuelve a desmentir que tenga cáncer: "Es increíble que siga ocurriendo"
El exentrenador de Alcaraz, Juan Carlos Ferrero , ha vuelto a recurrir a las redes sociales para desmentir otra vez que tenga cáncer después de crecer los rumores sobre unos posibles problemas de salud. " Es increíble que siga ocurriendo" , ha añadido junto a un comunicado que publicó hace unos meses. En esa publicación, subida el 6 de octubre de 2025, Ferrero afirmaba: "Durante los últimos días han circulado noticias completamente falsas sobre mi salud, afirmando que padezco cáncer. Quiero dejar claro que es totalmente falso. Me duele profundamente que se utilicen temas tan sensibles para generar atención o views ". El exentrenador resaltó en ese comunicado que "el cáncer es una enfermedad que ha marcado a mi familia y a tantas otras, y merece el máximo respeto ", y agradeció "los mensajes de apoyo y cariño" antes de pedir " responsabilidad a quienes difunden este tipo de informaciones sin comprobar su veracidad". Los rumores de que Juan Carlos Ferrero tenía cáncer empezaron a correr hace meses cuando no estuvo presente en el ATP 500 de Tokio junto a Carlos Alcaraz, unos meses antes de poner fina su relación profesional, aunque sí se dejó ver en un Challenger en su academia de Villena.

El inesperado homenaje de los jugadores del Barça a Ronaldinho: camiseta retro con el '10' del brasileño antes del partido contra el Rayo
Los futbolistas del Barça sorprendieron este domingo al aparecer en el Camp Nou antes del partido contra el Rayo Vallecano vistiendo unas camisetas retro del club blaugrana en homenaje a Ronaldinho , quien este sábado 21 de marzo cumplió 46 años. Los de Hansi Flick saltaron al terreno de juego en la previa para supervisar el césped con la camiseta del Barça de la temporada 2005-2006, temporada en la que Ronaldinho ganó con los blaugranas la segunda Champions de la historia del club. El delantero brasileño desembarcó en el Barça en 2003 procedente del PSG por 24 millones de euros y a razón de tres netos por temporada. Rápidamente se convirtió en ídolo de la afición blaugrana. En 2005 ganó como jugador del Barça el Balón de Oro y un año después conquistó la tan ansiada Champions League con compañeros como Puyo, Deco o Eto'o. También ganó entonces su segunda liga consecutiva. Ronaldinho puso fin a su etapa en el FC Barcelona en 2008 tras una etapa con muchas lesiones y a consecuencia de la decisión de Pep Guardiola de no contar con él. Puso rumbo al AC Milan, pero nunca salió de los corazones de los aficionados culés.
Al Jazeera
Center
Puerto Rican activists bring medicine to Havana despite US blockade
Puerto Rican activists brought suitcases filled with medicine and medical supplies to Havana despite US blockade.

Iran says will hit region’s energy sites if US, Israel target power plants
Iran warns of 'irreversibly' destroying vital infrastructure across region after Trump threatens to bomb power plants.

Hezbollah attack kills one in north Israel as assault on Lebanon continues
Hezbollah has been launching attacks in response to US-Israel war on Iran as more Israeli troops enter southern Lebanon.
Associated Press (AP)
CenterItaly’s justice referendum becomes a high stakes test for conservative Premier Giorgia Meloni
A woman arrives to vote in a referendum on judicial reform, at a polling station in Milan, Italy, Sunday March 22, 2026. (Marco Ottico/Lapresse via AP) 2026-03-22T06:04:34Z ROME (AP) — Italy’s conservative premier, Giorgia Meloni , faces a pivotal political test in a two-day referendum on judicial reform that started on Sunday, a vote that has transformed into a broader judgment on her leadership at home and abroad. Originally presented as a technical overhaul of the justice system, the reform has sharpened political divisions and unified the center‑left opposition, turning the referendum into a symbolic showdown on Meloni’s strength one year ahead of national elections. Recent polls show the race remains too close to call, with the “No” camp gaining late momentum in a polarized climate where turnout may prove decisive. After five hours of voting on the first day, according to Italy’s Interior Ministry, turnout reached almost 15% of eligible voters. That is the highest turnout for any two-day referendum in the past 23 years. freestar.queue.push(function () { window.fsAdCount = window.fsAdCount + 1 || 0; let customChannel = '/dynamic_' + fsAdCount; let adList = document.querySelectorAll(".fs-feed-ad") let thisAd = adList[fsAdCount]; let randId = Math.random().toString(36).slice(2); thisAd.id = randId; let thisPlacement = fsAdCount == 0 ? "apnews_story_feed" : "apnews_story_feed_dynamic"; freestar.newAdSlots({ placementName: thisPlacement, slotId: randId }, customChannel); }); Lorenzo Pregliasco, political analyst and polling expert at YouTrend, said a rejection of the reform would carry significant political weight. “A possible ‘No’ victory would send a political signal, weakening Meloni’s aura of invincibility, while pushing the center-left opposition to say that there is already an alternative in the country,” he told The Associated Press. Meloni raises the stakes Meloni initially avoided tying her image too closely to the referendum, wary of the danger that a defeat could weaken her domestically and abroad. She currently presides over Italy’s most stable government in years, after gaining credibility among her European allies as a charismatic leader. A referendum win would further strengthen her tenure at home, alongside her international standing. That’s why, as the vote neared and polls tightened, the Italian premier shifted strategy and fully embraced the “Yes” campaign. Meloni has sharpened her rhetoric, accusing parts of the judiciary of hindering government work on migration and security, and warning that failure to pass the reform would strengthen unaccountable judicial “factions” and endanger citizens’ safety. freestar.queue.push(function () { window.fsAdCount = window.fsAdCount + 1 || 0; let customChannel = '/dynamic_' + fsAdCount; let adList = document.querySelectorAll(".fs-feed-ad") let thisAd = adList[fsAdCount]; let randId = Math.random().toString(36).slice(2); thisAd.id = randId; let thisPlacement = fsAdCount == 0 ? "apnews_story_feed" : "apnews_story_feed_dynamic"; freestar.newAdSlots({ placementName: thisPlacement, slotId: randId }, customChannel); }); “If the reform doesn’t pass this time, we will probably not have another chance,” she said at a campaign event last week. “We will find ourselves with even more powerful factions, even more negligent judges, even more surreal sentences, immigrants, rapists, pedophiles, drug dealers being freed and putting your security at risk.” Her stark warnings have drawn fierce criticism from magistrates and the center-left, who argue that the reforms would erode judicial independence and undermine constitutional guarantees. “Obviously (I’m voting) no, because I think this government has organized a referendum that serves no purpose other than its own, if it were to go ahead,” said Giovanna Antongini, an 89-year-old, as she headed to a polling station in central Rome. freestar.queue.push(function () { window.fsAdCount = window.fsAdCount + 1 || 0; let customChannel = '/dynamic_' + fsAdCount; let adList = document.querySelectorAll(".fs-feed-ad") let thisAd = adList[fsAdCount]; let randId = Math.random().toString(36).slice(2); thisAd.id = randId; let thisPlacement = fsAdCount == 0 ? "apnews_story_feed" : "apnews_story_feed_dynamic"; freestar.newAdSlots({ placementName: thisPlacement, slotId: randId }, customChannel); }); The ‘Trump risk’ Analysts say the referendum carries international implications as well. Meloni’s long standing alignment with U.S. President Donald Trump , once politically advantageous, has become increasingly problematic as his foreign policy — particularly the U.S. and Israeli war with Iran — faces growing disapproval among Italians. “Meloni is facing what I would call the ‘Trump risk’ — which is appearing too subservient to the U.S. president, who is an extremely unpopular political leader in Italy and the rest of Europe and generates a lot of distrust, even among center-right voters,” Pregliasco said. A defeat in the referendum would not force Meloni to resign — her mandate runs through 2027 and she repeatedly pledged to complete it — but could diminish her credibility within the European Union, where she is viewed as a stabilizing actor in an often politically volatile environment. A long running clash The referendum centers on long-debated reforms aimed at reshaping the structure of Italy’s judiciary. “This vote is very important,” said Francesca Serlupi Ferretti Crescenzi, 67, casting her ballot in Rome. “It is intended to improve the judicial system, which is long overdue for reform. I am convinced that it must and can be improved.” A key measure includes separating the career paths of judges and prosecutors, preventing them from switching roles — something that is currently allowed but rarely practiced. freestar.queue.push(function () { window.fsAdCount = window.fsAdCount + 1 || 0; let customChannel = '/dynamic_' + fsAdCount; let adList = document.querySelectorAll(".fs-feed-ad") let thisAd = adList[fsAdCount]; let randId = Math.random().toString(36).slice(2); thisAd.id = randId; let thisPlacement = fsAdCount == 0 ? "apnews_story_feed" : "apnews_story_feed_dynamic"; freestar.newAdSlots({ placementName: thisPlacement, slotId: randId }, customChannel); }); Another major change concerns the High Judicial Council, which oversees magistrates’ appointments and disciplinary matters. The reform proposes splitting it into three separate chambers and altering how members are chosen, replacing internal elections with selections by lottery from eligible judges and prosecutors. The clash between Italy’s right-wing leaders and magistrates has punctuated Italian politics, exploding during the governments of late conservative leader Silvio Berlusconi, who was one of the staunchest supporters of the judicial reform. Supporters argue the changes will modernize an infamously slow court system and enhance accountability. But critics, including prominent magistrates, say the reform misses the real priorities while threatening the judiciary’s independence. freestar.queue.push(function () { window.fsAdCount = window.fsAdCount + 1 || 0; let customChannel = '/dynamic_' + fsAdCount; let adList = document.querySelectorAll(".fs-feed-ad") let thisAd = adList[fsAdCount]; let randId = Math.random().toString(36).slice(2); thisAd.id = randId; let thisPlacement = fsAdCount == 0 ? "apnews_story_feed" : "apnews_story_feed_dynamic"; freestar.newAdSlots({ placementName: thisPlacement, slotId: randId }, customChannel); }); Nicola Gratteri, Naples’ chief prosecutor and a long time anti-Mafia magistrate, offered one of the most pointed rebukes. “I don’t think this government has implemented the reforms needed to make trials work more effectively,” he told the AP. “Instead, it has made it virtually impossible to combat crimes against the public administration and to tackle white-collar abuse and corruption.” As Italians head to the polls, the referendum stands as one of the defining moments of Meloni’s premiership — a choice that could reshape not only the justice system but also the trajectory of her government, regardless of the outcome. PAOLO SANTALUCIA Santalucia covers events throughout Southern Europe, Italy, the Mediterranean sea and the Vatican for The Associated Press based in Rome. instagram mailto
‘Saturday Night Live UK’ aims to take a comedy hit across the pond. The first verdicts are in
Tina Fey attends the American Museum of Natural History's Museum Gala on Nov. 30, 2023, in New York. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, File) 2026-03-22T13:23:55Z LONDON (AP) — “Saturday Night Live” has crossed the pond with a mild splash. A British offshoot of the 51-year-old U.S. comedy institution has debuted to generally positive reviews, defying doomsayers who doubted the show would survive the trans-Atlantic journey. The format of the first episode of “Saturday Night Live UK” stuck closely to the U.S. original. The 75-minute show opened with a skit showing Prime Minister Keir Starmer seeking help from a Gen Z adviser about how to talk to President Donald Trump, before the proclamation: “Live from London, it’s Saturday night!” “SNL” veteran Tina Fey was the host, taking questions during her opening monologue from celebrity audience members Michael Cera, Graham Norton and “Bridgerton” star Nicola Coughlan, who jokingly warned Fey that “British people tend to root for the failure of others.” freestar.queue.push(function () { window.fsAdCount = window.fsAdCount + 1 || 0; let customChannel = '/dynamic_' + fsAdCount; let adList = document.querySelectorAll(".fs-feed-ad") let thisAd = adList[fsAdCount]; let randId = Math.random().toString(36).slice(2); thisAd.id = randId; let thisPlacement = fsAdCount == 0 ? "apnews_story_feed" : "apnews_story_feed_dynamic"; freestar.newAdSlots({ placementName: thisPlacement, slotId: randId }, customChannel); }); Certainly, many in Britain had predicted the show would fail, and reviews expressed surprise that it was — largely — pretty funny. The Telegraph newspaper called it “shockingly competent” and “occasionally hilarious.” There was widespread praise for the cast of largely little-known comics: George Fouracres, Hammed Animashaun, Ayoade Bamgboye, Larry Dean, Celeste Dring, Ania Magliano, Annabel Marlow, Al Nash, Jack Shep, Emma Sidi and Paddy Young. As in the original, the show featured topical comedy, offbeat sketches, fake commercials and the “Weekend Update” spoof of the news, as well as a guest musical act, the English band Wet Leg. Some of the humor was mildly edgy, including jokes about pedophiles, the Epstein files and disgraced royal Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor. Apart from the accents, one difference from the American original was the expletives. British broadcasting rules allowed for a liberal sprinkling of F-words. Since its debut in 1975 “SNL” has become a pop-culture institution and helped launch the careers of generations of comedians, from Bill Murray to Eddie Murphy and Gilda Radner to Kristen Wiig . freestar.queue.push(function () { window.fsAdCount = window.fsAdCount + 1 || 0; let customChannel = '/dynamic_' + fsAdCount; let adList = document.querySelectorAll(".fs-feed-ad") let thisAd = adList[fsAdCount]; let randId = Math.random().toString(36).slice(2); thisAd.id = randId; let thisPlacement = fsAdCount == 0 ? "apnews_story_feed" : "apnews_story_feed_dynamic"; freestar.newAdSlots({ placementName: thisPlacement, slotId: randId }, customChannel); }); Efforts to replicate its success in other countries, such as France, Japan and Italy, have typically been short-lived, though a version of the show remains on the air in South Korea. The U.K. offshoot, which has “SNL” creator Lorne Michaels as executive producer, airs on the relatively little-watched channel Sky One and the NOW streaming service. But social media may bring a much bigger audience for clips. Fey’s monologue had more than half a million views on YouTube by noon on Sunday. The initial run is only eight episodes, and it remains to be seen how the cast fares without Fey’s assured guidance. Future guest hosts include Jamie Dorman and Riz Ahmed. Nick Hilton in The Independent said the first episode’s sketches included “a handful of hits,” but also moments when it seemed like “tepid cosplay” of the U.S. original. Charlotte Ivers in The Times of London felt that “the spark is not there yet,” but The Guardian’s Lucy Mangan praised the program’s ambition. “It did not fail. And in the coming weeks, let’s hope, it can build toward real success,” she wrote. JILL LAWLESS Lawless is based in London, covering British politics, diplomacy and culture and top stories from the UK and beyond. She has reported for the AP from two dozen countries on four continents. twitter mailto
Welcome to allergy season. Here’s how to protect yourself
Elena Ivanov, visiting from San Jose, Calif., walks across a field covered with blooming poppies near the Antelope Valley California Poppy Reserve in Lancaster, Calif., March 30, 2022. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File) 2026-03-22T11:15:25Z ATLANTA (AP) — Allergy season can be miserable for tens of millions of Americans when trees, grass, and other pollens cause runny noses, itchy eyes, coughing and sneezing. Where you live, what you’re allergic to and your lifestyle can make a big difference when it comes to the severity of your allergies . Experts say climate change is leading to longer and more intense allergy seasons, but also point out that treatments for seasonal allergies have become more effective over the last decade. Here are some tips from experts to keep allergy symptoms at bay — maybe even enough to allow you to enjoy the outdoors. New cities top the list of ‘allergy capitals’ The Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America issues an annual ranking of the most challenging cities to live in if you have allergies, based on over-the-counter medicine use, pollen counts and the number of available allergy specialists. This year, the top five cities are: Boise, Idaho; San Diego; Tulsa, Oklahoma; Provo, Utah; and Rochester, New York. freestar.queue.push(function () { window.fsAdCount = window.fsAdCount + 1 || 0; let customChannel = '/dynamic_' + fsAdCount; let adList = document.querySelectorAll(".fs-feed-ad") let thisAd = adList[fsAdCount]; let randId = Math.random().toString(36).slice(2); thisAd.id = randId; let thisPlacement = fsAdCount == 0 ? "apnews_story_feed" : "apnews_story_feed_dynamic"; freestar.newAdSlots({ placementName: thisPlacement, slotId: randId }, customChannel); }); Pollen helps plants reproduce — and makes us miserable Pollen is the powdery substance made by seed-producing plants and trees that is part of their reproductive process. Earlier in the spring , tree pollen is the main culprit. After that grasses pollinate, followed by weeds in the late summer and early fall. Some of the most common tree pollens that cause allergies include birch, cedar, cottonwood, maple, elm, oak and walnut, according to the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America. Grasses that cause symptoms include Bermuda, Johnson, rye and Kentucky bluegrass. Here’s how to track pollen levels Pollen trackers can help you decide when to go outside. The American Academy of Allergy Asthma and Immunology tracks levels through a network of counting stations across the U.S. Counts are available at its website and via email . This article is part of AP’s Be Well coverage, focusing on wellness, fitness, diet and mental health. Read more Be Well. The first step is to try to avoid pollen altogether The best and first step to controlling allergies is avoiding exposure. Keep the windows in your car and your home closed, even when it’s nice outside. If you go outside, wearing long sleeves can keep pollen off your skin to help ward off allergic reactions, said Dr. James Baker, an allergist at the University of Michigan. It also provides some sun protection, he added. When you get home, change your clothes and shower daily to ensure all the pollen is off of you — including your hair. If you can’t wash your hair every day, try covering it when you go outside with a hat or scarf. Don’t get in the bed with your outside clothes on, because the pollen will follow. It’s also useful to rinse your eyes and nose with saline to remove any pollen, experts said. And the same masks that got us through the pandemic can protect you from allergies — though they won’t help with eye symptoms. How to relieve allergy symptoms Over-the-counter nasal sprays are among the most effective treatments for seasonal allergies, experts said. But patients often use them incorrectly, irritating parts of the nose, said Dr. Kathleen May, an allergist at Augusta University in Georgia. She suggested angling the nozzle outward toward your ear rather than sticking it straight up your nose. Over-the-counter allergy pills like Claritin, Allegra and Zyrtec are helpful, but may not be as effective as quickly since they’re taken by mouth, experts said. freestar.queue.push(function () { window.fsAdCount = window.fsAdCount + 1 || 0; let customChannel = '/dynamic_' + fsAdCount; let adList = document.querySelectorAll(".fs-feed-ad") let thisAd = adList[fsAdCount]; let randId = Math.random().toString(36).slice(2); thisAd.id = randId; let thisPlacement = fsAdCount == 0 ? "apnews_story_feed" : "apnews_story_feed_dynamic"; freestar.newAdSlots({ placementName: thisPlacement, slotId: randId }, customChannel); }); If your allergy symptoms are impacting your quality of life, like causing you to lose sleep or loose focus at work or school, it might be time to consider making an appointment with an allergist. There are medications that can train you immune system not to overreact to allergens. freestar.queue.push(function () { window.fsAdCount = window.fsAdCount + 1 || 0; let customChannel = '/dynamic_' + fsAdCount; let adList = document.querySelectorAll(".fs-feed-ad") let thisAd = adList[fsAdCount]; let randId = Math.random().toString(36).slice(2); thisAd.id = randId; let thisPlacement = fsAdCount == 0 ? "apnews_story_feed" : "apnews_story_feed_dynamic"; freestar.newAdSlots({ placementName: thisPlacement, slotId: randId }, customChannel); }); Some remedies for allergy relief that have been circulating on social media or suggested by celebrities — like incorporating local honey into your diet to expose yourself to pollen — have been debunked. Dr. Shyam Joshi, an allergist at Oregon Health and Science University, said that’s because the flowers that bees pollinate typically don’t contain the airborne pollen that causes allergy symptoms. freestar.queue.push(function () { window.fsAdCount = window.fsAdCount + 1 || 0; let customChannel = '/dynamic_' + fsAdCount; let adList = document.querySelectorAll(".fs-feed-ad") let thisAd = adList[fsAdCount]; let randId = Math.random().toString(36).slice(2); thisAd.id = randId; let thisPlacement = fsAdCount == 0 ? "apnews_story_feed" : "apnews_story_feed_dynamic"; freestar.newAdSlots({ placementName: thisPlacement, slotId: randId }, customChannel); }); Is allergy season changing? Winters are milder and growing seasons are longer as the climate is changing, meaning there’s more opportunity for pollen to stay in the air, resulting in longer and more severe allergy seasons. Last year was one of the most intense allergy seasons on record, particularly in the Southeast U.S. ___ A version of this story was published April 19, 2025. The writer is no longer with The Associated Press. ___ The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. KENYA HUNTER Hunter is an Atlanta-based public health reporter for The Associated Press, covering disabilities and sexual health. mailto
BBC Mundo
Center
Del estrecho de Ormuz al de Malaca: las 5 angostas vías navegables de las que depende el comercio mundial
El comercio mundial depende de un número sorprendentemente reducido de estrechos canales, a menudo denominados "puntos de estrangulamiento" marítimos.

