Category: News
Indonesia Remains The World’s Most Generous Nation
Indonesia Remains The World’s Most Generous Nation
Started in 2012, Giving Tuesday, which takes place on the Tuesday after Thanksgiving, is a day which aims to encourage people to do good.
Described as “a global generosity movement unleashing the power of radical generosity”, the goal of Giving Tuesday is to encourage people to donate time or money or to use their voice for a good cause.
While generosity may seem like a complicated concept to quantify, for over a decade now, the Charities Aid Foundation has been providing an overview of generosity around the world with its World Giving Index.
This international study examines populations in more than 100 countries according to three main aspects of generosity: charitable donations, volunteering and willingness to help strangers.
As in previous years, Statista’s Valentine Fourreau notes that the most generous country is not one of the richest in the world.
You will find more infographics at Statista
In 2024 Indonesia again tops the ranking, with a score of 74. The volunteer rate in the country (65 percent) is nearly three times higher than the global average (24 percent), and nine out of ten Indonesians made charitable donations in 2023 (year the data was collected).
In second place among the most generous countries is Kenya, with a score of 63, while Singapore and the Gambia both obtained a score of 61.
This ranking, whose top 20 remains fairly similar from one year to the next, reflects certain religious and cultural characteristics.
Notable examples include the influence of Islamic charity in certain Muslim countries such as Indonesia (with zakât, or ‘legal alms’), and that of Theravada Buddhism in Thailand (ranked 14th) and Myanmar (ranked 19th), an ancient branch of Buddhism that values offerings and charitable donations.
Anglo-Saxon and Protestant countries, with their long tradition of philanthropy, are also well represented.
Tyler Durden
Sat, 12/06/2025 – 22:45
https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-finance/indonesia-remains-worlds-most-generous-nation
Toluca resiste apenas y supera 3-2 a Monterrey para volver a la final de la Liga MX
TOLUCA, México (AP) — Toluca estuvo cerca de dilapidar una amplia ventaja y terminó sufriendo para vencer el sábado 3-2 a Monterrey, con lo que avanzó por segundo torneo consecutivo a la final de la Liga MX, gracias a su mejor posición en la campaña regular, tras igualar 3-3 en el global de las semifinales del torneo Apertura.
Federico Pereira abrió el marcador por los Diablos Rojos a los 19 minutos, Paulinho amplió la diferencia a los 43 y Helinho pareció dejar resuelta la serie al convertir un penal a los 51. Toluca había perdido el encuentro de ida por 1-0 en Monterrey, pero requería sólo de empatar en el global para ser finalista.
Al final, ése fue apenas el resultado que consiguió.
Sergio Ramos recortó de penal para Monterrey a los 58 y Roberto de la Rosa (75) emparejó el global con la segunda diana de los visitantes, que terminaron volcados en el área rival.
Los Diablos Rojos, líderes del certamen regular, buscarán defender la corona que conquistaron hace seis meses en el torneo Clausura, cuando vencieron al América en la final. De nueva cuenta, la serie por el título tendrá su partido decisivo en el estadio Nemesio Diez de Toluca.
Ubicados en el quinto sitio de la temporada regular, los Rayados se quedaron a un tanto de eliminar por segunda semana consecutiva a un equipo mejor posicionado en la tabla, luego de haber echado al América (4ta posición).
Pereira puso fin a un ayuno de 224 minutos sin que los escarlatas anotaran en la liguilla. El uruguayo se deslizó para alcanzar un centro de Helinho a segundo poste.
Paulinho amplió la ventaja en los mejores momentos escarlatas, tras aprovehar dentro del área un pase filtrado de Nicolás Castro. Para el ariete portugués, triple monarca de goleo de la Liga MX, fue su segunda diana de la liguilla y la 14ta del torneo.
El brasileño Helinho hizo más holgada la ventaja con un penal, tras una falta que sufrió dentro del área Nicolás Castro cuando fue trabado por Ricardo Chávez.
Pero el encuentro cambió de mando. Ramos, el excentral estelar del Real Madrid, recortó la desventaja con otro penal, que fue señalado por el árbitro Luis Enrique Santander tras recurrir a la repetición de video para valorar una zancadilla de Marcel Ruiz.
De la Rosa hizo más dramática la eliminatoria, tras mandar a las redes un rebote en el poste de un disparo de Germán Berterame.
El conjunto toluqueño repetirá como finalista en torneos consecutivos por segunda ocasión en su historia. Sucedió también hace un cuarto de siglo, cuando ganó la final del torneo Verano 2000 a Santos (con un global de 7-1) y luego cayó en la serie por el título del Invierno 2000 ante Morelia (5-4 en penales, tras un 3-3 en tiempo regular y extra).
