Stor säkerhetsstyrka sätts in mot gäng

Stor säkerhetsstyrka sätts in mot gäng

Säkerhetsstyrkor med fler än 4 000 man har satts in i tre förorter till San Salvador, huvudstaden i El Salvador.

Valet: Demokrati – eller säkerhet med "världens coolaste diktator"

Valet: Demokrati – eller säkerhet med "världens coolaste diktator"

El Salvador var en gång ansett som ett av världens farligaste länder. I dag har brottsligheten och mordstatistiken sjunkit drastiskt, och människor återtar gatorna.

– Vi levde i otrygghet och kunde inte uttrycka oss som vi kan i dag, Bukele är en hedersman, säger 80-åriga Margarita när hon njutningsfullt dansar till en gatuorkester i San Salvadors gamla kvarter. En procent i fängelse För två år sedan utlyste landets unge president, Nayib Bukele, undantagstillstånd, vilket gav polisen utökade möjligheter att gripa människor. Han förklarade krig mot den organiserade brottsligheten som länge terroriserat befolkningen och byggde ett nytt superfängelse för de ökända kriminella gängen.

I dag sitter en dryg procent av befolkningen inlåsta, 76 000 människor. Människorättsorganisationer har upprepade gånger påtalat att det förekommer tortyr och övergrepp i fängelserna, och att minst 150 fångar dött. De pekar också på att tusentals oskyldiga gripits. ”Oskyldiga dör” Sandra Hernandez man José försvann för snart två år sen. Han var daglönare inom jordbruket, och enligt henne inte kriminell. En dag fick hon veta att han dött i fängelset. Hon är kritisk till de urskillningslösa gripandena.

– Det är inte gängbrottslingar som dör, utan oskyldiga. De spärrar in fattiga människor och låter dem inte komma ut.

Några anhöriga till fängslade demonstrerade utanför riksåklagarens kontor i veckan och ropade nedsättande slagord mot presidenten. Men kritikerna får allt svårare att göra sig hörda. Väntas bli omvald Den tidigare PR-konsulten Nayib Bukele har enbart kampanjat på sociala medier och behöver sällan stå till svars för att han på olika sätt monterat ner demokratiska kontrollfunktioner och koncentrerat mer makt till sig själv. Grundlagen förbjuder honom egentligen att ställa upp till omval, men efter att han tillsatt lojala domare i Högsta domstolen fick han den att godkänna kandidaturen.

Bukele väntas bli omvald under söndagen. Enligt opinionsundersökningar kan han få mellan 70 och 90 procent av rösterna. Detta trots att mer än en fjärdedel av befolkningen lever i fattigdom och regeringen misslyckats med att skapa jobb, speciellt till de unga.

Den alltmer auktoritäre presidenten har blivit en fixstjärna i Latinamerika, där fler och fler länder paralyserats av knarkligor och maffiagäng. Att han på olika sätt monterat ner demokratiska kontrollfunktioner och koncentrerat mer makt till sig själv talas det mindre om. Inte heller att ingen vet hur hans politik kommer att påverka brottsligheten på lång sikt.

Ny undersökning: Svensk demokrati i topp – med liten nedgång

På en liten ö mitt i Stockholm, i vinkel mot både riksdagen och regeringskansliet Rosenbad, ligger den mellanstatliga organisationen Idea som mäter tillståndet i världen och i dag presenterar en rapport om demokratins ställning världen över. – Vi mäter demokrati världen runt och vi har en ganska bred definition av demokrati, säger analytikern Michel Runey. Fyra värden mäts: Rättsstatens principer, rättigheter, representation och deltagande. Sverige ligger tillsammans med övriga Norden högt i mätningar. I Sverige syns en tillbakagång när det gäller deltagande:

– Vi har sett en nedgång i participation (deltagande) från Sverige, men vi tror att det kanske beror på - under de senaste fem eller tio åren - den minskning av svenskar som går med i fackförbund och problem med finansiering, och medlemskap i ideella föreningar under pandemin, säger Michael Runey. 13 i ranking När det gäller deltagande har vi nu 13 i ranking mot 6 tidigare. Under rubriken rättigheter ligger yttrandefrihet och som är densamma enligt lagen men numer upplevs annorlunda eftersom invånarna inte lika gärna talar om vad de tycker. – Känns det bekvämt dela politiska åsikter eller andra åsikter om samhällsviktiga frågor ute i allmänheten eller i privata sammanhang och det är där vi har sett en sakta nedgång under de senaste fem åren i Sverige. Enligt Michael Runey ligger Sverige och resten av Norden bäst till när det gäller den breda definitionen av demokratin. Länder som gått bakåt med stora kliv de senaste är El Salvador, Afghanistan, Belarus och Ryssland, bra för att nämna några.

