Le Journal

L'incroyable offre de Canal+ pour PSG/Tottenham et le Black Friday

La nouvelle collection PSG x Jordan se dévoile en partie

Dembélé plus surveillé, Doué proche des terrains
Tous les deux blessés deux fois depuis le début de saison, Ousmane Dembélé et Désiré Doué devraient rejouer avec le PSG d'ici la fin de l'année, contrairement à Achraf Hakimi. Dembélé est le plus proche d'un retour, mais Luis Enrique ne veut rien précipiter, comme pour Doué.

Dembélé, Kolo Muani, les jeunes, etc, la conf' complète de Luis Enrique avant PSG/Tottenham

Luis Enrique et Kvaratskhelia devant la presse à 13h avant PSG/Tottenham (live video)

Trump administration excludes nursing, teaching from ‘professional' degree list. Here's why
A coalition of nursing and other health care organizations are angry over a Trump administration plan that could limit access to student loans in some cases. Students pursuing graduate degrees in nursing, physical therapy, public health and some other fields would face tighter federal student loan limits under the plan because it doesn’t consider them professional programs. The revamp is part of Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” passed by Congress. While graduate students could previously borrow loans up to the cost of their degree, the new rules would set caps depending on whether the degree is considered a graduate or professional program. The Education Department is defining the following fields as professional programs: pharmacy, dentistry, veterinary medicine, chiropractic, law, medicine, optometry, osteopathic medicine, podiatry and theology. Left out are nursing, physical therapy, dental hygiene, occupational therapy and social work as well as fields outside of health care such as architecture, education and accounting. While the plan is still being finalized, the new student loan caps would take effect next July. Why this is happening now The Trump administration says limits on graduate loans are needed to reduce tuition costs. It believes that capping student loans will push universities charging higher-than-average tuition to look at lowering rates. To define what counts as a professional program, the Education Department is turning to a 1965 law governing student financial aid. The law includes several examples of professional degrees but says it isn’t an exhaustive list. The Trump administration’s proposal, by contrast, says only the degrees spelled out in the new regulation can count as professional programs. One in 6 of the nation’s registered nurses held a master’s degree as of 2022, according to the American Association of Colleges of Nursing. The details of the plan were recently hashed out in a federal rulemaking process. What this means for students Some future students could find it more costly or difficult to pursue a specialized degree. Under the new plan, students in professional programs would be able to borrow $50,000 a year and up to $200,000 in total. Other graduate students, such as those pursuing nursing and physical therapy, would be limited to $20,500 a year and up to $100,000 total. Trump administration says impact will be minimal The Education Department says its data show 95% of nursing students, for example, are in graduate programs that won’t be affected by the new caps. The department says the vast majority of students are in programs that cost less than the $100,000 cap being proposed for federal student loans. Students already enrolled in graduate programs would be grandfathered into current lending limits. Health groups say change will worsen nursing shortage A coalition of health care organizations has urged the Education Department to change course, arguing that post-bachelor’s health care degrees that are needed for licensure or certification should be considered a professional degree. They also say that fields being excluded are largely filled by women and in high-demand. According to a U.S. Census Bureau report in 2019, women made up about three-fourths of the full-time, year-round health care workers in the U.S. and accounted for a much higher share in jobs such as dental and medical assistants. The organizations contend that capping federal student loans will make the ongoing nursing shortage even worse, force students to seek more expensive private loans and threaten patient care. The American Association of Colleges of Nursing says if the proposal is finalized, “the impact on our already-challenged nursing workforce would be devastating.” Giving nurses a chance to further their education and advance their careers has attracted young people to the profession, said Susan Pratt, a nurse who is also president of a union representing nurses in Toledo, Ohio. But making that harder could…

Les flocages du nouveau maillot Jordan du PSG disponibles
Le PSG a dévoilé ce mardi, à la veille du choc face à Tottenham, son quatrième maillot pour la saison 2025/2026. Un maillot signé Jordan et qui est déjà disponible en plusieurs versions et avec deux flocages.

How Trump changed what “terrorism” means
On the deck of the USS Gerald Ford in the Caribbean. | Paige Brown/US Navy via Getty Images The State Department designated Venezuela’s “Cartel de los Soles” as a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO) on Monday as part of an escalating campaign aimed at forcing President Nicolás Maduro from power. The designation comes amid an ongoing campaign of US strikes on suspected drug boats that has killed more than 80 people, the largest build-up of US military forces in the Caribbean in decades, and the news that President Donald Trump has authorized covert action within Venezuela. The designation of Cartel de los Soles — which the US says is led by Maduro himself alongside other high-ranking Venezuelan officials and military officers — “brings a whole bunch of new options to the United States,” Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth said last week. From a legal perspective, it’s not clear what options he’s talking about. FTO designation brings with it a range of penalties, including economic sanctions and visa bans, but it does not authorize military action. Trump has used it that way in the past, however; in his first term, his administration controversially designated Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps as a terrorist organization shortly before assassinating its commander, Gen. Qassem Soleimani, in a drone strike. So it’s not far-fetched to interpret Monday’s move as laying the groundwork for military action against targets on Venezuelan soil, or even against Maduro himself, since the designation considers him the lead “narcoterrorist.” “The concern is that what they’re doing is dressing up regime change under the guise of counterterrorism and counternarcotics,” Brian Finucane, a former State Department legal adviser now with the International Crisis Group, told Vox. It’s also another example of the unusual way that this administration is using the label “terrorism” very differently from how it was used in the years when fighting terrorist groups was America’s top national security priority. Meet the new War on Terror… Cartel de los Soles is not what would normally be described as a terrorist organization, nor is it even an “organization” at all. It’s a term Venezuelans use to describe a loose network of Venezuelan military officers and regime figures (“Soles” refers to the stars on generals’ uniforms) involved in a range of criminal activity that includes drug trafficking. But since Inauguration Day, the administration has been casting a very wide net with these designations. Trump’s State Department has designated 24 groups as foreign terrorist organizations this year — more than the US designated in the previous 10 years. The groups named in 2025 alone now comprise nearly a third of the total groups on the list. Four of the Trump targets have been Iran-aligned militia groups (including Yemen’s Houthis, who had been removed under the Biden administration), but the vast majority have been Latin American criminal organizations, including Mexican drug cartels, and gangs from Haiti, Venezuela, and Ecuador. For the administration, these all fall under the category of “narcoterrorism,” which is not a new term but has been wielded to an unprecedented extent by this administration, blurring the lines between criminal and military threats. The deaths and misery caused by drug addiction are undoubtedly a major issue, and foreign criminal groups undoubtedly play a role in supplying the drugs. But the administration’s rhetoric about which groups are transporting which drugs has been highly misleading, and many experts believe focusing exclusively on the international dimension of the opioid epidemic can distract from efforts to counteract the demand for drugs. In any event, groups supplying drugs to Americans with drug addiction for money do not pose the same sort of threat as those plotting violent attacks for the sake of politics or ideology. The action in Trump’s new war on terror isn’t all in the Western Hemisphere: This month, it also…

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Seulement deux absents avant PSG/Tottenham