Ramos pudo haber disputado su último encuentro como jugador de los Rayados. El contrato de un año del español concluye con este torneo y no se ha hecho un anuncio oficial de alguna renovación.
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Deportes AP: https://apnews.com/hub/deportes
No. 14 Illinois uses big second-half run to beat No. 13 Tennessee 75-62 in Music City Madness
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Tomislav Ivišić and Keaton Wagler each scored 16 points and No. 14 Illinois beat No. 13 Tennessee 75-62 on Saturday night in the second part of the Music City Madness.
The Fighting Illini (7-2) came in rested after an eight-day break with this their last of four top-15 opponents over a seven-game stretch. Illinois snapped a five-game skid on neutral courts against ranked opponents and also gave coach Brad Underwood his first win in three tries against Tennessee.
Illinois is averaging 90.4 points this season after leading the Big Ten in scoring last season. Leading scorer Kylan Boswell went to the bench in the opening minutes grabbing at his left shoulder. He returned and finished with 15 points.
David Mirković added 10 for the Fighting Illini.
Tennessee (7-3) has lost three straight after going 30-8 last season and reaching the Elite Eight in the NCAA Tournament.
Ja’Kobi Gillespie led Tennessee with 15 points. Freshman Nate Ament, who came in averaging 17.1 points, finished with nine.
The Vols never led by more than two and had their last lead at 49-48 on a J.P. Estrella dunk. Andrej Stojaković’s layup gave Illinois the lead back for good and started a 15-3 run, and Boswell’s layup with 6:55 to play put the Illini up 63-52. Illinois pushed it to as much as 14 in the final minutes.
Illinois controlled much of the first half. Ivišić scored the last 10 of the half for the Fighting Illini, but the Vols finished the half with an 11-4 run with Cade Phillips’ layup with 51 seconds left putting them up 34-32 at halftime.
Up next
Illinois: At Ohio State on Tuesday.
Tennessee: Hosts No. 6 Louisville on Dec. 16.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/12/06/illinois-tennessee-music-city-madness/
Pro-Israel Forces Intensify Effort To Control American Discourse
Pro-Israel Forces Intensify Effort To Control American Discourse
Via Brian McGlinchey at Stark Realities
Across the American political spectrum, support for the State of Israel is steadily eroding. With the long-running, staggeringly expensive redistribution of American wealth and weapons to one of the world’s most prosperous countries under unprecedented threat, Israel’s advocates inside the United States are growing increasingly desperate to suppress the facts, opinions, questions and imagery that are causing this sea change.
Pro-Israel forces have long worked to limit and shape US discourse to Israel’s advantage. However, the intensity and novelty of what’s taking place in 2025 — from the government-coerced transfer of a social media platform to pro-Israel billionaires, to the jailing and attempted deportation of a student for writing an opinion piece, and more — deserves the attention of every American who values free expression, an enlightened electorate, and independence from foreign influence.
Many Americans know that Congress and President Biden teamed up in 2024 to force the Chinese company ByteDance to divest its US operation of the popular video-sharing app TikTok, yet few realize this unusual intervention was motivated in large part by a desire to serve the interests of Israel.
Though politicians pointed to the supposed Chinese menace lurking inside the app — while revealing their lack of sincerity by continuing to use it themselves — the catalyst for the extraordinary TikTok ban’s passage was a sea of viral content illuminating Israel’s rampage in Gaza, casting Palestinians in empathetic light, and questioning the legitimacy of the political philosophy that is Zionism.
The idea that passage of the ban was largely about Israel is no conspiracy theory. American politicians who supported the compelled divestiture of TikTok have candidly said so themselves. Sharing a stage with Biden Secretary of State Antony Blinken in 2024, then-Senator Mitt Romney said:
“Some wonder why there was such overwhelming support for us to shut down, potentially, TikTok or other entities of that nature. You look at the postings on TikTok and the number of mentions of Palestinians relative to other social media sites — it’s overwhelmingly so among TikTok broadcasts, so I’d note that’s of real interest to the president, who will get the chance to take action in that regard.”
Similarly, Rep. Mike Lawler of New York told a webinar that pro-Palestinian student protests were “exactly why we included the TikTok bill…because you’re seeing how these kids are being manipulated by certain groups or entities or countries to foment hate on their behalf and really create a hostile environment here in the US.”
