Розділ: Повідомлення
Вербна неділя в Україні буде холодною – синоптики
На 25 квітня для християн східного обряду припадає Вербна неділя, після якої у вірян розпочинається Страсний тиждень перед Великоднем
…
By Gromada | 04/25/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
За рік карантину відвідування церков скоротилося на дві третини – голова ПЦУ
«Церква буде робити все залежне від неї задля того, щоб задовольнити духовні потреби наших вірних» – митрополит Епіфаній.
…
By Gromada | 04/24/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
Толока по-київськи: у КМДА відзвітували про прибрані локації та висаджені дерева
За даними «Київзеленбуду», всього у столиці сьогодні висадили понад 120 дерев та більш ніж 650 кущів
…
By Gromada | 04/24/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
«На хлібокомбінатах, заводах, у магазинах»: Епіфаній розповів, як освячуватимуть паски цього року
Предстоятель ПЦУ також наголосив, що під час Великодніх богослужінь потрібно дотримуватися дистанції і обов’язково одягати маски
…
By Gromada | 04/24/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
Укрзалізниця запровадила додаткові поїзди на Великдень і травневі свята
Зокрема, додаткові сполучення отримають Чернівці, Одеса, Ужгород і Волинь із Рівненщиною
…
By Gromada | 04/24/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
US-Japan Statement Raises Issue of Taiwan Defense Against China
A joint statement by U.S. President Joe Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga from their recent meeting at the White House has left officials and analysts in Taiwan wondering how far Japan might be willing to go to help defend the island against an attack from China.The White House said April 16 on its website that Suga and Biden “underscore the importance of peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait.”Some analysts say the joint statement signals Tokyo’s willingness to help defend Taiwan against China if needed, but only in support of a U.S.-led campaign.Taiwan quickly welcomed the joint statement.“Our government is happy to see that the United States and Japan are concerned about the current situation of regional security,” the Foreign Affairs Ministry in Taipei said in a statement April 17.“We will build on existing solid foundations and work closely with the United States, Japan and other countries with similar ideas to defend the democratic system, shared values and a rule-based international order and work together to maintain peace, stability and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific region,” the ministry’s statement said.China claims sovereignty over self-ruled Taiwan, a leftover issue from the Chinese civil war of the 1940s, and it has threatened to take the island by force if needed.Regular Chinese military flights in a corner of Taiwan’s air defense identification zone over the past eight months have sparked worries about a possible attack by China, which maintains the world’s third strongest armed forces, after the United States and Russia. A 1979 congressional act allows the United States to help defend Taiwan militarily.Backup for U.S. forcesAs Suga faced questions at home after the Biden visit about his designs for Taiwan, officials in Tokyo reportedly clarified on Wednesday that Japan would not send troops but could offer logistical support to the United States in the event of a conflict.In response to a question Tuesday from a member of the Japanese Diet about Japan’s commitment to Taiwan, Suga said the joint statement with Biden “does not presuppose military involvement at all,” the Jiji Press news service reported.Japan and the United States still honor a 70-year-old treaty that commits both countries to act against common dangers. Both see Taiwan as a friendly Asia Pacific buffer against Chinese naval expansion.“Taiwanese leaders would be thankful for Japan Prime Minister Suga’s goodwill and friendliness,” said Chen Yi-fan, assistant diplomacy and international relations professor at Tamkang University in Taiwan. “However, based on [the] U.S. Japan security treaty, Japan will only offer logistical support to the U.S. military forces.”Japan spars with China over sovereignty in parts of the sea between them and bicker about leftover World War II issues. However, Japanese officials hope to avoid irritating China now as they pursue post-pandemic economic recovery, Chen said. China is Japan’s largest trading partner.Japan might wait for the United States to request military aid, said Yun Sun, East Asia Program senior associate at the Stimson Center in Washington.“As for whether Japan will aid Taiwan in the event of a contingency, the United States has not provided such strategic clarity yet and it will be far off to speculate if Japan will,” Sun said. “To a large extent, Japan’s involvement in a Taiwan contingency depends on what the U.S. will do and also ask Japan to do.”Jeffrey Kingston, a history instructor at the Japan campus of Temple University, called the U.S.-Japan statement on Taiwan “much ado about nothing.”After Suga agreed to the Taiwan Strait statement in Washington last week, Kingston said, “I think Japan was like just laughing up its sleeve thinking, ‘Wow, the Americans, they’re satisfied with that?’”U.S. allies marshaling near ChinaThe Biden-Suga consensus is unlikely to stop at just the United States and Japan, or at Taiwan, some scholars say. They note that four U.S.-allied Western European countries have sent vessels or planned voyages this year to date to the South China Sea, a disputed waterway near Taiwan where China has alarmed much of Asia by building up tiny islets for military use.A U.S. aircraft carrier group joined an amphibious-ready group for drills in the sea earlier this month. Japan’s Maritime Self-defense Force held anti-submarine drills in the sea last year.Taiwan contests sovereignty over the sea, as do four Southeast Asian governments.“We’re going to see more of that occurring in the South China Sea,” said Carl Thayer, an emeritus professor from the University of New South Wales in Australia. “It’s the beginning of a full-court press.”
