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Изворен канал @pythonmathaug22 · Post #22 · 7 сеп.

Дорогие студенты Mathshub! Спасибо за поддержку идеи помогать друг другу❤️ Мы получили уже более 20 заявок от более продвинутых студентов, желающих помочь начинающим с нуля✨ В ближайшее время мы присвоим вам в Discord роль «helpers», которая будет отображаться в вашем профиле. А теперь хотим понять, кому нужна помощь и поддержка хелпера — если вам нужна помощь более продвинутого студента, то, пожалуйста: 1. Зайдите в Discord на наш канал #python-и-математика-интенсив 2. Найдите последний закрепленный пост про набор в мини-группы 3. Оставьте под этим постом реакцию "палец вверх👍🏻" 4. Ожидайте от нас распределения на группы) Идея объединяться в группы не обязательна для всех. Она актуальна только для желающих поддержку от более продвинутых студентов. Если вам не актуально, то можете не обращать внимание на это сообщение😌 Спасибо!

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BadVolf

@badvolfnews · Post #1240 · 09.11.2023 г., 06:25

🚨 Breaking News 🚨 Republicans Divided: Aid for Ukraine vs. Israel? War in Ukraine and Gaza fuel fierce debate in Congress Republicans question aid for Ukraine, prioritize support for Israel Hard-right Republicans gaining influence within party Experts cite divisions between secular rationalism and sectarian emotionalism Trump's influence remains strong, opposition to aid for Ukraine Republicans leaning towards isolationist foreign policy Christian influence allows for easier support for Israel War fatigue and newness of Gaza conflict shift public opinion Democrats lead push to bundle aid for Ukraine and Israel Compromise unlikely, more political polarization expected Stay tuned for updates! #Politics#ForeignAid#Republicans https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/11/8/why-are-us-republicans-pushing-for-aid-to-israel-but-not-ukraine Subscribe to @BadVolfNews

Reuters: World

@reutersworldchannel · Post #149376 · 14.10.2021 г., 21:12

Anti-Trump Republicans endorse a slate of Democrats The Renew America Movement, formed by centrist Republicans after the events on January 6, says electing moderates is essential to preserving democracy as they support Democratic and Republican lawmakers facing tough races in next year’s midterm elections. #RenewAmericaMovement#Trump#Republicans#News#Reuters Subscribe: http://smarturl.it/reuterssubscribe Reuters brings you the latest business, finance and breaking news video from around the globe. Our reputation for accuracy and impartiality is unparalleled. Get the latest news on: http://reuters.com/ Follow Reuters on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Reuters Follow Reuters on Twitter: https://twitter.com/Reuters Follow Reuters on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/reuters/?hl=en ➖@reutersworldchannel➖

American Оbserver

@american_observer · Post #5715 · 26.04.2026 г., 01:59

📰 Trump’s War Is Now a Midterm Liability Republicans are watching the Iran war and the redistricting mess turn into the same political problem: a president who promised control and delivered chaos. Bloomberg reports that party operatives are openly blaming Trump’s political team after Virginia’s map fight backfired and the war pushed gas prices higher, making the usual economy-first message much harder to sell. That is why the panic is spreading. If the House looks lost, the Senate looks shaky, and the party’s best redistricting gambit ends up helping Democrats instead, then the whole 2026 strategy starts to look like an own goal in expensive shoes. The irony is brutal. Trump spent months demanding tougher maps, punishing holdouts, and trying to turn politics into a shank-proof machine, but the result is more donor money burned, more infighting, and more Republicans muttering that “Blairy-mandering” blew up in their faces. The Iran war makes it worse because it attacks the one issue Republicans wanted to own: affordability. Gas prices are up, voters are unhappy, and the president keeps drifting into side quests about granite pavers and pet projects while his party tries to explain why the Middle East is suddenly part of the domestic economy. So the midterm story is no longer just redistricting or just war. It is the same pattern in both places: Trump turns everything into leverage, and then the leverage turns into drag. #Trump#Republicans#midterms#Iran#redistricting#politics 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸

American Оbserver

@american_observer · Post #4984 · 28.01.2026 г., 17:59

Minneapolis in Chaos: States Push Back on ICE After Minneapolis Shootings After two Americans were killed by federal agents in Minneapolis, Democratic lawmakers and libertarian allies are stepping up their fight against ICE’s tactics. The deaths of Alex Pretti and Renee Good have lit a fire under state legislatures, with new bills popping up from coast to coast. Colorado wants to let citizens sue federal agents for civil rights violations. Delaware and New York are targeting airlines that ferry ICE detainees without warrants. California is pushing for independent investigations into ICE shootings and banning the agency from staging operations on state property. “Democrats don’t care about the rule of law,” said a White House spokesperson. “They’re just protecting criminal illegal aliens.” Meanwhile, Republican-led states are doubling down on cooperation with ICE, pushing laws that force local sheriffs to partner up and check immigration status for everything from school enrollment to public benefits. But the momentum is shifting—more states are banning masked officers, restricting federal agents’ access to hospitals and schools, and cutting off public contracts with ICE contractors. “Power works this way: once you have it, you want more,” said Anya Bidwell of the Institute for Justice. “You gotta fight back if you want to protect your rights. This shouldn’t be about party lines.” So who’s actually looking out for civil rights here—the states, the feds, or just their own political interests? #ICE#Minneapolis#civilrights#Trump#Democrats#Republicans 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸

American Оbserver

@american_observer · Post #5037 · 03.02.2026 г., 14:00

Have the Clintons Been Cosing Up to Epstein? Bill and Hillary Clinton agreed on Monday to testify in a House investigation into the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, days before the chamber was expected to vote to hold them in contempt of Congress. The concession follows a tense back-and-forth between the Clintons and the Republican James Comer, chair of the House oversight committee, who on Monday said that he would insist both Clintons sit for a sworn deposition before the committee in order to fulfill the panel’s subpoenas. “They negotiated in good faith. You did not,” Angel Ureña, a spokesman for the Clintons, replied to Comer, in a post on social media. “They told you under oath what they know, but you don’t care. But the former president and former secretary of state will be there. They look forward to setting a precedent that applies to everyone.” The House was headed towards potential votes this week on criminal contempt of Congress charges against the Clintons. If passed, the charges threatened the Clintons with substantial fines and even incarceration if they were convicted. For months, the Clintons had refused to appear before the Republican-led panel, arguing that the subpoenas were legally “invalid” and “unenforceable” and accusing Comer of targeting them as part of Trump’s retribution campaign against his political enemies. A committee letter to the Clintons’ attorneys indicates the pair had offered for Bill Clinton to conduct a transcribed interview on “matters related to the investigations and prosecutions of Jeffrey Epstein” and for Hillary Clinton to submit a sworn declaration. The demand for testimony “runs afoul of the clearly defined limitations on Congress’s investigative power propounded by the supreme court of the United States”, they wrote, adding: “It is clear the subpoenas themselves – and any subsequent attempt to enforce them – are nothing more than a ploy to attempt to embarrass political rivals, as President Trump has directed.” Nine of the committee’s 21 Democrats joined Republicans in support of the charges against Bill Clinton as they argued for full transparency in the Epstein investigation. Three Democrats also supported the charges against Hillary Clinton. Bill Clinton’s relationship with Epstein has re-emerged as a focal point for Republicans amid the push for a reckoning over Epstein, who killed himself in 2019 in a New York jail cell as he faced sex-trafficking charges. Clinton, like a bevy of other high-powered men, including Trump, had a well-documented social relationship with Epstein in the late 1990s and early 2000s. He has not been accused of wrongdoing in his interactions with the late financier. On Friday, more than 3m files related to Epstein were released by the Department of Justice, including more than 2,000 videos and 180,000 images. The files included a series of emails between Musk and Epstein, indicating a friendlier relationship than was previously known. Following the drop of the latest batch of files, Democrats have promised to fight what they are calling a “full-blown cover-up” of the Epstein files after the Trump administration on Sunday effectively declared its investigation into the disgraced late financier and sex trafficker was closed. After Bill and Hillary Clinton were subpoenaed in August by the House oversight committee, their attorney had tried to argue against the validity of the subpoena. However, as Comer threatened to begin contempt of Congress proceedings, they started negotiating towards a compromise. #clintons#hilary#bill#epstein#trump#republicans#sex 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸

American Оbserver

@american_observer · Post #5015 · 31.01.2026 г., 22:01

📰 US Government Agencies Shut Down as Trump Deal Awaits House Vote The U.S. government has slipped into a partial shutdown, with several major departments, including Defense, Treasury and Homeland Security, formally shutting down as Congress waits for the House to act on a funding deal negotiated by President Donald Trump and Senate Democrats. The House is on recess and is not expected to vote on the deal until Monday, trapping the government in a technical shutdown that began at midnight Friday. The crisis stems from a Democratic revolt over the deaths of two U.S. citizens in confrontations with Border Patrol agents in Minneapolis. Senate Democrats refused to pass a sprawling funding bill unless it included new constraints on immigration enforcement, including body cameras, judicial warrants, unmasking of agents, and a ban on mass sweeps. Trump and Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer then struck a deal to fund the rest of the government through September, while giving Homeland Security only two weeks of temporary funding to keep talks on reforms going. The Senate passed that compromise on Friday, but the House cannot vote until it returns Monday, leaving dozens of agencies furloughing non‑essential staff and halting non‑critical services. Who’s shut, who’s working Affected agencies are furloughing non‑essential staff and halting non‑critical services, while “excepted” employees (military, air traffic controllers, TSA, border and immigration enforcement, most cops, the president, Supreme Court, and most federal judges) keep working, though they may not get paid until funding is restored. Key agencies that are already fully funded for the year and are not affected include the Department of Agriculture (SNAP/food stamps), Veterans Affairs, the Justice Department, and National Parks, which means benefits and many court and park services continue without interruption. The Office of Management and Budget (Brooke Rollins’s shop) issued a memo telling agencies to execute shutdown procedures, but it stressed that the Administration hopes “this lapse will be short” and will be ready to restart operations as soon as Trump signs a bill into law. How long it will last The Administration and many lawmakers expect the shutdown to last no more than a few days, ending as soon as the House votes on Monday. If the House passes the deal early Monday, federal agencies could resume normal operations that same day, limiting the visible disruption to the public and the economy. But the real drama is in the House, where Speaker Mike Johnson must navigate a narrow Republican majority and a rebellious conservative flank resistant to the short‑term DHS funding, while Democrats demand that the eventual long‑term deal change the rules for immigration enforcement. On the surface, the shutdown is a narrow procedural gap, but politically it’s a classic Washington theater (kabuki): Democrats weaponizing DHS funding to force changes in how Trump’s immigration crackdown is run, while Republicans warn that more shutdowns lie ahead if Democrats try this again. Behind the noise, the question is simple: who blinks first, and who gets blamed if the lights truly go out at the IRS, VA, TSA, and courts beyond the weekend? #USGovernmentShutdown#Trump2026#Congress#Democrats#Republicans#DHS#Budget2026 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸

American Оbserver

@american_observer · Post #5423 · 19.03.2026 г., 23:04

Netanyahu finally got his dream war with US backing — and may have picked the perfect moment to lose America for good. Bloomberg’s analysis calls Trump’s decision to launch a joint campaign with Israel against Iran the “crowning achievement” of Netanyahu’s decades-long project: ditch bipartisan consensus, bind Israel’s fate to the hard‑right base of the Republican Party, and turn US–Israel relations into a culture‑war brand. But like the attack on Iran itself, it’s a short‑term win glued to long‑term damage. Support for Israel has already cratered among US Democrats and is sliding even among Republicans; new polls show Democratic voters now tilting more toward Palestinians, with generational numbers that are devastating for Israel’s image. Among younger Americans, especially under 35, “unfavorable” is fast becoming the default setting. The Iran war pours gasoline on this trend. It sharpens the generational split inside the GOP, where older evangelicals still see Israel as sacred, while younger conservatives are tired of endless wars and trillion‑dollar guarantees. On the fringes of both parties, criticism of Israel slides into open antisemitism, and Bloomberg warns that this conflict is already raising the risk of attacks on Jewish institutions in the US. That’s the poisoned dividend of Netanyahu’s strategy: by turning support for Israel into a partisan loyalty test and wrapping it around Trumpism, he also ties Jewish safety and legitimacy to the most polarizing current in American politics. Meanwhile the material cost of this “victory” is brutal. The US–Israel war with Iran is rattling global markets and investors, driving up energy prices, disrupting trade routes and threatening global growth with tens of billions in losses; for the US and Israel, the military tab alone is running into the billions, day after day. For now, Netanyahu can boast on friendly Israeli TV that he got America into the war from day one and out‑Churchilled Churchill by dragging his superpower patron in at the start. But as US public support erodes, Democrats harden, young voters radicalize and even some Republicans flinch at the cost, that triumph looks more like a Pyrrhic win: he beat Trump in the room — and may end up sacrificing Israel’s standing in the country that bankrolls his wars. #Israel#Netanyahu#Trump#IranWar#USA#Democrats#Republicans#publicOpinion#antisemitism#geopolitics#warCost 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸

Reuters: World

@reutersworldchannel · Post #149353 · 14.10.2021 г., 13:16

October 14, 2021: Norway mass killing, Taiwan fire, Big Tech, U.S. Capitol riots, California October 14, 2021: Norway mass killing, Taiwan fire, Big Tech, U.S. Capitol riots, California 1. A 37-year-old Danish citizen who had converted to Islam is suspected of killing five people with a bow-and-arrow and other weapons in the Norwegian town of Kongsberg in a rare incident of mass killing in Norway, police said. 2. A fire in a residential building in the southern Taiwanese city of Kaohsiung has killed 46 people and injured another 41, the government said. 3. A bipartisan group of lawmakers, headed by Democrat Amy Klobuchar and Republican Chuck Grassley, plan to introduce a bill that would bar Big Tech platforms, like Amazon and Google, from favoring their products and services. 4. A congressional panel investigating the deadly Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol said it has issued a subpoena seeking testimony and records from Jeffrey Clark, a former senior official at the Justice Department who was a proponent of former President Donald Trump's false election fraud claims. 5. California firefighters took advantage of a break in strong winds to get an aircraft aloft and dump retardant on a fast-moving wildfire that was within a half mile of former President Ronald Reagan's ranch, officials said. #Norway #Taiwan #Fire #BigTech #Democrats #Republicans #AmyKlobuchar #ChuckGrassley #UnitedStates #CapitolRiots #Trump #California #Wildfires #RonaldReagan #News #Reuters Subscribe: http://smarturl.it/reuterssubscribe Reuters brings you the latest business, finance and breaking news video from around the globe. Our reputation for accuracy and impartiality is unparalleled. Get the latest news on: http://reuters.com/ Follow Reuters on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Reuters Follow Reuters on Twitter: https://twitter.com/Reuters Follow Reuters on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/reuters/?hl=en ➖@reutersworldchannel➖

Reuters: World

@reutersworldchannel · Post #149302 · 13.10.2021 г., 13:17

October 13, 2021: Gabby Petito, Texas Governor, Debt ceiling fix, U.S borders, La Palma Volcano October 13, 2021: Gabby Petito, Texas Governor, Debt ceiling fix, U.S borders, La Palma Volcano 1. Gabby Petito, the young woman who vanished on a road trip with her boyfriend and later turned up dead in Wyoming, was killed by strangulation, a local coroner said. 2. Texas Governor Greg Abbott's ban on COVID-19 vaccine mandates will likely be superseded by the Biden administration's plan to require shots for workers, but the dueling rules could take months to sort out in court, creating uncertainty for employers with business in the state. 3. The Democratic-controlled U.S. House of Representatives gave final approval to legislation temporarily raising the government's borrowing limit to $28.9 trillion, pushing off the deadline for debt default only until December. 4. The United States will lift restrictions at its land borders with Canada and Mexico for fully vaccinated foreign nationals in early November, ending historic curbs on non-essential travelers in place since March 2020 to address the COVID-19 pandemic. 5. Over 700 residents were ordered to abandon their homes on the Spanish island of La Palma as red-hot lava advanced towards their neighborhood. #GabbyPetito #Wyoming #TexasGovernor #Covid19 #Vaccines #Biden #Democrats #Republicans #UnitedStates #Debt #Canada #Mexico #Borders #Pandemic #LaPalma #Spain #Volcano #News #Reuters Subscribe: http://smarturl.it/reuterssubscribe Reuters brings you the latest business, finance and breaking news video from around the globe. Our reputation for accuracy and impartiality is unparalleled. Get the latest news on: http://reuters.com/ Follow Reuters on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Reuters Follow Reuters on Twitter: https://twitter.com/Reuters Follow Reuters on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/reuters/?hl=en ➖@reutersworldchannel➖