Of course, mere divestiture wouldn’t guarantee that TikTok would start suppressing anti-Israel and pro-Palestinian content in the United States. To have the desired effect, the buyer — who required White House approval — would have to be an ardent supporter of Israel. That’s just how things played out. In September, President Trump approved the sale of TikTok’s US operations to a joint venture led by Larry Ellison, the founder of tech-titan Oracle and the fourth-richest man in the world.
Ellison has expressed his “deep emotional connection to the State of Israel” and has been a major benefactor of the Israeli Defense Forces, via donations to IDF-supporting organizations. He spent at least $3 million on Marco Rubio’s failed 2016 presidential campaign, after being assured by Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations that Rubio would “be a great friend to Israel.” There are other Israel-favoring billionaires in the consortium now controlling TikTok’s American presence, among them NewsCorp head Rupert Murdoch and investment trader Jeff Yass.
Americans were propagandized into fearing Chinese control of TikTok users’ data. Now that data will be controlled by Oracle, a firm whose founder has described Israel as his own nation, said “there is no greater honor” than supporting the IDF, and invited Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to take a seat on the board. It’s also a firm with strong business ties to the Israel government, and a firm whose Israel-born executive vice chair and former CEO last year declared, “For [Oracle] employees, it’s clear: If you’re not for America or Israel, don’t work here.”
A few months before the TikTok divestiture was finalized, the company installed former IDF soldier and self-described “passionate” Zionist Erica Mindel as TikTok’s hate speech manager in July. Weeks later, and just days before the transfer of TikTok’s US operation was approved, the platform posted new guidelines on Sept 13 about what’s allowed on the platform.
Soon after the change, users and content creators began sharing examples of content being deleted by TikTok, with the platform exploiting its vague new rules about “conspiracy theories” and “protected groups” to reject negative content about Israel — wielding the threat of demonetization of repeat offenders. In a recent appearance on the Breaking Points podcast, Guy Christensen, who has 3.4 million TikTok followers, shared his experience:
“What all these videos have in common that have been removed since Sept 13 are that I am talking about Israel, I’m talking about AIPAC’s influence, I’m talking about Larry Ellison and the attempt to put TikTok under Zionist control — I’m criticizing Israel in some way. It’s the same thing I’ve heard from my audience, my friends who are creators. Ever since Sept 13, they’ve had the same exact experience. Videos that are more informational and critical of Israel get removed.”
In a late-September meeting with pro-Israel social media “influencers,” Netanyahu hailed the transfer of TikTok’s US ownership. “We have to fight with the weapons that apply to the battlefield with which we’re engaged, and the most important ones are in social media. And the most important purchase that is going on right now is TikTok. Number one.” Expressing hope that, by “talking” with Elon Musk, his X platform could be reshaped to be more Israel-protective too, Netanyahu added, “If we can get those two things, we can get a lot.”
NEW – Netanyahu mission-briefed American influencers today, stating TikTok is the “most important” weapon in securing Israel’s right-wing support: “Weapons change over time… the most important ones are the social media,” he said. “The most important purchase that is going on… pic.twitter.com/EeszHlcZmN
— Disclose.tv (@disclosetv) September 27, 2025
Ellison’s TikTok takeover is troubling enough, but that wasn’t his only media move this year. He also financed his son David’s takeover of Paramount Skydance, the media company that controls many movie and television properties, including CBS. David Ellison quickly installed as head of CBS News Bari Weiss — a self-described “Zionist fanatic” who took a gap year before college to live on an Israeli kibbutz.
Weiss’s history of wrangling over the bounds of acceptable speech vis-a-vis Israel goes back to her sophomore year at Columbia University, when she was part of a group of students who claimed they were subjected to intimidation by Middle East Studies professors over the students’ Zionist views. A university panel found only one of the supposed incidents represented unacceptable conduct.
Both outside observers and network insiders are braced for Weiss to nudge the outlet’s reporting to Israel’s benefit, and there are early indications validating worries about her bias. Citing executive sources inside CBS, the Wall Street Journal reported that foreign correspondent Chris Livesay, who was set to be laid off as part of a downsizing move that preceded Weiss’s arrival, sent Weiss an email expressing his affinity for Israel and claiming he was “bullied” for his beliefs. Weiss intervened and saved Livesay from the layoff. Other correspondents told the Journal that Livesay’s claim about bullying was bogus.
