elections
消費者団体パブリック・シチズンが、仮想通貨企業からの資金が2024年の米国選挙にどのように影響を与え...
Cointelegraph JP
Consumer advocacy organization Public Citizen has released a report detailing how money from cryptocurrency firms may influence the 2024 elections in the United States. In an Aug. 21 report, Public Citizen said crypto firms in 2024 had used roughly $119 million to influence federal elections, mainly through contributions to Super political action committees (PACs) like Fairshake. According to the advocacy group, roughly 48% of the $248 million of corporate funds used toward US elections in 2024 came from crypto backers — primarily Coinbase and Ripple. Notably, according to Public Citizen’s res...
Cointelegraph
If you ever wanted to live in a world of endlessly fascinating conversations about the arts, science, and philosophy, you're going to love today's guest—Anna Gát. She's the person behind a membership platform called Interintellect, which hosts hundreds of online salons a year. While some of them feature superstars like Harvard psychologist Steven Pinker, relationship guru Esther Perel, and economist Tyler Cowen, all of the salons are built around civil yet engaging discussions on interesting cultural ideas. Interintellect's stated ambition is to reinvent French salon culture for the 21st centu...
Reason
Several prominent German news outlets have gone to court over the far-right Alternative for Germany's (AfD) decision to exclude their journalists from election-day events in the central German state of Thuringia. The news magazine Spiegel, the newspapers Bild and Welt as well as the left-wing daily taz all announced that they had asked a court in the city of Erfurt to order the AfD's state party in Thuringia to grant access to their reporters. The news outlets said that freedom of the press was being restricted by the AfD's decision to deny access to journalists from those outlets. A court spo...
DPA Breaking News
Several prominent German news outlets have gone to court over the far-right Alternative for Germany's (AfD) decision to exclude their journalists from election-day events in the central German state of Thuringia. The news magazine Spiegel, the newspapers Bild and Welt as well as the left-wing daily taz all announced that they had asked a court in the city of Erfurt to order the AfD's state party in Thuringia to grant access to their reporters. The news outlets said that freedom of the press was being restricted by the AfD's decision to deny access to journalists from those outlets. A court spo...
DPA International
Several prominent German news outlets have gone to court over the far-right Alternative for Germany's (AfD) decision to exclude their journalists from election-day events in the central German state of Thuringia. The news magazine Spiegel, the newspapers Bild and Welt as well as the left-wing daily taz all announced that they had asked a court in the city of Erfurt to order the AfD's state party in Thuringia to grant access to their reporters. The news outlets said that freedom of the press was being restricted by the AfD's decision to deny access to journalists from those outlets. A court spo...
DPA International
Several prominent German news outlets have gone to court over the far-right Alternative for Germany's (AfD) decision to exclude their journalists from election-day events in the central German state of Thuringia. The news magazine Spiegel, the newspapers Bild and Welt as well as the left-wing daily taz all announced that they had asked a court in the city of Erfurt to order the AfD's state party in Thuringia to grant access to their reporters. The news outlets said that freedom of the press was being restricted by the AfD's decision to deny access to journalists from those outlets. A court spo...
DPA
Several prominent German news outlets have gone to court over the far-right Alternative for Germany's (AfD) decision to exclude their journalists from election-day events in the central German state of Thuringia. The news magazine Spiegel, the newspapers Bild and Welt as well as the left-wing daily taz all announced that they had asked a court in the city of Erfurt to order the AfD's state party in Thuringia to grant access to their reporters. The news outlets said that freedom of the press was being restricted by the AfD's decision to deny access to journalists from those outlets. A court spo...
DPA
Several prominent German news outlets have gone to court over the far-right Alternative for Germany's (AfD) decision to exclude their journalists from election-day events in the central German state of Thuringia. The news magazine Spiegel, the newspapers Bild and Welt as well as the left-wing daily taz all announced that they had asked a court in the city of Erfurt to order the AfD's state party in Thuringia to grant access to their reporters. The news outlets said that freedom of the press was being restricted by the AfD's decision to deny access to journalists from those outlets. A court spo...
DPA Breaking News
Photo of Yeni, used with her permission. A longer version of this article was published on the Romanian media website HotNews and is republished on Global Voices with permission. It is July 29 in the morning, and Yeni (name changed), 26 years old, is on the bus that takes her from Valencia to Caracas, Venezuela. The next day she will be flying back to Romania, where she has lived for three years. She traveled to Venezuela to see her family and to be able to vote in the presidential elections that took place on July 28. The streets of Venezuela are wrapped in an atmosphere of mourning: there is...
Global Voices
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