Gåtan med Ölands ringborgar ska få en lösning: "Det här är jättestort"

Gåtan med Ölands ringborgar ska få en lösning: "Det här är jättestort"

I den öländska myllan tror forskare att det finns omkring 16 ringborgar från folkvandringstiden, 400-550 e.Kr. Några av dom har fått stor uppmärksamhet som Eketorp och Sandby, men de flesta har inte undersökts. I ett stort forskningsprogram, som beviljats 43 miljoner kronor från Riksbankens Jubileumsfond, ska nu arkeologer försöka få ett helhetsgrepp över öns alla ringborgar och vad de kan berätta om sin samtid. Arkeologen: ”Det här är jättestort” – Det här är jättestort och ger en helt annan möjlighet att ta ett större grepp om Ölands historia. Jag tror vi kommer vända upp och ned på en del av det vi tror oss veta, säger Ludvig Papmehl-Dufay docent i arkeologi vid Linnéuniversitetet. Under åtta år ska forskare från Stockholms universitet, Linneuniversitetet och Kalmar länsmuseum, med arkeologistudenters hjälp, gräva fram delar av borgarna och därefter analysera fynden. Präglades av krig, epidemier, och klimatkatastrofer Man vet att världen under tidsepoken präglades av krig, epidemier, och klimatkatastrofer, bland annat orsakade vulkanutbrott i dåtidens El Salvador askmoln som skymde solen under flera år. Under den här tiden övergavs många av Ölands borgar och nu ska arkeologerna försöka ta reda på orsaken och vilken nytta vi kan dra av dåtidens händelser idag. – Klimatkatastrofer, sjukdomar och våld präglar vår egen tid och genom att belysa en period som kännetecknades av detta kanske vi kan få perspektiv på hur vi kan hantera kriser idag, säger Ludvig Papmehl-Dufay.

Amini favorit till EU-pris

Amini favorit till EU-pris

Bland de tre finalister som utsetts är nämligen iranska Mahsa Zihna Amini storfavorit, efter att ha nominerats av alla de tre största partigrupperna i EU-parlamentet: konservativa EPP, socialdemokratiska S&D och liberala RE. 22-åriga Amini avled i september 2022 efter att ha gripits av Irans moralpolis, för att hon inte ansågs bära sin obligatoriska huvudsjal på korrekt vis. Hennes död följdes av omfattande protester mot de styrande i Iran. Övriga finalister är två nicaraguanska människorättsaktivister, Vilma Núñez de Escorcia och Rolando José Álvarez Lagos, samt tre aborträttsaktivister: Justuna Wydrzynska från Polen, Morena Herrera från El Salvador och Colleen McNicholas från USA. Vem som får priset avgörs den 19 oktober av EU-parlamentets talman och gruppledare.

