#gualeguaychu
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Entre Ríos - Termas del Gualeguaychú https://ift.tt/hPb4NOo
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... " hemos recibido muchos mimos Gracias✨ #gualeguaychu #EntreRíos #pittyffyti (en Gualeguaychu Entre Rios) https://www.instagram.com/p/Co8bNCfOXWB/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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Y mientras tanto, el sol se muere.
Gualeguaychu, Entre Ríos. Argentina.
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In this week's Prime Time True Crime recap, we explore five deeply tragic and compelling murder cases that span continents and circumstances, each weaving a tale of loss, betrayal, and unsolved mystery. In these stories, victims' voices echo the chilling realities of human cruelty and the relentless pursuit of justice.
1️⃣ **The Heartbreaking End of Mary Isbell**
Venture into the forests of Alabama, where the disappearance of Mary Elizabeth Isbell led to a shocking revelation eight months later. Discover how a tip unraveled a heinous plot by two people she knew, culminating in a brutal and calculated murder that shook the community to its core.
2️⃣ **Fatal Attraction: The Murder of Fernando Pastorizzo**
Travel to Gualeguaychu, Argentina, where a seemingly reconciliatory meetup turned deadly for Fernando Pastorizzo. Nahir Galarza's actions on that fateful day sparked a national debate on domestic abuse and the legal system, leaving many questions unanswered.
3️⃣ **The Unimaginable Tragedy of the Clancy Children**
In North Plymouth, Massachusetts, a family dinner turned into an incomprehensible nightmare. This harrowing case delves into the darkness of mental health struggles and the unspeakable act of a mother against her own children, leaving a community and nation in mourning.
4️⃣ **Savanna Greywind's Horrific Fate**
In Fargo, North Dakota, the disappearance of the eight-month pregnant Savanna LaFontaine-Greywind led to a discovery that horrified the nation. A story of deceit, betrayal, and the horrific act of fetal abduction, this case exposes the depths of human depravity.
5️⃣ **The Mystery of Amanda Deza: The Lady in the Fridge**
For nearly 30 years, the identity of the "Lady in the Fridge" remained a haunting mystery. Uncover the story of Amanda Deza, whose life and tragic end were shrouded in mystery until groundbreaking DNA technology brought her identity to light, yet her killer remains unknown.
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creo que tenemos q pasar de carnaval rioplatense a gualeguaychu o rio. Hace demasiado calor para la cantidad de ropa que tienen las murgas
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🖥#LaSemillaRebelde
Sábado 15.06.2024 - 16 hs.
Argentina: detectan más de 80 #agrotóxicos en alimentos. #NoAgrotóxicos #NoTransgénicos
Bayer venderá verduras editadas genéticamente en EEUU. #NoCrispr
Lagarto Alzaga Unzué en "La Semilla Terminator": páginas del gobierno sobre #OGM vegetal.
PUEBLOS ORIGINARIOS:
- La Red de Acompañamiento de los Pueblos Indígenas se reunió con el Pte. del #INAI y legisladores.
- Imputan a integrantes de la Lof Paicil Antriao para responder a intereses inmobiliarios de Villa La Angostura.
- "Pueblos Originarios de Ayer y de Hoy": nueva Presidente de México a favor de los #derechosindígenas.
PAISANOS EN ACCION:
- Recetas Eterno Presente con Javi Nepo: lectura del libro Alimentación Evolutiva de Daniel Gagliardo parte 9. @luzdelvalleediciones
- China está optando por cultivar arroz en el desierto.
- Los Espacios Municipales de Primera Infancia en Gualeguaychu transforman su propuesta alimentaria. #AcuerdoBasadoEnPlantas
Los planes nacionales de acción climática tienen objetivos forestales insuficientes y la #deforestación aumenta.
Thórkhom en "Colaboración Entre Reinos": qué son los ramilletes de mayo en ciruelas y damascos, qué son los dardos y más.
