While the West debates what to do with AI in schools, in China there are already schools turning it into a child tutor

Anyone who has been a child or a parent knows the scene: the flexo light on, an incomprehensible math problem on the table, tears falling from the frustration of not understanding a lesson or not being able to pronounce a foreign language, and a parent losing patience after explaining the same thing for the fifth time. In China they have found a way to turn it around, parents frustrated and exhausted by their workdays are delegating the academic supervision of their children to artificial intelligence. While in different countries there is a strong debate and fear about whether AI erodes critical thinking of students, the opposite is true in China: a 2025 survey led by KPMG revealed that more than 90% of the Chinese are optimistic about this technology. The phenomenon came to light and sparked debate on social media when a mother in Shandong province discovered her husband playing on his mobile phone while letting her Kimi AIa chatbot capable of processing two million characters, did his son’s homework. But this father is not an isolated case. Many adults are using AI not just to teach, but to do the dreaded “parenting chores.” Mr. Zhang, for example, admitted to using the chatbot Doubao to generate summaries of the Aesop’s Fables and print step-by-step images for your third grader’s craft projects. The market has responded with an avalanche of gadgets. Zheng Wenqi, a working mother, bought for about 375 dollars the “Native Language Star”, a device composed of a mask that muffles your voice in Chinese and a speaker that translates it into English to converse with your children. Others, like university professor Wu Ling, They invested $1,170 in AlphaDoga robot dog powered by the DeepSeek model that practices English, dances and keeps his only son company. There are even parents who have gone one step further by becoming creators. This is the case of Yin Xingyu, a mother from Shenzhen who does not know how to program, but who uses the technique of vibecoding with DeepSeek to create interactive English word games for her 6-year-old daughter, as well as generate personalized comics using the Nano Banana Pro imaging model. For the purist parents, devices have emerged such as the “Youdao AI Q&A Pen”, a smart pen designed from “asceticism”: it has no browser or games, it only guides the child step by step in their mathematical reasoning without giving them the direct answer. A multi-million dollar business in a gray area All this enthusiasm has fueled a runaway educational technology market valued at more than $43 billion. Outsourcing has left the homes to take to the streets and, until July 2024, The opening of about 50,000 was estimated “AI study rooms” across the country. In these establishments, children sit in cubicles in front of standardized tablets; They cannot leave until the indicators on the screen turn from red (errors) to green (correct answers). As detailed on CCTVthe “teachers” in these rooms do not teach, they are prohibited from explaining the subject and they act as mere supervisors and commissioned salespeople. To cope with the monotony of 6 to 8 hours answering questions, some children learn to play Go or Gomoku secretly on the same machines, often with the supervisors’ blind eye. However, former employees and parents report that in many of these centers, “artificial intelligence” is just a marketing façade to charge more, and children simply consume pre-recorded lessons on basic tablets. Behind these study rooms hides a business survival tactic. Many of these centers operate in a gray zone to avoid the strict “double reduction” policy. imposed by the government in 2021which banned for-profit tutoring to relieve financial and academic pressure on families. By arguing that “it is AI that teaches and not a human,” these companies dodge education regulators, registering under names of “cultural media” and avoiding words like “enrollment” or “classes.” Franchises are strategically expanding into peri-urban areas and small towns, where rents are low and parents are equally willing to pay for a place to leave their children. This mass adoption is no accident; is backed by a clear state directive. The Chinese government is promoting the integration of AI in education as part of a national strategy to accelerate its technological progress against global competitors such as the United States. The regulations are already on the table. Starting with the fall 2025 semester, Beijing will require a minimum of eight hours per year of AI education in all primary and secondary schools. The transition has been rapid and planned, with higher education leading the way: 99% of university students and teachers in China already use generative tools, and elite universities such as Zhejiang or Fudan have made AI courses mandatory and transversal subjects. Science supports this dive. An empirical study conducted with high school students in H city showed that the duration of daily use of AI tools significantly and positively influences students’ AI knowledge and algorithmic thinking. That is, constant exposure is already shaping your cognitive and technological abilities. The debate is served The families’ opinions are drastically divided. For many, AI democratizes education. Mothers like Li Linyun celebrate that the Doubao chatbot be a “24-hour, knowledgeable and extremely patient teacher,” which has saved him hundreds of dollars on human tutors and improved his relationship with his daughter. On the other hand, technological dependence terrifies educators and a faction of parents, who criticize that children are becoming lazy and losing the ability to think independently. In study halls, proctors notice that students, desperate to turn the screen green, resort to tactical memorization: repeatedly choosing incorrect answers by discard until the system approves them, without actually learning the concept. Added to this is the “AI illusion” and its hallucinations. Su Xiao, mother of a ninth grader, discovered that the general models They could invent historical data with complete confidence and fluency, or omit crucial data in mathematical problems, offering logically impeccable but erroneous results. This forced her to become a “cyber quality inspector,” … Read more