Compounding the expectations that CBS News is about to become a de facto Israel PR outlet, the network’s new ombudsman — the arbiter of editorial concerns — also has strong Zionist credentials. The New York Times describes Kenneth Weinstein as a “firm and vocal champion of Israel.” On X, Grayzone editor-in-chief Max Blumenthal notedthat, “during a 2021…event with Mike Pence, Weinstein touted his Israel lobbyist creds, describing how he’d been groomed by the Tikvah Fund, the Likudnik training network which will award Bari Weiss its Herzl Award this November.” (The Likud Party is the Israeli party led by Netanyahu.)
Here’s how Glenn Greenwald summed up the TikTok and CBS moves:
The minute the American public starts turning against Israel and the US financing of that country, the world’s richest and most fanatical pro-Israel billionaires start buying up large media outlets and TikTok, then install Bari Weiss and an ex-IDF soldier to control content: https://t.co/wjJbliKRmO
— Glenn Greenwald (@ggreenwald) November 20, 2025
The transfer of TikTok into Israel-friendly hands isn’t the only example of intensified US government intervention in America’s public square on behalf of the tiny Middle Eastern country. Much of the Trump administration’s war against anti-Israel, pro-Palestinian speech has focused on college campuses. In the most alarming such move in 2025, the Trump administration has arrested, jailed and attempted to deport foreign students for merely voicing their support for Palestinians or opposition to the Israeli government.
The most atrocious example — which Stark Realities examined in depth earlier this year — centers on a 30-year-old, Turkish Tufts University PhD candidate who was arrested on a Boston street and whisked away to a dismal Louisiana prison, just for co-authoring a calmly-written Tufts Daily op-ed urging the university to formally characterize Israel’s conduct in Gaza as genocide, and to sell the school’s Israel-associated investments.
This cruelly despotic tactic is the brainchild of the Heritage Foundation. In a policy paper, the think tank urged pro-Israel groups and the US government to characterize pro-Palestinian activists as “effectively members of a terrorist support network,” and then use that characterization to target activists for deportations, expulsions from colleges, lawsuits, terminations by employers, and exclusion from “open society.”
Supporters of Israel have long attempted to stifle critics of the Israeli government by smearing them as antisemites. In 2016, that kind of mislabelling was codified in a definition of antisemitism that’s now being embraced by governments, universities and other institutions in the United States and around the world: the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s “working definition of antisemitism.”
Some elements of the IHRA definition are reasonable, but others irrationally conflate criticism of the State of Israel with hatred of all Jews. For example, the IHRA definition says it’s antisemitic to “claim that the existence of a State of Israel is a racist endeavor” or to merely “draw comparisons of contemporary Israeli policy to that of the Nazis.”
Images of the complete obliteration of much of Gaza have contributed to an historic, bipartisan dip in Americans’ affinity for Israel (AP Photo/ Abed Hajjar)
Other, vague elements of the definition are open to creative interpretations, facilitating bogus accusations of bigotry against Israel’s critics. For example, the IHRA says it’s antisemitic to “apply double standards by requiring of [Israel] a behavior not expected or demanded of any other democratic nation.” The IHRA also says it’s antisemitic to make statements about the “power of Jews as [a] collective,” which can put someone who talks about the enormous influence of the pro-Israel lobby squarely in the crosshairs.
Similarly, the IHRA says it’s antisemitic to “deny the Jewish people their right to self-determination,” a definition that could ensnare people who — right or wrong — advocate for the State of Israel to be replaced by a new governing arrangement for the land between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea. Indeed, those who want speech to be policed on Israel’s behalf frequently point to the slogan “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free” as inherently antisemitic.
As I wrote in an earlier article (“No Country Has a Right To Exist”):
Those who support the State of Israel are free to present a case that it’s a just arrangement for the 7.5 million Jews and 7.5 million Palestinians “between the river and the sea.” However, painting those who demand a new arrangement as inherently immoral, genocidal or antisemitic is ignorant at best and maliciously misleading at worst.
Doing its part to vilify Israel’s critics and mislead the public and policymakers, the Anti-Defamation League has employed expansive definitions in its numerical tracking of antisemitic incidents — statistics that are unquestioningly quoted by journalists and cited by pro-Israel politicians.
For example, in early 2024, the ADL claimed that, in the first three months after the Oct. 7 Hamas invasion of Israel and the IDF’s brutal assault on Gaza, antisemitic incidents skyrocketed 360%. ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt said Jews faced a threat “unprecedented in modern history.” However, the ADL admitted that it was counting as antisemitic incidents all protests that included “anti-Zionist chants and slogans.”