…
By Polityk | 04/24/2021 | Повідомлення, Політика
Синоптик: із середи в Україну прийде потепління
Потепління не буде стрімким, додала Наталка Діденко
…
By Gromada | 04/24/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
На Чернігівщині починається пробне ЗНО
Пробне ЗНО в Києві і у Миколаївській області відбудеться 15 травня
…
By Gromada | 04/24/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
Німецька перекладачка Клаудія Дате стала першою лауреаткою премії Drahomán Prize
Клаудія Дате є координаторкою проєкту, присвяченого літературному перекладу, в Тюбінгенському університеті
…
By Gromada | 04/24/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
College Voters Overwhelmingly Approve of Biden’s Job in Office
U.S. President Joe Biden’s approval rating among college voters is 63%, according to a new Harvard Youth Poll, the highest for that demographic in the poll’s 21-year history.The poll said other high approval ratings by college voters came in 2003 for then-President George W. Bush, who received 61% approval, and in 2016 for then-President Barack Obama, with 57% approval.Overall, the Harvard Youth Poll, released Friday, found that 59% of young adults ages 18 to 29 approved of Biden’s job performance.His highest marks came from his handling of the coronavirus (65% approval), climate change (58% approval), education (58% approval) and race relations (57% approval).Biden’s popularity among young voters is a sharp contrast from this time last year, when only 34% of young adults viewed Biden favorably, according to the Spring 2020 Harvard Youth Poll.Friday’s poll also found that young Americans were more hopeful about the future of the country than they had been in the fall of 2017, during President Donald Trump’s first year in office. At that time, only 31% of young Americans were hopeful about country’s future, while now 56% have hope.The jump was most pronounced in young Blacks and Hispanics. Only 18% of young Blacks and 29% of young Hispanics had called themselves hopeful in 2017, while in the latest poll, 72% of Black youths and 69% of Hispanic youths said they were hopeful about America.The poll also found that politics could be personally divisive for youth, with nearly one-third (31%) of young Americans saying that politics had gotten in the way of a friendship.