Kupperna i Afrika visar på en djupare politisk kris

Kupperna i Afrika visar på en djupare politisk kris

Bara under 2020-talet har det skett nio kupper i Afrika – det är en tredjedel av alla de lyckade kupperna på kontinenten sedan århundradets början. Det är symtom på en bredare politisk kris, skriver The Economist och hänvisar till mätningar som visar att acceptansen för militärstyre har ökat i 24 av 30 afrikanska länder sedan 2014. Yngre afrikaner ses ofta som en latent progressiv kraft – men de är inte mer immuna mot populism än amerikaner är mot Donald Trump, skriver tidningen. De unga kommer att dras till de som erbjuder en förändring för dem, om demokratin inte ser ut att göra det. Democracy is under threat from graft, stagnation and violence By The Economist 3 October 2023 For many years, coups in Africa seemed a thing of the past. But in the 2020s they are back with a vengeance: the nine this decade account for more than a third of successful African putsches this century. At this rate there will be more of them in the 2020s than in any decade since the 1960s. Aside from the latest one, in Gabon on August 30th, the seizures of power have been in the “coup belt”. It is possible, if inadvisable, to walk some 6,000km from the Atlantic coast of west Africa to the shore of the Red Sea and stride only through countries where there have been coups in the past three years (see map). The trek from Guinea to Sudan would cross the Sahel, the region south of the Sahara where there have been two coups each in Mali and Burkina Faso since August 2020, and one in Niger in July. Africa—which covers an area larger than America, China, India, Japan and western Europe combined—is more than its coup belt. Yet the takeovers are part of a broader political crisis. The most recent surveys by Afrobarometer, a pollster, find that in 24 of 30 countries approval of the idea of military rule has risen since 2014. Contingent support is higher. On average across 36 countries more Africans (53%) would be willing to consider a military government than would rule it out (42%) “if elected officials abused their power”—which they often do (see chart 1). Just 38% expressed satisfaction with “democracy”, the lowest share since at least 2014. The backing for potential strongmen or deep dissatisfaction with democracy was common across the coup belt, but also in relatively stable places, including Botswana and South Africa (see chart 2). Afropopulism, for want of a better phrase, is an increasingly potent force. Why is there such widespread discontent? Africans are frustrated with the sham that passes for “democracy” in most countries. They are also fed up with flimsy states that provide neither security nor prosperity. Around two-thirds of them, as well as majorities in 28 of 36 polled countries, feel their countries are heading in the wrong direction. Should this continue, many Africans, especially younger ones, may be tempted to reconsider shabby social contracts—and look for radical change. The most important failure is the provision of security. African states are often strong in areas where they ought to be weak and weak where they ought to be strong. Many regimes are adept at beating or locking up opponents, but inept at stopping their citizens from being robbed or killed. As a consequence, those promising to restore security, however ruthlessly, can gain support from ordinary citizens. Although some African wars in the late 20th century were much deadlier, the overall number of African conflicts is rising, according to a paper published last year by the Peace Research Institute Oslo. It noted that small conflicts caused more deaths in 2021 than at any point since its data began in 1989. The number of conflicts in which at least one side is a state was higher in 2021 than a decade earlier. Since 2021 things have become only bloodier. In Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger, a trio of countries where jihadists linked to al-Qaeda and Islamic State run riot, deaths in conflict have risen from under 800 in 2016 to over 10,000 in 2022. It is no coincidence that all three have gone from being largely democratic to suffering coups in the 2020s. Putschists have sought to justify their takeovers and gained support by pointing to insecurity under democracy. As the jihadist chaos spills into coastal states, political chaos could follow. Togo, for example, has a dynastic dictatorship like the one recently toppled in Gabon: the Gnassingbé family has run the country for 56 years. And it faces growing jihadist insecurity—at least 140 people have been killed since July 2022. In Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country, jihadists terrorise the north-east, gangs kidnap hundreds at a time in the north-west and armed separatists pillage the south-east. Clashes between farmers and herders in the centre add to the bloodshed. More than 10,000 people died in conflict in the country in both of 2021 and 2022. This year will be almost as bad. acled, a conflict-tracking group, rates Nigeria as having the fifth-most extreme violence globally, behind Ukraine. Nigeria’s political class, lounging in well-guarded mansions, is out of touch. Turnout in this year’s election was 29%, the lowest ever. More than 40% of Nigerians think it would be legitimate for the armed forces to take over in the event of abuses of power by elected leaders. Before the election senior Nigerian political figures told The Economist they had heard of coup-plotting. That is a troubling development, given that the country was run (abysmally) by military dictators for much of the second half of the 20th century. Other large countries are riven with conflict. Though the civil war centred on Ethiopia’s Tigray region may be over, clashes in Amhara and Oromia spiral on. Resurgent violence in the east of Congo has caused almost 3m people to flee from their homes since March 2022. In April 2023 Sudan plunged into civil war. All three countries are among Africa’s