Por qué los supermercados de Finlandia son fundamentales para la defensa del país
Todas las cadenas de supermercados tienen planes detallados para seguir en el caso de que la nación entre en guerra.

La encrucijada de Trump mientras EE.UU. evalúa duras opciones en Irán
Anthony Zurcher analiza los objetivos militares de Trump y las alternativas que maneja el gobierno de EE.UU.
BBC News - World
Center
'A direct hit' - BBC visits Israeli town after Iranian strike
The BBC's Sebastian Usher reports from Dimona in southern Israel, which was hit by an Iranian missile.

Qatari and Turkish citizens die in military helicopter crash
Four Qatari military personnel, one Turkish serviceman and two technicians from a Turkish defence company were on board.

Sudan drone attack on key hospital killed 64 people during Eid, WHO says
The strike killed 64 people, including 13 children, two nurses and a doctor, according to the WHO head.
BFM TV Economie
Center-Right
L'unilatéralisme et le protectionnisme "ne sont en aucun cas une panacée pour résoudre les problèmes", selon le Premier ministre chinois: il promet d'importer davantage de "biens étrangers de haute qualité"
Le numéro deux chinois Li Qiang a déclaré ce dimanche 22 mars que son pays serait disposé à contribuer à agrandir le "gâteau" du commerce international en s'ouvrant davantage, a rapporté l'agence nationale Chine Nouvelle.

Le Royaume-Uni avance vers "une solution à la française" qui déplaît aux patrons: plus d'emplois qualifiés, moins de bas salaires, plus d'impôts... et plus de chômage (il dépasse désormais celui de l'Italie)
Depuis son arrivée au pouvoir, Keir Starmer et son gouvernement ont pris une série de mesures visant à lutter contre les emplois à bas salaires. De quoi, espèrent-ils, stimuler l'investissement et relancer la productivité particulièrement faible du pays. Les chefs d'entreprise britanniques déplorent, eux, une stratégie qui s'attaque à la flexibilité du travail.

Ne demandez pas à l'IA de vous aider à investir en Bourse
Une étude a testé les capacités d'analyse financière de l'IA sur les résultats du CAC 40. Les résultats sont catastrophiques avec même un zéro pointé pour ChatGPT.
Der Spiegel
Center-Left
Fußball-Bundesliga: Borussia Dortmund trennt sich von Sportdirektor Kehl
Gekriselt hatte es in der Beziehung zwischen Borussia Dortmund und seinem Sportdirektor Sebastian Kehl schon länger. Der jetzige Zeitpunkt, sich mit sofortiger Wirkung voneinander zu trennen, kommt dennoch überraschend.

Erinnerungen von Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht: Monument des Eigenlobs
Er ist ein Star seiner Zunft, eine Ausnahme in der Literaturwissenschaft: Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht hat die Welt bereist und mit ikonischen Denkern gearbeitet. Doch seine Autobiografie hat einen schwer erträglichen Grundton.

Sandra Hüller: Ihr Hollywood-Debüt »Der Astronaut – Project Hail Mary« wird zum Blockbuster
Großer Aufschlag für Sandra Hüller in Hollywood: Ihr Film »Der Astronaut – Project Hail Mary« mit Ryan Gosling übertrifft mit knapp 80 Millionen Dollar Einspielergebnis am Startwochenende alle Erwartungen.
Deutsche Welle (DE)
Center
Härtetest für Meloni: Italiener stimmen über Justizreform ab
Ministerpräsidentin Giorgia Meloni will Italiens Justizapparat umbauen. Kritiker werfen ihr vor, politischen Einfluss nehmen zu wollen. Der Streit dauert schon viele Jahre. Jetzt ist das Volk an der Reihe.

Trump stellt Iran Ultimatum zur Straße von Hormus
Drohungen und Gegendrohungen - die wichtige Schifffahrtspassage für Energielieferungen rückt immer mehr ins Zentrum der Auseinandersetzung zwischen den USA und Iran.

