Brazil's Crackdown on Racist Speech: Social Media Figure Faces Record 8-Year Prison Sentence Day McCarthy's conviction marks Brazil's toughest racism penalty as prosecutions surge, with 4,871 cases filed between 2020 and 2023. 12/14/2024 - 10:06 pm | View Link
The infighting with Leon Musk, Vivek Ramawhatever, and MAGA just reached a whole different level, with the wealthiest man in the world, a bellend billionaire with daddy issues, telling Trump fans to go fuck themselves.
This weirdness is all about H1-B visa holders, and MAGA is against them because they aren't white enough.
Lisandro Claudio, University of California, Berkeley; Garret Martin, American University School of International Service; Jorge Heine, Boston University; Patrick James, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences, and Tatsiana Kulakevich, University of South Floridaread more
Barely a day passes without colleges scolded in the headlines over admissions or athletics and endowments or education and expression. Schools have become scapegoats for both good and bad reasons. Prominent commentators and populist political leaders from both the far left and far right now target higher education as a common enemy.
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In fact the current fight over the meritocracy vs charges of elitism which would not characterize other fields such as sports or entertainment have torn open a seam on the right between Vivek Ramaswamy and Elon Musk in favor of selectivity and merit on one side and Laura Loomer and Matt Goetz on the other.
The news can be tough in a world often marked by suffering, disaster and war.
Sometimes you need to stop and remember that good things happen all the time, all across the world, and 2024 was no different.
Take a look at some of the stories that made us smile.
Moo Deng
FILE – Two-month-old baby hippo Moo Deng plays with a zookeeper in the Khao Kheow Open Zoo in Chonburi province, Thailand, Thursday, Sept.
In 2019, Erika Mahoney was working as a reporter at KAZU Public Radio — a National Public Radio member station in Monterey, Calif. and she loved everything about it: the people, the work, the community. Then one evening, her phone blew up with calls from NPR. There was an active shooter in Gilroy, Calif.
Michelle Villanueva’s son was just 11 when Douglas County school resource officers handcuffed him and put him in a patrol car, leaving the sixth-grader for two hours before booking the boy, who has autism, into juvenile jail for poking a classmate with a pencil.
After the August 2019 incident, Villanueva no longer felt comfortable sending her son to Sagewood Middle School in Parker.
“There was just a whole lot of trust broken,” she said.
But Villanueva’s son, who The Denver Post is only identifying by his initials — A.