ten most populous. In every place people will seek protection where they think they can find it. Insecurity is felt beyond war zones. In a poll of 30 countries around the world released last month by Open Society Foundations, an NGO network, four of the five countries with the highest share of respondents fearing political violence were African: Kenya, Nigeria, Senegal and South Africa. The latter’s murder rate, among the highest in the world, is rising again. Lawlessness increases support for populists and vigilantes. And 72% of South Africans would swap elected governments for a crime-bashing strongman. One former cabinet minister, who campaigned against apartheid, praises Paul Kagame for Rwanda’s apparent lack of crime (but says less about its abuses of human rights). “Kagame has the right idea: sometimes you need to crack the whip.” Economic stagnation compounds the political crisis. From 1990 to 2018 the number of people living in extreme poverty in sub-Saharan Africa rose from 284m to 433m, as population growth often outstripped the economic sort. The region has lost another decade: real gdp per person was lower in 2022 than ten years earlier. Households and governments are also facing a tightening financial squeeze. The median inflation rate in sub-Saharan Africa has more than doubled since the start of the pandemic. In a region where food makes up 40% of consumption, there is double-digit food-price inflation in 80% of countries. Some 17% of government revenues will be spent on servicing external debt this year, the highest share since 1999. “Job creation” is by far the most-cited priority by 18- to 35-year-olds in Afrobarometer polls. The Mo Ibrahim Foundation, a British NGO, reckons that 18m formal jobs must be created annually to absorb the numbers entering the labour force; the current figure is 3m. Almost half of 18- to 24-year-olds in 15 countries surveyed last year by the Africa Youth Survey, a poll by a South African charity, said they were thinking of emigrating. Young Nigerians talk of “adulthood na scam” and hunt ways to japa, Yoruba slang for to emigrate. Earlier this year Hakainde Hichilema, whom the West sees as a rare liberal on the continent, warned his outside champions that African democrats need to secure material results or they will face political consequences. “[Y]ou can’t eat democracy,” argued Zambia’s president in an opinion piece urging foreign creditors to speed up debt restructuring. “Human rights may sustain the spirit, but not the body.” The desperation to meet basic needs partly explains why Africans may be relatively willing to consider strongmen. The Open Society poll asked whether authoritarians would produce better results in ten policy areas, such as creating jobs and fighting crime. In eight cases the sub-Saharan African average was higher than the global one. “Invariably, juntas that promise better material conditions will show up and win enough people’s hearts and minds,” notes Ken Opalo of Georgetown University in America. Nevertheless, Africans’ faith in what passes for democracy is plummeting not just because of the insecurity and poverty their governments deliver, but also because of the nature of politics itself. In the 1990s and 2000s most African countries ditched one-party systems and embraced multi-party elections. The pageantry of elections, however, obscures the fact that much of Africa has only the patina of democracy. EIU our sister outfit, classifies just one African country (Mauritius) as a “full democracy” and six as “flawed”. Between 1990 and 2019 sitting presidents won 88% of the 112 elections they ran in. Nine leaders have kept power for more than 20 years. These include Uganda’s Yoweri Museveni; Cameroon’s Paul Biya, who spends much of the year in a Swiss hotel; Equatorial Guinea’s Teodoro Obiang, the longest-serving president of any country; and Mr Kagame. All fear fair elections; all may be grooming a son for office. Even relative newbies abuse the law, entrenching frustration. In August Zimbabwe’s main opposition party did not contest yet another dubious election because it sees the courts as biased. A month earlier the Central African Republic’s president won a referendum he rammed through the courts that will end term limits. In 2020 Alassane Ouattara, president of Ivory Coast, won a third term after controversially tweaking the constitution so he could get around the two-term limit. Senegal’s Macky Sall this year opted against a similar move after violent protests. But any goodwill earned was undermined by the arrest of hundreds of opposition-party members, including a presidential candidate. On average in Afrobarometer polls only 13% believe that no one in their country’s presidency is corrupt. Transparency International (TI), a watchdog, finds that sub-Saharan African countries are on average seen as less clean than El Salvador, where graft is so endemic that a millennial authoritarian has promised to build a huge jail specially for white-collar criminals. On average, perceptions of corruption in sub-Saharan Africa were slightly worse in 2022 than they were a decade earlier, reckons TI. The Open Society poll found that corruption was the gravest national issue for voters in Ghana and Nigeria. Voters also fret about it in South Africa, where “state capture” became ubiquitous under Jacob Zuma, president from 2009 to 2018. The looting of state institutions remains a problem in South Africa today—and in many other countries. “The capture of democratic political systems by private power networks is arguably the greatest threat to civil liberties and inclusive development in Africa,” argues Nic Cheeseman of the University of Birmingham in Britain. Putschists exploit anger at graft—and it works, at least initially. In a poll before the first coup in Mali, 58% of people thought most or all the people in the presidency were corrupt. Two years and a second coup later, just 25% did. In Guinea the share before the coup was almost 50%. After it the