Contenido Informativo Socioambiental
Área Prensa
Regional #Córdoba
#ConcienciaSolidaria ONG
Transmisión: Facebook.com/LaSemillaRebelde
#MEDIOAMBIENTE #DERECHOSHUMANOS #PueblosOriginarios #Salud #Agroecología #Veganismo #AlimentaciónEvolutiva
#ColaboraciónEntreReinos #Agrotóxicos #Transgénicos #NoMonsanto
"Un programa con etiqueta orgánica que nadie podrá patentar"
@lasemillarebelde
@concienciasolidariaong
#ConcienciaSolidariaONG
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Sunday, July 16, 2023
World adds 165 million more poor as debt consumes governments’ funds (Washington Post) A punishing series of economic shocks over the past three years drove 165 million people into poverty worldwide and left debt-swamped developing nations unable to afford adequate schooling, medicine and other social services, according to a report from the United Nations Development Program. Some of the world’s poorest countries borrowed heavily since 2020 to cope with the pandemic, soaring food and fuel bills caused by the war in Ukraine, the fastest inflation in four decades and higher interest rates. Now, dozens of governments—most in Africa and the Middle East—are spending more than twice as much of their revenue repaying debt as they do on social programs. About 3.3 billion people live in countries that spend more on interest payments to banks or official lenders than they devote to educating or caring for their citizens. “What this means is a government that can no longer pay its teachers; a government that can no longer employ doctors and nurses in hospitals; that cannot provide the medicines for rural health centers,” said Achim Steiner, UNDP administrator. “And this is what it translates into: less health care, less education, no social safety nets that are able to provide temporary relief for people who, through no fault of their own, find themselves in a situation where they literally cannot feed their family anymore.” Battered by repeat economic challenges, governments throughout the developing world find their financial resources exhausted. Unable to fund necessary social and economic programs, they risk sliding into disarray.
Bargain-hunting Uruguayans are flocking to Argentina as its peso slides (AP) On a recent cross-border shopping trip, four friends from Fray Bentos, Uruguay, visited the nearby Argentine city of Gualeguaychu, where they could afford to live lavishly and snap up eye-popping bargains, thanks to a huge disparity in the two South American countries’ currencies. With its economy faltering, Argentina’s peso has plunged against the U.S. dollar and its annual inflation is 115.6%, one of the highest rates in the world. In contrast, Uruguay’s economy is more stable, with low inflation and a stronger currency. The result has been a huge flow of shoppers from Uruguay throwing an economic lifeline to struggling Argentine stores and restaurants in cities like Gualeguaychú, Concordia and Colón. But there’s a downside for Uruguayan businesses along the border: In the provinces of Salto, Paysandú, Río Negro and Soriano, municipal authorities say 170 stores closed in the first five months of this year. Businesses still open complain they hardly have any customers. The price differences between the two countries can be staggering. A liter of sunflower oil that costs $5 in Uruguay is 50 cents in Argentina. A jar of skin-care cream that costs $10 in Uruguay can be had for a dollar across the border. And a liter of gasoline in Uruguay is close to $2. In the Argentine province of Entre Rios it is 52 cents.
European heat wave sparks multiple warnings, shuts Greece’s Acropolis (Washington Post) Parts of southern Europe are sweltering under a heat wave, with a historic monument forced to close in Greece as authorities in several countries issued warnings over the high temperatures. Cyprus’s meteorology department warned of extreme heat on Saturday, with temperatures expected to reach 110 degrees Fahrenheit (44 Celsius) in inland areas, while Italy’s Health Ministry issued red alerts for over a dozen cities, including the capital Rome, and warned people to avoid heat and direct sun during the hottest hours. Germany, meanwhile, announced heat warnings for about half the country. In Greece’s Attica region, home to the capital Athens, temperatures were predicted to reach up to 104 degrees (40 Celsius) on Saturday. Extreme temperatures on Friday prompted authorities to temporarily close one of the city’s most recognizable monuments, the Acropolis, as Red Cross staff handed out bottled water to tourists waiting in line. The Spanish island of Mallorca could see temperatures as high as 102.2 degrees (39 Celsius) on Saturday, according to the country’s Weather Service. The heat wave over many parts of southern Europe has been caused by a high-pressure system that has been nicknamed Cerberus after the multi-headed dog said to guard the underworld in ancient Greek mythology.
Ukraine’s Forgotten Villages (NYT) Leave the eastern Ukrainian city of Izium and turn west onto rougher roads, where dead trees and twisted power lines give way to a string of shattered villages. These enclaves, once the backbone of Ukraine’s agricultural eastern steppe, were reduced to ruin as the war passed over them like a flood tide. Despite being recaptured by Ukraine’s military last fall, the villages of Sulyhivka, Virnopillia and Kamianka are now at risk of being lost—not to artillery or pitched battles, but to overgrown weeds, wildflowers and minefields. They are another kind of casualty in a war that has claimed many. The few residents who returned home after the Russians retreated are struggling to live. They have waited 10 months, in vain, for electricity to be restored, for their fields to be cleared of explosives, and for neighbors to come back to restore some semblance of community.