…
By Polityk | 04/24/2021 | Повідомлення, Політика
ПЦУ відкрила прихисток для жертв домашнього насильства
Про відкриття Шелтера святої княгині Ольги повідомив митрополит ПЦУ Епіфаній
…
By Gromada | 04/23/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
Судді по апеляції Стерненка двічі відмовилися брати відвід, засідання перенесли
Сергій Стерненко відмовився давати покази на цій стадії прокесу
…
By Gromada | 04/23/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
Румунська меншина в Україні має розвиватися, МЗС очікує такого ж ставлення до українців у Румунії – Кулеба
Про це голова МЗС сказав під час зустрічі з румунським колегою Богданом Ауреску у Бухаресті
…
By Gromada | 04/23/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
У 2021 році 13 родин загиблих військових отримали фінансову допомогу – Міноборони
Cім’ям загиблих військовослужбовців виплачено 13,9 мільйона гривень від початку року – МОУ
…
By Gromada | 04/23/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
Обшуки в бізнес-центрі Millennium були пов’язані зі справою «Центренерго» – СБУ
СБУ здійснює досудове розслідування у справі про продаж «Центренерго» на різних сегментах ринку електроенергії за заниженими цінами
…
By Gromada | 04/23/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
Sen. Tim Scott to Deliver Republicans’ Rebuttal to Biden Address
Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina will deliver the Republicans’ rebuttal to President Joe Biden’s joint address to Congress next week.Scott, who is the only Black Republican in the Senate, will serve as the face of the party after Biden addresses the nation Wednesday. Considered a potential 2024 presidential candidate, Scott is a leading Republican voice on race and criminal justice reform and is popular with the pro-Donald Trump and moderate wings of the party.The selection underscores the party’s efforts to unite and expand its appeal after a bruising 2020 cycle that saw them lose the White House and both chambers of Congress.”Senator Tim Scott is not just one of the strongest leaders in our Senate Republican Conference, he is one of the most inspiring and unifying leaders in our nation,” Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell said in a statement announcing the selection. “As Senator Scott likes to say, he is living his mother’s American dream, and he has dedicated his career to creating more opportunity for our fellow citizens who need it most.”Biden is set to address lawmakers just before he marks his 100th day in office. The speech — much like a State of the Union address, which presidents don’t deliver until their second year in office — will give Biden the opportunity to update the American public on his progress and make the case for the $2.3 trillion infrastructure package he unveiled earlier this month.In a statement, Scott said he was honored by the selection and looked forward to having “an honest conversation with the American people.””We face serious challenges on multiple fronts, but I am as confident as I have ever been in the promise and potential of America,” he said.Scott, a senator since 2013 and a former congressman whose grandfather picked cotton as a child, was initially reluctant to focus on race in his political career. But he has increasingly talked about his experiences living as a Black man in America amid a national reckoning over racial injustice and police tactics.In an interview with The Associated Press last year, he talked in emotional terms about how often he had been pulled over by law enforcement, including for failing to signal early enough for a lane change — or, as he called it, stopped for “driving while Black.””I’m thinking to myself how blessed and lucky I am to have 18 different encounters and to have walked away from each encounter,” he said.
…
By Polityk | 04/23/2021 | Повідомлення, Політика
Biden’s Climate Pledge: Not Easy, Not Impossible
Cutting U.S. greenhouse gas emissions in half is doable but hard, experts say, and some of the biggest barriers are political, not technical.President Joe Biden on Thursday FILE – A wind turbine is pictured, Jan. 13, 2021, near Spearville, Kan.U.S. emissions are declining, but far too slowly to reach Biden’s target. They would have to fall on a scale that has happened only three times since 2005, Rossetti noted, and not for good reasons — during the COVID-19 pandemic, the 2008-09 financial crisis and during an exceptionally mild winter in 2012.The Biden administration has proposed broad areas where it sees opportunities for cuts, without giving much detail. It says there are multiple pathways to get there.But each path faces opposition, experts note. Legislation may struggle to pass in a closely divided Congress. And a conservative Supreme Court may take a dim view of expanding regulations.Several research groups have mapped out ways that the United States could cut emissions in half.”We have the policies to do it, and we have the technologies to do it,” said Robbie Orvis, director of energy policy design at Energy Innovation, a policy research group.For starters, the amount of solar and wind power installed each year needs to be three to four times as much as last year’s record-setting pace.”It is a big leap to do that, but the technology exists,” Orvis said.And the technology is cheaper than ever, and getting cheaper.The FILE – New Lexus automobiles are shown for sale after California