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By Billy PerrigoJuly 2, 2018 1:03 PM EDTPupils in 24 Danish schools will be guinea pigs for a new policy aimed at [url=https://www.cup-stanley.ca]stanley cup[/url] integrating non-Western immigrants into Danish society. From 2019, it will become law for schools that take more than 30 percent of their students from ghetto areas to force their students to take language [url=https://www.cup-stanley.us]stanley cup[/url] tests.Denmark [url=https://www.stanleycups.it]stanley cup[/url] 8216 government currently lists 22 areas as ghettos, areas with social problems where more than 50% of residents are non-Western immigrants.According to the Copenhagen Post, Students from those 24 schools will undergo Danish tests in the coming monthsmdash;making them some of the first to be affected by the Danish governmentrsquo new sweeping laws aimed at eradicating immigrant ghettos by 2030.There are a number of parents who come from the Middle East who have a totally different understanding of pedagogy, childhood and school than their Scandinavian counterparts, said Merete Riisager, the Danish minister of education, according to the Post.Prime Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen had previously announced in his New Year speech that the government intended to take measures to end the existence of ghettos completely. That was followed by an announcement in March that the government would pursue a new set of laws to will deal with parallel societies.While it not the first time the government has tried to abolish ghettos, the late Mezi German Parliament Votes to Make It Easier for Trans People to Change Their Legal Gender
By Naina BajekalSeptember 29, 2014 10:43 AM EDTNot reading the small print could mean big problems, as a handful of Londoners who accidentally signed away their first born children in exchange for access to free Wi-Fi recently found out.An experiment organized by the Cyber Security Research Institute was conducted in some of the busiest neighborhoods in London and intended to highligh [url=https://www.hokas.com.de]hoka[/url] t the major risks associated with public Wi-Fi networks.In June, researchers set up a Wi-Fi hotspot that promised network access to users who agreed to a set of terms and conditions. These included a Herod Clause offering free Wi-Fi if the user agreed to hand over their eldest child for the duration of eternity. The page was disabled after six people signed up.Finnish security firm F-Secure, which sponsored the research, said it had decided not to enforce the clause. As this is an experiment, we will be returning the children to their parents, wrote the Finnish company in its report. While terms and conditions are legall [url=https://www.nike-dunks.de]nike dunk[/url] y binding, it is contrary to public policy to sell children in return for free services, so the clause would not be enforceable in a court [url=https://www.yeezy.com.mx]yeezy[/url] of law.The company urged people to take Wi-Fi security more seriously. Sean Sullivan, security advisor at F-Secure, told The Guardian: People are thinking of Wi-Fi as a place as opposed to an activityhellip;You donrsquo;t do unprotected Wi-Fi at home, why are you doing it in publi