Of course, exaggerating the scale of antisemitism does more than facilitate efforts to suppress criticism of Israel: It also helps the ADL justify its existence and boost its fundraising. The ADL’s over-counting is nothing new. In 2017, the ADL claimed antisemitic incidents in the United States had soared by 86% in the first quarter of the year, and major media outlets ran with the story. However, much of the increase springs from the ADL’s decision to include a huge number of bomb threats phoned into US synagogues and schools by a Jew living in Israel.
The IHRA definition is at the forefront of a broad campaign to suppress candid discourse about Israel and Palestine on college campuses, with multiple state governments ordering public schools to use it to determine what can and can’t be said.
Bard College’s Kenneth Stern, a lead drafter of a 2004 antisemitism definition that was subsequently adopted by the IHRA, has spoken out against the weaponization of the definition to stifle discourse at universities. “The history of the abuse of the IHRA definition demonstrates the desire is largely political—it is not so much a desire to identify antisemitism, but rather to label certain speech about Israel as antisemitic,” Stern wrote at the Knight First Amendment Institute.
Even at schools that haven’t adopted the IHRA definition, activists and scholars who are critical of Israel and empathetic to the Palestinians are being subjected to countless false accusations of antisemitism, and universities are being sued by pro-Israel students who claim the schools tolerate antisemitism.
A Stark Realities analysis of an 84-page complaint filed against the University of Pennsylvania found nearly every alleged “antisemitic incident” was merely an instance in which Penn students, professors and guest speakers engaged in political expression that proponents of the State of Israel strongly disagree with. Eighteen months later, a federal judge agreed. “At worst, Plaintiffs accuse Penn of tolerating and permitting the expression of viewpoints which differ from their own,” Judge Mitchell Goldberg wroteas he dismissed the case.
Courtroom victories, however, can only do so much to counter the chilling effect of campaigns that vilify students, professors and institutions as antisemitic. That’s especially true when university cash flows are threatened.
Major pro-Israel donors have withdrawn or threatened to suspend donations to various schools, and those threats have been credited with forcing out university presidents like Penn’s Liz Magill. Donor pressure has also led schools to adopt the problematic IHRA antisemitism definition, shut down chapters of Students for Justice in Palestine, and strip Israel-critical professors of chair positions.
President Trump embraces US-Israeli billionaire Miriam Adelson, who’s donated upwards of $200 million to his campaigns (Haiyun Jiang / New York Times)
The greatest financial pressure being exerted on universities, however, is coming from the Trump administration, which has not only suspended billions of dollars in funding from various universities that are supposed hives of antisemitism, but has also filed lawsuits and hammered schools with fines. Many of them are surrendering, paying the government large sums and making policy and staffing changes. Last week, Northwestern agreed to pay $75 million to the federal government for its alleged failure to fight “antisemitism.” Earlier, Columbia agreed to a $200 million fine payable over three years, and Brown will surrender $50 million.
There are other avenues by which government force is being tapped to squelch criticism of Israel and advocacy for Palestinians. Dozens of states have passed legislation that bar individuals and businesses from contracting with the state if they boycott or divest from Israel. That led to a bizarre spectacle in which hurricane-battered Texans applying for emergency benefits were asked to verify that they do not and will not boycott Israel. Comparable federal measures have been introduced, but not yet enacted.
Another proposed federal bill is the Antisemitism Awareness Act, which would require the Department of Education to use the IHRA definition when evaluating accusations that colleges tolerate antisemitism — essentially codifying a Trump executive order. It sailed through the House in 2024 by a 320-91 vote, but stalled in the Senate this year amid bipartisan concerns about the definition. Seven amendments had been attached in committee, including one clarifying that criticism of the Israeli government isn’t antisemitism.
Tellingly, champions of the bill said amendments like that were poison pills that would render it un-passable.
Stark Realities undermines official narratives, demolishes conventional wisdom and exposes fundamental myths across the political spectrum. Join thousands who benefit from ad-free, monthly insights at starkrealities.substack.com
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Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of ZeroHedge
Tyler Durden
Sat, 12/06/2025 – 22:10
https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/pro-israel-forces-intensify-effort-control-american-discourse
Up to 6 inches of snow expected in Chicago by Sunday morning
Two to 6 inches of snow were expected to blanket the Chicago region by Sunday morning, according to the National Weather Service.
A winter weather advisory remains in effect from midnight to 9 a.m. Sunday across northeast Illinois. The weather service warned of snow accumulations up to 6 inches, with the highest amounts expected in the vicinity of Interstate 88.
The weather service said late travelers should plan on slippery road conditions, recommending they slow down and use caution while traveling.
