US politics
fromwww.aljazeera.com
1 day agoFIFA urged to push US for ICE Truce' at World Cup by Human Rights Watch
HRW urges FIFA to negotiate an ICE Truce during the 2026 World Cup to protect human rights and ensure safety at events.
In 2025, the five biggest military spenders were the United States ($954bn), China ($336bn), Russia ($190bn), Germany ($114bn) and India ($92bn), accounting for more than half (58 percent) of world military spending.
A robot's claw hurtles toward a light bulb on a table. I wince, waiting for the crunch. But suddenly the claw decelerates. It starts gingerly pawing around the table, as if searching for its glasses on the nightstand.
The literary classic you read in fifth grade is about to become your newest streaming obsession. The brains behind last year's Netflix sensation Adolescence will soon release their series version of William Golding's celebrated novel about young boys who descend into tribalism and savagery on a remote island.
Pregnancy and childbirth put great stress on a woman's body. Black women may experience additional strain due to factors including systemic racism, socioeconomic disadvantage and environmental stressors.
Virginia has become the latest state to clear the way for churches and other faith groups to build affordable housing on their land, borrowing a page from a California precedent-setting attainable housing win-win innovation.
Noah Caluori's try was a deft dink over the top just outside the Tigers' 22, followed by searing acceleration and a balletic leap to regather the ball while staying infield.
David Gross emphasizes the existence of a final, unified theory of nature, which would reconcile electromagnetism, the strong and weak nuclear forces, and gravity. He believes this theory is waiting to be discovered, yet he is pessimistic about humanity's chances of achieving this before potential self-destruction through nuclear warfare.
TikTok's 2026 algorithm scans each frame, favours clips that keep viewers watching, and pushes down posts that feel low effort. When an AI editor trims silence, snaps cuts to the beat, and adds captions in seconds, you gain that retention-boosting polish without spending hours in Premiere.
What makes it shine are the behind-the-scenes moments throughout this five-part series. Without getting lost in technical detail or overselling the sport, it leans into what ski racing actually is: long travel days, fragile confidence, and moments where everything - a season, a career - comes down to a few seconds between gates.