Profile avatar
laciuraraffaele.bsky.social
Socializza senza stressare il prossimo tuo!
2,802 posts 1,031 followers 531 following
Prolific Poster

Russia’s recent school textbooks rewrite the invasion of Ukraine as a “peacekeeping” mission and blame the West. Historical revisionism aimed at shaping the next generation’s view of history. #DontBeDeceived 👉 euvsd.info/XbfvXhXw

The standard way to commemorate Canada’s founding is "to drive to the quietest place you can near a body of water and drink beer while staring at it," Stephen Marche writes. This year, though, "Canada is trying to make sure there’s a Canada Day next year":

"One of the most important, and most overlooked, functions of protest is to prevent the dreaded 'spiral of silence,' which can begin when people wrongly believe that their own point of view is not widely shared," Betsy Levy Paluck writes:

In Gaza we watched Iranian missiles go by, heading for Israel. That war is over – it seems ours will never end | Hassan Abo Qamar

Food supplies to some Sudan refugees could dry up within two months, WFP says reut.rs/4noZElz

Euro zone inflation edges higher, hitting ECB's 2% target in June www.cnbc.com/2025/07/01/e...

En Turquie, nouvelle opération policière contre l’opposition à Izmir, 120 arrestations pour « corruption »

Europe drives LNG import growth as Asia stumbles on higher price www.reuters.com/markets/comm...

Twelve days in Gaza: what happened while the world looked away? www.theguardian.com/world/2025/j...

Il Mattinale Europeo è online. L’analisi del giorno: “Presidenza danese: pilotare in terra incognita”. Con @cspillmann.bsky.social 👇 davidcarretta.substack.com/p/presidenza...

Sudan civil war: Losing a baby, rescuing a child and dodging air strikes in Darfur

Trump Tyranny Tracker: Day 162 The daily tracker documenting the latest in corruption, power consolidation, civil & human rights abuses, and weaponization of government news. Today's news is extremely troubling, and that's saying a lot

Shakespeare in war: Ukraine festival explores intersection to bard’s world www.theguardian.com/world/2025/j...

‘A new wave of repression’: fears for Iran’s political prisoners after Israel war www.theguardian.com/world/2025/j...

Come stanno andando le auto cinesi.

French Premier Bayrou in the Hot Seat Again www.bloomberg.com/news/newslet...

Kim Jong-un pays rare public tribute to North Korean soldiers killed in Ukraine www.theguardian.com/world/2025/j...

Tiny Tuvalu seeks assurance from US its citizens won't be barred reut.rs/4kd1ItX

Europe’s 5% Pledge Must Buy 10-Fold Edge cepa.org/article/euro...

Despotism Beckons as Georgia Jails Opponents cepa.org/article/desp...

Secret Weapon: History | "The pseudohistorical “Litvinism” is stirring discord between Lithuania and Belarus." @edwardlucas.bsky.social

How a bridge changed lives and boosted business www.bbc.com/news/article...

Kumbh Mela: BBC investigation reveals hidden deaths at India festival crush www.bbc.com/news/article...

Woman dies from injuries suffered in Boulder antisemitic attack www.bbc.com/news/article...

Syria's Christians fear for future after devastating church attack www.bbc.com/news/article...

Lethal heat is Europe’s new climate reality www.politico.eu/article/leth...

Putin is invading more than Ukraine www.politico.eu/article/vlad...

Les coupes américaines dans l’aide internationale pourraient causer plus de 14 millions de morts d’ici 2030

Clashes and arrests in Turkey over magazine cartoon allegedly depicting prophet Muhammad www.theguardian.com/world/2025/j...

Five years on, Hong Kong’s national security law extinguishes last standing pro-democracy party www.theguardian.com/world/2025/j...

Ukraine war briefing: Russia claims to have seized all of Luhansk region; Kim Jong-un mourns war dead www.theguardian.com/world/2025/j...

Trump news at a glance: Republicans scramble to pass ‘one big, beautiful bill’ as deadline looms www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025...

By shifting toward the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, a 100-year-old Hindu nationalist organization, the Bharatiya Janata Party has tightened its grip over India—and shown that the party can survive without Modi, writes Hartosh Singh Bal.

In this collection of essays, Foreign Affairs’ editors have selected some of our best analysis of the roots of the conflict between Iran, Israel, and the United States—and what comes next. Start reading here:

The Trump administration is giving up the pursuit of worldwide influence in order to focus on Asia, write @proflind.bsky.social‬ and Daryl Press “This strategy offers a middle position between isolationism and the longtime U.S. strategy of global leadership.”

Comparing two leaders, two millennia apart. foreignpolicy.com/2025/06/30/t...

It took a decade for the U.S. economy to recover from Nixon. This time could be worse. foreignpolicy.com/2025/06/30/d...

Jimmy Carter made foreign policy feel moral again, but that era might be over. foreignpolicy.com/2025/06/30/h...

In an era defined by vanity, the U.S. president outdoes all his populist peers. foreignpolicy.com/2025/06/30/t...

We live in an America governed by Trump. But we do not have to accept that we live in Trump’s America. My latest for @theatlantic.com Daily: www.theatlantic.com/newsletters/...

"My fellow Americans: When you pay taxes, which would you rather support? Cancer research, or getting one guy a really big boat?" @petridishes.bsky.social writes:

“The toxic-empathy rhetorical framework, built for producing peace of mind for conservative debaters, threatens to render Christians insensitive to moral demands of Christianity that run contrary to conservative preferences,” Elizabeth Bruenig writes:

Progressive lawyers must stop bringing new cases to the Supreme Court, writes Duncan Hosie. They are fighting “for ideas the justices were explicitly appointed to oppose”:

The housing crunch is widely seen as a problem for high-regulation Democratic states. So why is it now spreading to places like Florida and Texas? Rogé Karma writes:

“America, América,” Greg Grandin's new book, suggests that our southern neighbors may hold lessons for our own democracy. Carolina Miranda about what the U.S. can learn from Latin America:

Humanity is set to start shrinking several decades ahead of schedule, Marc Novicoff writes. “Because global fertility trends are much worse than they, and probably you, think”:

Even with people having children later, more families now include great-grandparents. It’s beautiful—but it also presents a new caretaking challenge, Faith Hill writes:

In recent years, an irresistibly intuitive hypothesis has both salved and fuelled parental anxieties: it’s the phones. But is it?

The arrival of A.I. means that college students can now bypass the process, and the difficulty, of learning altogether. Hua Hsu reports.