Skip to content

thatsthewaythecookiecrumbles.org

Trusted news at #1 place

  • About us
  • Trusted sources
  • Democracy matters
  • Trump’s decisions

Home - BBC US politics - South Africans fear spike in HIV infections as US aid cuts bite

Posted in
  • BBC US politics

South Africans fear spike in HIV infections as US aid cuts bite

by The editor•10 July 2025•Posted inBBC US politics

South Africa has been at the forefront of the successful battle to halt the spread of HIV/Aids – until now.

The editor
More by The editor

You might also like

Royal Mail and DHL halt some US deliveries over tariffs

The winners and losers in US-EU trade deal

Texans did not immediately receive flood alerts after request, audio reveals

Post navigation

Previous Article Previous article:
Brazil vows to match US tariffs after Trump threatens 50% levy
Next Article Next article:
46 percent of local election officials worried about politically motivated investigations: Poll

The Atlantic

  • The Race to Save America’s Democracy

    Trump’s administration may seem chaotic, but Americans should not take the integrity of next year’s elections for granted.

  • Charlie Kirk and the ‘Third Great Awakening’

    MAGA is embracing the language of a rising Christian movement.

  • How Charlie Kirk’s Death Will Change His Message

    For a case study in how martyrdom can transform a firebrand, look to Malcolm X.

  • When Child Death Was Everywhere

    RFK Jr.’s health policies stem from the idea that the past holds the secret to health and happiness.

  • Brendan Carr’s Half-Empty Threat

    The FCC can do plenty of damage to free expression—even without revoking licenses.

Talking Points Memo

  • 25th Anniversary Event Update

    We’ve noted this in the emails members have received, but since we’ve gotten a lot of questions about it: tickets...

  • It’s Completely Trump’s Supreme Court Now, And He Knows It

    President Trump notched a startling legal win Friday evening, as the Supreme Court gave an early stamp of approval to...

  • Heads Won’t Roll

    Hello it’s the weekend. This is The Weekender ☕️ Eager to cleanse his administration of the human guardrails that fenced...

  • Sinclair Backs Down

    As I’ve written a few times, we can’t over-read any single move in the broad contest over big societal institutions...

  • Beware the (Purported) Iron Laws of Shutdowns

    As we hurtle toward an almost inevitable government shutdown, I want to note one part of the discussion I’ve seen...

Fox News

  • Ex Michelle Obama aide leads Des Moines school board's defense of superintendent arrested by ICE

    Iowa Republicans launched a probe into the state's hiring practices after ICE arrested school superintendent Ian Roberts on Friday.

  • Baltimore residents reveal what changes they want to see to combat crime amid National Guard threat

    Local Baltimore residents split on National Guard deployment for crime reduction, with many advocating for community resources and accessible recreational centers.

  • Iraqi president calls nation ‘100% safe’ even as ISIS, Iranian militia threats persist

    President Abdullatif Jamal Rashid dismisses concerns about Iranian proxy influence in Iraq, insisting Baghdad maintains independent decision-making as U.S. troops prepare to leave.

  • Harris recalls stun over Biden's botched debate response about fallen service members in Afghanistan

    Former Vice President Kamala Harris criticizes Biden's debate performance in new book, noting his failure to mention troops killed during botched Afghanistan withdrawal.

  • ‘Escape From New York’: Researcher predicts NYC business exodus if Zohran Mamdani wins

    Researcher predicts a mass business exodus if Democratic socialist candidate Zohran Mamdani wins the Nov. 4 mayoral election in New York City.

The Hill

  • Thune says Democrats have taken ‘the federal government as a hostage’ amid shutdown fight

    Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) said on Sunday that Democrats have taken “the federal government as a hostage” amid tension over a looming government shutdown. “Thirteen different times, we did continuing resolutions in the Democratic majority. And in every case, they passed,” Thune told NBC News’s Kristen Welker on “Meet the Press.” “And what...

  • Johnson on Comey: ‘There are many things that he could have been indicted for’

    Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) said on Sunday that there are “many things” for which former FBI Director James Comey could have faced charges, but said the statute of limitations had expired on those other allegations. “It's a very important principle for us to apply that everybody has to subscribe to the law, even a former...

  • Plastic packaging is poisoning America, and MAGA is letting corporations off the hook 

    If MAHA and MAGA were serious about improving the health of Americans, they would stop gaslighting the public and start standing up to the corporations making us sick.

  • Johnson pushes back on Jeffries: ‘There is nothing partisan about this continuing resolution’

    Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) insisted on Sunday that there is “nothing partisan” about the Republican bill to keep the government funded ahead of the shutdown deadline this Wednesday. In an interview on CNN’s “State of the Union,” the GOP leader pushed back on House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries’s (D-N.Y.) suggestion this past week that the...