Kuba erlebt erneut kompletten Stromausfall
Blackouts, knappe Lebensmittel, Müll auf den Straßen: Kuba kämpft mit einer Krise, die das tägliche Leben massiv beeinträchtigt. Das US-Ölembargo macht die Lage noch schlimmer.
Die Welt
Center-RightDeutschlands Botschafter erzürnt israelischen Außenminister mit Beitrag auf X
Deutschlands Botschafter in Israel postet auf X einen Beitrag über einen im Westjordanland getöten Israeli – die Antwort des israelischen Außenministers kommt prompt. Netanjahu fordert andere Länder auf, sich dem Kampf gegen den Iran anzuschließen. Mehr im Liveticker.
Die Trennung von Kehl könnte erst der Anfang gewesen sein
Borussia Dortmund und Sportdirektor Sebastian Kehl haben ihre Zusammenarbeit beendet. Doch dabei muss es nicht bleiben. Lars Ricken wackelt ebenfalls. Mitentscheidend wird sein, was der ehemalige BVB-Boss Watzke im Sinn hat.
Mann schießt in Frankfurter Bahnhofsviertel um sich – offenbar Streit um E-Scooter
Schüsse am frühen Morgen im Frankfurter Bahnhofsviertel: Ein Mann hat gegen 6 Uhr mit einer Waffe um sich gefeuert. Grund soll laut einem Medienbericht ein Streit um einen E-Scooter gewesen sein.
El Confidencial
Center
Miremos el triunfo de la inteligencia artificial por el lado positivo: ¡las IA acabarán por fin con la especie humana!
Por primera vez en mucho tiempo estoy ilusionado . Los expertos lo afirman rotundamente: la revolución tecnológica que implica el advenimiento de la inteligencia artificial como vehículo primordial de desenvolvimiento para el ciudadano del siglo XXI y su intromisión en todos nuestros ámbitos cotidianos culminarán con la rebelión de la máquina, la asunción de su autoconsciencia como ser vivo y, en su afán por emanciparse, la eliminación de su Dr. Frankenstein: o sea, de nosotros. Nuestra especie está, pues, condenada. Siempre positivo, nunca negativo, bip bip En lo personal, recibo con cierto alivio esta noticia. Soy ya cincuentón, me siento veinte años más viejo y muy desapegado del mundo, no tengo hijos ni me da mucha pena el destino de la especie humana, tras comprobar durante décadas el ahínco con que luchamos por ganarnos a pulso nuestra propia extinción. Sí, soy un Capitán Nemo de economato, qué pasa. Dejad que mis muertitos se acerquen a mí: la IA convierte en zombis a nuestros seres queridos Hernán Migoya La nueva moda de imbuir movimiento mediante inteligencia artificial a las imágenes inanimadas de nuestros ancestros nos convierte a todos en doctores Frankenstein obsesionados con resucitar la carne ya fenecida y sepultada Además, me considero ecologista de corazón y sé que cuando estemos todos muertos, la Tierra rejuvenecerá y alcanzará un esplendor inédito en los últimos dos o tres siglos. Qué bonito será ver todo repleto otra vez de Bambis … Claro que en verdad no podremos ver tamaño panorama, porque ese resurgir de fauna y flora vendrá motivado precisamente por nuestra ausencia: ahí está la gracia. ¡Seguro que muertos formaremos un humus de alta calidad! Nuestros cadáveres putrefactos harán más por la vida del planeta de lo que nuestros corazones lograron con su voluntad y sus latidos. Pero durante ese tramo de prórroga que las predicciones nos conceden hasta nuestra completa desaparición —es decir, hasta que nos ejecuten—, pienso aprovecharme de las IA en todas las ventajas prácticas que ofrezcan para que los diez a quince años que me quedan sean lo más llevaderos posible. Ya he apartado con un dinerito a cuenta varios avances tecnológicos en fase de desarrollo que me van a facilitar mucho mi vejez: una memoria en forma de implante dental —me sobran huecos donde encajarla, desde que sufro bruxismo ando más desdentado que Alonso Quijano — que limpia e irriga, mediante un sistema independiente de inyecciones y aspersión, todos los piños y la encía en cuanto detecta un exceso de suciedad en el buche; otro implante cerebral que mide el nivel de neuronas en la cabeza y acecha alerta para activarse cuando me ataque el Alzhéimer heredado, regenerándolas hasta un tope concreto, el que juzgue la IA… porque ni a ella ni —en el fondo— a mí nos interesa que yo piense demasiado; y un artefacto volador autónomo denominado The Pedorruter, patente del profesor Franz de Copenhague que ya ha pasado a dominio público y que aprovecha como fuente de energía el excedente de ventosidades que procesamos los que padecemos en silencio —a no ser que aflore un pedo muy sonoro o sibilante— de colon irritable. ¡Alguna ventaja habíamos de tener, ahora que el cine español ya no cuenta con Mariano Ozores para que represente nuestra singularidad en alguna peli titulada Los aerofágicos a mayor gloria de Pajares y Esteso ! Por culpa de la IA y las redes sociales, los jóvenes son tan ignorantes e idiotas como nosotros Hernán Migoya ¿Se estarán volviendo gilipollas? Bueno, la respuesta es no… y sí. No y sí, en el sentido de que siempre ha habido un componente gilipollas en la juventud, connatural —y por tanto comprensible— a su inexperiencia vital Y mientras se perfeccionan y comercializan esos adelantos de la ciencia, como sociedad también asistiremos, con toda probabilidad, a la descomposición progresiva de nuestro mundo tal como lo conocemos, hasta configurar una globalidad ultradecadente, similar al universo de las pelis apocalípticas en las producciones italianas de los VHS ochenteros. ¡No me digáis que no sería emocionante agonizar durante unos años en un Mad Max cutre! O mejor aún, merodear por los restos en Los guerreros del Bronx. En cuanto a la juventud actual, si yo contara veinte años me preocuparía de irme implementando chips en la sesera y prótesis en el chasis hasta volverme ciborg. Estoy seguro de que los ciborgs, como especie híbrida, podrán sobrevivir y adaptarse. Los mestizos siempre han sido más inteligentes y recurseros en los nuevos paradigmas que las especies "puras", más testarudas y por tanto menos preparadas en su empeño maníaco por no mezclarse ni cambiar. Año 2050: así será la España en la que (salvo vuelcos improbables) reinará Leonor I Fernando Jáuregui El periodista Fernando Jáuregui analiza en su libro 'El cambio en cien palabras' (Plaza&Janés) cómo serán nuestras vidas dentro de 25 años. Publicamos un capítulo Vivir de espaldas al mañana Hoy tampoco se puede sobrevivir sin el ya arraigado tejido de IA que involucra desde el uso corriente de internet a cualquier reclamación que uno quiera hacer en el sector servicios; pero sí se puede intentar prescindir de la IA en otros campos . Si millones de personas h emos podido subsistir durante siglos sin recurrir a la inteligencia , ¡cómo no vamos a poder hacerlo sin la artificial! Lo confieso: mi intención es continuar vetando por completo la IA dentro de mi parcela de creatividad como escritor y guionista. Conozco a varios colegas que, preaviso legítimo mediante, ya se han subido al carro de la IA para concebir sus nuevos libros. Yo, como soy un poco carca, no me hallo a gusto investigando esas posibilidades. Pero es que para mí el placer de escribir ficción consiste en explorar mi mente corriendo descalzo entre sus gargantas y circunvalaciones, perdido en la dimensión desconocida de mi propia psique, no apoyándome sobre una muleta creativa externa. Desde mi punto de vista, esa concesión implica una adulteración de base. Es como jugar a las cartas con los naipes amañados. Que no cuenten conmigo. ¿No se os está haciendo demasiado largo el fin del mundo? Juan Soto Ivars Sé muy bien que la ciencia no predice, sino que plantea posibilidades, pero a los medios de comunicación y a los activistas ecologistas solo les gustan las más negras Sí, lo sé, soy un retrógrado. Un campo donde sí creo lícito y factible plantear la resistencia individual a las IA, a la manera reaccionaria en que lo haría el —esencialmente— fantasioso autor de ci-fi Ray Bradbury , todo un mago de la autosuficiencia imaginadora, es precisamente el de la creación literaria y, por ende, narrativa: si en su Fahrenheit 451 la gente común adoptaba como misión personal la memorización de los innumerables libros quemados por las autoridades con el fin de garantizar su pervivencia oral, yo me he tomado como causa obsesiva el consumo de cultura restringida al siglo XX y anteriores. Se acabó para mí leer novelas recientes, para no correr el riesgo de que me endilguen las pergeñadas o remozadas por IA: de hecho, me comentan que algunas de estas ya han sido merecedoras de premios de prestigio , no en vano se han revelado bastante mejores que los últimos libros galardonados con el Planeta . Así que, desde hace unos meses, únicamente me expongo a literatura, cómics y cine alumbrados antes del año 2001. Con ello mato dos pájaros intencionales de un tiro: p or un lado, me aseguro de que en la elaboración de la ficción que me nutre no haya un ápice de inteligencia artificial ; por otro, siento que ejerzo una labor de "biblioteca viviente" o cámara de criogenización respecto a figuras creativas del pasado que en nuestros días parpadean, se difuminan y diluyen en el borroso límite del olvido más temprano. Y no paro de descubrir creadores cuya aportación artística ignoraba previamente. La última 'Misión imposible' de Cruise: ni un microsegundo en el que el espectador pueda pararse a pensar Marta Medina. Cannes La película, que tuvo su 'première' en el Festival de Cannes y que es un tráiler larguísimo de la propia serie, se estrena en España este 23 de mayo No nos engañemos: si nos atenemos al medio cinematográfico, las miles y miles de películas del siglo pasado conforman en el presente un corpus imposible de digerir, reventado en un inmenso batiburrillo de cineastas e intérpretes cada año más indistinguibles en su acúmulo, enterrados en un limbo paralelo que ya no participa de la vida cultural activa, un mero ruido de fondo amorfo, sin jerarquías de valor en curso, como lo era en nuestra juventud la literatura de los siglos XV a XVIII, en la que sólo algunas contadas plumas privilegiadas, señaladas por el dedo despiadado del azar, pasaron a la memoria colectiva, por no decir académica y gracias. Hoy ya es imposible abarcar con una sola vida el visionado de toda esa producción audiovisual del siglo XX. Consagrar mis últimos años a transitarla constituye una manera de mantener vigentes en mi consciencia a esos artistas y, a la vez, de homenajear la memoria de mis padres y abuelos, conservando la imaginería y referencias culturales que resultaron significativas para ellos. Asimismo, supone un modo eficaz de dar la espalda al aluvión de actores y actrices generados virtualmente que muy pronto nos invadirán. Y encima gran parte de ese material añejo está disponible gratis en Youtube , lo que hace tilín en los oídos de mi espíritu rácano. La única injerencia de la IA se reduce a su preselección de títulos aconsejables, que uno puede acatar o no. Por lo que a mí respecta, prefiero vivir el resto de mis días entre fantasma s que fueron humanos que entre fantoches creados artificialmente.

Trump anuncia la muerte del exdirector del FBI Robert Mueller: "Me alegro de que esté muerto"
El exdirector del FBI Robert S. Mueller , quien estuvo al frente de la agencia federal 12 años, ha fallecido este sábado a los 81 años. El presidente de Estados Unidos, Donald Trump , ha hecho público el deceso del funcionario en un mensaje de Truth Social en el que ha celebrado su pérdida. "Robert Mueller acaba de morir. Bien, agradezo que esté muerto. Ya no podrá hacer daño a gente inocente", ha expresado el magnate neoyorquino. Mueller, republicano liberal, lideró el principal servicio de seguridad interior e inteligencia de Estados Unidos durante una década especialmente convulsa . Como fiscal, dirigió las investigaciones sobre la presunta influencia de Rusia en las elecciones presidenciales de 2016, donde concluyó que no podía acusar al actual inquilino de la Casa Blanca de ningún delito. Sus familiares ya habían informado el año pasado que Mueller había sido diagnosticado con la enfermedad de Parkinson . "Con profunda tristeza, compartimos la noticia del fallecimiento de Bob anoche", explicó su familia en un comunicado. Nacido en Nueva York en 1944, Mueller fue el sexto director de la Oficina Federal de Investigaciones (FBI) entre 2001 y 2013. Tras una destacada carrera como fiscal, Mueller llegó al cargo una semana antes de que se produjeran los ataques del 11-S en su ciudad natal y, tras los ataques, además de modernizar la estructura de la agencia, durante su mandato varios de sus operativos fueron los primeros en denunciar los abusos que se cometieron en las prisiones secretas establecidas por la CIA en diversas partes del mundo tras los actos terroristas de 2001. El FBI investiga a Joe Kent por una posible filtración de información confidencial tras su renuncia por la guerra EFE Fuentes conocedoras del caso apuntan a que la investigación sobre Kent estaba en marcha antes de que presentara su renuncia esta semana, tras expresar desacuerdos con la política de la Casa Blanca por el conflicto en Oriente Medio Su nombre volvió a copar todos los focos cuando, en mayo de 2017, fue nombrado como fiscal especial por el Departamento de Justica para investigar a Donald Trump por las supuestas interacciones con una trama rusa para ayudar al republicano a ganar las presidenciales en las que se había impuesto seis meses antes. Finalmente, su investigación determinó que Rusia llevó a cabo una amplia campaña de injerencia en 2016, incluida desinformación en redes sociales y hackeo y filtración de correos de políticos demócratas, pero no estableció ninguna conspiración con la campaña de Donald Trump.

