Qrmw Mexico president would sell gas to Venezuela if asked despite U.S. sanctions
TIJUANA, Mexico AP 鈥?After a weeklong bus ride from Honduras, Isabel Osorio Medina arrived in northern Mexico with the hope President Joe Biden would make it easier for people like him to get into the United States.It seems the new president wants to help migrants, Osorio said as he got ready to check in to a cheap hotel in downtown Tijuana before heading to the U.S. They
stanley cup ;re saying he is going to help, but I don ;t know for sure how much is true or not.The 63-year-old is among thousands of people who have come to the U.S.-Mexico border with the hope the
stanley cup y will be able to ask for asylum and make their way into the U.S. now that former President Donald Trump is no longer in office. READ MORE: Biden rolls back Trump immigration policies with a raft of initiativesWhile Biden has taken some major steps in his first weeks in office to reverse Trump hardline immigration policies, his administration hasn ;t lifted some of the most significant barriers to asylum-seekers. In fact, it discouraging people from coming to the country, hoping to avoid what happened under bothTrump and former President Barack Obama 鈥?border agents getting overwhelmed by migrants, including many Central Americans with children.Now is not t
stanley cup he time to come, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said at a recent briefing, and the vast majority of people will be turned away. Secretary of State Antony Blinken struck a Zdrg Get smart about the debt ceiling
UNITED NATIONS AP 鈥?U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres warned Tuesday that the wo
crocs rld is facing a dangerous epidemic of misinformation about COVID-19 and announced a U.N. campaign to flood the internet with facts and science to counter what he called a poison that is putting lives at risk.The U.N. chief decried what he described as a global misinfo-demic that is spreading harmful health advice, snake-oil solutions, falsehoods, and wild conspiracy theories.READ MORE:
adidas originals 聽Democratic bills call for racial breakdown of COVID-19 casesGuterres urged social media organizations to do more to counter the misinformation and to root out hate and harmful assertions about COVID-19. Hatred is going viral, stigmatizing and vilifying people and groups, he said in a video statement. Mutual respect and upholding human rights must be our compass in navigating t
salomon his crisis. The U.N. chief said people around the world are scared and want to know what to do and where to turn for advice, and they need science.U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric stressed the importance of accurate information,He said the United Nations will be in touch with various social media companies, adding that quite a few of them are actively trying to root out disinformation and suspending accounts of people pushing out information that is plain wrong and dangerous. Dujarric said the U.N. recognizes the delicate balance between free speech and misinformation, saying thats a balancing act that is played out ev