There is no God-given right to discriminate against LGBTQ people
Senate Republicans are standing in the way of Congress acting according to the will of the majority of Americans.
By Kimberly Atkins Globe Staff,Updated March 11, 2021, 2:59 p.m.
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Brigham Young University freshman Annie Richards watches two people embrace during Rainbow Day on the campus of BYU in Provo, Utah, on March 4. Students at BYU wore rainbow colors in support of the LGBTQ campus community, a year after the school said what it described as same-sex romantic behavior was prohibited and would lead to discipline under school code.Isaac Hale/Associated Press
अमेरिकी कांग्रेस ने 19 खरब डॉलर की राहत योजना पारित की-CRI
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March 10, 2021
During the past few decades, many countries in Latin America have confronted the impact of systemic corruption on rule of law, business, social cohesion, and citizen security. Amid weakened institutional capacities, endemic corruption persists as a foremost challenge in the countries of the Northern Triangle Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador. Those three countries were ranked 101, 116, and 84 respectively among 128 countries examined in the World Justice Program’s Rule of Law Index, and they also share some of the lowest rankings on Transparency International’s 2020 Corruption Perception Index, where their respective ranks were 149, 157, and 104 out of 180 countries. In Honduras, for example, 28 percent of surveyed public service users reported paying a bribe in the last year and 54 percent of people thought corruption had increased in the same time frame. Pervasive corruption comes at a high cost, with estimates that in El Salvador alone, $1.5 billion is lost