The Opus schools decided to keep up with the government and continue segregating by sex. His students are running away

When it came into force in January 2021 the new education lawno one missed that in its provisions there was a direct missile to the waterline of dozens of schools and institutes throughout the country: segregation by sex was prohibited; Only mixed schools could continue to be chartered. What we discovered a couple of weeks later is that the missile came with a timer. Five years later, the timer is reaching zero and many centers are preparing to stop being chartered. Immediately afterwards, a wave of students are trying to leave those schools. What did the law say? The LOMLOE, which is what the law is called, demanded that educational centers that receive public funds “develop the principle of coeducation in all educational stages.” That is, they were prohibited from “not separating students by gender.” However, as competition is regional and each place has different regulations, many of the attempts to apply this point they have been delayed. In Catalonia, for example, when the ERC department tried to eliminate agreements with differentiated education centers, the courts stopped the measures until the agreements were renewed. That period begins at the beginning of 2026. And why does it affect Opus Dei? Strictly speaking, talking about “Opus schools” is a bit inaccurate. It is true that there are many centers in that orbit, but the relationships between them are complex and that means that they are not a uniform whole. However, this group of centers (which in Catalonia number a dozen and receive 35 million each year) are the spearhead of the “anti-coeducational” movement. Thus, many Catalan schools linked to the Prelature are doing the math. Continuing to be concerted would mean losing one of its hallmarks; Not losing it means becoming private (with the increase in fees that this entails). For this reason, the steps they were taking in two schools in the Sant Cugat/Bellaterra area (La Vall – for girls – and La Farga – for boys) were seen as the great privatization experiment. The area is one of the richest and most exclusive in all of Catalonia and, in that sense, it seemed logical to think that they would be two of the schools that would suffer the least from the jump. But the flight of students has begun. El País requested in July (through a complaint to the Commission for Guarantees of Access to Public Information) the data from the official pre-registration process and what these data show is a complete leak. 63 students from La Vall and 96 students from La Farga tried to go to other schools. Finally, only 38 of the first and 74 of the second achieved it; but it is a warning to sailors. Applications for admission also decreased (between 10 and 14%). All this, while a group of families try not to abandon the concert. However, the decision seems firm. Last week, two schools in L’Hospitalet de Llobregat also linked to the Prelature (Xaloc – for boys – and Pineda – for girls) announced that they were going to begin preparing for a more than possible non-renewal of the agreement and the problems that this will entail. According to data from El Paísonly those two schools (with more than 2,800 students) receive seven million euros from the Generalitat. And what situation does all this leave us in? In recent years, the debate about whether single-sex or mixed education it has become more intense. In fact, in some countries like the US, differentiated education It has been experiencing a real boom for a decade. However, the current conversation makes it clear that research on the topic is the least of it. The opposing positions at an ideological, economic and social level They make these investigations become ammunition with which to attack the opponent. For this reason, what everyone in the sector is wondering is how long the legislature will last and what will happen if, eventually, a government of the opposite direction arrives. Meanwhile, what is clear is that differentiated education is going to verify, for the first time in many years, the commitment of its families to the project. Image| Vazovsky In Xataka | The generation of parents who feel guilty because their children spend a lot of time looking at screens

