menudo suplicio tienen los brasileños, con Bolsonaro y ahora con Lula
menudo suplicio tienen los brasileños, con Bolsonaro y ahora con Lula
se empieza a acabar el humo de lo que rodea a Musk
Pobre Argentina sufriendo decadas de populismo
este se va a escapar a Brasil antes de juicio
a partir de ahora hay que añadir, la empresa neerlandesa.... Ferrovial.
....puente de plata
la razón del tribunal se refiere a qué el padre del lider de Podemos al no ser ni diputado,
no pintaba nada que un diputado le ponga un apelativo de esa magnitud, diferente sería si hubiera ido dirigido a un diputado
#5 Pero es algo que dice una persona elegida para representar a la ciudadanía, que quede constancia en el diario de sesiones de lo que dice esa persona es lo que debería ser.
Luego que cada cual opine si quiere si eso deja en evidencia a esa persona o a quien acusa o lo que sea, pero es un discurso hecho en una institución oficial actuando en representación de la ciudadanía. La censura ahí no debería tener cabida alguna.
Iglesias perdio el juicio (se desestimo) por el que pedía 18.000€ y Alvarez de Toledo perdió que se quede incluido en diario de sesiones.
Menuda manera estupida de contribuir a colapsar mas la justicia
Están adaptados, el clima en Suecia también es una porquería
#5 madre protectora se les llama
Veo una idea de negocio, "si te cuidas y entras en el asiento, te ofrecemos un 50% descuento de la tarifa" el que no quiera pesarse pues que pague la tarifa estándar.
#9 o que paguen una tarifa extra que no sea tan cara como un asiento entero. sino solo por el exceso de espacio que necesitan ocupar por su estado físico
Malditas aerolineas gordofobicas que se empeñan es solamente comprar aeronaves incitadoras de odio contra los cuerpos que no entran en los cánones corporales normativos.
yo sólo veo a una chica sana ancha de huesos.
#2 No solo es gordofobia, también es Megalofobia
Cualquier persona que mida mas de 1,90 cm tiene problemas para entrar en los asientos económicos
En antaño no era así
#12 Yo mido 185cm y sino separo las rodillas no quepo en el asiento.
PD: Antaño era muchísimo, pero muchísimo, más caro volar en avión, todo sea dicho.
#12 Antaño ¿Qué porcentaje de salario medio suponía una plaza de vuelo de 2000 km de distancia? Ahora en business también puedes viajar como un marqués.
#22 Ejem, ejem... "Ti" no lleva tilde.
Me salta el muro para que pases por caja. copio el texto para ahorrar click
un saludo.
12 Books You Should Be Reading Right Now
por The New York Times Books Staff, nytimes.com
16 de April de 2023 05:54
At The New York Times Book Review, we write about thousands of books every year. Many of them are good. Some are even great. But we get that sometimes you just want to know, “What should I read that is good or great for me?”
Well, here you go — a running list of some of the year’s best, most interesting, most talked-about books. Check back next month to see what we’ve added.
(For more recommendations, subscribe to our Read Like the Wind newsletter, or visit our What to Read page.)
Fiction
Birnam Wood, by Eleanor Catton
In this action-packed novel from a Booker Prize winner, a collective of activist gardeners crosses paths with a billionaire doomsday prepper on land they each want for different purposes. The billionaire decides to support the collective, citing common interests, but some of the activists suspect ulterior motives.
Local bookstores | Barnes and Noble | Amazon
Our Share of Night, by Mariana Enriquez. Translated by Megan McDowell.
This dazzling, epic narrative, translated from the Spanish by Megan McDowell, is a bewitching brew of mystery and myth, peopled by mediums who can summon “the Darkness” for a secret society of wealthy occultists seeking to preserve consciousness after death.
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This Other Eden, by Paul Harding
Harding’s latest novel was inspired by the true story of a devastating 1912 eviction in Maine that displaced an entire mixed-race fishing community. Harding turns that history into a lyrical tale about the fictional Apple Island on the cusp of destruction.
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Every Man a King, by Walter Mosley
In the second novel in Mosley’s King Oliver series, a Black private detective in New York investigates whether the government framed a prominent white supremacist. The plot gets more intricate the more he digs, with prison contractors, alt-right militias and Russian oil traffickers all in play.
Local bookstores | Barnes and Noble | Amazon
Victory City, by Salman Rushdie
Rushdie’s new novel recounts the long life of Pampa Kampana, who creates an empire from magic seeds in 14th-century India. Her world is one of peace, where men and women are equal and all faiths welcome, but the story Rushdie tells is of a state that forever fails to live up to its ideals.
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The Chinese Groove, by Kathryn Ma
A comedic take on the trials of immigration, Ma’s latest novel follows a Chinese man who is woefully unprepared for his move to America, but who powers through thanks to his belief that generosity and connection always exist among his fellow countrymen.
Local bookstores | Barnes and Noble | Amazon
Hello Beautiful, by Ann Napolitano
In her radiant and brilliantly crafted fourth novel, Napolitano puts a fresh spin on a classic tale of four sisters and the man who joins their family. Take “Little Women,” move it to modern-day Chicago, add more intrigue, lots of basketball and a different kind of boy next door and you’ve got the bones of this thoroughly original story.
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Nonfiction
Lives of the Wives: Five Literary Marriages, by Carmela Ciuraru
The relationships at the center of Ciuraru’s lively and absorbing new literary history vary widely, but are united by questions of ego and agency, competition and resentment. In most cases, unsurprisingly, the female creative got the short end of the stick.
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Unscripted: The Epic Battle for a Media Empire and the Redstone Family Legacy, by James B. Stewart and Rachel Abrams
This jaw-dropping chronicle by two Times reporters of the final years of Sumner Redstone, the head of Paramount, is an epic tale of toxic wealth and greed populated by connivers and manipulators, not least Redstone himself.
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Master Slave Husband Wife: An Epic Journey From Slavery to Freedom, by Ilyon Woo
Woo’s book recounts a daring feat: the successful flight north from Georgia in 1848 by an enslaved couple disguised as a sickly young white planter and his male slave. But her meticulous retelling is equally a feat — of research, storytelling, sympathy and insight.
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Bottoms Up and the Devil Laughs: A Journey Through the Deep State, by Kerry Howley
The people in this darkly funny book include fabulists, truth tellers, combatants, whistle-blowers. Like many of us, they have left traces of themselves in the digital ether by making a phone call, texting a friend, looking up something online. Howley writes about the national security state and those who get entangled in it — Edward Snowden, Chelsea Manning and Reality Winner all figure into Howley’s riveting account.
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Poverty, by America, by Matthew Desmond
The central claim of this manifesto by the Princeton sociologist (who won a Pulitzer Prize for his 2016 book “Evicted,” about exploitation in Milwaukee’s poorest housing market) is that poverty in the United States is the product not only of larger economic shifts, but of choices and actions by more fortunate Americans.
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#4 Ya puestos podrías haberlo traducido.
Espero que puedan protegerlo de los pescadores de China continental que estan esquilmando los mares de la zona.
https://www.nytimes.com/es/interactive/2022/10/13/espanol/pesca-china-sudamerica.html