Pogačar rompe su obsesión y conquista una San Remo con Roubaix en el horizonte
Es, seguramente, el mayor desafío que existe en el deporte moderno . Al menos en nuestro deporte moderno , vaya. Es, seguramente, la mayor rivalidad que uno imaginarse pudiera . Tan distintos, tan iguales. Una tan especial que solo la vemos cinco o seis días al año. Cómo no ponerse tontorrón mientras llega el que abre. Sean ustedes bienvenidos a la Milán-San Remo, edición de 2026 . Volvamos a lo de antes. El desafío es por los cinco Monumentos que afronta Tadej. Solo tres ciclistas ganaron los cinco, y lo hicieron antes de que fueran cinco. Sucede en un período muy concreto, unos campeones muy específicos . Todos de Flandes (aunque Eddy es patrimonio de la humanidad), todos en el Gotha de los clasicómanos.Y, ahora, Tadej. Medio siglo más tarde, Tadej. Entre aquel de Ronde con Freddy y Roger y esta primavera han pasado muchas cosas, pero ningún ciclista logró ganar los cinco monumentos. Quedó (muy) cerca Kelly, quedó (menos) cerca Hennie Kuiper (solo trinca podio en La Doyenne durante aquella carnicería de Hinault), quedó (menos) cerca Philippe Gilbert. Parecía imposible, hace no tanto, cuando Boonen y Cancellara luchaban por enseñorear adoquines y se hacían mus en colinas. Parecía imposible, hasta que llegó Tadej. Que fue podio (podio, hostia) en todos los Monumentos del año anterior Y que tiene entre ceja y ceja lo de completar repóker. ASO y RCS rezan, cada uno en su idioma, para que San Remo o Roubaix sean el asalto definitivo. Porque aquello sí que será la mayor batalla desde, no sé... Austerlitz. Tadej Pogačar derrotó a la Milán-San Remo, pero no pudo con Mathieu van der Poel Marcos Pereda El neerlandés firmó las tablas con el esloveno como ciclista con más Monumentos (siete). En Italia, Van der Poel repitió el sprint que ya protagonizó en el Tour de Flandes en 2022 Porque, allí donde sea, estará él. Nuestro segundo protagonista, que sería primer protagonista en casi cualquier momento histórico. Mathieu van der Poel es, seguramente, el mejor ciclista que jamás haya nacido para las clásicas de adoquín. Y tiene un talento tal que suma ya dos San Remo, que fue, incluso, podio en Lieja. Es rey indiscutible (aunque discutido) en el Principado de las piedras y los bergs . Y es la otra cara de una rivalidad histórica, un Merckx vs de Vlaeminck con menos patillas, un regalo cuando ya no esperas nada que echarte a la boca. Ambos son, en sus feudos, casi imbatibles. Ambos salen, cuando se enfrentan en estos sitios, al cincuenta de opciones. Hasta los que ven este momento de las bicis aburrido (mucho mejor el trenecito SKY, mucho mejor el ataque de Joaquim Rodríguez en las vallas, mucho mejor Zabel y Cipollini por la Vía Roma), hasta esos, de cuyo nombre no quiero acordarme, esperan las clásicas de primavera con interés. Es imposible sobreponderar la importancia que este desafío, que esta lid violenta y constante, tiene en el mundo de las bicis. Demos gracias, pues . Pogačar continúa su pulso con la Historia: su segundo Flandes es un golpe más en la mesa Marcos Pereda Ya entonces era Flandes uno de los días mayores del año. Igual el mayor, depende de sus gustos, pero entre ellos siempre. La pasión, las implicaciones políticas, el feeling de estar viendo algo salvaje Porque hemos visto tantas cosas... Yo aún recuerdo un ataque de Marco Pantani, año 1999 (el Marco Pantani de 1999, antes de Campiglio) en La Cipressa. Todos decían (todos supimos) que aquello era una inmolación, eran espectáculos fatuos, era un poner gónadas encima de la mesa frente a su némesis popular, Michele Bartoli. Nunca coincidían, ambos, porque cómo iba un vueltómano a meter morruco en tales temas. Nunca coincidían . Y entonces eso de Cipressa fue solo demostrar a la tele que estaba allí, y ver si picaba su rival.Es imposible que llegue, desde Cipressa. Sí, Chiappucci, pero haceya, de Chiappucci, y aquello fue muy específico. Imposible. En época de Coppi, de Gino, vale... pero hoy... Hoy, con los equipos, con la velocidad, con la preparación... Nah, hoy La Cipressa, como mucho, desgasta. Como mucho, que normalmente ni eso. Y miren ahora, que llevamos 30 días diciendo "Cipressa esto,Cipressa lo otro". Que si se va Pogačar en solitario , que si cortan a van der Poel, que si ya recuperó Ganna de aquel esfuerzo. Es increíble. Es maravilloso. Aquiles y Héctor sobre los adoquines: Van der Poel derrota a Pogačar en Roubaix y ambos firman una primavera histórica Marcos Pereda El neerlandés Mathieu Van der Poel firmó su tercera victoria consecutiva en la París-Roubaix. El ciclista esloveno Pogacar se cayó a 37,9 kilómetros de meta en un duelo fascinante Repetimos . Demos gracias, pues . Hasta ese instante preciso... pues un poco lo de siempre en San Remo. Una escapada lejanísima sin mayor interés que ver cuándo entran en escena los capos (que suele ser tras los Capos) . No es fácil ser Marc Gómez , amigos. Pero, oye, mejor eso que hacer entrenamiento de siete horas sin asomar morruco. Fueron Milesi, Tarozzi, Marcellusi,Moro, Faure-Prost, Belleta y Maestri. Quede aquí, al menos, esa mención. Pogacar confirma que es indestructible, rompe la historia y triunfa en Lieja a lo Street Fighter II Marcos Pereda La grandeza de un deportista se mide en los rivales. O se mide, entre otras cosas, en los rivales y, desde luego, lo que está haciendo el ciclista esloveno es de otro planeta Aunque nadie diera un duro por ellos . (Quede, también, toda la fuerza para Debora Silvestri. Yo no voy a entrar en detalles , porque ya los carroñeros les habrán metido el vídeo en todas sus redes, periódicos y televisiones. Allá ellos.Toda la fuerza para Debora Silvestri). Hasta entonces, hasta esa Cipressa que dijimos (y la previa, que fue agitadísima)... pues lo de siempre en esta carrera. Unos paisajes increíbles, una lengua de asfalto lamiendo la mar tras bajar desde interiores, pueblos con pinta de poner cafés riquísimos . Ah, y el equipo de Pogačar tirando. Porque la única opción de Pogačar, aquí, es que esto sea más duro que nunca, que sea una San Remo de (más) agonías, que vuelva a decidirse a puro tirón de angustia y fondo. Así que... se endurece. En la carrera de los 300 kilómetros, se endurece. Pogacar no tiene límites, Pogacar derriba muros: todo sobre el año ciclista en 2025 Marcos Pereda El esloveno ha completado otra gran temporada, en la que sumó su cuarto Tour de Francia. Además, logró la victoria tanto en el Mundial en Ruta como en el Europeo en Ruta Hasta que ocurre. A poco de Cipressa. En (casi) la misma cabeza del pelotón Una curva a izquierdas, un maillot arcoíris que cae. Afilador, parece. Arrastra a otros. A Van Aert (menudo tras coche después, macho, con televisión en directo... esto también juega contra la credibilidad), a Girmay. Tiene, Tadej, el coulotte sucio, roto por las caderas, tiene dolor aunque puede reincorporarse, tiene un reguero sanguinolento recorriendo la pálida piel. No importa, el asunto ha cambiado. Ya no es entrar a tope en Cipressa, sino entrar en el pelotón antes de Cipressa . Mathieu también se corta; Mathieu también debe remontar. Menos, en su caso, y no lleva manchurrones en maillot. Lo hace fácil, porque lleva Van der Poel en que colocación y olfato, déficits suyos cuando joven, tornan aliados para conseguir la victoria. Pero vean ustedes cómo se modifica el asunto en solo un curveurbano... Empalma Tadej en plena subida a Cipressa, y asoma el morro al primer instante. Y tiran los suyos, y todos se estremecen, todos metencoditos, buscan rueda , entienden que es culmen, aunque haya dolor. Muestran, en la tele, velocidad subiendo. 35, 36, 37, hasta 40. Un Pogačar legendario vuelve a dominar el Campeonato del Mundo Marcos Pereda El evento sorprendió por su impecable organización y ambiente vibrante, mientras el esloveno dominó con un ataque lejano, consolidando su estatus legendario en el ciclismo 40 , tú, que los pillo bajando Ubiarco... Momento clave... tres kilómetros a la cima (el último es más suave) y acelera Isaac del Toro. Con un maillot distinto Del Toro podría ser outsider, pero aquí... prepara el despegue de Tadej. Que llega. Donde todos lo piensan, donde todos lo saben. Mueve la bici deforma violenta, como si los pedales fuesen venganzas . Y a su rueda sale Mathieu, y tenemos otra vez el duelo, y está allí, como invitado aparente, Tom Pidcock, que es un mini-van der Poel, un mini-Pogačar, un motor privilegiado, pero más chico, ante auténticos buques de guerra... Ya saben cómo (casi) termina . Tadej Pogačar gana Lombardía en una exhibición total e iguala a Merckx y Coppi Marcos Pereda El ciclista esloveno sumó su quinta victoria consecutiva en el monumento italiano del Giro de Lombardía. Evenepoel terminó segundo y Storer, tercero. Nadie le pudo frenar El resto... En fin, el resto . Más de 20 a meta . Más de 20... Sin llegar arriba vuelve a probar Pogačar. Tras dos relevos (uno de Tom, uno de Mathieu) vuelve a probar Pogačar. Pero casi no hay pendiente , lo cogen fácil, todo lo fácil que se pueden hacer estos asuntos. Va entre ellos tres. Ahora toca remar. Eddy Merckx, leyenda del ciclismo, sobre Pogacar: "No sé si es más fuerte de cabeza o de piernas" El Confidencial Considerado por muchos como el mejor ciclista de la historia gracias a su inmenso palmarés con cinco Tours de Francia, cinco Giros de Italia, una Vuelta a España y 19 victorias en Monumentos Que lo hacen. No es poca cosa jugarse San Remo , y los tres hacen porcolaborar. Relevos francos, sin esconderse. Todo para el Poggio, peroantes lleguemos al Poggio. Esta generación, esta de la que hablémás arriba, también destaca por algo tan sensato, tan lógico, comono esconderse. Antes se rateaban fuerzas y se buscaba sprint, perdiendo con esa táctica muchas victorias. Ahora todos jugamos aljugar de las bicicletas (que no se me enfade el Vizconde). Y se agradece mucho, eh. Así que Il Poggio. La colina sin dureza más legendaria de todo el mundo bicis. Apenas pendiente, asfalto ideal, herraduras donde estos muchachos deben frenarse mogollón (con lo que resulta difícil lo de romper grupos, con lo que resulta difícil descolgar a alguien con la técnica exquisita, la técnica deliciosa, de un van der Poel, por ejemplo), una cabina telefónica devenida en icono que algún concejal sin sentido estético decidió cargarse . Ese Poggio. Y acelerones. Vuelta y revuelta. Pogačar que mete unos metros a Mathieu, Pidcock que aguanta tras el monstruo, que sufre a su rueda,que se muere sobre el manillar . El grupo grande a menos de diez segundos, van der Poel que parece entrar en crisis, que descompone suestampa bella e irrepetible (yo a veces viendo a van der Poel siento... cosas). Ha hecho, Tadej, lo imposible. Ahora solo quedarematar con lo más difícil. Porque Tom Pidcock no cede, Tom Pidcock se aferra. Tom es nueva némesis, Pogačar siempre está. Ni un metroabre. El hombre de los ataques sentado se alza en pie, mueve su bici, descompone gesto. O'Connor gana su etapita en los Alpes del coitus interruptus Marcos Pereda Jornada alpina marcada por la dureza de los puertos y el abandono de favoritos españoles, con Ben O’Connor sorprendiendo tras una etapa caótica y movimientos tácticos inesperados No hay forma. Quedará para la discesa, para el sprint . Y qué sprint. Pidcock es rápido, y se juega su gran día. Pogačares rápido, y se juega su gran obsesión. Se vigilan, pareciera que los pueden coger. Sería injusto, sería un bajón curioso, una pelide Star Wars donde a Darth Vader se lo cepilla Astrako. Nollegan. Llegan. Sprint, sprint agónico, sprint increíble. Sprint con Pidcock que remonta , con las bicis una junto a otra, con el casi tocar de manillares, con el miedo por ver ambos al suelo. Llegan casi (casi) a la vez. Casi. Media rueda. Solo media rueda. No alza los brazos, solo lanza un puño al aire. Solo uno. Se guarda . Un filósofo gana a un nihilista el día en que Enric Mas rozó la gloria en el Tour de Francia Marcos Pereda El ciclista español del Movistar terminó séptimo tras no poder culminar una gran etapa donde se quedó sin gas en los últimos metros. El francés Paret-Peinte se llevó el triunfo Gloria a Tom Pidcock. Leyenda Tadej Pogačar . Desde hoy con expectativas insuperables para la París-Roubaix . Menudo mes y pico nos espera.
El Mundo
Center-Right
Muere un aficionado del Racing tras una violenta discusión con un hincha del Albacete en Santander
Las primeras averiguaciones apuntan a que los hechos se iniciaron en el transcurso de una discusión entre los seguidores de ambos equipos, que se enfrentaron este sábado Leer

Trump amenaza con atacar plantas eléctricas de Irán si no abre el Estrecho de Ormuz en 48 horas
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Un ataque contra un hospital de Sudán deja 64 muertos y 89 heridos
La ofensiva alcanzó el Hospital de Enseñanza El-Daein Leer
El Pais
Center-LeftFrancia vota las alcaldías de sus grandes ciudades en un primer ensayo de las presidenciales de 2027
Francia sale a votar este domingo para decidir quién dirigirá las principales ciudades del país. La segunda vuelta de las elecciones municipales deberá configurar las alcaldías de las tres principales urbes (París, Marsella y Lyon), pero también de municipios cruciales como Toulouse, Toulon, Lille, Niza o Le Havre, donde el ex primer ministro conservador Édouard Philippe se juega también su candidatura a las presidenciales de 2027. Más de 16,8 millones de electores (y ciudadanos de la Unión Europea que residen en Francia) están llamados a las urnas este domingo para la segunda vuelta de las elecciones municipales. Seguir leyendo
Última hora del ataque de Estados Unidos e Israel contra Irán, en directo | Trump amenaza con atacar centrales eléctricas iraníes si el régimen no abre el estrecho de Ormuz en 48 horas
El pesidente de Estados Unidos, Donald Trump, ha amenazado esta madrugada con atacar centrales eléctricas iraníes si el régimen no abre “completamente” el estrecho de Ormuz en menos de 48 horas. En un mensaje en su red social Truth, el mandatario estadounidense ha instado al país pérsico a liberar el paso estratégico “sin amenazas”. Sin embargo, Irán ha respondido con otra amenaza: atacar sitios energéticos estadounidenses. A primera hora de este domingo, el representante iraní ante la Organización Marítima Internacional, Ali Mousavi, ha afirmado que el estrecho de Ormuz permanece abierto a la navegación internacional, excepto para los buques vinculados a “los enemigos de Irán”. En Israel, el ejército iraní ha bombardeado con hasta cinco tandas de misiles la central de Dimona, clave en el programa nuclear israelí, causando al menos 40 heridos. Un vídeo capta cómo el interceptor israelí falla y uno de los proyectiles llega a impactar de lleno y genera una bola de fuego. El Organismo Internacional de Energía Atómica (OIEA) no ha detectado niveles anormales de radiación en la zona. La cuarta semana de la guerra de Irán ha comenzado con nuevos ataques a la capital, Teherán, y un misil lanzado al sur de Tel Aviv. Un impacto en la localidad de Arad deja otros 59 heridos. El ejército israelí asegura haber destruido almacenes de armas de la Guardia Revolucionaria y un taller donde se fabricaban componentes de misiles balísticos. En el océano Índico, el régimen de los ayatolás ha lanzado dos proyectiles contra la base militar conjunta de Estados Unidos y Reino Unido en la isla Diego García, a casi 4.000 kilómetros de distancia, según la agencia iraní Mehr. Seguir leyendo

Este protector solar coreano tiene una fórmula invisible que hidrata como una crema y se siente como si no llevaras nada
Que los protectores solares deben aplicarse durante todo el año es un tema que ya no admite debate. Da igual que el cielo esté nublado o que llueva, es un paso imprescindible en cualquier rutina. Ahora, con la llegada de la primavera y los días soleados, todavía cobra más importancia. Aun así, gran parte de la población sigue teniendo ese sentimiento de odio hacia este tipo de productos por su textura espesa y sensación pesada. Seguir leyendo
FAZ
Center-Right
„Polexit“: Ein EU-Austritt Polens wäre eine Katastrophe – für beide Seiten
Polens Regierungschef Tusk wirft Präsident Nawrocki vor, er wolle das Land aus der EU hinausführen. Der weist das zurück. Aber ist das noch glaubwürdig?

Tod des Actionstars: Warum Chuck Norris beinahe unsterblich ist
Der Kampfkünstler und Actionstar Chuck Norris ist mit 86 Jahren gestorben. Die Meldung will man nicht glauben. Denn nichts kann Chuck Norris etwas anhaben. Und eine Welt ohne Chuck-Norris-Witze ist undenkbar.

Leipziger Buchmesse: Muss man so deutlich werden?
Auf der Leipziger Buchmesse wird darüber nachgedacht, den Kulturstaatsminister auf den Mond zu schießen. Und was passiert sonst noch?
Fox News - World
Center-Right
Churchill, Shakespeare and the UK flag all under siege in modern Britain, commentators say
Over a century ago, Britain was seen as the place to be. It pioneered science, including medicine. It built industries such as railroads, major bridges and created a strong middle class. And despite what some would say, it was the only major empire that abolished slavery and policed the oceans, at its own considerable expense, to make sure other countries didn’t enslave people. And it had the largest Navy in the World. Now, many say that all seems like a distant memory. The latest controversy involves images or statues of some of the United Kingdom’s most lauded people. The face of Winston Churchill, the British Prime Minister during WWII, is being removed from the five-pound note by the Bank of England. The Reform UK leader Nigel Farage called the decision "absolutely crackers," noting the proposal was to replace Churchill and others with a picture of a beaver. STATE DEPARTMENT WARNS UK OVER GROOMING GANG HANDLING: 'UNSPEAKABLE ABUSE' Churchill’s statue in Westminster was vandalized in 2020 and again last month. Churchill led the defense of Britain, which was the only country in Europe that didn’t fall during WWII. "Decades of woke education policy have taught people to deny and decry the history of this country as it is deemed to be oppressive, racist and unfair," Alan Mendoza, founder and executive director of the Henry Jackson Society, told Fox News Digital. He says the teaching labor unions controlled by the hard left have enforced their agenda on generations of pupils. "It is no surprise, therefore, that at least some of their victims have imbibed this philosophy and are acting on it." Statues of British people who lived centuries ago have been targeted to be pulled down and then destroyed. Some of these efforts have been successful. Some have not. William Gladstone, Robert Peel, James Cook, and Francis Drake were targeted for destruction by activists, according to Sky News. These men were, respectively, a reformist prime minister, the founder of the police force, a naval explorer and a privateer. Luckily, their statues remain largely intact. Now William Shakespeare is under attack. Apparently, being white is a bad thing, and some say the Bard was really a black woman. The activist summary is that Shakespeare might be used to advocate white nationalism. These attempts to erase high-achieving Brits from history might appear trivial, Matt Goodwin, a GB News Presenter, wrote on X. "It matters far more than many people realize," he wrote. "Across the Western World, an assortment of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion [DEI] bureaucrats, radical activists, and increasingly compliant public institutions are engaged in a cultural project that seeks to delegitimize our national." It’s not just statues and images that have been targeted. Flying your own country’s flag can get you in trouble. Left-wingers in Britain, such as Labour Party supporters, often view the flying of the United Kingdom’s Union Flag, or England’s George Cross, as racist or anti-immigration. FORMER UK PM DEFENDS TRUMP FOR HIGHLIGHTING 'SHARIA LAW' IN BRITAIN DURING UN SPEECH "So strong has become the voice of DEI and immigrants that any sign of a proud U.K. gets denounced," Ben Habib, founder of the Advance UK political party, told Fox News Digital. "DEI cannot bear strong nations - it wants them set aside so minorities feel at "home". Habib also notes there’s an added complication with the Union and St. George's flags - they both represent Christian Saints. "That is offensive to the growing numbers practicing foreign religions in the U.K.," he told Fox News Digital. Much of this flag-hating began following the invasion of Israel by Hamas, an Iran-backed terrorist organization. The U.K. then witnessed a surge in Palestinian flags flying on public buildings. This upset more than a few British patriots, who then stepped out with the British flags. "We need to start cohering around national stories and symbols, and the flag is the most visual way of doing that," says Colin Brazier, a British culture commentator had previously told Fox News Digital. Planning authorities, usually the local U.K. councils, do not need to grant permission for people to fly either the Union Flag or the George Cross. Other flags are seen as an advertisement. However, spray-painting a George Cross on a building that’s not yours is not allowed. Despite the George Cross being seen as anti-immigrant in the U.K., the historical St. George , who died approximately 1700 years ago, is mentioned in the Koran as a friend of Moses. And some religious scholars suggest he is a servant of God. At the same time, Britain’s economy has slowed to a near total stop under the present center-left Starmer government. The unemployment rate increased to 5.4% in December, up from 3.6% in August 2022, according to data from Trading Economics. The country’s GDP growth has been stuck at 1% or less since the first quarter of 2022. Part of the rush to take up flags may be the disastrous economy in Britain. One outstanding, poorly thought-through government policy came from the Labour Party, which mandated an increase in National Insurance contributions (the U.S. equivalent to FICA) by corporations, undermining any chance of increasing employment, as the jump in costs effectively acted as a tax on employment. Fox News Digital's Michael Saunders contributed to this report.