Governor Gavin Newsom announced the state would ban the sale of new gasoline-powered passenger cars and trucks starting in 2035.The next biggest cut would come from transportation, where the largest proportion of U.S. carbon emissions come from. A combination of incentives and regulations would take old, inefficient vehicles off the road and help increase sales of zero-emissions vehicles.Smaller shares would come from cutting industrial emissions by switching to electrification, where possible, or emerging sources such as hydrogen or ammonia, though these technologies are still in development.The best path to any of these policies would be through legislation passed by Congress, experts note. Many of them are included in Biden’s $2.3 trillion infrastructure proposal.But Republicans are firmly opposed to it.FILE – Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., turns to an aide in Washington, March 7, 2021.”Their so-called ‘infrastructure’ plan would aim at completely ‘de-carbonizing’ our electric grid, which means hurting our coal and natural gas industries and putting good-paying American jobs into the shredder,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said in a statement.Some policies could be implemented through regulations, which do not require Congress. But it is a riskier approach.”I’m honestly pretty pessimistic on that because the scope of regulatory authority Biden has is limited,” R Street’s Rossetti said. “The courts are going to challenge any sort of proposal that goes outside of those bounds.”Plus, regulations can change with administrations, and climate regulations have whiplashed through the past several presidencies. The Trump administration reversed President Barack Obama’s climate regulations, and Biden is reversing Trump’s reversals.Many of the policies that would get the United States to a 50% cut have strong backing from the private sector.FILE – An Apple logo hangs above the entrance to the Apple Store on Fifth Avenue in the Manhattan borough of New York City, July 21, 2015.More than 400 companies signed a letter to Biden ahead of this week’s climate summit asking for a 50% cut. The list includes tech giants Apple and Microsoft, mega-retailers Walmart and Target, automakers Ford and General Motors, and other household names.The electric utility industry’s main lobby group supports a clean energy standard.”A well-designed CES makes some sense for us,” Emily Fisher, senior vice president of clean energy at the Edison Electric Institute, told Reuters.But she cautioned that the industry still needs breakthroughs, in long-term storage and carbon capture, for example, to meet the target.”We need those technologies, and they don’t exist,” Fisher said.Getting to 50% “is certainly going to be challenging,” Orvis said, “but I’m cautiously optimistic.”
…
By Polityk | 04/23/2021 | Повідомлення, Політика
US House Passes DC Statehood Bill on Party-Line Vote
The U.S. House of Representatives has passed a bill that would make Washington, D.C., the 51st state, sending it to the U.S. Senate for consideration.The measure, sponsored by D.C. House Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton and aptly titled House Bill 51, passed on a straight 216-208 vote.A statehood bill passed the House in 2020 but died in the then-Republican controlled Senate. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Shumer has promised to see the measure at least gets consideration in a committee.Republicans in Congress staunchly oppose the bill, calling it a “power grab” by Democrats, as a vast majority of the city’s population supports them, which could result in more congressional seats for the Democratic Party.The District of Columbia was created on an undeveloped tract of land between the U.S. states of Maryland and Virginia in 1790 and became known as the Federal City for a brief period afterward. Residents initially were allowed to vote in either Maryland or Virginia.But in 1800, the U.S. Congress moved into the new Capitol, and later passed the District of Columbia Organic Act of 1801, which stripped D.C. residents of voting rights in all federal elections, including for U.S. president, and gave Congress oversight of the city. In 1961, residents were given the right to vote for president.Washington currently has a population greater than the states of Wyoming and Vermont, but its more than 700,000 residents still do not have a vote in Congress. Norton, D.C.’s delegate, can vote in committee but not for the final passage of a bill.Under her plan, the area that includes the Capitol, White House and federal office buildings would become the “federal district,” with the remaining portions of the city becoming the “State of Washington, Douglass Commonwealth,” named partially for former slave, abolitionist and voting rights advocate Frederick Douglass.In a news release after the statehood measure passed, Norton called the bill historic, noting polls showing it is supported by 54% of Americans.House Republicans opposed the measure on constitutional grounds, with conservative witnesses arguing that statehood could not be achieved through simple legislation and that a constitutional amendment would be required.In the Senate, where Democrats have only a one-seat majority, the Senate filibuster rule requires the support of at least eight Republicans.Not all Senate Democrats have indicated they would support the measure.