South Korea launched an AI textbook program for schools. It has lasted four months

The South Korean government bet heavily on artificial intelligence in classrooms with a million-dollar investment in digital textbooks. They promised more personalized learning, a reduction in teaching load and, generally speaking, fewer school dropouts. The reality It has been very different: after a single semester they stopped being mandatory and became complementary material, allowing each school to decide whether to use them or not. Few have continued using them. A experiment that does not has worked. In March of this year a special program started educational promoted by then-president Yoon Suk Yeol: textbooks with artificial intelligence for mathematics, English and computer science. The government invested more than 1.2 trillion won (726 million euros at the exchange rate) in equipment and teacher training, while the publishers allocated another 800,000 million won (484 million euros) to the development of the material. Barely four months later, in August, parliament stopped considering them official texts after an avalanche of criticism. They are now optional supplementary material. Problems that came from day one. Ko Ho-dam, a high school student on Jeju Island, explains it to Rest of World: “All of our classes were delayed due to technical problems. I didn’t know how to use them well either. Working only with my laptop, I had a hard time staying focused. The books didn’t offer lessons adapted to my level.” Complaints spread throughout the country. Students, teachers and families reported errors in the content, risks to data privacy, increased screen time and, paradoxically, a greater workload for both teachers and students, especially if at the beginning it was necessary to add time to adapt to the new system. In a hurry. Representative Kang Kyung-sook, an opponent of the program, he questioned deadlines in parliament: “Traditional textbooks take 18 months to develop, nine to revise and six to prepare. But AI books took only 12, three and three months respectively. Why the rush?” Lee Bohm, researcher at the University of Cambridge, points out “AI should be tested first in homework or practice before being carefully introduced in class. The focus should be on how to integrate it into the school curriculum.” Digitized classrooms and addiction. South Korea has been dealing with another technological problem for years: digital addiction among young people. According to psychiatrist Lee Hae-kook, professor at the Catholic University of Korea, “almost one in two young people is at risk of smartphone addiction,” a figure that, according to Le Monde, increased between 30% and 40% after the pandemic. The country has had digital detox centers since 2002 and will ban mobile phones in schools starting March 2026. In this context, introducing more screens in classrooms has generated greater rejection. Jang Ha-na of the Political Mamas organization, which advocates for the well-being of women and children, expressed to the medium that “textbooks (with AI) worsen the effectiveness of learning. Once digital devices become central in classrooms, exposure to screens increases, weakening literacy and communication skills.” Legal and political battle. According to the medium, even before the launch, teachers unions and civil groups They sued the then minister of education for abuse of authority, arguing that the program was “problematic” by making the use of AI mandatory, ignored risks to minors, and lacked data protection measures. The government moved from mandatory adoption to a voluntary test one year in January. Yoon was ousted in April following his attempt to impose martial law, and new President Lee Jae Myung, who promised to reverse the policy, kept his word. According to explains Rest of World, the publishers that developed the texts announced lawsuits for financial damages. Hwang Geun-sik, president of the committee that represents them, explains that “companies that trusted the government saw the market suddenly disappear. Our business is reduced and staff cuts are inevitable.” The figures say it all. The adoption rate collapsed from 37% in the first semester to 19% in the current one. Only 2,095 schools use them now, half of the number at the beginning of the school year. Among teachers, opinions are divided. Lee Hyun-joon, a mathematics teacher in Pyeongtaek, admits that “monitoring students’ progress was a challenge. The overall quality was poor.” In contrast, Kim Cha-myung, a primary school teacher near Seoul, recognize to the means that “they were convenient, helped save time and supported students with difficulties. But he also added that “the program failed because everything was rushed. It should have been implemented gradually after proving its effectiveness.” llearned action. Kim Jong-hee, digital director of Dong-A Publishing, one of the developer publishers, defend that books “did not cause addiction to screens” and that they can reduce educational inequalities. But he acknowledges that “a key reason for the setbacks is that the issue became overly politicized.” “We no longer trust the government, and that is the biggest problem,” he added. Cover image | Korea Times (Yonhap) In Xataka | There is a national symbol that Japan has kept unchanged for generations: a very expensive school backpack

“20 years ago I would have pointed to my daughter to the Top schools, now I think that no longer matters.”