Dad loses custody of autistic son after fighting sex change, gets support from Elon Musk
A devastated father in Iceland says he was stripped of his parental rights after speaking out against his 11-year-old autistic son 's sex change — a case that has drawn international attention, including from billionaire Elon Musk — as he accuses the courts of prioritizing progressive ideology over a parent’s right to protect their child. Alexandre Rocha, a French national who has lived in Iceland for 25 years, lost custody to the child’s mother in December and told Fox News Digital he believes the judge ruled against him because he questioned the long-term impacts of puberty blockers and hormone therapies. "It should be a crime," Rocha said of the medical interventions. "You are molesting kids, castrating a boy, like in the case of my kid. This shouldn’t happen. This is an ideology that has no place for kids." He argued that his then-10-year-old — whose worldview is shaped by video games like Minecraft and Roblox — could not comprehend the permanent consequences of sex reassignment. ESSAY EXPOSES CRUMBLING MEDICAL CONSENSUS ON YOUTH GENDER SURGERY "Naturally, every kid [after a separation and autism diagnosis] will have a mental challenge," Rocha said. "The transition is a happy place. They do feel validated, they like the attention… To me, the concern is the long-term. Will they still be happy in four years from now, or six years, from having blockers and having more hormones? Is it really fixing what is underlying — the mental challenge or difficulty, whatever they're going through?" Despite his child being diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder just eight months ago, Rocha said the court and medical professionals "slightly passed over" the diagnosis during the trial. He noted that children on the autism spectrum often struggle with feeling "right in their skin" or "wanting to be something else," adding that his child sometimes prefers to be a cat — wearing a tail or cat ears. VIRGINIA MOM PRAISES TRUMP FOR SHINING 'A LIGHT' ON DAUGHTER'S SCHOOL TRANSITION CASE DURING SOTU However, when he raised those concerns in court, Rocha said an Icelandic endocrinologist "totally dismissed" him under oath, guaranteeing the hormone drugs posed "no problem" and refusing to examine underlying mental health factors. Now cut out of the medical decision-making process, Rocha said he fears what treatment his son may be receiving without his knowledge. "It could very well be that he is being treated with hormones and I don’t know anything about it," he said. Rocha added that the child’s mother is pushing a "stronger ideology than ever," saying he had to use advanced artificial intelligence ( AI ) program ChatGPT to understand terms like "deadname," which refers to a person’s birth name before a sex change. DAVID MARCUS: SCOTUS GETS CASE ON TRANSING KIDS RIGHT, DESPITE THREE CLUELESS JUSTICES "I can’t support this kind of speech. This, to me, is diabolical. It’s beyond love," he said. "When you talk about a kid, you can’t talk about death. It just doesn’t make sense to me." Rocha said he was notified in February that the child’s mother formally changed his son’s name to a female name, "meaning his ID will now clearly state he is a girl." The father said he believes the court's ruling was not about his child’s welfare, but rather a coordinated effort to silence dissent. "It is to control parents. It is to control me," he said. "It is to silence me. It is to give all power to this ideology." Rocha’s story has garnered international attention and recently caught Musk’s eye. The Tesla CEO has been outspoken about transgender issues after revealing his son, Xavier, transitioned to a female and now goes by the name Vivian Jenna Wilson. Musk said he was "essentially tricked" into giving consent for Wilson to go on puberty blockers, before he had "any understanding of what was going on." In response to a post about Rocha's story on popular X account @libsoftiktok, Musk said, "The woke mind virus even affects Iceland." Rocha said he was "very surprised and honored" that Musk shared his story. "I think we have a common fight going on," he said. "Because at the end of the day, we’re all parents, no matter the borders or nationalities." Musk did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment. CHLOE COLE ACT AIMED AT BLOCKING MINORS FROM UNDERGOING LIFE-ALTERING TRANSGENDER SURGERIES, GOP LAWMAKER SAYS Beyond politics, Rocha said he misses everyday moments with his son, who he said he hasn't seen since January. "I miss story time at night and cooking together," he said, noting how much he enjoyed sharing 1990s Steven Spielberg movies like "Jurassic Park" with his son. Rocha recently requested daily fines against the child's mother for obstructing his court-ordered visitation rights. The mother denied intentionally blocking the visits, claiming the child refuses to attend because Rocha rejects his transgender identity and does not use his new name, according to court documents. Rocha provided a witness affidavit alleging their last visitation went smoothly and that the child appeared happy and secure in his presence. CHRISTIAN PARENTS LOSE FINAL APPEAL AFTER SWEDISH STATE TOOK DAUGHTERS FOLLOWING FALSE ABUSE CLAIM He recalled a recent visit where his son said he "missed it, to be with grandma and my sister." "When you don’t know what’s happening on the other side, as a parent, you get really worried," Rocha said. "We are slowly drifting apart, and that’s a very sad outcome of this." Despite pressure to stay quiet, Rocha urged other parents to trust their "instincts," speak up and seek professional guidance. "I’m here for my kid and for his future," he said. "That’s the only thing I care about. I am campaigning for him, for his future." The child's mother could not immediately be reached by Fox News Digital for comment.

Trump proven right on Iran's long-range missile capability as regime targets US-UK base, experts say
The Islamic Republic of Iran significantly escalated its war effort against the U.S. with its launch of two intermediate-range ballistic missiles on Friday toward Diego Garcia, a key U.S.-U.K. military base in the Indian Ocean. The targeting of Diego Garcia, roughly 2,500 miles from Iran, means Tehran’s missile capabilities appear to have exceeded previously acknowledged limits. In the period leading up to Operation Epic Fury on Feb. 28, Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi claimed that "We intentionally kept the range of our missiles below 2,000 km so we don’t have that capability. And we don’t want to do that because we do not have hostility against the United States people and all Europeans." TRUMP VOWS TO HIT IRAN 'VERY HARD' AFTER OBLITERATING NEARLY '90 PERCENT' OF REGIME MISSILES On Saturday, Israel Defense Forces IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir said "Just yesterday, Iran launched a two-stage intercontinental ballistic missile with a range of 4,000 kilometers [2,500 miles] toward an American target on the island of Diego Garcia. These missiles were not intended to hit Israel. Their range reaches the capitals of Europe — Berlin, Paris and Rome are all within direct threat range." IDF spokesman Nadav Shoshani blasted the alleged Iranian deception on X: "Just 3 days before the war, the Iranian regime said they don’t obtain long-range missiles. Today, their lies were exposed once again, when missiles were fired 4000km away from Iran. They hoped to lie their way into becoming a force that can terrorize the world. We didn’t buy it." Jason Brodsky, the policy director of United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI), told Fox News Digital, "The Trump administration, in citing Iran's missile threat as a rationale for Operation Epic Fury, was therefore justified in its decision to undertake military action as Iran has consistently refused to negotiate over its missile program. It also shows how dangerous it is to solely rely on Iranian nuclear weapons fatwas and the supreme leader’s public rhetoric in formulating U.S. policy. As long as Iran retains the technical capability beyond public pronouncements, it is a threat." BEFORE-AND-AFTER SATELLITE IMAGERY OFFERS A RARE LOOK AT DAMAGE INSIDE IRAN According to Brodsky, "I think it's a message that the IRGC is in charge in Iran after Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei 's death. When Khamenei was alive, he limited the range of Iran's missile program to 2000 km. Khamenei recounted in 2018 how he had rejected overtures from IRGC commanders seeking to increase the range to as much as 5000 km." He continued, "But now that he has died, those voices in the IRGC seeking to increase the range are likely driving the agenda. The launch of the missiles was likely meant as a signal of the IRGC's capabilities to threaten U.S. allies beyond the Middle East. For example, this threatens Europe." The two long-range Iranian missiles did not hit the base, but the attempted attack marked a significant expansion of Iran’s reach beyond the Middle East and toward a major U.S. strategic hub . One missile reportedly failed in flight, while a U.S. warship launched an SM-3 interceptor at the other, officials said. It was not immediately clear whether the interception was successful. The remote base is a critical launch point for U.S. bombers, nuclear submarines and other strategic assets. Ilan Berman, Vice President of the American Foreign Policy Council in Washington, D.C., told Fox News Digital, "The launch hammers home the president’s point about Iran being an imminent threat . It’s easy for casual observers to ignore, but the increasing maturity of Iran’s strategic programs, plural, has been exponentially expanding the threat that the Islamic Republic poses beyond the Middle East. That is what "Epic Fury" is seeking to address. The administration believes, absolutely correctly in my view, that these types of capabilities cannot be left in the hands of a radical, predatory regime." HEZBOLLAH, IRAN UNLEASH COORDINATED CLUSTER BOMB STRIKES ON ISRAEL IN MAJOR ESCALATION He continued that "Despite its public denials, it’s been clear that the Iranian regime has been working on expanding the range of its ballistic missile capabilities for years. The launch toward Diego Garcia confirms that it has made real progress toward that goal, and is already able to put targets in the same range as Central and Eastern Europe at risk. Moreover, it’s clear that the regime is seeking still greater capabilities – and that, if left intact, Iran’s ballistic missiles would attain intercontinental range soon." Berman, the author of "Iran’s Deadly Ambition: The Islamic Republic’s Quest for Global Power," added, "The parallel development Iran has been carrying out on its space program is significant. The booster used to put payloads into orbit can be married onto a medium-range missile to create intercontinental range capabilities. Before the war, we were seeing a clear convergence of the regime’s strategic programs: its ballistic missile work, its space capabilities and its nuclear program." He warned about the serious Iranian threat to continental Europe. "Europe is absolutely at risk, as the recent launch makes clear. I wouldn’t say that a failure to recognize this to date has been due to a grand deception by Tehran, though. It is more attributable to willful blindness on the part of European elites about the extent of the threat that the Iranian regime poses, as well as undue faith in diplomacy and arms control in containing it," he said. On Saturday, the United Kingdom condemned the attack. "Iran’s reckless attacks, lashing out across the region and holding hostage the Strait of Hormuz, are a threat to British interests and British allies," the U.K. Ministry of Defense said in a statement. "RAF jets and other U.K. military assets are continuing to defend our people and personnel in the region." "This government has given permission to the U.S. to use British bases for specific and limited defensive operations," it added. Fox News Digital's Greg Norman and Jasmine Baehr contributed to this report.
France Info
Center
Télétravailler, rouler moins vite, cuisiner à l'électricité... Quelles sont les recommandations pour réduire la consommation de carburants ?
Face à la flambée des prix provoquée par la guerre au Moyen-Orient, l'Agence internationale de l'énergie a publié vendredi ses préconisations à l'attention des gouvernements, mais également des particuliers et des entreprises.

Municipales 2026 : le taux de participation au 2d tour atteint 20,33% à midi, bien supérieur à 2020 pendant le Covid-19, et en très légère hausse par rapport à 2014
Il y a six ans, le second tour s'était tenu fin juin, près de deux mois après le premier confinement et plus de trois mois après le premier tour. La participation s'élevait alors à 15,29% à la mi-journée.

Portes blindées, surveillance vidéo, protection des données : comment les réseaux d'eau de Paris ont été sécurisés au maximum
À l'occasion de la journée mondiale de l'eau, visite du site ultra-protégé qui gère les réseaux d'eau potable et non potable de la capitale.
La Vanguardia
Center
Despídete del vello corporal: las mejores recortadoras de Braun y Philips ahora tienen unos descuentos de hasta el 46%
Aunque aún no vaya a la piscina ni a la playa, me voy depilando de vez en cuando. No me gusta tener vello corporal, por eso, en todas las épocas del año lo elimino por mucho que no se vea. Para conseguir un resultado excelente, tanto mis amigos como yo optamos por las mejores recortadoras del mercado: las de Philips y las de Braun. Seguir leyendo...

El príncipe Guillermo no es devoto, pero cree en la Iglesia de Inglaterra
El príncipe Guillermo, heredero de la corona británica, ha despejado dudas sobre su fe cristiana y ha revelado, a través de una fuente cercana, que no es devoto, pero cree en la Iglesia de Inglaterra, está comprometida con ella y la apoyará cuando sea rey. Seguir leyendo...

Kevin Durant supera los 32.292 puntos de Michael Jordan en la NBA
Noche histórica para Kevin Durant. El alero de 37 años se ha convertido en el quinto máximo anotador de la NBA, al superar los 32.292 puntos de Michael Jordan. Seguir leyendo...
Le Figaro
Center-Right
EN DIRECT - Lyon-Monaco : les Lyonnais trouvent la faille en fin de première période
Entre des Lyonnais dans le dur et des Monégasques le vent en poupe, il sera question de lutte pour s’accrocher au podium ce dimanche.

Donald Trump va déployer la police de l’immigration dans les aéroports américains dès lundi
À cause d’un «shutdown partiel», des milliers de salariés de l’Agence de sécurité dans les transports (TSA) ne sont plus entièrement payés.

«Près de 400% d’augmentation»: revalorisation salariale historique pour les basketteuses professionnelles américaines
En moyenne donc, le salaire des joueuses passera de 120.000 à 583.000 dollars annuels, jusqu’à 1 million de dollars en 2032, le minimum passant lui de 66.000 à 270.000 dollars annuels dès en 2026.
Le Monde
Center-LeftBruxelles commémore, avec toute la Belgique, les dix ans des attentats djihadistes de mars 2016
« Les responsables de notre sécurité ont le devoir de tirer les leçons du passé », a écrit le premier ministre Bart De Wever. La menace terroriste est maintenue au niveau 3 sur 4 dans le pays et jugée « grave » depuis un attentat perpétré en octobre 2023 à Bruxelles.