share fell to 28%. Why doesn’t dissatisfaction with sham democracy spur Africans to try to obtain a better version of it? There are several reasons. For a start it is fiendishly difficult to oppose dictatorships. The bad guys usually have the guns. Ruling parties also often co-opt NGOs and youth groups. Many activists have tried to improve democracy and to vote out authoritarians. Yet after decades of failing, some may be concluding that only more radical methods, even coups, can end stagnation and state capture. Guinea’s main opposition leader, for example, told The Economist of his “relief” immediately after the coup that ousted Alpha Condé, then president, in 2021. Second, there is reason to believe that support for liberal democracy is softer than its champions would wish. In Mali, for example, support for the idea of military rule had been flat for years at just under 30% before the first coup. Now almost 80% of Malians say they approve or strongly approve of rule by military men. Although outsiders may point out that liberal democracy has never really been tried in Africa, that is not always the view of Africans. Last month Olusegun Obasanjo, a former Nigerian president, said: “We have seen that the liberal type of democracy as practised in the West will not work for us.” Mr Kagame has argued similarly. (“The West does not define democracy in Africa.”) In the Africa Youth Survey just 39% of respondents said that Africans should emulate “Western democracy”; 53% said Africa needed to find its own version. Indeed, too much is often expected of young Africans. Many of them are apathetic when confronted with the façade of democracy. They are more than twice as likely to say they did not vote in the last election as the over-56s. In Nigeria’s election this year young voters helped Peter Obi to the best-ever result for a third-party candidate but he still came only third. In South Africa’s last general election only 30% of eligible 20-somethings voted—from apartheid to apathy in a single generation. Support for military rule if elected leaders abuse power is highest among the young. On average 56% of 18- to 35-year-olds would contemplate it, versus 46% of those aged 56 and older. It is young men who rally in support after coups, complicating potential efforts by African countries or the West to reverse takeovers. Not that outsiders’ commitment to African democracy is especially strong—the third reason for its feebleness. The continental organisation, the African Union, is weak and ultimately the creature of its mostly authoritarian members. Regional hegemons such as South Africa carry less weight: economic stagnation means it has less hard power, while endorsing rigged elections in Zimbabwe and elsewhere means it has less soft power. Meanwhile, China skews aid towards corrupt autocratic regimes, as the Chinese Communist Party preaches its model to Africa’s ruling parties. Russia, whether through the notorious Wagner Group or via arms sales, props up juntas and authoritarians. Newer players such as Turkey and Gulf countries will not promote democratic norms. The West offers half-hearted help and hypocrisy. It sometimes speaks out when elections look sketchy, as was the case this year in Zimbabwe and Sierra Leone. But America decided to whitewash dodgy results in mineral-rich Congo in 2018. Britain is unlikely to criticise Mr Kagame given that it wants to fly asylum-seekers to Rwanda. France rails against coups in countries where it stands to lose influence, such as Niger, but says little when the putschists are in tune with Paris, as was the case with Chad’s coup in 2021. Françafrique—the term given to how France has maintained influence in former colonies by propping up autocratic elites—is coming back to bite Paris. In Mali a survey in 2021 found that more than a fifth of Malians believed that France’s armed forces in the country were in league with jihadists or separatists. In Burkina Faso the new president, 35-year-old Captain Ibrahim Traoré, says that he is restoring sovereignty. It is the free choice of his junta, like Mali’s, to ask Russia for help. After Niger’s coup, the junta quickly scapegoated France, which had troops fighting jihadists in the country. Crowds waved Russian flags and decapitated a rooster painted in French colours. In Senegal, protesters against Mr Sall’s flirtation with a third term burned down French-owned supermarkets and petrol stations. Half of Ivorians say that France is the country they trust least, according to Premise Data, a pollster. So long as Africans see—and experience—“democracy” as a charade played by corrupt elites with the help of foreigners, then many will consider other options. What those look like will vary depending on the context. In South Africa frustration at meagre progress since apartheid is opening up space for Julius Malema, a hard-left black nationalist, and for ethnic-based parties. In Nigeria the efforts of Nnamdi Kanu, a separatist, to resuscitate the dream of an independent Biafra rely on charisma, populism, disregard for the truth and violence. Elsewhere populist military men may prove appealing, at least temporarily. In Burkina Faso Captain Traoré chooses deliberately to mimic Thomas Sankara, a revered former socialist leader often referred to as Africa’s Che Guevara. He came to power in a coup in 1983 aged 33 before being gunned down four years later. France has been a butt of both men. There is a well-intentioned desire to see Africans, especially younger ones, as a latent progressive force. But it is also patronising to deny, given the present circumstances amid what passes for democracy on the continent, that many Africans will be tempted by authoritarians. They are no more immune to populism than Americans are to Donald Trump, or Turks are to Recep Tayyip Erdogan. They will gravitate to those who seem to meet their needs—or at least offer a change from those who manifestly do not. © 2023 The Economist Newspaper Limited. All rights reserved.

