Archeologische opgraving klooster Yesse bij Haren onthult 'feministisch powerhouse' dvhn.nl - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dvhn.nl Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
För Sverige måste det viktigaste just nu vara att återskapa lag och ordning på gator och torg, säger Ayaan Hirsi Ali. Den nederländska författaren och debattören Ayaan Hirsi Ali är aktuell med den svenska översättningen av hennes nya bok Villebråd, Fri Tanke förlag. Det är en bok om migration, islam och kvinnors rättigheter där tesen är att kvinnors trygghet försämrats på grund den stora invandringen från muslimska länder till Västeuropa. Sverige tas flera gånger upp i boken som exempel, och Ayaan Hirsi Ali menar att Sverige har större problem med kulturella konflikter än många jämförbara länder.
Filed to:ad serving
Photo: Maranie R. Staab, Getty Images
Like just about every other corner of the web, including this one, the Daily Caller’s website is littered with ads. I can count seven on the story I have open while writing this (which, if you’re curious, is a blog heckling the Unicode Consortium daring to add a pregnant man to the impending emoji roster). There are two ads for something called “benefiber,” another for a $US120 ($162) pillow promising to cure acid reflux, and four more for Oculus charging cables, hospital admin software, grocery store coupons, or pleated polo shorts (now 30% off!).
OpenWeb Anti-Toxicity Tech Is Used by Daily Caller, Ben Shapiro gizmodo.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from gizmodo.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Support independent, faith-based journalism.
i(Bigstockphoto)
The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom has expressed displeasure over a series of recent court decisions that seek to limit the religious rights of Christians in the North African country of Algeria.
USCIRF’s concern, expressed via a press release in late June, was made public after three separate court rulings against Christians in the majority Muslim country.
In March, Hamid Soudad, a 42-year-old Christian accused of insulting the prophet Mohammad, had a five-year prison sentence against him upheld by the Oran City Court of Justice. On June 6, Rachid Mohamed Seighir, pastor and bookstore owner, was sentenced to one year in prison by a court in Oran for “printing, storing or distributing materials” considered damaging to the Muslim faith. And an administrative court in Oran separately ordered that three Protestant churches that had been forcibly closed by the government in 2020 be sea