In response to the snow, the city’s Department of Streets and Sanitation said it plans to deploy more than 220 salt-spreading trucks.
“DSS staff will continue to monitor the weather and ground conditions and will adjust resources as needed,” the department said in a statement. “Residents are urged to exercise caution while traveling. Please allow extra time and drive according to conditions, leaving ample space between vehicles.”
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/12/06/up-to-6-inches-of-snow-expected-in-chicago/
Al menos 18 migrantes mueren al hundirse bote inflable al sur de Creta; rescatan vivos a 2
Associated Press
ATENAS (AP) — Al menos 18 migrantes que intentaban cruzar el mar Mediterráneo en un bote inflable murieron al naufragar al sur de la isla de Creta, informaron las autoridades griegas el sábado.
El bote medio hundido fue localizado el sábado por un buque mercante turco que pasaba por el lugar, indicaron las autoridades. Dos sobrevivientes fueron rescatados y se inició una operación en busca de más personas en el agua.
Grecia es un punto de entrada importante a la Unión Europea para personas que huyen de conflictos y pobreza en el Oriente Medio, África y Asia, y los incidentes fatales son una ocurrencia común.
El corto pero peligroso viaje desde la costa de Turquía hasta las cercanas islas griegas en botes inflables o pequeñas embarcaciones, a menudo en malas condiciones, solía ser la ruta principal hasta que el aumento de patrullas y los presuntos rechazos redujeron los intentos de cruce. En los últimos meses, las llegadas desde Libia a Creta han aumentado.
Las autoridades aún no han determinado de dónde provenía el bote.
Un barco y un avión de la agencia fronteriza europea Frontex, un helicóptero de la Guardia Costera griega y tres buques mercantes participan en las tareas de búsqueda.
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Esta historia fue traducida del inglés por un editor de AP con la ayuda de una herramienta de inteligencia artificial generativa.
Johnson logra segundo triple-doble en dos noches y lidera a Hawks 131-116 sobre Wizards
Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — Jalen Johnson logró su segundo triple-doble consecutivo el sábado por la noche y el cuarto de la temporada, terminando con 30 puntos, 12 rebotes y 12 asistencias en la victoria de los Hawks de Atlanta por 131-116 sobre los Wizards de Washington.
Johnson había conseguido 21 puntos, 18 rebotes y 16 asistencias el viernes por la noche en una derrota en casa por 134-133 ante Denver.
Onyeka Okongwu añadió 21 puntos para los Hawks. Rompieron una racha de tres derrotas consecutivas y se vengaron de una derrota por 132-113 en Washington el 25 de noviembre.
Vít Krejci anotó 14 puntos e hizo tres de sus cuatro triples en el último cuarto para ayudar a Atlanta a despegarse después de haber perdido una ventaja que había sido de 20 en el segundo cuarto y de 18 en el tercero.
CJ McCollum anotó 28 puntos para Washington, que ocupa el último lugar y perdió su tercer partido consecutivo y el segundo seguido en casa tras dos victorias consecutivas en casa. Encestó siete triples mientras los Wizards se mantenían en el juego con un 17 de 28 en tiros desde más allá del arco.
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Deportes en español AP: https://apnews.com/hub/deportes
Sismo de magnitud 7,0 sacude zona remota en frontera entre Alaska y Canadá
Associated Press
JUNEAU, Alaska, EE.UU. (AP) — Un fuerte terremoto de magnitud 7,0 sacudió una zona remota cerca de la frontera entre Alaska y el territorio canadiense de Yukón el sábado. No hubo alerta de tsunami, y las autoridades indicaron que de momento no se han reportado daños ni heridos.
El Servicio Geológico de Estados Unidos (USGS, por sus siglas en inglés) informó que ocurrió a unos 370 kilómetros (230 millas) al noroeste de Juneau, Alaska, y a 250 kilómetros (155 millas) al oeste de Whitehorse, Yukón.
En Whitehorse, la sargento de la Real Policía Montada de Canadá, Calista MacLeod, dijo que la comisaría recibió dos llamadas al 911 sobre el terremoto.
“Definitivamente se sintió”, afirmó MacLeod. “Hay mucha gente en las redes sociales, la gente lo sintió”.
Alison Bird, sismóloga de Recursos Naturales de Canadá, comentó que la parte de Yukón más afectada por el temblor es montañosa y tiene poca población.
“Principalmente, la gente ha reportado que cosas se cayeron de los estantes y las paredes”, expresó Bird. “No parece que hayamos visto nada en términos de daños estructurales”.
