2023-12-15 06:30:15
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#Freeze #oil #prices #days #Year #Noon #News #Dec #PPTV
2023-12-15 06:30:15
1702623129
#Freeze #oil #prices #days #Year #Noon #News #Dec #PPTV
2023-12-15 05:45:28
Published on Dec 15 2023 at 6:45
The RSA, the sooner you get out of it, the better. And the best way to get out of it is to find paid employment. What appears to be obvious, an unprecedented study by the Drees, the Department of Studies and Statistics of Social Ministries, published this Friday, demonstrates it in detail. Its publication is all the more interesting as it comes at a time when the experimentation with the reform of support provided to beneficiaries as part of the France travail reform places priority on professional integration.
The unique nature of the study comes from the fact that it traces the journey of beneficiaries of this minimum income, recipients or spouses, aged 16 to 49, over a long period, between 2010 and 2020, underlines Julie Labarthe, deputy director of solidarity observation at Drees.
Its main conclusions show that one in five beneficiaries (21%) continued to receive the RSA each of these ten years. Two in five (41%) made at least one return trip. The others, a little less than two in five (38%), left without returning, including a third in 2011.
In detail, it is clear that the future of RSA beneficiaries is very linked to their seniority in the system, summarizes Aurélien Boyer, research manager at the office fighting once morest exclusion from the Drees. 37% of those who had already been receiving RSA for four years or more in 2010 continued in this way until 2020, compared to 10% of those for whom this had been the case for less than a year.
The early releases, from 2011, follow the same logic. In other words, the more we stay there, the less we leave.
“This greater persistence in the RSA for people who have benefited from it for the longest may be partly due to certain characteristics at the time of entry into the benefit, such as lower qualifications, health problems or obstacles to accessing the service. “employment”, we can read in the study.
Having a salaried job promotes rapid and lasting exits from the RSA.
Aurélien Boyer Researcher at the Fight Against Exclusion Office of the DREES
As if caught in a vicious circle, this persistence “can however also be linked to the consequences of the time spent in the RSA, which implies a situation of lasting poverty”, continue the authors of the study. The length of the last salaried professional experience obviously does not help, nor does having children, being over 40, or residing overseas.
The other interest of the study concerns the monitoring of these same beneficiaries with regard to their professional integration, from 2010 to 2019 on the other hand, due to lack of availability of data for 2020. Over this period, 4 out of 10 continued to receive the RSA without holding a job, salaried or not, at the end of each year. Among them, beneficiaries with great seniority or from overseas are over-represented.
Conversely, it is the beneficiaries with less than one year of seniority at the end of 2010 who are over-represented among those who manage to leave the RSA in a lasting manner by finding paid employment.
1702622993
#trap #confinement #RSA
2023-12-15 06:42:01
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — De’Aaron Fox scored 41 points and the Sacramento Kings beat Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and the Oklahoma City Thunder 128-123 on Thursday.
Oklahoma City wasted a great performance by Gilgeous-Alexander, who finished with 43 points, nine assists and six rebounds.
The Kings led by 14 points midway through the fourth quarter, but the Thunder cut the deficit to two on a 13-2 run.
Fox and Keegan Murray responded with baskets late, and Sacramento strengthened its defensive efforts down the stretch. It was the third 40-point performance this season by Fox, who also added seven assists and three rebounds.
It was a duel between two of the best young point guards in the NBA: Gilgeous-Alexander and Fox. They both responded.
Gilgeous-Alexander made 16 of 18 free throws and Fox made five 3-pointers.
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#Fox #scores #points #Kings #beat #Thunder
2023-12-15 06:26:24
As of: December 14, 2023 9:17 a.m
Michael F. from Hanover was once considered a competent chief detective, but now the Federal Prosecutor General has brought charges once morest the “Reich citizen” for membership in a terrorist organization. What is he accused of – and what does his lawyer say regarding it?
by Amelia Wischnewski and Angelika Henkel
It is a Powerpoint presentation that Michael F. gave at a meeting at Henry XIII’s hunting lodge. Prince Reuss is said to have held in Thuringia. “The cart is deep in the mud,” he analyzes in the first pages. He then outlines how he imagines reconstruction following the collapse of the Federal Republic: Illustrated with a black and white photo of the destroyed Berlin in 1945. This is what Germany might soon look like once more, then the “new order” would have to take over.
Videos
1 Min
The former police officer is accused of membership in a terrorist organization. (12/12/2023) 1 min
The Federal Prosecutor’s Office is certain: F. was responsible for the “Interior Affairs” department within the group’s “military arm” – and was supposed to continue to do so in a later government following the planned coup. The terrorist group was ultimately founded in order to violently eliminate the state order and to establish its own form of government, which had already been largely developed. The defense contradicts: “They didn’t want to overthrow. They assumed that the social system was so ailing that it would collapse at the instigation of alliances, an extraterrestrial and an earthly alliance,” says Martin Heynert, who is with Michael F. defended by other lawyers. “After this collapse, the hour would have come for Michael F. to use his police knowledge to build a new security structure, for the benefit of the citizens, as he himself says.”
Alien and terrestrial alliances – it’s a world of thought that the investigators from the Federal Criminal Police Office probably had to think regarding during their interrogations. Michael F., who was once her colleague, gave the investigators insights in hours-long conversations – around 4,000 pages of files are filled with his statement alone. The prosecutors speak of conspiracy myths from the QAnon ideology. The alliance is a non-existent, technically superior “secret society of governments, intelligence services and militaries from various states, including the Russian Federation and the United States of America,” according to a press release.
The indictment lists that F. is said to have taken part in three of six meetings of the Council – the central body, similar to a government. Gatherings that apparently included lots of wine and five courses. At least that’s how F’s lawyer describes it. In conspiratorial meetings, F. is said to have tried to get others to join in. According to information from NDR, one of them was in Lower Saxony in the Harz Mountains, another was near Sehnde in the Hanover region, near the correctional facility where he is today. “From Mr. F.’s point of view, the association was not criminal and not terrorist,” says the lawyer, unlike the prosecution. “He certainly wouldn’t have stormed the Bundestag. He says he would never have taken part and would have left the group immediately.”
Further information
“Reich citizens” reject the Federal Republic and dream of the German Reich or Empire – and are sometimes extremely dangerous. more
It remains to be seen whether he can convince the court with this. If the Frankfurt Higher Regional Court accepts the indictment and opens the proceedings, Michael F. will be seated with nine other defendants from the group surrounding the entrepreneur Prince Reuß. This included a management consultant from the Harburg district who came to the meeting in Sehnde and is said to have donated a total of 160,000 euros to the group. Two other people from Lower Saxony are accused in Munich: a doctor from Vechelde and a lawyer from Hanover. Because the group of 27 accused is too large for one courtroom, they are divided into three locations, Frankfurt, Munich and Stuttgart. Other supporters – including two police officers from Lower Saxony – are being investigated.
Further information
The group around Prince Reuss is said to have planned a violent coup. Four people from Lower Saxony are also charged. (December 12, 2023) more
1 Min
The Interior Minister comments on the nationwide raids. Three people from Lower Saxony were arrested. (07.12.2023) 1 min
They should belong to the group around Henry XIII. Prince Reuss belongs. One of the accused was caught in the Harburg district. (05/23/2023) more
A group classified as terrorist has apparently planned a coup. Ex-police officer Michael F. is also one of them. (December 16, 2022) more
This topic in the program:
NDR 1 Lower Saxony | Regional Lüneburg | 12/12/2023 | 2:30 p.m
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#charges #brought #expolice #officer #Hanover #NDR.de #News #Saxony
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