Los argentinos viendo que ya vengaron a Uruguay con Cabo Verde y ahora tienen que vengar a Colombia, después a Brasil y último a Paraguay contra Francia
Madame Celeste Amarilla,
Vous êtes une femme méprisable et indigne de sa fonction.
Vous ne représentez pas le Paraguay, ce pays qui a transpiré la passion et l’honneur tout au long de la compétition. Par votre inconscience et votre racisme décomplexé, le monde entier a déjà oublié le parcours et l’effort historique que vos joueurs ont réalisés durant cette coupe du monde pour laisser place à une dame incompétente donnant la pire image possible de son pays.
Je ne laisserai jamais aux gens comme elle, la liberté de laisser propager leur haine et leur racisme à travers le monde.
it was great watching this amazing show
not sure why they made only 2 episodes for this season but i’m glad it ended with rhaenyra finally claiming the throne like her father wanted 🙏🏾
PARAGUAY 🇵🇾
In 1639, Jesuit priest Father Antonio Ruiz de Montoya wrote about a game called Manga ñembosarái that was played by the Guarini people
His record of the game strongly resembles the modern game of football
“Todos en la vida nos hemos sentido solos alguna vez. Y en los momentos de soledad vienen las propuestas mas descabelladas para salir de ahí, pero la soledad es como un invierno, un tiempo nublado que pasa. Nunca hay que cambiar de rumbo por eso, solo hay que transitarla. Para eso sirve mucho el diálogo y nuestros amigos o familiares. Pero de los momentos feos siempre se saca algo bueno. Las tormentas al final se terminan”.
El Papa Francisco en una de las mejores explicaciones sobre la soledad. Cuanta falta le hace su voz hoy al mundo.
São Francisco de Assis dizia: comece fazendo o que é necessário. depois o que é possível. e, de repente, você está fazendo o impossível.
um passo de cada vez.
¿Cuál es el #efecto de la #rebeldía respecto a la #etapa preparatoria?
La Sala Penal había emitido un fallo que generó “confusión” al sostener que la rebeldía no suspende la investigación (A.I. 17 - 01/02/2023)😃
Sin embargo, varios juzgados entendieron que esto implica que👇🏻
DID YOU KNOW??
Google Maps is legally allowed to publish highly detailed aerial photographs of your private backyard, swimming pool, and roof without ever asking for your permission because of a centuries-old property law doctrine that essentially says your ownership of the sky stops the moment it leaves your rooftop!
If a stranger stood on your lawn and peered through your window with binoculars, they could be arrested for trespassing or voyeurism. Yet, a tech company can capture high-resolution imagery of your entire estate from above and display it to the global public. This legal paradox exists because modern privacy laws stop working the moment you look up into the sky. Let me explain 👇🏾👇🏾
1. The Death of the "To the Heavens" Doctrine:
For hundreds of years, property rights across Western civilization were governed by an ancient Latin legal maxim: Cuius est solum, eius est usque ad coelum. This translates to: "Whosoever owns the soil, it is theirs all the way up to the heavens." Under this old law, flying over someone’s house at any altitude was technically considered civil trespassing.
This changed forever with the advent of commercial aviation in the early 20th century. If landowners owned the sky all the way to outer space, airlines would have to secure billions of individual permissions just to cross a country.
In a landmark 1946 case (United States v. Causby), the U.S. Supreme Court officially struck down the ancient rule, declaring that the air is a "public highway."
The court decided that a homeowner only owns the immediate air space above their roof that they can reasonably occupy or use. Beyond that boundary, the sky becomes public domain, meaning anyone, including mapping companies, can look down at your property from above.
2. The Satellites Floating Beyond National Sovereignty:
While the highest-resolution imagery on Google Maps actually comes from low-flying commercial airplanes equipped with specialized surveying cameras, a significant portion of global map data relies on orbital satellites. This introduces a completely different layer of international space law.
According to the Outer Space Treaty of 1967, which forms the foundation of international space law, outer space is completely exempt from claims of national sovereignty. No country can declare ownership over the space through which a satellite orbits.
Because space is legally neutral territory, a commercial imaging satellite orbiting 300 miles above the planet is not subject to local state or national privacy trespassing laws.
It can take photos of any location on Earth as it passes overhead, and companies like Google can legally purchase that raw image data from private satellite operators without violating a single municipal law.
3. The "Plain View" Privacy Loophole:
The final legal shield that protects Google Maps is a core legal concept known as the PLAIN VIEW DOCTRINE.
Under standard privacy laws, you only have a legal right to privacy in areas where you have a "reasonable expectation of privacy."
If an asset can be seen by the naked eye from a public vantage point, whether that viewpoint is a sidewalk on the street or the open public airspace thousands of feet above your head, it is legally considered to be in plain view.
Because the sky is a public highway, anything exposed to the open air is legally deemed "visible to the public." If you build a swimming pool or sunbathe in a backyard surrounded by a 10-foot wooden privacy fence, you are protected from the view of your neighbors on the ground. However, because you haven’t built a literal solid roof over your entire yard, you have legally exposed that space to the public sky.
IN SUMMARY!
Google Maps doesn't need your permission to photograph your home because our legal systems redefined the sky to make modern aviation, logistics, and global telecommunications possible.
Hopefully you've learnt something new today?
Cheers 🥂 😅
The Medic Who Writes™🌚
In his first encyclical, Pope Leo XIV quotes J.R.R. Tolkien's "Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King.”
“It is not our part to master all the tides of the world, but to do what is in us for the succour of those years wherein we are set, uprooting the evil in the fields that we know, so that those who live after may have clean earth to till.”
(Photo: Vatican Media)
Tener una amiga haciendo la tesis es como ver un documental de un animal sufriendo. No podés hacer nada para ayudarla, solo queda apoyar desde lejos y desear que pueda salir viva de esta.
To build this dam, engineers first drowned a waterfall twice the size of Niagara. You could hear it roaring from 20 miles away. Then they made one of the world's biggest rivers move out of the way, just to clear room for the construction site.
It's the Itaipu Dam, on the Paraná River where Brazil meets Paraguay. Work started in 1975, and the first job was the river itself. Crews spent three years carving a 1.2-mile channel through solid bedrock, 500 feet wide and 300 feet deep.
They hauled away 50 million tons of earth. In October 1978, they set off 58 tons of dynamite, forcing the Paraná into a brand new path. Only then could the dam itself start to rise.
The structure ate roughly five times the concrete used for the Hoover Dam, plus enough steel to rebuild the Eiffel Tower 380 times over. On one day in November 1978, the site poured concrete fast enough to put up a 10-story apartment building every hour for 24 hours straight. The main wall is 643 feet tall, the height of a 65-story tower. It runs almost 5 miles across the river.
The bill came to $19.6 billion in 1970s money, roughly $60 billion today. About 40,000 people lost their homes when the reservoir filled. And in October 1982, when the water rose in just 14 days, it drowned Guaíra Falls, a chain of 18 waterfalls on the Brazil-Paraguay border that carried double the water of Niagara. Months earlier, a footbridge over the falls had collapsed under crowds of last-look tourists. Twenty-six died.
In 2016, the dam produced as much electricity in a single year as New York City uses in two. That set a world record only broken in 2020 by China's Three Gorges Dam, which has 60% more generating power but sits on a river that runs low for half the year. Since 1984, Itaipu has put out more electricity than any single power plant in human history. It supplies around 90% of Paraguay's electricity and roughly 10% of Brazil's, from one wall of concrete. The final construction loan was paid off in February 2023, almost 50 years after the treaty was signed.