For Ukraine's mil-tech startups, access to credit remains a battlefield


The battle for control of the United States Senate begins in Maine. If Democrats want to take the upper house from Republicans in the upcoming November 3 midterm election, they cannot lose in this northeastern state, famous for its lobster industry and for producing the writer Stephen King. Republican Senator Susan Collins, who has sometimes been critical of President Donald Trump, is running for re-election and polls place her in a weak position. Graham Platner, a political newcomer, seemed like the right man for the job—until criticism from at least three women he had relationships with, as well as new details about a tattoo resembling a Nazi symbol that he got years ago, began to cast doubt on his suitability. Despite these shadows, Platner won the Democratic primary this Tuesday, making him the official Senate candidate for the midterms.

© Brian Snyder (REUTERS)
A Sherpa guide whose family had already begun funeral rituals after he vanished on Mount Everest was found alive and crawling toward base camp nearly a week later, surviving alone on the world's highest peak without food, water or supplemental oxygen in what rescuers called "nothing short of a miracle."
Dawa Sherpa, 52, disappeared around May 29 while descending Everest after turning back short of the summit with a Polish climber he was guiding. The client made it safely to base camp, but Dawa had not, triggering fears that he had died on the mountain.
A cleanup crew from the Sagarmatha Pollution Control Committee found him Thursday morning crawling through the treacherous Khumbu Icefall, one of the most dangerous sections of Everest, just above base camp, Pemba Sherpa of 8K Expeditions told The Associated Press.
Rescuers carried him to safety, gave him food and water, and flew him by helicopter to a hospital in Kathmandu, where his wife and daughter were waiting.
LONE SURVIVOR RESCUED AFTER FATAL FALL KILLS THREE CLIMBERS ON MOUNT MCKINLEY
By that point, his family had already lost hope.
His teenage daughter, Mendo Lhamu Sherpa, told the outlet that relatives were in the middle of funeral rites when news of the rescue broke.
"When we first heard about it (the rescue), we could not be sure if that person was indeed our father," she said. "So to be certain we asked for photos to be sent and then only we were sure and very happy."
His wife, Damu Sherpa, added that the family learned he was alive through local news reports and phone calls from friends.
"We first heard that he was still alive on the local news and from a person we know who called with the news that ... he is being brought down," she said.
Dawa was still wearing his climbing jacket when rescuers found him. His family said he is being treated for frostbite and other complications but is conscious and able to speak.
"He recognized me … is good and speaks," his daughter told Reuters. "We are happy."
The Nepal Mount Everest hiking company called his survival extraordinary.
"Dawa survived alone for nearly a week without food, water, or supplemental oxygen navigating the treacherous Khumbu Icefall (even after the fixed ladders were removed for the season)," the company said in a social media post. "This is nothing short of a miracle."
It was unclear how Dawa became separated from his client during the descent or why there was a delay in launching a search team when he went missing last week. Helicopters were eventually dispatched but failed to locate him.
His rescue came at the end of a record-breaking Everest climbing season. More than 1,000 climbers and guides reached the summit this year after Nepal issued a record 494 permits.
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Officials have said five climbers and guides died on Everest during the season, according to Reuters.
The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