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Evening in the Mountains of El Salvador

Narrator: Thomas Jones 🇬🇧 Writer: Stephanie ✍️ Sound design: crickets 🌾   Welcome back, sleepyheads. Tonight, we'll travel to the small country of El Salvador and join two friends who are enjoying a relaxing, laid-back vacation. 😴    👀 Watch, listen and comment on this episode on our brand new Get Sleepy YouTube channel! And hit subscribe while you're there!   We want your feedback! If you're able to spare a couple of minutes, we'd be so grateful to get your thoughts on the show and how we can improve it in this short Get Sleepy Listener Survey.  Support our Sponsors Check out other great products and deals from Get Sleepy sponsors: getsleepy.com/sponsors/   Support Us   - Get Sleepy’s Premium Feed: https://getsleepy.com/support/.  - Get Sleepy Merchandise: https://getsleepy.com/store.  - Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/get-sleepy/id1487513861.    Connect  Stay up to date on all podcast news and even vote on upcoming episodes!  - Website: https://getsleepy.com/.  - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/getsleepypod/.  - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/getsleepypod/.  - Twitter: https://twitter.com/getsleepypod.    About Get Sleepy  Get Sleepy is the #1 story-telling podcast designed to help you get a great night’s rest. By combining sleep meditation with a relaxing bedtime story, each episode will guide you gently towards sleep.    Get Sleepy Premium Get instant access to ad-free episodes, as well as the Thursday night bonus episode by subscribing to our premium feed. It's easy! Sign up in two taps!  Get Sleepy Premium feed includes:  Monday and Wednesday night episodes (with zero ads). The exclusive Thursday night bonus episode. Access to the entire back catalog (also ad-free). Exclusive sleep meditation episodes. Discounts on merchadise. We’ll love you forever. Get your 7-day free trial: https://getsleepy.com/support.    Thank you so much for listening!  Feedback? Let us know your thoughts! https://getsleepy.com/contact-us/.   That’s all for now. Sweet dreams ❤️ 😴 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

104 - El Salvador: The Price of Security

Once the murder capital of the world, El Salvador finds itself grappling with both gang violence and geopolitical shifts. Between 2013 and 2016, murder rates soared due to gang wars and systemic extortion. President Nayib Bukele, emerging from this tumult, removes the safety catches from the government and actually tackles the issue. However, all of this is coming at a long-term cost. How does Bukele's regional vision mesh with the complexities of Central American geopolitics, and does this new path set Bukele on a collision course with the US? Join us as we dissect El Salvador's evolving position on the world stage. On the panel this week are: - Robert Guest (The Economist) - Nik McNally (The Red Line) - Margaret Myers (Inter-American Dialogue) Intro - 00:00 PART 1 - 02:04 PART 2 - 24:29 PART 3 - 42:59 Outro - 54:44 Follow the show on @TheRedLinePod Follow Michael on @MikeHilliardAus Support the show at: https://www.patreon.com/theredlinepod For more info, please visit: https://www.theredlinepodcast.com/