Torrential rains in South Korea kill at least 26 in landslides and floods (AP) Days of heavy rain in South Korea killed at least 26 people and left 10 others missing in landslides and floods, the government said Saturday. South Korea has been pounded by heavy rains since July 9. The ministry report said the rainfall had forced about 5,570 people to evacuate and left 25,470 households without electricity in the past several days.
Syria’s “sovereign decision” (Foreign Policy) Syrian officials announced on Thursday that they will continue to allow United Nations humanitarian aid to enter rebel-held northern areas of the country through the Bab al-Hawa crossing but with government oversight, thereby giving Syrian President Bashar al-Assad control over almost all aid deliveries in the north. This comes after the U.N. Security Council failed, thanks to a Russian veto, to extend a 2014 agreement on Thursday allowing international relief access to Syria’s rebel-held territory without Syrian government involvement. Damascus’s announcement is a “sovereign decision,” wrote Bassam Sabbagh, Syrian ambassador to the U.N., to assist the roughly 4.1 million people in northwest Syria dependent on these humanitarian supplies. Syria maintains that the U.N.’s aid mechanism violates Damascus’s sovereignty and that Assad’s regime should have control over how aid enters the country. However, some U.N. Security Council members were quick to denounce Syria’s decision, with British ambassador Barbara Woodward warning that “without U.N. monitoring, control of this critical lifeline has been handed to the man responsible for the Syrian people’s suffering.”
Israeli Unions and Military Reservists Renew Resistance to Judicial Overhaul (NYT) Union chiefs, business leaders and military reservists in Israel have warned the far-right government that proceeding with its plan to limit judicial powers without a social consensus will open the door for another wave of national strikes and business closures. The country’s largest labor union, the Israeli medical association and thousands of military reservists have all said that they could go on strike, scale back operations or refuse to volunteer for army service if the government’s plan goes ahead. “The option of general strike is on the table,” Peter Lerner, a spokesman for the Histadrut, Israel’s largest labor union, said in a phone interview on Friday morning. The latest warnings set the stage for a showdown comparable to an earlier wave of social turmoil in March, when labor strikes, disquiet in the military and mass protests destabilized large parts of Israel’s economy, security services and infrastructure. The unrest shut down universities, municipal authorities, stopped departing flights from the main airport and prompted the government to suspend a previous iteration of the judicial plan.
Nigeria: Soaring costs for food and transport (NPR) The cost of food and transport in Nigeria have soared since the end of May. The trigger was the removal of a fuel subsidy that dates to the 1970s and kept fuel prices artificially lower than the market rate and lower than in neighboring countries. But in his inaugural speech on May 29, new president Bola Ahmed Tinubu declared an end to the subsidy. It had become too expensive—rising to $9.7 billion last year, a quarter of Nigeria’s budget— all while government revenues were stretched thin. The ripple effects were immediate. Fuel prices almost tripled overnight, from roughly 180 naira (23 cents) per liter in May, to roughly 500 naira (70 cents). Fuel prices are expected to rise even further to account for the depreciation in Nigeria’s currency since May. The impact of the subsidy has been profound in a large but challenging economy with 70% of people living in poverty. The World Bank says an additional 7 million people in Nigeria could be plunged into poverty by the end of the year—driven by a combination of a painful cash crisis earlier this year, high inflation and the fuel subsidy.
South Africa deploys army over burning of trucks, braces for unrest over ex-president’s court case (AP) South Africa deployed the army to help secure four provinces Friday, after at least 21 delivery trucks were set on fire in the past five days and amid concerns of unrest over a court decision that could send former President Jacob Zuma back to jail. The deployment of soldiers came a day after South Africa’s apex Constitutional Court ruled that Zuma’s early release from prison on medical parole in 2021 was invalid. The Department of Corrections has not said if it will order Zuma back to jail to serve the remainder of a 15-month prison sentence for contempt of court, but his initial jailing two years ago sparked a week of violent protests that left more than 350 people dead in some of the worst violence South Africa had experienced in 30 years. Police said they had no evidence that this week’s torching of trucks was connected to the 2021 unrest or to Zuma, but the decision in Zuma’s court case clearly has put the country on edge.