…
By Polityk | 04/23/2021 | Повідомлення, Політика
Effects of Jim Crow Era Live On in Modern America, Some Say
“My mother and stepfather grew up during the era of Jim Crow,” Dontaye Carter told VOA. Carter is the head of a public relations firm in the suburbs of Atlanta and helps lead voter registration and mobilization efforts in the area. “Sometimes, people think of that time as being ancient history, but it’s not true,” he said. “There are still people alive today who were traumatized by its events.” Jim Crow refers to a time in U.S. history from the late 19th century through the first half of the 20th century in which state and local laws — primarily in the Southern United States — denied equal opportunity to Black citizens. Carter said that when he was a child, he was told about that tension-filled period — an era whose effects many believe can still be seen today. “My stepfather told me stories about how he and his siblings would walk three miles to school because every time they got on the bus, there would be fights with white students who didn’t want them to sit down,” he said. “Black kids can sit down on buses today, but it isn’t hard to find the inequalities in our society that still exist. Look at where the industrial plants are in the Atlanta area. All that pollution got put in the Black communities. Even that there are neighborhoods that are specifically ‘Black neighborhoods’ — that’s all because of racist Jim Crow.” FILE – A multi-racial group of students sit next to each other on the actual bus where Rosa Parks, a black woman, refused to give up her seat to a white man in 1955 in Alabama, during their visit to Henry Ford Museum in Michigan, Oct. 25, 2005.Jim Crow revival? In the months since the November 2020 presidential election in which Democratic nominee Joseph Biden defeated incumbent President Donald Trump, state legislatures across the country — but led primarily by closely contested Southern and Sunbelt states such as Georgia, Texas and Arizona — have proposed and sometimes passed laws restricting how voters can cast their ballots. FILE – Voters line up early in the morning to cast their ballots in the U.S. Senate runoff election, at a polling station in Marietta, Georgia, Jan. 5, 2021.Republicans in these states have said the bills are designed to secure the election process and to make it harder to cast fraudulent votes — something judges across the judicial system deny being a problem in the 2020 election. Still, since late March, more than 360 measures in 47 states have sought to impose more stringent identification requirements for absentee ballots, limit ballot drop boxes and shorten runoff elections. Democrats have derided these measures as another attempt by Republicans to make it harder for African Americans and other minorities — groups that tend to overwhelmingly favor Democrats — to vote. They say it steals from the same playbook that racist politicians used more than a century ago to stop Black Americans from voting. Biden recently called it “Jim Crow in the 21st century,” and other Democrats have called the attempts “Jim Crow 2.0.” To some, however, calling recent proposals a reversion to earlier, racist times is unfair and disingenuous. “I have no doubt that the Jim Crow era in this country is still in the minds of some African Americans,” said Jay Williams, who has been a consultant for many top Republican politicians. “But the storyline that Republicans today are stopping Black people from voting is ludicrous. Voter turnout has increased in each of the last three elections, and that includes minority voters. There’s nothing nefarious about these laws.” History of Jim Crow Named after a Black minstrel show character, Jim Crow laws — and their predecessor, the Black Codes — were first enacted across the American South after the Civil War ended in 1865. After winning the war, the U.S. government passed amendments to the Constitution that guaranteed previously denied rights to the formerly enslaved. FILE – Jim Crow sign, Lonestar Restaurant Association, Dallas, Texas. (Library of Congress)Strict local and state laws, however, sought to infringe on those rights by putting restrictions on Black Americans’ ability to get a job, receive an education and even to vote. “Laws were passed that required you pay a poll tax to vote,” explained Matthew Stuart, a history teacher in the suburbs of Jackson, Mississippi. “Requiring payment to vote is already terrible, but if you simultaneously pass laws that limit where you can work or how much you can get paid, that makes the tax even more of a barrier.” Stuart said Southern states also instituted literacy tests to stop Black Americans from voting.