Crypto Update | El Salvador's Bitcoin Bonds Are One Step Closer to Issuance

Noelle Acheson, the mind behind the Crypto Is Macro Now newsletter, explores market moves, inflation, El Salvador and more.Today's episode is sponsored by CME Group.To get the show every day, follow the podcast here.World's First Bitcoin Bonds Receive Regulatory Approval in El Salvador -From our sponsors:CME Group Cryptocurrency futures and options provide market-leading liquidity for bitcoin and ether trading. These cash-settled contracts give full exposure to crypto performance without the hassle of holding the physical position. No digital wallet? No problem. Trade nearly 24/7 in a transparent, CFTC-regulated market. Visit cmegroup.com/crypto to learn more.Disclaimer:This communication is not directed to investors located in any particular jurisdiction and is not intended to be accessed by recipients based in jurisdictions in which distribution is not permitted. The information herein should not be considered investment advice or the results of actual market experience. Past results are not necessarily indicative of future performance. Trading derivatives products involves the risk of loss. Please consider carefully whether futures or options are appropriate to your financial situation.-This episode was hosted by Noelle Acheson. “Markets Daily” is executive produced by Jared Schwartz and produced and edited by Eleanor Pahl. All original music by Doc Blust and Colin Mealey.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

News Block: Bitcoin Price Breaks $42K, Fed to Cut Rates in 2024?, El Salvador Bitcoin in Profit, Gold Hits New Record High, Franklin Templeton CEO Owns Bitcoin, New Decentralized Mining Pool

In this week's episode of the Coin Stories News Block, we cover the major headlines related to Bitcoin and global finance: Bitcoin Breaks $42k, Highest Price Since May 2022  El Salvador’s Bitcoin Holdings Now in Profit  Market Expecting the Fed to Cut Rates in 2024  Gold Hits a Fresh New All Time High   Franklin Templeton’s CEO Announces Bitcoin Holdings Microstrategy Stacks an Additional 16,100 BTC  Jack Dorsey Invests in Decentralized Mining Pool, OCEAN References mentioned in the episode:  Bloomberg Article on Bitcoin $500,000 Super-cycle  President Bukele Tweets ES’s Bitcoin in Profit Bitcoin Dollar Cost Averaging Calculator 70% of Supply Hasn’t Moved in Over a Year  Fed’s Waller Endorses Extending Rate Pause Fed Officials Feel Rate Hikes are Done  Treasury Bonds Best Month Since 1980sGold Hits a New All Time High Powell Calls Fiscal Path Unsustainable One in Four Americans Hold Bitcoin, Survey Says  Atlantic Article Says Inflation is Your Fault   Franklin Templeton CEO Holds Bitcoin Microstrategy Buys 16,100 More Bitcoin -- Promotional Links: Bitcoin Nashville is July 25-27, 2024: Get 10% off your passes using the code HODL at  https://b.tc/conference CrowdHealth offers the Bitcoin community alternative to health insurance. I now spend just ~$100 a month on my health care. Sign up: https://www.joincrowdhealth.com/natalie  Coinkite is your go-to tech company for top-notch Bitcoin custody solutions, including the cold card wallet. Get 5% off using my link: https://store.coinkite.com/promo/COINSTORIES Buy vaulted gold, silver, and platinum in seconds with OneGold: https://onegold.me/3s6cGg4. Use code COINSTORIESAU for gold and COINSTORIESAG for silver. Fold is the best Bitcoin rewards debit card and shopping app in the world. Get 10,000 satoshis when you sign up and spend $20 on the card:  https://www.foldapp.com/natalie The Orange Pill App is building the social layer for Bitcoin:https://signup.theorangepillapp.com/opa/natbrunell If you’re looking for the highest-quality sustainable pork, steak and seafood products, look no further than Campo Grande. For $20 off use code HODL: https://eatcampogrande.com/HODL -- This podcast is for educational purposes and should not be construed as official investment advice. -- VALUE FOR VALUE — SUPPORT NATALIE’S SHOWS Strike ID https://strike.me/coinstoriesnat/ Cash App $CoinStories   #money #Bitcoin #investing