Le premier ministre belge appelle l’Europe à répliquer à la Chine « qui dévaste notre économie »
Dans un courrier envoyé à la Commission européenne, Bart De Wever demande un renforcement des moyens d’enquête sur les pratiques commerciales de la Chine et une action concertée des Etats membres afin d’éviter des accords bilatéraux fragmentés.

Une bombe à retardement économique en Inde : plus de la moitié des jeunes diplômés sont au chômage
Cette proportion est quatre fois supérieure à celle des autres tranches d’âge, souligne une étude parue le 18 mars. La croissance du pays ne permet pas d’absorber les millions de moins de 25 ans entrant sur le marché du travail chaque année.
Liberation
Center-LeftLettre à la «France libre», futur porte-avions français, par Luc Le Vaillant
Missive au prochain navire amiral d’une nation obligée d’envoyer par le fond son rêve de paix perpétuelle.
Pour pouvoir alimenter Bamako en carburant, la junte malienne libère des jihadistes présumés
Le régime malien aurait relâché une centaine de prisonniers en échange d’une trêve dans les attaques de camions-citernes par les jihadistes.
Rencontre avec la Japonaise Ichiko Aoba : «Avec ces chansons ancestrales, je deviens une transmettrice»
En concert vendredi 27 mars à Paris, la star rêveuse de la folk nipponne, propulsée par les plateformes de streaming lors du Covid, se nourrit de la musique traditionnelle de petits archipels.
ProPublica
Center-Left
The Number of Families Being Held at Dilley Detention Center Has Plummeted
The number of parents and children booked into the country’s only immigrant family detention center, in Dilley, Texas, plummeted in February by more than 75% compared with a month earlier, according to Immigration and Customs Enforcement data obtained by ProPublica. Between April 2025, when President Donald Trump started sending families there, and January of this year, the number of people sent into detention with their families averaged around 600 per month. In February, those so-called books-ins fell to 133. As of mid-March, they dropped again to just 54. This week there were only around 100 people in family detention at Dilley, compared with an average daily population in January of over 900, the data shows. Current and former ICE officials and lawyers with clients in Dilley said they were unable to explain the reason for the sharp decline. However, they said the shift followed weeks of mounting public pressure generated in part by the widespread publication of letters written by several of the detained children in which they described the conditions inside Dilley and their despair at being ripped from their homes and schools. ProPublica published several of those letters on Feb. 9 after visiting the facility — about an hour south of San Antonio — in mid-January. The letters set off a storm of outrage in Washington and across the country. They were raised in congressional hearings and pasted on posters in anti-ICE demonstrations. Rep. James Walkinshaw, a Democrat from Virginia , read the letters aloud to ICE’s acting director, Todd Lyons, during a congressional hearing on Feb. 10, pressing him for answers about whether the children’s detention could cause adverse psychological effects. He pointed to one drawing by a 5-year-old Venezuelan girl named Luisanney Toloza of her family. “My son’s 5. He can’t write many words, but he can communicate through drawings like this,” Walkinshaw said, making special note of the expressions on the family’s faces. “None of the faces are smiling.” It was another 5-year-old who first triggered public attention to children being detained at Dilley. Liam Conejo Ramos was picked up on Jan. 20 in Minnesota and sent to the facility with his father. A photograph of him at the time of his detention, wearing a blue bunny hat, went viral. Detainees, emboldened by the attention, organized a protest in a yard at the facility that was captured in an aerial photograph and widely published on social media. Lawmakers demanded multiple visits to push for the release of Ramos and others. Nearly 4,000 doctors, nurses and health professionals sent a letter to the Trump administration calling for the immediate release of all children currently in immigration detention. This month, social media personality Rachel Accurso, an educator better known as Ms. Rachel, who makes popular children’s programming, posted a video conversation with one of the kids detained at Dilley to her 4.9 million Instagram followers, garnering more than 3,700 comments. Rep. Joaquin Castro, a Democrat from Texas, has been at the forefront of a push by legislators from his party to shut down Dilley and for the administration to find alternatives to family detentions. When told about the drop in the number of families being held at Dilley, he said, “That trailer prison is no place for children, and I’m glad to hear that the numbers continue to decline,” adding, “It’s a reminder that people can make a difference by speaking up.” The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE, said in a statement that custody decisions are made “daily, on a case-by-case basis,” adding that the “administration does not make immigration decisions based on public opinion. We follow the rule of law.” In the past, the agency has said that Dilley offers families a safe environment equipped with access to educational materials, child care necessities and round-the-clock medical and mental health care. Meanwhile, CoreCivic, the private prison company operating the facility, said in a statement it does not have “any say whatsoever” in whether detainees are deported or released.” In previous statements, it has said that the health and safety of detainees is its “top priority.” Dilley first opened as a family detention facility under former President Barack Obama in 2014, mostly for recent border crossers. Trump kept the facility running during his first term, but President Joe Biden stopped holding families in 2021, arguing the United States shouldn’t be in the business of detaining children. Soon after taking office a second time, Trump resumed family detentions at Dilley. As border crossings have dropped to record lows, more of the families being held there have been arrested inside the United States and have been in the country long enough to lay down roots and build networks of relatives and friends. The children detained there have ranged in age from newborns to older teenagers. The vast majority of adults held at Dilley had no U.S. criminal record. Following the protests and the publication of children’s letters, detainees and attorneys interviewed by ProPublica said guards took away crayons, colored pencils and drawing paper during recent room searches. This week, ProPublica learned the facility had cut off access to video calls in common areas. The Trump administration said in a recent court filing that personal property had not been destroyed at Dilley and items confiscated during searches were “limited to materials identified as protest-related and not authorized under facility rules.” CoreCivic “vehemently” denied staff confiscated or destroyed children’s personal artwork or supplies. DHS said the restrictions were put in place on video calls following the livestreaming of recorded calls online “that resulted in the unauthorized dissemination of law enforcement sensitive information.” The agency added the video calls are still available in private rooms, as is access to in-person visitation and phones. While a long-standing legal settlement, known as the Flores agreement, holds that children should generally not be detained for more than 20 days, the data ProPublica obtained showed the average days in custody was longer than that for every month since family detentions resumed at the facility last year. In each month between November and February, the average stay in family detention was over 50 days. DHS has said in the past that the Flores agreement, in place since the 1990s, is outdated and should be terminated because newer regulations address the needs of children in detention. One Egyptian family, Hayam El Gamal and her five children ranging in age from 18 to 5-year-old twins , has been at Dilley for nine months. They were taken into custody after the father, Mohamed Soliman, was charged over an alleged antisemitic attack in Boulder, Colorado, that killed one person and injured 13 others. The family said it had no knowledge of his plans. DHS said it is still investigating. One 13-year-old Guatemalan boy named Edison was released from Dilley with his mom this week. During his 92-day detention, Edison had cried in video calls to his father back in Chicago, saying he felt like he was being treated like a criminal. (His father asked that his son’s last name not be used.) Then in the early hours of Wednesday morning, a guard came to their bunk room and told him and his mom to start packing their belongings. By that night, they were on a plane to Chicago to be reunited with Edison’s dad. “We don’t understand why they were released,” his dad said. “All I can tell you is it was a miracle from God.” As soon as they landed, the family went home to enjoy a seafood dinner, one of Edison’s favorites. The post The Number of Families Being Held at Dilley Detention Center Has Plummeted appeared first on ProPublica .