Artificial intelligence is modeling the present at such a frantic pace that We can barely realize that what until only a few years ago was essential, in the very close future will be Totally accessory. As confirmed in a recent interview Ben Mann, co -founder of Anthropic, academic training and the skills learning is one of those pillars That is changing. Knowledge and skills. Benjamin Mann is one of the “six of Anthropic” a group of engineers who left OpenAi to create their own AI model. Now they are one of The main competitors of his “alma mater“Business. In a recent interview In the podcast From Lenny Rachitsky, the co -founder made it clear that he preferred his children to be happy and kept their curiosity, to pass a good part of their youth acquiring knowledge. “10 or 20 years ago, maybe I would be trying to prepare it to be the best in school and aim it to all extracurricular activities and all that. But at this time, I don’t think that an amount. I just want it to be happy, considered, curious and friendly,” Mann said when talking about his children’s academic training. The titles are overvalued. Despite having abandoned Openai, Mann took with him a common idea in many OpenAi managers and engineers: in the near future marked by AI, university titles They are not guarantee of anything. Mann’s statements go along the same lines asjust a few days agoMark Chen, Openai research leader. The manager assured that“It is less and less necessary to have a doctorate in AI”, even when it came to accessing jobs in AI development. Again, the questions are the key. Mann said he preferred that his children maintain a profile open to experimentation, empathetic and with high doses of curiosity to be studied in an elite school with programs only based on knowledge. Just the same skills that Chen stood out in the profiles he was looking for to incorporate his team. Sam Altman, OpenAi CEO, I summed it up In a much more specific way: “Determining what questions will be more important than knowing the answer.” According to Altman, in a context in which AI can already assume the executive part of tasks such as programming or designing academic training will go to the background, the most decisive part will be how to squeeze the maximum that technology with people who know how to ask questions adequate. AI as an executing arm. The main actors in AI development seem to have reached the consensus that AI, at least in the short term, will have the role of executing arm of human decisions. Such and As I said Jensen Huang during An interviewthat change of roles will make knowledge such as programming less and less relevant to the work world. As Mann mentioned, this approach is totally opposed to that established so far, in which academic training and knowledge acquisition was a fundamental pillar to develop a successful work career. The founder of Anthropic does not even contemplate that possibility for the education of his children, aware that they will develop their career in a labor market conditioned by AI. In that scenario, the truly differential will be to contribute something that still the AI You cannot offer: Creativity and curiosity. In Xataka | Founders of small startups and large technological ones already has something in common: they are millmillonarios thanks to the AI Image | Unspash (Siora Photography), Lenny Rachitsky