La comunidad canadiense más cercana al epicentro es Haines Junction, señaló Bird, a unos 130 kilómetros (80 millas) de distancia. La Oficina de Estadísticas de Yukón lista su población para 2022 como 1.018.
El sismo también ocurrió a unos 91 kilómetros (56 millas) de Yakutat, Alaska, donde según el USGS residen 662 habitantes.
El terremoto se produjo a una profundidad de aproximadamente 10 kilómetros (seis millas) y fue seguido por múltiples réplicas más pequeñas.
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Esta historia fue traducida del inglés por un editor de AP con la ayuda de una herramienta de inteligencia artificial generativa.
Americans Worry Most Among Developed Nations About Food Security
Americans Worry Most Among Developed Nations About Food Security
Concerning nations surveyed in Statista’s Consumer Insights, Americans were among those most worried about food and water security.
Indeed, as Statista’s Katharina Buchholz reports, while for most European nations, worry about the topic peaked during the coronavirus pandemic and the beginning of the Russia-Ukraine war, concern has remained elevated in the United States into 2025.
You will find more infographics at Statista
Food and water supplies were not considered a particular issue among developed countries for a long time. But the data illustrates how that is starting to change.
As many as 1 in 5 respondents in France said that food and water security was one of the biggest challenges their country faced in 2025.
The proportion was similarly high in the United Kingdom and Italy (23 percent), while it had fallen a little lower again in Spain (16 percent) and Germany (13 percent).
As wars (trade and kinetic) continue to disrupt international trade and affairs in recent years, the constant chatter about climate change shifting droughts and destructive fires more top of people’s minds, and inflation (groceries becoming more expensive), more people are seeing how these and other issues can affect the security of their food and water supply even in richer countries.
In the United States, shifts in government benefit programs by the Trump administration might also add to peoples’ feeling around food security.
Tyler Durden
Sat, 12/06/2025 – 21:35
https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/americans-worry-most-among-developed-nations-about-food-security
Gobierno de Trump resalta arresto de sospechoso de colocar bombas caseras, omite asalto al Capitolio
Por ALANNA DURKIN RICHER y ERIC TUCKER
WASHINGTON (AP) — Tras el arresto de un hombre acusado de colocar dos bombas caseras frente a las sedes de los partidos republicano y demócrata el 5 de enero de 2021, la advertencia del gobierno de Donald Trump fue clara: quien acuda a la capital del país a atacar a ciudadanos e instituciones democráticas, tendrá que rendir cuentas.
No obstante, los líderes del Departamento de Justicia que anunciaron el arresto no mencionaron los actos de violencia que se desataron cuando partidarios de Trump irrumpieron en el Capitolio y se enfrentaron con la policía un día después que los artefactos explosivos fueran colocados.
Ese es el ejemplo más reciente de los esfuerzos del gobierno de Trump por reescribir la historia de los disturbios, mediante indultos y el despido de los fiscales que enjuiciaron a los participantes del asalto, y de la desconexión de un gobierno que se enorgullece de combatir la delincuencia violenta y de apoyar a las fuerzas del orden, pero que ha ocultado la brutalidad de los ataques del 6 de enero contra policías.
“El gobierno ha ignorado e intentado maquillar los actos de violencia cometidos por los alborotadores el 6 de enero porque eran partidarios del presidente. Intentaban imponerlo para un segundo mandato contra la voluntad de los votantes en 2020”, dijo Michael Romano, quien enjuició a los alborotadores antes de dejar el Departamento de Justicia este año. “Y se siente como que el intento de ignorar eso es puramente transaccional”.
La Casa Blanca remitió los comentarios al Departamento de Justicia, el cual a su vez remitió los comentarios al Buró Federal de Investigaciones de Estados Unidos (FBI, por sus siglas en inglés). El FBI no respondió a un mensaje de correo electrónico enviado por The Associated Press el viernes.
Bongino llegó a sugerir que incidente con bomba casera fue un “ataque interno”
Cuando era presentador de un podcast conservador durante el gobierno de Joe Biden, el actual director del FBI, Kash Patel, calificó a los alborotadores del 6 de enero de “presos políticos” y se ofreció a representarlos gratuitamente. No obstante, el jueves dijo que el arresto del sospechoso de la bomba casera, Brian Cole Jr., de 30 años, cumplía con el compromiso de Trump de “asegurar la capital de nuestra nación”.
“Cuando atacas a los ciudadanos estadounidenses, cuando atacas nuestras instituciones legislativas, cuando atacas la capital de la nación, atacas la esencia misma de nuestro estilo de vida”, declaró Patel. “Y este FBI y este Departamento de Justicia están aquí para decirte que siempre lo combatiremos”.