The Student Massacre of 1975- El Salvador

On July 30, 1975 Salvadoran students were peacefully protesting in San Salvador when they were met by police and national guard, who opened fire on them. This massacre was a turning point in Salvadoran history and directly contributed to the buildup to El Salvador's civil war. In this episode, Cristina tells Carmen about the student massacre of 1975 in El Salvador. If you have topic suggestions, feel free email Historiasunknownpodcast@gmail.com or use this form Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/historiasunknown/ Want to support Historias Unknown and access ad-free episodes? Join Historias Unknown Premium: https://historiasunknown.supercast.com/new_landing Sources https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/tdih/massacre-el-salvador/ https://www.revistadebate.net/sobreviviente-cuenta-en-toronto-su-dolorosa-vivencia-durante-masacre-en-el-salvador/ https://fightbacknews.org/articles/more-2000-march-july-30-el-salvador-commemorate-1975-student-massacre https://cispes.org/article/students-denounce-supreme-court-manipulation-commemoration-1975-massacre https://www.salvacultura.com/home/39-years-of-resistance-in-el-salvador-commemorating-student-massacare-of-july-30th-1975 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1975_Salvadoran_student_massacre https://www.cispes.org/article/under-state-exception-and-constitutional-crisis-el-salvador-hosts-miss-universe-pageant Bukele update info: https://www.cispes.org/article/why-consecutive-reelection-unconstitutional-el-salvador Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

El Salvador: The rise of the ‘world’s coolest dictator’

Not long ago, the tiny nation of El Salvador had the highest murder rate in the world. Now, it has the highest incarceration rate. President Nayib Bukele – who has described himself as “the world’s coolest dictator” – has detained 70,000 gang suspects without trial. His supporters point to the homicide rate, which is down 93 per cent. But Bukele’s critics warn that his hardline policies risk sacrificing democracy for security.  This podcast was brought to you thanks to the support of readers of The Times and The Sunday Times. Subscribe today: thetimes.co.uk/storiesofourtimes.Guest: Stephen Gibbs, Latin America Correspondent, The Times. Host: Luke Jones. Clips: NBC, CBS, Channel 4, Sky News Australia, ITV, Al Jazeera, CFR Education. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

El Salvador Wins BIG with the Bitcoin Freedom Visa | EP 890

El Salvador Announces a Path to Citizenship for Bitcoiners with it's newly announced "Freedom Visa" SPONSORS ► Passport by Foundation: https://www.foundationdevices.com/simply ► Swan: https://www.swan.com/simply ► Kaboomracks: https://www.kaboomracks.com ► Stamp Seed: https://www.stampseed.com PROMO CODE: SIMPLY for a 15% discount BITCOIN CONFRENCE DISCOUNTS ► Bitcoin 2024: https://b.tc/conference/2024  PROMO CODE: SIMPLY for discount on your tickets! FOLLOW US ► https://twitter.com/SimplyBitcoinTV ► https://twitter.com/BITVOLT7 ► https://twitter.com/Optimistfields ► Nostr: npub1vzjukpr2vrxqg2m9q3a996gpzx8qktg82vnl9jlxp7a9yawnwxfsqnx9gc JOIN OUR TELEGRAM, GIVE US A MEME TO REVIEW! ►https://t.me/SimplyBitcoinTV SUBSCRIBE TO OUR YOUTUBE ►https://bit.ly/3QbgqTQ SUPPORT US ► On-Chain: bc1qpm5j7wsnk46l2ukgpm7w3deesx2mdrzcgun6ms ►Lightning: simplybitcoin@walletofsatoshi.com  #bitcoin #bitcoinnews #simplybitcoin DISCLAIMER: All views in this episode are our own and DO NOT reflect the views of any of our guests or sponsors. Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research. If you are or represent the copyright owner of materials used in this video and have a problem with the use of said material, please contact Simply Bitcoin.