convert schools into tourist experience

If we look back for a year until today, the word that best defines the situation in many rural areas of Japan is despairand is given by a birth crisis and aging of the population that affects several layers of social fabric. That is why they are betting unpublished in bring immigrantsor there are villages where, literally, there are More dolls than neighborsor they are even offering thousands of euros for attracting youth. Drift has led to School closureand now they have found an unpublished solution to the centers. The sunset of classrooms. I told it in an extensive BBC report And we have gone counting months ago, Japan faces a silent but deep transformation: every year, about 450 rural schools close their doors, victims of the demographic aging and of the exodus Youth to the big cities. What were previously training and community life centers become empty structures that reflect the depopulation of entire regions. Miyoshi, a remote municipality of the Shikoku IslandIt is a paradigmatic example. Its population has decreased dramatically since 1955, going from almost 78,000 inhabitants to just 20,000with more than 40% of its residents exceeding 65 years. In this context, the closure of the Deai Elementary School in 2005 seemed only one more fact in the chronicle of the rural decline. An designer and an idea. And here an unprecedented name and initiative arise. It was in 2014 when the Designer Shuko Uemoto He visited Miyoshi with his little son. What began as a getaway became a revelation: pure air and the natural environment caused an immediate improvement in the health of their son, who suffered asthma. That personal impact, added to the overwhelming silence and the beauty of the landscape, inspired a vision into a vision: transform an abandoned school into a Rest spacehealth and community. As soon as he discovered the Deai building, surrounded by trees and crossed by the rumor of a river, he knew that he had found the perfect place for his project. From the classroom to the accommodation. So HARE TO KE BORNa rural accommodation that takes its name from an ancient Japanese dichotomy: Hare, the holidays and extraordinary days, and Ke, the daily life. The concept invites recover balance Between them, in contrast to a modernity that has saturated the everyday of constant stimuli. The rooms occupy old carefully restored classrooms, spaces where blackboards, desks, laboratory bottles and murals painted by former students are still preserved. The design does not erase the memory of the place, but it welcomes and enhances it, offering visitors an intimate and deeply rooted sensory experience. Miyoshi Sleep like never. The hotel has specialized in what call “Sleep Trips”experiences focused on improving sleep quality. From a brief questionnaire, guests receive personalized medicinal infusions, accompanied by aromatherapy, spring water baths, and sessions in cedar sauna overlooking the forest. Everything is designed to “reconnect the five senses” with a slower, more natural vital rhythm. In a country where light and sound pollution is omnipresent, the absolute silence and the total darkness of Miyoshi are, for many, A revelation. Sleep well, even just one night, transforms the entire trip, says Uemoto to the British environment. “Other” tourism. But HARE TO KE It is much more than a hotel. Its impact has been so deep that former students and even the former director have returned to visit the building, now revitalized. Local elders gather in the old sports field for Play Gateballwhile guests observe from the classrooms turned into common rooms. In addition, the hotel organizes kitchen workshops with local products, monthly fairs and cultural activities such as classes of Awa Odorithe traditional dance of Tokushima. All this not only strengthens the link between visitors and residents, but helps to support the traditions that, without intervention, could be extinguished. Ancestral legacy. The experience in Miyoshi goes beyond rest: it is part of a cultural and historical landscape that resists over time. Guests can participate in the Mount Tsurugi Festivalwhich includes a Ritual procession over 900 years old. Or can travel the Iya Valley and cross their iconic liana bridges, or taste dinners made with cultivated cereals In inclined terraces up to 40 degrees. Everything seems thought to integrate the visitor into a way of life that has been transmitted for generations, and that now finds a continuity through tourism (respectful). Replicated model. From the opening of Hare to Ke, at least 13 more schools In Miyoshi they have been converted into coffees, offices or new accommodations. A revitalization model, promoted by the local administration, which has returned economic activity, community self -esteem and visibility to a region condemned to oblivion. So much, the challenge is huge: Japan loses about 900,000 inhabitants a year, and it is estimated that More than 40% of his municipalities could cease to exist in the coming decades. Under that scenario, the Miyoshi case It shows that it is possible to fight against oblivion, not with great megaprojects, but with sustainable proposals and deeply rooted in memory. Image | HARE TO KE, 京浜にけ In Xataka | In his desperate career against rural depopulation, Japan has a star measure: 7,500 euros if you move there In Xataka | The situation in the Japan field is so desperate that they are betting on an unprecedented solution: bring immigrants

The number of young Chinese enrolled in the art schools in Japan has shot. It’s a springboard to stay