  • Schumer on chance of shutdown: ‘It depends on the Republicans’

    Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) on Sunday said the chance of a looming government shutdown “depends on the Republicans.” “You think you can keep the government open, or you think you’re headed for a shutdown?” NBC News’s Kristen Welker asked Schumer on “Meet the Press.” “Well, it depends on the Republicans. You know, we...

Categories

  • Adventure
  • Architecture
  • Astronomy
  • BBC US politics
  • Beauty
  • CNN
  • Democracy matters – defending democracy
  • Fashion
  • Featured articles
  • FiveThirtyEight
  • Food
  • Fox news
  • Just security
  • Movie Stuff
  • NPR
  • Painters Matter
  • Politico
  • Politics Matters
  • Real Clear Politics
  • Talking Points Memo
  • The Atlantic
  • The Guardian
  • The Hill
  • Travel

  • About us
  • Trusted sources
  • Democracy matters
  • Trump’s decisions

Find Us

This is a good place to read all your sources at just one stop.

Address
123 Main Street
New York, NY 10001

Hours
Monday–Friday: 5:00AM–5:00PM
Saturday & Sunday: Only urgent matters

The abouve looks good so I left it there, like I would be running a regular physical operation as well ,-)

You can reach me at editor@thatsthewaythecookiecrumbles.org

The Guardian

  • Rudy Giuliani and Dominion settle $1.3bn defamation suit over election lies

    US voting machine maker sued ex-New York mayor and Trump lawyer in 2021 for repeatedly calling election riggedRudy Giuliani, the former New York mayor and personal lawyer to Donald Trump, has settled a long-running defamation lawsuit with Dominion Voting Systems over lies he told about the result of the 2020 presidential election.Details of the settlement, revealed in federal court in Washington DC in a filing late on Friday, are confidential. The Colorado-based voting machine manufacturer sued Giuliani for $1.3bn in 2021, citing more than 50 instances in which he made false or defamatory statements insisting the election was rigged against Trump, with the integrity of Dominion’s machinery at the heart of the conspiracy theory. Continue reading...

  • A Trump ally in California is fighting redistricting. Is that what his constituents want?

    Representative Doug LaMalfa made headlines in August after being booed and shouted down at a local town hallInside a packed banquet hall in northern California in early August, tensions were flaring. As the representative Doug LaMalfa spoke to constituents in his district, he faced immediate pushback from frustrated audience members who shouted the Republican down.It was the first public town hall LaMalfa had held in Chico, the largest city in his district, in eight years. The booing and shouts grew louder still as the Republican representative, a loyal supporter of Donald Trump, talked about “waste and fraud” in government programs, and the uproar continued for more than an hour as people expressed fear and anger over immigration raids, tariffs, cuts to Medicaid and Medicare and the impacts on rural hospitals. Some called for his resignation, while one attendee yelled: “No fascism in America.” The rowdy scene made headlines across the US. Continue reading...

  • We Americans love remaking British TV. Must the UK remake our odious politicians? | Dave Schilling

    A recent trip to Britain from my native California presented some worrying truths about our shared political futureI’ve always wanted to visit the UK. This might sound absurd to you, considering I’m from California – home of sunshine, half-naked bodies and the studio where they film Jeopardy. What could possibly pull me to the cold, damp, gray shores of England? The oppressively brown food? The dodgy colonialist history? Tesco? No, it was the glowing box that vibrated with whatever passed for culture in my small town: television.British TV was an obsession in my house, via those purveyors of affordable, exotic entertainment at PBS. We’d get classy fare through the Masterpiece Theatre series, but also more downmarket comedies like Are You Being Served? (a variety of sexually obsessed retail clerks trip over each other) or Keeping Up Appearances (lower-middle-class oafs desperately wish they were posh). I had no concept of what people were saying in their thick accents or most of the jokes meant, especially the double entendres. Continue reading...

  • ‘Like the Gestapo’: trailblazing immigration judge on Ice brutality and Trump’s damage to the courts

    Dana Leigh Marks had a long and notable tenure on the bench. Now she’s watching the Trump administration trash her institution – and raising the alarmDana Leigh Marks had the kind of career most immigration judges dream of.At 32, she won a precedent-setting supreme court case that made it easier to claim asylum in the US. In the decades that followed, she led the National Association of Immigration Judges to gain collective bargaining rights, fought to protect immigration courts from political meddling and blazed a trail for a generation of female judges. Continue reading...

  • Why Trump is backing Argentina’s Thatcherite economics | Heather Stewart

    While Javier Milei’s shock therapy to tame inflation has won support from Washington and the IMF, ordinary Argentinians seem less impressed“We’re backing him 100%. We think he’s done a fantastic job. Like us, he inherited a mess.” Donald Trump gave his enthusiastic endorsement to Javier Milei’s radical economic experiment when the pair met in New York last week.The US has declared itself ready to offer more than rhetorical support to the chainsaw-wielding Argentinian president in the coming days, as Buenos Aires stands on the brink of a fresh financial crisis. Continue reading...