“Of course, that’s going to prevent African Americans from voting, because they were also passing laws that made it harder for them to get an education.” Hate groups such as the Ku Klux Klan were founded during this period, allowing white Americans to retain anonymity while victimizing and suppressing the rights of newly freed slaves. “Jim Crow lasted approximately 80 years between the end of post-Civil War Reconstruction and the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965,” Stuart said of the federal legislation that finally outlawed the discriminatory voting practices adopted across the South. “But I only get to spend three weeks with my students on the entire period.” To Stuart and many others, spending so little time on an era that continues to create discord today is a missed opportunity for learning and reflection. “We practically skip from the Civil War to the civil rights era, and we look at its heroes like Martin Luther King Jr., and we feel good about how far we’ve come,” Stuart said. “But those 80 years are what made the civil rights era possible. It’s a generation’s entire life. And just because it’s uncomfortable doesn’t mean we shouldn’t address it.” An enduring legacy Blair Condoll, a political science professor at Dillard University, a private, historically Black liberal arts college in New Orleans, is also a lawyer and a constitutional scholar who spends four hours every morning talking politics on his daily radio show. Why Jim Crow continues to affect American life, particularly in Southern states like Louisiana, seems obvious to him. “Of course, there are still effects between Jim Crow and slavery before it. That’s hundreds of years of this society having two tiers — one for white Americans and another for Black. We can’t just erase that in a generation or two,” Condoll told VOA. Carter agreed, adding that even though it’s no longer codified in law, the enduring legacy of the Jim Crow era in his daily life remains obvious. “You can see it in the still-segregated neighborhoods of American cities and the disparity in education for white and Black children,” he said. “You can see it in the credit-lending habits of banks, and why highways are built in one part of a city while grocery stores are built in another.” These disparities occur, Carter said, because Black Americans often lack the political clout to stop them. And that, he said, is because politicians use their power to make it harder for Black people to vote, rather than easier. In the 2013 Shelby v. Holder case, the Supreme Court ruled that a key portion of the 1965 Voting Rights Act — Section 5, which previously required Southern states to have any changes to state voting laws approved by the attorney general — was no longer necessary. Political consultant Williams believes this decision makes sense. “Why should Georgia need federal approval of its voting laws while New York doesn’t? That doesn’t seem fair to me,” he said. To Carter, the answer to that question couldn’t be more obvious. “For more than eight decades — and until not that long ago — states like Georgia passed voting laws that disenfranchised Black voters,” he explained. “In fact, they just passed a law making it harder to vote that would never have been approved if the Voting Rights Act was still fully intact.” FILE – Republican Governor Brian Kemp signs S.B. 202, legislation that activists have said will curtail the influence of Black voters, in this handout photo posted to Kemp’s Twitter feed on March 25, 2021.There is a push among congressional Democrats to reform the election system and protect against the actions of individual states. Condoll believes that because the right to vote is guaranteed by the Constitution, the federal government has the authority to create one standardized set of rules and regulations. “There are certain times it doesn’t make sense to have different laws in every state,” he said. “Voting is one of those times. For hundreds of years, and all the way through Jim Crow, we’ve seen that states don’t protect everyone’s rights equally. It’s time we learned our lesson and protect the right to vote.”
…
By Polityk | 04/23/2021 | Повідомлення, Політика
Понад 3 мільйони українців залишаються без доступу до швидкісного фіксованого інтернету – Мінцифри
Очікується, що в рамках проєкту «Інтернет-субвенція» оптичний інтернет з’явиться в об’єктах соціальної інфраструктури у трьох тисячах сіл
…
By Gromada | 04/22/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
ОАСК отримав позов до ДБР з вимогою надати інформацію про справу Чауса
Позивач просить Окружний адміністративний суд визнати протиправною «бездіяльність ДБР» щодо розгляду запиту адвоката Чауса про надання інформації
…
By Gromada | 04/22/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
У Нацполіції 300 електронних браслетів, 18 із них вийшли з ладу
Електронні браслети, до роботи яких є зауваження, вже ремонтують, запевнили у відомстві
…
By Gromada | 04/22/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
З Ратушного не зняли електронний браслет попри скасування домашнього арешту судом – адвокат
Напередодні апеляційний суд скасував цілодобовий домашній арешт Роману Ратушному
…
By Gromada | 04/22/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
«Під’їзд із комфортом»: в «Укравтодорі» повідомили про ремонт дороги на шляху до заповідника «Асканія-Нова»
Екскурсійні маршрути в «Асканії-Новій» цьогоріч планують відкрити для відвідувачів із 24 квітня по 10 листопада
…
By Gromada | 04/21/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
У Києві «хворі» дерева виявлятимуть за допомогою спецобладнання з Німеччини – КМДА
Передусім оглядатимуть вікові дерева, які є пам’ятками природи – таких у Києві понад 300
…
By Gromada | 04/21/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство
«Однієї скарги достатньо»: у Facebook прокоментували блокування акаунтів українських користувачів
При цьому речник Facebook зазначив, що алгоритм виявлення порушень може хибити
…
By Gromada | 04/21/2021 | Повідомлення, Суспільство

