This edition was published on April 27, 2019 at 1 PM E.T. [ Go to the front page ]
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Women in Nicaragua. The number of Central American women who make difficult, often harrowing, journeys to the United States to flee domestic and gang violence is rising. What these women go through while detained by Customs and Border Protection or Immigration and Customs Enforcement can take an additional physical, social and emotional toll.  (Photo by Adam Jones) Photo used under CC BY
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Photo of the Day
Central American migrants on “la Bestia” in July, 2008. Every year, thousands of people, 90 percent of them Central American, cross the length of Mexico in hopes of reaching the United States. Many hop trains known as la Bestia (the Beast) facing kidnapping, extortion, rape, robbery, sickness, hunger, and death along the way. And it has only become worse since Mexico ramped up the drug war; in search of easy profits, cartels have started to seize migrants, holding them ransom. Amnesty International has called the migrants’ route “one of the most dangerous in the world.”  (Photo by Peter Haden) Photo used under CC BY
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When a society abandons its ideals just because most people can’t live up to them, behavior gets very ugly indeed.
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