Auteur Sujet: edtz Illegal surveillance: GCHQ s neither confirm nor deny a thing of the past  (Lu 58 fois)

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 The exams crisis in England and Wales this summer threatens to be as damaging for the publics confidence in th stanley cup e ability of Boris Johnsons government to tackle regional inequalities and level up Britain as the crisis over the exchange rate mechanism  ERM  was for John Majors reputation on economic management. How it responds now is pivotal for the countrys future, but also the current administrations.Justine Gre stanley termoska ening: exams crisis could be Boris Johnson s Black WednesdayRead moreAs soon as the decision was taken to close schools in mid-March, it was clear that there needed to be a plan in place for reopening them and helping young people catch up on the education they lost out on during lockdown.It was also clear that children who were already less privileged were most affected by the shutdown. It was clear when life-defining exams were cancelled that there would also need to be a way to ensure university places, apprenticeships and wider employment opportunities wouldnt become even further out of reach.Gavin Williamson, the education secretary, was right to say sorry to young people for the school exam disruption theyve had to suffer, but ultimately actions speak louder than words.What is most important now is to find a route forward: young people need to be able to develop their talents and find further opportunities. While talk from the government about levelling up h stanley cups uk as continued, levelling down is whats happened in reality.The best way to keep schools open  Stop coronaviru Absj What my night in a tent with the Naked Rambler taught me
 In December, 28-year-old Marshae Jones saw a woman she didnt like, Ebony Jemison, in the parking lot of a Dollar General in Pleasant Grove, Alabama, and confronted her. The fight turned physical, and Jemison shot Jones, wh stanley uk o was five months pregnant, in the stomach. Jones was rushed to a hospital. She survived, but lost her pregnancy. The fetus had been struck by a bullet.Yet a grand jury indicted Jones 鈥?not Jemison 鈥?for manslaughter. Under Alabama law a fetus has the same rights as a living person, and the grand jury ruled that Jones had an obligation to avoid anything that could potentially cause harm to her pregnancy, like making herself available to be shot.The US rights concern for the foetus doesnt survive the trip down the birth canal | Emer OTooleRead moreThe indictmen stanley borraccia t follows on the heels of an amendment to the Alabama state constitution late last year giving fetuses the rights of people 鈥?the provision that made the indictment possible 鈥?and the states passage of a total abortion ban in May. After a national uproar, charges against Jones were dropped. But the Jones indictment is part of a larger trend, both in Alabama and nationwide, of states engaging in hostile surveillance of pregnant women, oft stanley trinkflaschen en with the collusion of doctors, and criminalizing women for their pregnancy outcomes. The campaign is the product of a mass moral panic based on a flimsy and misogynistic ethical calculation in which women have few claims to their own rights, dignity or freedom, but ar