Yahoo! News: World News
Yahoo! News: World News |
- How social media helped Caribbean islanders say: Don't forget us
- What's really important about Facebook Russia Ads
- Tale of two Mexicos? Amid NAFTA rethink, some urge more inclusive growth
- Do Russia's western war games deliver a threat, or just a message?
How social media helped Caribbean islanders say: Don't forget us Posted: 19 Sep 2017 02:25 PM PDT U.S. That's us," said MSNBC host Rachel Maddow in a segment devoted to the devastation hurricane Irma wrought across the United States Virgin Islands. Ms. Maddow's report highlighted how hurricane Irma, a Category 5 storm, transformed the once green and leafy paradise in the southeastern Caribbean to a dull, brown mess. |
What's really important about Facebook Russia Ads Posted: 19 Sep 2017 02:07 PM PDT Yes, a shadowy Russian firm with ties to the Kremlin bought about $100,000 worth of Facebook ads intended to sway voters during last year's presidential campaign, the social media giant disclosed earlier this month. The problem is, those Russian-bought online spots might be just a hint of a darker, undetected flood of attempts at influence, according to experts in political communication. Recommended: Sochi, Soviets, and czars: How much do you know about Russia? |
Tale of two Mexicos? Amid NAFTA rethink, some urge more inclusive growth Posted: 19 Sep 2017 01:16 PM PDT Omar Chavira grew up near the rolling foothills of this state capital, coming of age when the US, Mexico, and Canada first signed the North American Free Trade Agreement. Mr. Chavira had already dropped out of high school and soon married his wife, Soledad, who halted her education before junior high. "Back then, there weren't many incentives to stay in school," Chavira says, remembering high school fees and few formal job opportunities. |
Do Russia's western war games deliver a threat, or just a message? Posted: 19 Sep 2017 01:13 PM PDT President Vladimir Putin watched through a cool drizzle in Russia's far western reaches Monday, just 70 miles from his country's border with the European Union, as Russian tanks and paratroopers battled fictional extremist groups. The confrontation was just one part of "Zapad 2017," a huge military exercise involving both Russia and Belarus that has caused some hand-wringing in parts of NATO, not least its eastern capitals. While the war games are nothing out of the ordinary – a regular effort by the Kremlin to exercise and train its forces, as all militaries tend to do – there is also little doubt that Moscow intends a message to be sent loud and clear to leaders in the West, a demonstration of its modernized forces and a warning not to venture too close. |
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