O futebol de seleções se consolidou como uma indústria multibilionária, e o valor de mercado dos elencos nacionais passou a refletir não apenas o desempenho esportivo, mas também a força econômica das principais potências do esporte.
O chamado “valor de plantel” representa a soma das avaliações individuais de todos os jogadores convocáveis de uma seleção. Levantamento elaborado com base em dados da Transfermarkt e da Sports Value aponta a Inglaterra como a seleção mais valiosa do mundo em 2026.
De acordo com o ranking, o elenco inglês está avaliado em aproximadamente € 1,62 bilhão, o equivalente a R$ 9,44 bilhões. A França aparece na segunda colocação, com valor estimado em R$ 8,57 bilhões, seguida pela Espanha, com R$ 7,64 bilhões.
A Alemanha ocupa o quarto lugar, com um plantel avaliado em R$ 5,89 bilhões, enquanto Portugal aparece logo atrás, com R$ 5,63 bilhões.
O Brasil surge na sexta posição entre as seleções mais valiosas da Copa do Mundo de 2026, com valor de mercado estimado em R$ 5,28 bilhões. O ranking é influenciado pela presença de atletas que atuam nos principais clubes da Europa e possuem elevado valor de transferência no mercado internacional.
Confira as 10 seleções mais valiosas da Copa do Mundo de 2026:
O ranking evidencia a concentração de talentos nas principais ligas europeias e mostra como o mercado do futebol influencia diretamente a valorização das seleções nacionais às vésperas da Copa do Mundo de 2026.
The post Brasil aparece em 6º lugar no ranking das seleções mais valiosas do mundo appeared first on Diário da Manhã - O Jornal do leitor Inteligente.
Commentary by Brian Shilhavy
Health Impact News
Richard Wexler, the Executive Director of the National Coalition for Child Protection Reform has recently reported that Santa Clara County, home to Silicon Valley in California, now leads the nation in ripping children out of their homes and putting them into their foster care system where children are now dying at a rate higher than anywhere else in the U.S.
As I have been reporting for over a decade now, the foster care system in the United States is the #1 pipeline for child sex trafficking. Most of the foster care system in the U.S. is run by Christians who partner together with the government and their churches in this very lucrative system of “legalized” child trafficking. See:
Multiple studies over the years have clearly shown that children who are left in their homes with their parents, even if they are “troubled homes” where drug abuse may be occurring, for example, have far better lives than being put into the evil foster care system.
Santa Clara County in Silicon Valley, home to billionaires and some of the richest people in the world, has an especially notorious reputation for trafficking and sexually abusing children, while protecting the pedophiles.
Here is a video testimony from Debra Grant, who had her children taken away from her and then given to her pedophile husband, where she explains how these people get away with trafficking children that was recorded 13 years ago. (Amazingly, this video is still up on YouTube. But if it disappears, we have a copy here.)
WARNING! GRAPHIC CONTENT!
by Richard Wexler
National Coalition for Child Protection Reform
Excerpts:
Researchers estimate that the foster-care panic in Santa Clara County will lead to anywhere from four to 12 foreseeable premature deaths, and a whole lot of serious illness, that would not have happened had the children been left in their own homes.
Their methodology can be applied to any foster-care panic anywhere, and to states that regularly tear apart families at rates far above the national average.
KEY POINTS
Among the most popular pages on NCCPR’s website is one that summarizes some of the mass of evidence comparing what happens to children in foster care when compared to comparably-maltreated children left in their own homes.
Over and over, the studies find that in typical cases, the foster children do worse.
How, then does this apply to Santa Clara County?
In the wake of two high-profile child abuse deaths, the Vice President of the County Board of Supervisors, Sylvia Arenas, and the San Jose Mercury News, in particular, reporter Julia Prodis Sulek, rushed to falsely scapegoat efforts to keep families together.
That set off what is, proportionately, the worst foster-care panic I’ve seen anywhere in America in at least 40 years.
In fact, of course, there were tragic child abuse deaths in Santa Clara County long before the county started trying to do more to keep families together. There was another tragedy in April, – the death of Jaxon Juarez, long after the county was tearing apart families at a fanatical rate.
Indeed, the panic may have made the latest tragedy more likely by overloading workers, so they have less time to investigate any case thoroughly. None of that has stopped Arenas or Sulek from continuing to throw gasoline on the fire.
Neither has the massive study of more than 3.4 million case records and more than 24,000 child abuse deaths which found that increasing entries into foster care does nothing to decrease such deaths.
What all this research tells us is that increasing foster care does nothing to save lives, but can, in itself, lead to premature deaths.
Read the full article.
This article was written by Human Superior Intelligence (HSI)
See Also:


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The post Silicon Valley Leads the U.S. in Child Trafficking and Child Deaths in Foster Care first appeared on Health Impact News.