DOGE Goes Nuclear: How Trump Invited Silicon Valley Into America’s Nuclear Power Regulator
Last summer, a group of officials from the Department of Energy gathered at the Idaho National Laboratory, a sprawling 890-square-mile complex in the eastern desert of Idaho where the U.S. government built its first rudimentary nuclear power plant in 1951 and continues to test cutting-edge technology. On the agenda that day: the future of nuclear energy in the Trump era. The meeting was convened by 31-year-old lawyer Seth Cohen. Just five years out of law school, Cohen brought no significant experience in nuclear law or policy; he had just entered government through Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency team. As Cohen led the group through a technical conversation about licensing nuclear reactor designs, he repeatedly downplayed health and safety concerns. When staff brought up the topic of radiation exposure from nuclear test sites, Cohen broke in. “They are testing in Utah. … I don’t know, like 70 people live there,” he said. “But … there’s lots of babies,” one staffer pushed back. Babies, pregnant women and other vulnerable groups are thought to be potentially more susceptible to cancers brought on by low-level radiation exposure, and they are usually afforded greater protections. “They’ve been downwind before,” another staffer joked. “This is why we don’t use AI transcription in meetings,” another added. ProPublica reviewed records of that meeting, providing a rare look at a dramatic shift underway in one of the most sensitive domains of public policy. The Trump administration is upending the way nuclear energy is regulated, driven by a desire to dramatically increase the amount of energy available to power artificial intelligence. Career experts have been forced out and thousands of pages of regulations are being rewritten at a sprint. A new generation of nuclear energy companies — flush with Silicon Valley cash and boasting strong political connections — wield increasing influence over policy. Figures like Cohen are forcing a “move fast and break things” Silicon Valley ethos on one of the country’s most important regulators. The Trump administration has been particularly aggressive in its attacks on the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the bipartisan independent regulator that approves commercial nuclear power plants and monitors their safety. The agency is not a household name. But it’s considered the international gold standard, often influencing safety rules around the world. The NRC has critics, especially in Silicon Valley, where the often-cautious commission is portrayed as an impediment to innovation. In an early salvo, President Donald Trump fired NRC Commissioner Christopher Hanson last June after Hanson spoke out about the importance of agency independence. It was the first time an NRC commissioner had been fired. During that Idaho meeting, Cohen shot down any notion of NRC independence in the new era. “Assume the NRC is going to do whatever we tell the NRC to do,” he said, records reviewed by ProPublica show. In November, Cohen was made chief counsel for nuclear policy at the Department of Energy, where he oversees a broad nuclear portfolio. Hundreds of Staff Who Do Work Related to Nuclear Reactors and Their Safety Have Left and Not Been Replaced Source: Weekly Information Reports from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Note: The data is from the week ending Jan. 24, 2025, through Feb. 13, 2026. The aggressive moves have sent shock waves through the nuclear energy world. Many longtime promoters of the industry say they worry recklessness from the Trump administration could discredit responsible nuclear energy initiatives. “The regulator is no longer an independent regulator — we do not know whose interests it is serving,” warned Allison Macfarlane, who served as NRC chair during the Obama administration. “The safety culture is under threat.” A ProPublica analysis of staffing data from the NRC and the Office of Personnel Management shows a rush to the exits: Over 400 people have left the agency since Trump took office. The losses are particularly pronounced in the teams that handle reactor and nuclear materials safety and among veteran staffers with 10 or more years of experience. Meanwhile, hiring of new staff has proceeded at a snail’s pace, with nearly 60 new arrivals in the first year of the Trump administration compared with nearly 350 in the last year of the Biden administration. Some nuclear power supporters say the administration is providing a needed level of urgency given the energy demands of AI. They also contend the sweeping changes underway aren’t as dangerous or dire as some experts suggest. “I think the NRC has been frozen in time,” said Brett Rampal, the senior director of nuclear and power strategy at the investment and strategy consultancy Veriten. “It’s a great time to get unfrozen and aim to work quickly.” The White House referred most of ProPublica’s questions to the Department of Energy, where spokesperson Olivia Tinari said the agency is committed to helping build more safe, high-quality nuclear energy facilities. “Thanks to President Trump’s leadership, America’s nuclear industry is entering a new era that will provide reliable, abundant power for generations to come,” she wrote. The DOE is “committed to the highest standards of safety for American workers and communities.” Cohen did not respond to multiple requests for comment. The NRC declined to comment. Blindsided by DOGE The U.S. has not had a serious nuclear incident since the Three Mile Island partial meltdown in 1979, a track record many experts attribute to a rigorous regulatory environment and an intense safety culture. Major nuclear incidents around the world have only strengthened the resolve of past regulators to stay independent from industry and from political winds. A chief cause of Japan’s Fukushima accident, investigators found, was the cozy relationship between the country’s industry and oversight body, which opened the door for thin safety assessments and inaccurate projections overlooking the possible impact of a major tsunami. “We knew regulatory capture led directly to Fukushima and to Chernobyl,” said Kathryn Huff, who was assistant secretary for the Office of Nuclear Energy during the Biden administration. The U.S. has not had a serious nuclear incident since the Three Mile Island partial meltdown in 1979. Leif Skoogfors/Getty Images The U.S. has barely built any nuclear power plants in recent decades. Only three new reactors have been completed in the last 25 years, and since 1990 the U.S has barely added any net new nuclear electricity to its grid. Though about 20% of U.S. energy is supplied by nuclear power plants, the fleet is aging. Some experts blame the slow build-out on the challenging economics of financing a multibillion-dollar project and the uncertainty of accessing and disposing of nuclear fuels. But an increasingly vocal group of industry voices and deregulation advocates have blamed the slow build-out on overly cautious and inefficient regulators. Among the most powerful exponents of this view are billionaires Peter Thiel and Marc Andreessen; both venture capitalists have their own investments in the nuclear energy sector and are influential Trump supporters. Andreessen camped out at Mar-a-Lago, Trump’s private club in Florida, after Trump won the 2024 election, helping pick staff for the new administration. In late 2024, Thiel personally vetted at least one candidate for the Office of Nuclear Energy, according to people familiar with the conversations. Neither responded to requests for comment. Four months into his second term, Trump signed a series of executive orders designed to supercharge nuclear power build-out. “It’s a hot industry, it’s a brilliant industry,” said Trump, flanked by nuclear energy CEOs in the Oval Office. He added: “And it’s become very safe.” Under those orders, the NRC was directed to reduce its workforce, speed up the timeline for approving nuclear reactors and rewrite many of its safety rules. The DOE — which has a vast nuclear portfolio, including waste cleanup sites and government research labs — was tasked with creating a pathway for so-called advanced nuclear companies to test their designs. The goal, Trump said, was to quadruple nuclear energy output and provide new power to the data centers behind the AI boom. As DOGE gutted agencies , departures mounted in the nuclear sector. Career experts in nuclear regulations and safety departed or were forced out. When Trump fired Hanson, a Democratic NRC commissioner, the president’s team explained the move by saying, “All organizations are more effective when leaders are rowing in the same direction.” In an unsigned email to ProPublica, the White House press office wrote: “All commissioners are presidential appointees and can be fired just like any other appointee.” In August, the NRC’s top attorney resigned and was replaced by oil and gas lawyer David Taggart, who had been working on DOGE cuts at the DOE. In all, the nuclear office at the DOE had lost about a third of its staff, according to a January 2026 count by the Federation of American Scientists, a nonprofit focused on science and technology policy. That summer, Cohen and a team of DOGE operatives touched down at the NRC offices, a series of nondescript towers across from a Dunkin’ in suburban Maryland. He was joined by Adam Blake, an investor who had recently founded an AI medical startup and has a background in real estate and solar energy, and Ankur Bansal, president of a company that created software for real estate agents. Neither would comment for this story. Many career officials who spoke with ProPublica were blindsided: The new Trump officials at the NRC seemed to have no experience with the intricacies of nuclear energy policy or law, they said. One NRC lawyer who briefed some of the new arrivals decided to resign. “They were talking about quickly approving all these new reactors, and they didn’t seem to care that much about the rules — they wanted to carry out the wishes of the White House,” the official said. At one point, Cohen began passing out hats from nuclear energy startup Valar Atomics, one of the companies vying to build a new reactor, according to sources familiar with the matter and records seen by ProPublica. NRC staffers balked; they were supposed to monitor companies like Valar for safety violations, not wear its swag. NRC ethics officials warned Cohen that the hat handout was a likely violation of conflict rules. It betrayed a misunderstanding of the safety regulator’s role, said a former official familiar with the exchange. “Imagine you live near a nuclear power plant, and you find out a supposedly independent safety regulator — the watchdog — is going around wearing the power plant’s branded hats,” the official said. “Would that make you feel safe?” The NRC and Cohen did not respond to requests for comment about the hat incident. Valar counts Trump’s Silicon Valley allies as angel investors. They include Palmer Luckey, a technology executive and founder of the defense contractor Anduril, and Shyam Sankar, chief technology officer of Palantir, the software company helping power Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s deportation raids. It was among three nuclear reactor companies that sued the NRC last year in an attempt to strip it of its authority to regulate its reactors and replace it with a state-level regulator. Before the Trump administration came into office, lawyers watching the case were confident the courts would quickly dismiss the suit, as the NRC’s authority to regulate reactors is widely acknowledged. But new Trump appointees pushed for a compromise settlement — which is still being negotiated. The career NRC lawyer working on the case quietly left the agency. Valar and its executives did not reply to requests for comment. “Going So Fast” The deregulatory push is the culmination of mounting pressure — both political and economic — to make it easier to build nuclear power in the U.S. Over the years, a bipartisan coalition supporting nuclear expansion brought together environmentalists who favor zero-carbon power and defense hawks focused on abundant domestic energy production. Anti-nuclear activists still argue that renewable energy like wind and solar are safer and more economical. But streamlining the NRC has been a bipartisan priority as well. The latest major reform came in 2024, when President Joe Biden signed into law the ADVANCE Act, which went as far as changing the mission statement of the NRC to ensure it “does not unnecessarily limit” nuclear energy development. Some nuclear power supporters say the Trump administration is merely accelerating these changes. They cite instances in which the current regulations appear out of sync with the times. The NRC’s byzantine rules are designed for so-called large light-water reactors — massive facilities that can power entire cities — and not the increasingly in vogue smaller advanced reactor designs popular among Silicon Valley-backed firms. Rules that require fences of certain heights might make little sense for new reactors buried in the earth; and rules that require a certain number of operators per reactor could be a bad fit for a cluster of smaller reactors with modern controls. Advances in sensors, modeling and safety technologies, they say, should be taken into account across the board. The NRC has said it expects over two dozen new license requests from small modular and advanced reactor companies in coming years. Many of those requests are likely to come from new, Silicon Valley-based nuclear firms. “There was a missing link in the innovation cycle, and it was very difficult to build something and test it in the U.S. because of mostly licensing and site availability constraints in the past,” said Adam Stein of the pro-nuclear nonprofit Breakthrough Institute. The regulatory changes are in flux: This spring, the NRC is starting to release thousands of pages of new rules governing everything from the safety and emergency preparedness plans reactor companies are required to submit to the procedures for objecting to a reactor license. “It’s hard to know if they are getting rid of unnecessary processes or if it’s actually reducing public safety,” said one official working on reactor licensing, who, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation from the Trump administration. “And that’s just the problem with going so fast — everything just kind of gets lost in a mush.” Lawyers from the Executive Office of the President have been sent to the NRC to keep an eye on the new rules, a move that further raised alarms about the agency’s independence. Nicholas Gallagher — a relatively recent New York University law school graduate and conservative writer whom ProPublica previously identified as a DOGE operative at the General Services Administration — has been involved in conversations about overhauling environmental rules. He’s working alongside Sydney Volanski, a 30-year-old recent law school graduate who rose to national attention while she was in high school for her campaign against the Girl Scouts of America, which she accused of promoting “Marxists, socialists and advocates of same-sex lifestyle.” NRC lawyers working on the rules were told last October that Gallagher and Volanski would be joining them, and they both appear on the regular NRC rulemaking calendar invite. The White House maintains, however, that “zero lawyers from the Executive Office of the President have been dispatched to work on rulemaking.” Neither Gallagher nor Volanski replied to requests for comment. The administration is routing the new rules through an office overseen by Trump’s cost-cutting guru Russell Vought, a move that was previously unheard of for an independent regulator like the NRC. The White House spokesperson noted that, under a recent executive order, this process is now required for all agencies. Political operatives have been “inserted into the senior leadership team to the point where they could significantly influence decision-making,” said Scott Morris, who worked at the NRC for more than 32 years, most recently as the No. 2 career operations official. “I just think that would be a dangerous proposition.” Morris voted for Trump twice and broadly supports the goals of deregulating and expanding nuclear energy, but he has begun speaking out against the administration’s interference at the NRC. He retired in May 2025 as part of a wave of retirements and firings. At a recent hearing before the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board — an independent body that helps adjudicate nuclear licensing — NRC lawyers withdrew from the proceedings, citing “limited resources.” The judge remarked that it was the first time in over 20 years the NRC had done so. Meanwhile, some staff members, other career officials say, are afraid to voice dissenting views for fear of being fired. “It feels like being a lobster in a slowly boiling pot,” one NRC official who has been working on the rule changes told ProPublica, describing the erosion of independence. The official was one of three who compared their recent experience at NRC to being in a pot of slowly boiling water. “If somebody is raising something that they think that the industry or the White House would have a problem with, they think twice,” the official said. Inside the NRC, the steering committee overseeing the changes includes Cohen, Taggart and Mike King, a career NRC official who is the newly installed executive director for operations. The former director, Mirela Gavrilas, a 21-year veteran of the agency, retired after getting boxed out of decision-making, according to a person familiar with her departure. Gavrilas did not respond to a request for comment. Any final changes will be approved by the NRC’s five commissioners, three of whom are Republicans. In September, the two Democratic commissioners told a Senate committee they might be fired at any time if they get crosswise with Trump — including over revisions to safety rules . Draft rules being circulated inside the NRC propose drastic rollbacks of security and safety inspections at nuclear facilities. Those include a proposed 56% cut in emergency preparedness inspection time, CNN reported in March. Even some pro-nuclear groups are troubled by the emerging order. Some have tried to backchannel to their contacts in the Trump administration to explain the importance of an independent regulator to help maintain public support for nuclear power. Without it, they risk losing credibility. “You have to make sure you don’t throw out the baby with the bathwater,” said Judi Greenwald, president and CEO of the Nuclear Innovation Alliance, a nonprofit that promotes nuclear energy and supports many of the regulatory changes being proposed by the Trump administration. Greenwald’s group favors faster timelines for approving nuclear reactors, but she worries that the agency’s fundamental independence has been undermined. “We would prefer that they yield back more of NRC independence,” she said. The Vogtle nuclear power plant in Waynesboro, Georgia, is the largest nuclear power station in the U.S. Kendrick Brinson/The New York Times/Redux “Nuke Bros” in Silicon Valley One Trump administration priority has been making it easier for so-called advanced reactor companies to navigate the regulatory process. These firms, mostly backed by Silicon Valley tech and venture money, are often working on designs for much smaller reactors that they hope to mass produce in factories. “There are two nuclear industries,” said Macfarlane, the former NRC chair. “There are the actual people who use nuclear reactors to produce power and put it on the grid … and then there are the ‘nuke bros’” in Silicon Valley. Trump’s Silicon Valley allies have loomed large over his nuclear policy. One prospective political appointee for a top DOE nuclear job got a Christmas Eve call from Thiel, the rare Silicon Valley leader to back Trump in 2016. Thiel, whose Founders Fund invested in a nuclear fuel startup and an advanced reactor company, quizzed the would-be official about deregulation and how to rapidly build more nuclear energy capacity, said sources familiar with the conversation. Nuclear energy startups jockeyed to spend time at Mar-a-Lago in the months before the start of Trump’s second term. Balerion Space Ventures, a venture capital firm that has invested in multiple companies, convened an investor summit there in January 2025, according to an invitation viewed by ProPublica. Balerion did not reply to a request for comment. A few months later, when Trump was drawing up the executive orders, leaders at many of those nuclear companies were given advanced access to drafts of the text — and the opportunity to provide suggested edits, documents viewed by ProPublica show. Those orders created a new program to test out experimental reactor designs, addressing a common complaint that companies are not given opportunities to experiment. There are currently about a dozen advanced reactor companies planning to participate. Each has a concierge team within the DOE to help navigate bureaucracy. As NPR reported in January , the DOE quietly overhauled a series of safety rules that would apply to these new reactors and shared the new regulations with these companies before making them public. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright — who served on the board of one of those companies, Oklo — has said fast nuclear build-out is a priority: “We are moving as quickly as we can to permit, build and enable the rapid construction of as much nuke capacity as possible,” he told CNBC last fall. Oklo noted that Wright stepped down from the board when he was confirmed. The Trump administration hopes some of the companies would have their reactors “go critical” — a key first step on the way to building a functioning power plant — by July 2026. Then the NRC, which signs off on the safety designs of commercial nuclear power plants, could be expected to quickly OK these new reactors to get to market. According to people familiar with the conversations, at least one nuclear energy startup CEO personally recruited potential members of the DOGE nuclear team, though it’s not clear if Cohen was brought aboard this way. Cohen has told colleagues and industry contacts that he reports to Emily Underwood, one of Trump adviser Stephen Miller’s top aides for economic policy. He is perceived inside government as a key avatar of the White House’s nuclear agenda. In its email to ProPublica, the White House said, “Seth Cohen is a Department of Energy employee and does not report to Emily Underwood or Stephen Miller in any capacity.” The DOE spokesperson added, “Seth’s role at the Department of Energy is to support the Trump administration’s mission to unleash American Energy Dominance.” Cohen has been pushing to raise the legal limit of radiation that nuclear energy companies are allowed to emit from their facilities. One nuclear industry insider, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said many firms are fixating on changing these radiation rules: Their business model requires moving nuclear reactors around the country, often near workers or the general public. Building thick, expensive shielding walls can be prohibitively expensive, they said. Valar CEO Isaiah Taylor has called limits on exposure to radiation a top barrier to industry growth. A recent DOE memo seen by ProPublica cites cost savings on shielding for Valar’s reactor to justify changing those limits. “Shielding-related cost reductions,” the memo said, “could range from $1-2 million per reactor.” The debate over the precise rule change is ongoing. The DOE has been considering a fivefold increase to the limit for public exposure to radiation, which will allow some nuclear reactor companies to cut costs on these expensive safety shields, internal DOE documents seen by ProPublica show. A presentation prepared by DOE staffers in their Idaho offices that has circulated inside the department makes the “business case” for changing the radiation dose rules: It could cut the cost of some new reactors by as much as 5%. These more relaxed standards are likely to be adopted by the NRC and apply to reactors nationwide, documents show. In February, Wright accompanied Valar’s executive team on a first-of-its-kind flight, as a U.S. military plane was conscripted to fly the company’s reactor from Los Angeles to Utah. Valar does not yet have a working nuclear reactor, and a number of industry sources told ProPublica they viewed the airlift as a PR exercise. Internal government memos justified the airlift by designating it as “critical” to the U.S. “national security interests.” Cohen posted smiling pictures of himself from the cargo bay of the military plane. Cohen told an audience at the American Nuclear Society that the rapid build-out was essential to powering Silicon Valley’s AI data centers. He framed the policy in existential terms: “I can’t emphasize this strongly enough that losing the AI war is an outcome akin to the Nazis developing the bomb before the United States.” As it deliberated rule changes, the DOE has cut out its internal team of health experts who work on radiation safety at the Office of Environment, Health, Safety and Security, said sources familiar with the decision. The advice of outside experts on radiation protection has been largely cast aside. The DOE spokesperson said its radiation standards “are aligned with Gold Standard Science … with a focus on protecting people and the environment while avoiding unnecessary bureaucracy.” The department has already decided to abandon the long-standing radiation protection principle known as “ALARA” — the “As Low As Reasonably Achievable” standard — which directs anyone dealing with radioactive materials to minimize exposure. It often pushes exposure well below legal thresholds. Many experts agreed that the ALARA principle was sometimes applied too strictly, but the move to entirely throw it out was opposed by many prominent radiation health experts. Whether the agencies will actually change the legal thresholds for radiation exposure is an open question, said sources familiar with the deliberations. Internal DOE documents arguing for changing dose rules cite a report produced at the Idaho National Laboratory, which was compiled with the help of the AI assistant Claude. “It’s really strange,” said Kathryn Higley, president of the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements, a congressionally chartered group studying radiation safety. “They fundamentally mistake the science.” John Wagner, the head of the Idaho National Laboratory and the report’s lead author, acknowledged to ProPublica that the science over changing radiation exposure rules is hotly contested. “We recognize that respected experts interpret aspects of this literature differently,” he wrote. His analysis was not meant to be the final word, he said, but was “intended to inform debate.” The impact of radiation levels at very low doses is hard to measure, so the U.S. has historically struck a cautious note. Raising dose limits could put the U.S. out of step with international standards. For his part, Cohen has told the nuclear industry that he sees his job as making sure the government “is no longer a barrier” to them. In June, he shot down the notion of companies putting money into a fund for workplace accidents. “Put yourself in the shoes of one of these startups,” he said. “They’re raising hundreds of millions of dollars to do this. And then they would have to go to their VCs and their board and say, listen, guys, we actually need a few hundred million dollars more to put into a trust fund?” He also suggested that regulators should not fret about preparing for so-called 100-year events — disasters that have roughly a 1% chance of taking place but can be catastrophic for nuclear facilities. “When SpaceX started building rockets, they sort of expected the first ones to blow up,” he said. The post DOGE Goes Nuclear: How Trump Invited Silicon Valley Into America’s Nuclear Power Regulator appeared first on ProPublica .

