Alleged Cartrack Agent Dies At Work After She Was Denied Permission To Stay Home When She Reported Sick
A tragic incident has sparked calls for accountability after an employee, identified as Gcina, allegedly passed away while on duty after reportedly informing management that she was feeling unwell.
Locked her for 4 years, denied basis necessities but still made her pregnant, obviously raped her for 4 years. Judiciary still think marital rape aren't a crime.
"Asaltaron la casa, mataron a mi marido y mis hijos, luego me agarraron, me cortaron por todo el cuerpo, me tiraron agua hirviendo y me quemaron. Luego me violaron 20 soldados, rebeldes del M23 de Ruanda".
Las mujeres del Congo no salen en las noticias.
SA has so many capitalists without capital. It's so embarrassing to see someone defend the very system that keeps them poor.
It's definitely a product of "hustle" culture.
A la izquierda, millonarios en Mónaco, con Koenigseggs de 5 millones aparcados en la cubierta de un superyate de 75 millones de dólares.
A la derecha, un niño palestino hambriento en Gaza, intentando pescar en un trozo de madera, baleado esta mañana por "Israel".
Capitalismo, solo un sociópata puede defender este sistema.
Crazy that this is getting barely any coverage. This year’s European Press Prize was just awarded to an investigative report by the Dutch newspaper De Volkskrant. It is entitled “What the Wounds Tell” and in it the journalists Maud Effting and Willem Feenstra document the cases of 114 children in Gaza under the age of 15 who were struck by a single bullet to the head or chest. Almost all of them died or were left severely disabled. They chose to document only the cases of boys and girls under the age of 15 (though often much younger: aged 3, 4 or 7) because these are children who can be immediately identified as such. “A single bullet in these parts of the body is a clear indication that these children were deliberately targeted“, the two journalists write.
This is the article: https://t.co/YkZrpqBWBQ
@KaBediHaiOne@Nsikoe It shouldn’t be used as underclothes. I don’t think the people in power actually care much about the flag because they do not enforce the regulations hence everyone now thinks we can do whatever with it.
There’s R20 million to take random influencers who’ve never created content about football to the World Cup but not to fund the National Arts Fest? lol okay
Almost none of the boats in that photo are owned by a person. Each one belongs to a company that exists only to hold the boat, registered on a tiny island, with a stranger’s name on the paperwork. That is how you keep a 300-foot yacht in public and your own name out of it.
This is completely legal, and it is the normal way these boats are owned. Once a yacht passes about 100 feet, it is almost always wrapped inside one of these companies. The boat is easy to see. Tracing it back to the person who paid for it is the hard part, and that is the whole point.
When someone says these owners are not on any rich list, they are right, and the reason is dull. Forbes only ranks money it can prove. Their 2026 list has a record 3,428 billionaires worth $20.1 trillion between them, and an army of reporters digs through company filings, court records, and leaks to pin down every number. But a fortune tucked away the way these boats are cannot be proven, so it never reaches the page. As far as the rankings know, that fortune does not exist.
The owners do stay hidden. The money itself, though, has been counted, down to a number. A Berkeley economist named Gabriel Zucman worked out a neat trick: money in hiding leaves a gap in a country’s books, like a missing puzzle piece, and you can measure that gap. Using his method, the charity Oxfam reported this April that $13.25 trillion is sitting offshore, in accounts overseas built for secrecy. That is more than the whole world economy makes in a month. Around $3.55 trillion of it never gets taxed at all, more than the entire economy of France. The very richest people, about one in a thousand, hold roughly 80 percent of that untaxed pile. On its own, it is worth more than everything owned by the poorer half of the planet, all 4.1 billion of them.
For one weekend a year, all of that floats into a single harbor. As of early June, trackers counted 106 yachts packed inside Monaco’s main port and another 180 anchored just off the coast for the Grand Prix. One of them, a 400-foot giant called Kismet, costs 3 million euros a week just to rent.
Europe actually tried to lift the lid on who owns what. In 2018 it forced member countries to publish a public list of the real people behind each company, and reporters quickly began naming owners who had stayed out of sight. Then in November 2022 the EU’s top court closed that public access again, ruling it invaded the owners’ privacy. The lists still exist. Now you need a special reason and official permission to look.
The money is no great mystery, and the pool it sits in has been measured down to the trillion. The only thing still missing is a name to put on each boat.