Dan Bongino, director adjunto de Patel, sugirió antes de unirse al FBI que las fuerzas del orden federales habían perdido el tiempo en investigar a los alborotadores del 6 de enero y a los activistas antiaborto.
“¿Son esas amenazas para Estados Unidos?”, preguntó alguna vez en un podcast. “La abuela está en el gulag por un cargo de allanamiento el 6 de enero”. (En referencia a Rebecca Lavrenz, de más de 70 años, quien participó y fue sentenciada a seis meses de arresto domiciliario, y es apodada “J6 Praying Grandma”, o la “Abuela que reza del 6 de enero”).
Bongino especuló el año pasado que el incidente de la bomba casera fue un “ataque interno” que implicó un “encubrimiento masivo”. Tras unirse al FBI, Bongino describió repetidamente la investigación como una prioridad máxima que recibía recursos y atención importantes.
“Íbamos a rastrear a esta persona hasta el fin del mundo. No había forma de que escapara”, dijo el jueves.
No ha surgido ningún vínculo público entre las bombas caseras y los disturbios, y el arresto de Cole fue un avance considerable en sí mismo, dado que la investigación de casi cinco años había desconcertado a las autoridades, que ahora construyen un semblante de Cole.
Personas familiarizadas con el asunto dijeron a la AP que entre las declaraciones de Cole a los investigadores, se encuentra que creía en teorías de conspiración sobre las elecciones de 2020 —la cual Trump ha insistido que le fue robada en favor del demócrata Biden. Esas personas no estaban autorizadas a hablar públicamente sobre la investigación en curso y la discutieron bajo condición de anonimato.
No hubo fraude generalizado en esas elecciones, como lo han confirmado diversos funcionarios electorales de todo el país, incluido William Barr, ex secretario de Justicia en el primer mandato de Trump. Gobernadores republicanos de estados clave para la victoria de Biden también han avalado la integridad de las elecciones en sus estados. Casi todas las impugnaciones legales de Trump y sus aliados fueron desestimadas por los tribunales.
El gobierno ha minimizado el 6 de enero y sus consecuencias
La retórica de mano dura contra el crimen que se escuchó durante el anuncio del jueves sobre el arresto de Cole contrastó con los reiterados esfuerzos del gobierno republicano por minimizar los actos de violencia del 6 de enero, absolver a los acusados de la insurrección e ir tras aquellos que investigaron y enjuiciaron a los alborotadores.
La medida de clemencia que Trump otorgó en su primer día de regreso en la Casa Blanca en enero se aplicó a las más de 1.500 personas acusadas de participar en el ataque a los cimientos de la democracia estadounidense. Eso incluyó a acusados a quienes se vio en cámara agredir violentamente a la policía con armas improvisadas —como astas de bandera, una muleta y un palo de hockey. Más de 100 policías resultaron heridos, incluidos algunos que describieron haber temido por sus vidas al ser arrastrados hacia la multitud y golpeados.
A principios de este año, el Departamento de Justicia solicitó al FBI los nombres de los agentes que participaron en las investigaciones del 6 de enero, una solicitud que se temía al interior del FBI que era posible precursora de despidos masivos. En agosto, Patel despidió a Brian Driscoll, quien, como director interino del FBI al inicio del segundo mandato de Trump, se resistió a entregar esos nombres.
Por su parte, el gobierno de Trump ha despedido o degradado a numerosos fiscales que trabajaron en los casos del 6 de enero, incluidos a más de dos docenas de abogados que fueron contratados temporalmente para apoyar la investigación y que fueron transferidos a puestos permanentes tras la victoria electoral de Trump en 2024.
En octubre, a dos fiscales federales se les prohibió el acceso a sus dispositivos gubernamentales y se les informó que se les había suspendido de su empleo tras presentar documentos judiciales que describían a quienes atacaron el Capitolio como una “turba de alborotadores”. El Departamento de Justicia, posteriormente, presentó un nuevo expediente judicial en el que eliminó las menciones al motín del 6 de enero.
Un hombre cuyo caso fue desestimado gracias a los indultos de Trump fue acusado de lanzar un artefacto explosivo y un enorme trozo de madera contra un grupo de policías que intentaban defender la entrada al Capitolio. Algunos de ellos declararon posteriormente que “creyeron que iban a morir”, escribieron los fiscales en documentos judiciales, y varios informaron haber sufrido pérdida temporal de audición.