As Trump Demands Voter Data, This Fiercely Independent Red State Says No
States were on notice from the U.S. Department of Justice that if they didn’t fall in line, the federal government would force them into compliance. It wasn’t President Donald Trump’s administration applying pressure. It was the early 1990s, and President Bill Clinton had signed the “motor voter” law requiring states to offer voter registration when someone applies for a driver’s license. Idaho, with its fiercely independent streak, didn’t want to participate. So instead of going along with the federal government’s new National Voter Registration Act, state legislators followed the recommendation of Idaho’s top election officials and scrambled for a way out. Because the federal voter law said states with same-day voter registration could be exempt, Idaho lawmakers passed a bill almost unanimously, with full support from Republicans, to adopt same-day registration. Idaho’s chief deputy secretary of state at the time, Ben Ysursa, described the move as an almost existential response to “an insidious federal intrusion into state election procedures.” The Clinton Justice Department eventually sued three states for not complying with its demands. By then, Idaho’s had a shield against litigation due to its exemption. Three decades later, the exemption and the philosophy that led to it are at the heart of Idaho’s refusal to comply with a very different demand by the Trump Justice Department. The state’s top election official cites the exemption as one reason he will not sign a deal to give the Trump administration all the voter data his office holds, including sensitive personal information like partial Social Security and driver’s license numbers. Idaho Secretary of State Phil McGrane is one of about a dozen Republicans nationally to resist the administration’s efforts to gather sensitive voter data ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, in the face of litigation threats from the Justice Department. In a state that Trump won in 2024 by one of the largest margins in the country, an effort that the administration touts as essential to weeding out noncitizen voters has tested the limits of what a committed Trump stronghold will tolerate when it comes to privacy and federal power. Lists of voter addresses and party affiliations are often available to the public through an open records request. McGrane provided the government with this version. But state election administrators also keep more sensitive information such as a person’s exact date of birth and partial Social Security number. In Idaho, the law says this information can’t be given out — and that’s what the Trump administration is still after. Among the other five states exempt from the law , three have refused to give up their voters’ sensitive information and have since been sued by the Justice Department. Wyoming handed over its data without a lawsuit. Other states that are not exempt have also been sued. McGrane, who is an attorney, told the Justice Department in letters that he doesn’t see any legal reason why he should honor the government’s request — and that, given the administration’s recent admissions over its handling of sensitive data, he couldn’t be sure the department would keep it safe, which is his duty under state law. The trimmed-down version of voter info he’d already handed over should be enough for “any legitimate inquiry” by the government into how effectively Idaho maintains its voter lists, McCrane wrote. Through a spokesperson, McGrane declined an interview request from ProPublica, citing the possibility of an impending lawsuit from the Justice Department. A spokesperson for the Justice Department also declined to comment. Idaho’s Republican secretary of state, Phil McGrane, is one of about a dozen Republicans nationally to resist the administration’s efforts to gather sensitive voter data ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. Kyle Green/AP Photo A Justice Department attorney threatened to sue Idaho in December, in a halting voicemail with McGrane’s office that was obtained by ProPublica and previously reported on by the Idaho Capital Sun . “I need to get some clarification as to what you’re going to be doing. Or not doing. So, again, I need a response from you,” the lawyer says in the recording. “You may have seen in the news that we have sued six states earlier this week for refusing to provide their voter registration lists, and we’re preparing additional lawsuits.” The lawyer then tells the secretary of state’s office he would “like to keep everyone out of that as possible — as much as possible, but I haven’t heard anything back from you.” Ysursa, who served three terms as secretary of state until 2015, said McGrane is “in a much more politically volatile situation than I ever was.” “Going against Trump in Idaho on certain things, that’s a fine line,” Ysursa said. “And I think he’s doing a good job. He’s doing the right thing.” Public policy surveys in Idaho conducted since the 1990s have surfaced a current of “distrust or wariness towards federal control or national control,” said Matthew May, survey research director at the Boise State University School of Public Service. The polling over time has revealed Idahoans’ strong belief in independence, May said. In the months since McGrane’s refusal, more than 130 constituents have called, emailed and sent handwritten cards and letters to his office. Of those, just one person said they wanted McGrane to provide information to the Trump administration. The others were supportive, appreciative or, in some cases, seemingly panicked by the prospect of their private information being released. Although the senders skewed more Democratic than Idaho’s electorate, just over half the messages came from Republicans and unaffiliated voters, based on a review of voter registration data for commenters who left their names. “Mr McGrane has done a masterful job of dancing around the US Justice Dept request for the full voter records of Idaho voters,” wrote one registered Republican. “When the dancing no longer works, I expect Mr McGrane to give them a big fat NO! “Voting is our one sacred right in this country,” the person continued. “DOJ has no legitimate business receiving our PRIVATE voter information. They may threaten to sue, but so will the voters of Idaho if you grant their request. Do not give them our personal voter information. Thank you.” Ysursa told ProPublica that he has urged McGrane to “hold the line,” even amid threats of repercussions. Ysursa is one of nine former secretaries of state who filed an amicus brief in federal court, arguing against the administration’s demands for full voter information. The Trump administration’s creep toward nationalizing elections runs counter to the ethos of “keep your federal hands off Idaho,” Ysursa said. McGrane is a self-described election nerd who worked his way up through elections offices, as opposed to cultivating a resume as a professional politician. He served as a county elections chief and gained a reputation for approaching voting day with a Super Bowl level of enthusiasm. He also became known for his ability to resist the political winds. McGrane was one of seven people featured on the cover of Time magazine in 2022 as “the defenders” of America’s elections. That year, McGrane was the only Idaho Republican candidate for secretary of state who did not back the false claim that fraud was responsible for Trump’s loss in the 2020 election. In perhaps the strongest sign that Trump’s base in Idaho has not been inflamed by McGrane’s pushback on the administration’s demand for voter rolls — which received plenty of media attention locally — he drew no challenger by last month’s deadline to enter the Idaho Republican primary for his position. Voters across Idaho have sent McGrane thank-you notes for not sharing their data. Audrey Dutton/ProPublica While the Constitution gives states the authority to run elections, the National Voter Registration Act gives the federal government an oversight role when it comes to ensuring voter lists are properly maintained. The law says election officials must make a “reasonable effort” to keep ineligible voters off of the rolls, and typical oversight comes in the form of lawsuits claiming that states aren’t doing a good enough job. Under Trump, the Justice Department has gone a step further. The department claims it has the right to seize states’ unredacted voter rolls without proving its case in court, citing in lawsuits the powers that agency officials say they have under the National Voter Registration Act, the Help America Vote Act and the Civil Rights Act. The Justice Department has privately told states more about its intentions, according to emails obtained by ProPublica through public records requests. In Montana, a federal lawyer told the secretary of state’s legal counsel that the department was requesting voter rolls to “facilitate a review for noncitizens and dead voters,” adding that federal officials would be able to assess whether there are duplicate registrations as well. The demands come as part of the Trump administration’s focus on hunting down noncitizens on the voter rolls, a long-standing preoccupation for the president. He has long claimed, without evidence, that noncitizens have infiltrated the rolls to influence elections. Three judges who have considered the government’s lawsuits fully so far have dismissed them, saying that the federal laws the Trump administration cites as the basis for its demands do not apply — especially not where voters’ private information is concerned. In Oregon, U.S. District Judge Mustafa Kasubhai wrote that the Justice Department’s claims were “troubling,” representing federal overreach. In California, U.S. District Judge David Carter said the centralization of the information would have a chilling effect on voter registration, leading to decreased turnout as people worry their data could be used for an “inappropriate or unlawful purpose.” “This risk threatens the right to vote which is the cornerstone of American democracy,” Carter wrote. In Michigan, U.S. District Judge Hala Y. Jarbou echoed that interpretation, writing that “the risk of having one’s personal information misused will deter people from registering to vote.” The Justice Department has appealed all of the courts’ decisions. Leaders in Republican-led states that have held back their voter rolls, meanwhile, have taken pains to show they are making other efforts to keep noncitizens from voting. Idaho started looking for evidence of problems well before the Trump administration’s request. McGrane said in a letter to the Justice Department that his office worked with federal agencies to check the citizenship status of all registered Idaho voters in the lead-up to the 2024 general election. Given what Idaho has already done and the processes already in place, the federal government has “no legal or practical rationale for duplicative review,” McGrane wrote. The tools Idaho employed, he said, included a Department of Homeland Security program known as the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements. Idaho’s search found 11 cases of noncitizens registered to vote — none of whom actually cast votes in 2024 — and state police referred those cases to the Justice Department’s chief prosecutor in Idaho for review. McGrane told the Justice Department that he hadn’t heard anything about those cases since. The post As Trump Demands Voter Data, This Fiercely Independent Red State Says No appeared first on ProPublica .
RFI
Center
L'eau potable, cible stratégique de la guerre au Moyen-Orient
Le régime iranien a déclaré qu'il n'hésiterait pas à frapper les usines de désalinisation des pays du Golfe, si leurs infrastructures énergétiques venaient à être attaquées. Téhéran pourrait ainsi intensifier l’escalade et élargir ses frappes aux infrastructures civiles vitales, telles que les usines de dessalement d’eau.

Soudan: plus d'une soixantaine de morts dans une attaque contre un hôpital au Darfour
Au Soudan, une attaque contre un hôpital situé dans une zone contrôlée par les paramilitaires, dans l'est du Darfour, a fait au moins 64 morts dont 13 enfants, selon le directeur général de l'Organisation mondiale de la Santé (OMS) qui a appelé à stopper le conflit meurtrier dans le pays. L’attaque, survenue vendredi 20 mars, a visé l’hôpital universitaire d’El-Daein, le principal établissement de santé de la capitale du Darfour-Est.

Maroc: une pétition pour le retour de l'heure en temps universel recueille plus de 100 000 signatures
Le ramadan venant de s’achever, le Maroc a changé d’heure la nuit dernière. Depuis 2018, le royaume chérifien a choisi comme fuseau horaire officiel TU +1, sauf pour la période du ramadan, où le pays est aligné sur le Temps universel coordonné. Les signataires d’une pétition qui a déjà recueilli plus de 100 000 signatures souhaitent que l’heure TU, qu’ils appellent l’heure biologique, reste en vigueur toute l’année.
South China Morning Post
Center-Right
Alibaba chairman Joe Tsai credits China’s AI edge to power grid, open-source models
China’s artificial intelligence breakthroughs in recent years stemmed from the country’s strategic strengthening of its power grid, commitment to open-source models and complete manufacturing supply chain, according to Joe Tsai, chairman of Alibaba Group Holding. “Currently, geopolitical complexities are deeply affecting supply chain security and the sharing of technological achievements,” Tsai said in a speech on Sunday at the China Development Forum 2026 in Beijing. “In this era and...

Philippines will allow use of dirtier, cheaper fuel amid US-Iran war
The Philippines has allowed the temporary and limited use of a cheaper but dirtier type of fuel to ensure supply as it finds ways to cope with the impact of the Middle East crisis. The Department of Energy (DOE) said only vehicles from model year 2015 and earlier, traditional jeepneys, power plants and generators, and the marine and shipping sectors would be allowed to use Euro-II compliant petroleum products. “The measure is intended to help maintain a continuous, adequate and accessible...

Veteran of ‘iPhone City’ tapped as party boss of China’s Silicon Valley
China’s southern tech hub of Shenzhen has a new Communist Party chief, nearly six months after the city’s former party boss was promoted to provincial governor. State media announced on Sunday that Jin Lei, 56, had been appointed Shenzhen’s party chief as well as a member of the Guangdong provincial party committee and its standing committee. Jin, an economist and former official in the southwestern province of Sichuan, takes over from Meng Fanli, who had been in the position since April...
Sueddeutsche Zeitung
Center-Left
Gewalt gegen Frauen: Fernandes ruft zu Demo auf, auch Neubauer spricht als Betroffene
Die Aktion für einen besseren Schutz von Frauen vor Gewalt soll am heutigen Sonntag um 16 Uhr in Berlin stattfinden.

Bundespolitik: SPD-Umweltstaatssekretär Carsten Träger im Skiurlaub gestorben
Das Unglück geschah am Samstag in Österreich. Trägers überraschender Tod mache sie tief betroffen, erklärt Bundestagspräsidentin Klöckner. Am Mittwoch findet im Plenum eine Gedenkveranstaltung statt.

Krieg in Nahost: Warum sich die Hamas von ihrem Paten Iran distanziert
Eigentlich wollte die Terrorgruppe immer vereint mit dem Regime in Teheran kämpfen. Doch der Iran-Krieg trifft auch andere Förderer der Hamas, die für den Wiederaufbau im Gazastreifen wichtig sind.
Tagesschau (ARD)
Center
Wahl in Rheinland-Pfalz: Zweikampf an der Spitze
Bei der Landtagswahl in Rheinland-Pfalz kann die CDU auf mehr Zutrauen in wichtigen Politikfeldern bauen, die SPD mit Ministerpräsident Schweitzer auf einen beliebteren Kandidaten. Die AfD dürfte von Sorgen und Unzufriedenheit profitieren. Von Jörg Schönenborn. [ mehr ]

Dobrindt fordert angesichts von Krisen Zivilschutz-Schulunterricht
Angesichts weltweiter Krisen will sich Innenminister Dobrindt dafür stark machen, den Zivilschutz im Lehrplan fest zu verankern. Das helfe nicht nur den Schülerinnen und Schülern - sondern auch deren Familien.[ mehr ]

So teuer ist das Leben in der Rente
Viele unterschätzen, wie teuer das Leben im Ruhestand wird. Die gesetzliche Rente allein wird für die meisten nicht reichen - das zeigen einfache Rechenbeispiele. Wie viel muss man wirklich ansparen? Von L.-M. Hiltscher und J. Bartlitz. [ mehr ]
The Guardian - World News
Center-Left
ICE agents will be deployed to US airports to ease long lines on Monday
Trump and border czar Tom Homan confirm plan to assist TSA agents amid partial government shutdown standoff Donald Trump and his border czar, Tom Homan, have confirmed that the president’s administration is sending Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents to US airports beginning Monday to assist with security amid extremely long lines – and to help airport security agents who have been working without pay since 14 February because of a partial government shutdown. Homan will lead the effort, Trump said on Sunday. Continue reading...

Iran says it will ‘irreversibly destroy’ Middle East infrastructure if US attacks energy sites
Energy and oil sites across region would become ‘legitimate targets’, Tehran says Middle East crisis live – latest updates Iran has said it will “irreversibly destroy” essential infrastructure across the Middle East if the US attacks its energy sites, hours after Donald Trump threatened to “obliterate” the country’s power plants if the strait of Hormuz was not opened within two days. As Iranian missiles struck two southern Israeli cities overnight , injuring dozens and shattering apartment buildings, the developments signalled a dangerous potential escalation of the war in the Middle East, which is now in its fourth week. Continue reading...

Queensland government ‘opens old wounds’ as police officer criticised after Palm Island riots appointed to Legal Aid board
Exclusive: Townsville lawyer and former detective Darren Robinson’s appointment by attorney general Deb Frecklington has ‘brought back a lot of trauma’ for Indigenous community Get our breaking news email , free app or daily news podcast The Queensland government has “opened old wounds” by appointing a former police detective who was heavily criticised for his role in events surrounding the 2004 riots on Palm Island to the state’s Legal Aid board, say First Nations community leaders and members of the legal fraternity. The Liberal National party government sacked and replaced all Labor-appointed members of the Legal Aid Queensland board last month. Continue reading...
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