Politico

  • Black mayors celebrate drop in crime, even if they aren’t getting any credit

    Mayors at CBC conference challenged Trump on deploying troops to cities.

  • The nation’s cartoonists on the week in politics

    Every week political cartoonists throughout the country and across the political spectrum apply their ink-stained skills to capture the foibles, memes, hypocrisies and other head-slapping events in the world of politics. The fruits of these labors are hundreds of cartoons that entertain and enrage readers of all political stripes. Here's an offering of the best of this week's crop, picked fresh off the Toonosphere. Edited by Matt Wuerker.

  • James Talarico on immigration, his faith, and how Democrats are getting it wrong

    Talarico joined POLITICO’s Dasha Burns this week for an episode of The Conversation.

  • Nexstar, joining Sinclair, will preempt Jimmy Kimmel’s late night show

    The broadcasting group will effectively pull Kimmel’s show from more than 30 ABC affiliates as the program is set to resume airing Tuesday night.

  • Democrats hit vulnerable Republicans with $3M ad blitz on tariffs and shutdown politics

    The ads go after 10 vulnerable House Republicans on cost-of-living increases and cuts to Medicaid.

NPR

  • New Jersey Sen. Andy Kim discusses how Democrats are negotiating to avoid a shutdown

    NPR's Ayesha Rascoe talks with Senator Andy Kim, a New Jersey Democrat, about his party's strategy heading into a possible government shutdown.

  • Politics chat: Trump says he'll deploy troops to Portland, James Comey indicted

    In our roundup of domestic political news: an announced troop deployment to Portland, Oregon, the latest efforts to halt a government shutdown, and the indictment of a prominent Trump critic.

  • DACA has bipartisan support in Congress. Still, Republicans are following Trump's lead

    President Trump failed to revoke DACA in his first term and his focus on immigration this time has mostly ignored the policy. Still, Republican lawmakers are deferring to the president on the issue.

  • Large Russian drone and missile attack on Kyiv kills 4 and wounds at least 10

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the large-scale attacks involved nearly 500 strike drones.

  • Stampede at a political rally for popular actor Vijay in southern India kills 36, injures 40

    A stampede at a rally for a popular Indian actor and politician in the southern state of Tamil Nadu killed at least 36 people and injured 40 others.

Five Thirty Eight

  • What Americans Think Of The Biden Impeachment Inquiry

    Welcome to Pollapalooza, our weekly-ish polling roundup. It’s officially impeachment season again. On Tuesday, House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy announced that he’s directing three House committees to start investigating whether President Biden benefited from his son Hunter’s business dealings overseas. McCarthy accused the Biden family of “a culture of corruption,” saying that the Biden administration

  • The Second GOP Debate Could Be Smaller, With Or Without Trump

    The second Republican presidential primary debate is less than two weeks away, so time is running out for GOP contenders to meet the Republican National Committee’s qualification criteria. To make the Sept. 27 debate, each candidate must have at least 3 percent support in two qualifying national polls, or at least 3 percent in one

  • The Senate Is Losing One Of Its Few Remaining Moderate Republicans

    On Wednesday, Utah Sen. Mitt Romney announced he would not run for reelection in 2024. On the surface, the electoral impact of Romney’s decision is minimal — his seat should stay safely in Republican hands. But it’s still notable because it represents the departure of one of the few remaining Republican senators who had a

  • Why ‘Bidenomics’ Isn’t Working For Biden

    Welcome to FiveThirtyEight’s politics chat. The transcript below has been lightly edited. nrakich (Nathaniel Rakich, senior elections analyst): For a long time, the economy has been seen as a big liability for President Biden in his reelection bid. Inflation soared in 2021 and 2022, culminating at a rate of 9.1 percent last June. The same

  • Why Biden Is Losing Support Among Voters Of Color

    Among the most politically tuned-in, last week saw the kind of hand-wringing and accusations of bias surrounding the polls that you’d usually expect from the final two months of a campaign, not the final year and two months of a campaign. The focus was largely on general election polls: Whether a Wall Street Journal poll

Painte

Paul Klee

Paul Klee

24 April 202330 December 2024
Michael Parkes

Michael Parkes

24 April 202312 July 2025
Wassily Kandinsky, 1903, The Blue Rider (Der Blaue Reiter)

Wassily Wassilyevich Kandinsky

20 December 202012 July 2025
Copyright © 2025 thatsthewaythecookiecrumbles.org.
Powered by WordPress and HybridMag.
  • About us
  • Trusted sources
  • Democracy matters
  • Trump’s decisions

thatsthewaythecookiecrumbles.org

Trusted news at #1 place

  • About us
  • Trusted sources
  • Democracy matters
  • Trump’s decisions

bladibla

Scroll Up