The Whitest of White Paints (NYT) Xiulin Ruan, a professor of mechanical engineering at Purdue University, didn’t set out to make it into the Guinness World Records when he began trying to make a new type of paint. In 2020, Dr. Ruan and his team unveiled their creation: a type of white paint that can act as a reflector, bouncing 95 percent of the sun’s rays away from the Earth’s surface, up through the atmosphere and into deep space. A few months later, they announced an even more potent formulation that increased sunlight reflection to 98 percent. The paint’s properties are almost superheroic. It can make surfaces as much as eight degrees Fahrenheit cooler than ambient air temperatures at midday, and up to 19 degrees cooler at night, reducing temperatures inside buildings and decreasing air-conditioning needs by as much as 40 percent. It is cool to the touch, even under a blazing sun, Dr. Ruan said. Unlike air-conditioners, the paint doesn’t need any energy to work, and it doesn’t warm the outside air. In 2021, Guinness declared it the whitest paint ever, and it’s since collected several awards. The paint is at least a year from being ready for commercial use, and work is underway to increase its durability and dirt resistance.
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Puesto de Diarios y Revistas
Shot: Guri.arte
Edit: Pablo Avincetto/Waka_mola
Ubicacion: Gualeguaychu
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GUALE LA PENA INTENTAR
Hay una vieja de Gualeguaychu que todos los viernes se pone un disco de Barry White y limpia la alfombra que le trajo el marido de Turquía.
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Espectacular fin de semana de Carnaval en Gualeguaychu
http://dlvr.it/SjpWFz
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Puente Méndez Casariego, Gualeguaychú, Entre Ríos. https://ift.tt/9Uywjqo
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Chango Spasiuk en la Fiesta del Pescado y el Vino - Festival País 2022 Chango Spasiuk se luce en la segunda noche de la Fiesta del Pescado y el Vino en Gualeguaychu, provincia de Entre Ríos. Con su bandoneón a cuesta, el músico repasa un repertorio chamamecero con aires litoraleños. Más canciones y artistas de la Fiesta del Pescado y el Vino 2022 en https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLxaulh35hPBs8RVyPGWQjNKLHNFhFMP8F Más fiestas populares de Festival País en https://www.youtube.com/user/TVPublicaArgentina/playlists?view=50&sort=dd&shelf_id=3 La Fiesta del Pescado y el Vino es una propuesta que fomenta el turismo familiar. Tiene como objetivo destacar el trabajo de pescadores y productores vitivinícolas en la provincia de Entre Ríos. Festival País es una propuesta cultural y federal que reúne a todas las fiestas y celebraciones populares de Argentina. #FestivalPaís #FiestaDelPescadoYElVino #ChangoSpasiuk Mirá TVP en Vivo en https://youtube.com/TVPublicaArgentina/live Suscribite en https://youtube.com/TVPublicaArgentina?sub_confirmation=1 https://bit.ly/3HAdChH https://bit.ly/3H2ZPhX https://twitter.com/tv_publica https://bit.ly/3iXtsJt https://bit.ly/3j0kOtS https://bit.ly/3R4t4p9
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Intento guardar pedacitos de mi vida en negativos,
ahora las miro e intento viajar en el tiempo.
igual no es la intención remontar mucho el pasado
si no, mas bien mirar hacia el futuro.
abro este blog para llevar un registro de mi arte o huevadas que hago/realizo
como le parezca mas pertinente al lector.
(Recordatorio: las fotos son del final del verano, principios del otono del 2021
sacadas con mi camara praktica mtl5b, lente autochinon 55m f1.7 y un rollito kodacolor vencido en el 2007)
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GUALEGUAYCHÚ EL PAÍS DEL CARNAVAL
GUALEGUAYCHÚ EL PAÍS DEL CARNAVAL
WILDSTAR INTERNATIONAL CINEMILAGROSO & MARCO BERGER PRESENTAN GUALEGUAYCHÚ EL PAÍS DEL CARNAVAL Un documental de Marco Berger SINOPSIS Vilmar y Franco (el Toro) nacieron en la ciudad de Gualeguaychú. Todos los veranos, desde su infancia, participan juntos de los carnavales populares de la ciudad. Esta fiesta mágica logra maquillar, invadir de colores y plumas a los masculinos cuerpos de…
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