For some time to this part Japan has been living A arrivals boom from abroad. We do not talk only about tourists, since a percentage of the people who arrives do it with the bags to stay. In fact, a nation stands out in these statistics. The Chinese are traveling in mass to not return due to economic opportunities and socio -political challenges themselves. That is why, many young people are aiming at the university to study art. Art as a way for residence. Chinese migration to Japan is reaching unprecedented levels. It We have recently: With the flexibility of Visa requirementsthe migratory flow from China has expanded beyond the wealthy elite, also covering to the middle class. Moreover, it is estimated that by 2026 the number of Chinese citizens residing in Japan It will exceed one million. This increase is transforming not only the demographic structure, but also the culture, lifestyle and educational systems in Many Japanese cities. And within this phenomenon, a group has gained particular relevance: Chinese art studentswho see in Japanese universities an opportunity to establish themselves permanently in the country. The case of Li Yalin. Nikkei told him The weekend with an example. Li Yalin, a 28 -year -old girl, reflects the trend. After obtaining his degree in China, he moved to Japan in 2019 to study Japanese at a language school in Tokyo. However, the pandemic forced her to return to her country. Determined to return, he approved the entrance exam at the University of Arts of Kyoto remotely and today resides in Japan, specializing in Videogame characters design. Raised in a middle class family in Guangzhou, Li grew immersed in Japanese culture, especially through video games like Pokémon. Now he has achieved work in a video game company in Tokyo, where this spring will begin to work. With just a few years in the country, he is already evaluating his way to The permanent residence. A growing phenomenon. The number of Chinese students in the main art universities in Japan It has increased exponentially. He Nikkei study revealed That there are currently 245 Chinese students at the University of Arts of Tokyo, 462 at the University of Art of Musashino, 448 at the University of Art of Tama, 692 at the University of Arts of Kyoto and 823 at the University of Kyoto Seika. In total, Chinese students represent 70% of international students In these universities, which reflects a clear migratory pattern that links education with long -term residence. The 2017 inflection point. He counted the medium in his analysis that the phenomenon It took strength in 2017when the Japanese government relaxed the requirements To obtain permanent residence. The measure was especially beneficial for international students, allowing them to request residence in just one to three years, instead of the five required above. Not just that. Politics is part of the “Cool Japan” initiativewhich seeks to boost the Japanese cultural industry, such as anime, design and video games. As a result, facilities have been implemented in obtaining work visas for foreigners in these sectors, which has made careers animation, design and video games into quick accesses to permanent residence. How they get the residence. Apparently, Japan evaluates residence applicants through A point system which takes into account the academic level, work experience, annual income, age or mastery of the Japanese language. Those who reach 70 points are classified as “highly qualified professionals”, while those who exceed 80 points can request permanent residence In just one year. Ren Junying, 30, is Another successful example. Originally from Hebei, he completed a doctorate at the University of Arts in Tokyo and now works as a jewelry designer in the Japanese capital. Despite having less than a year in the labor market, it has reached 90 points in the evaluation system, which will allow you to obtain residence shortly. Chinese migration and labor structure. Japan has a unique massive hiring system of recent graduates, which facilitates international students to find employment more efficiently than in other developed countries such as the United States or Europe. As a result, the number of Chinese with permanent residence in Japan has grown 40% since 2017, reaching 330,000 in June 2024. Not just that. Permanent residence too benefits spouseswho can obtain unrestricted work visas. In recent years, the number of people under this category has increased significantly, even more strengthening the Chinese community in Japan. Universities such as “Migrant” springboard. Nikkei explained Cases such as the Coach Academy, a preparatory school for Chinese students in Shinjuku, Tokyo, has seen an increase in the registration of young people seeking to enter Japanese art universities. Yang Kailin, 25, arrived in Japan in April 2023 to prepare for a postgraduate degree at an University University. “My goal is to work for a Japanese toy company and, if possible, obtain permanent residence,” I assured the environment. The school introduced an art course in 2015 with just 10 Chinese students. Today, the figure has exceeded 200. Plus: a new phenomenon has emerged. Chinese parents are the ones who drive their children’s migration to Japan. In this regard, an employee of a preparatory academy pointed to the environment that he saw “more enthusiasm to study art in Japan by parents, rather than the students themselves.” The reason? If a student obtains the permanent residence in Japan as a highly qualified professional, Your parents can also benefit of a possible migration. Chinese migration expands. It We counted recently. Japan’s appeal as a migration destination is not limited to art universities. In a context where the Chinese economy shows signs of stagnation and increasing unemployment, many young people seek Alternatives abroad. In fact, the growth of the Chinese community in Japan is transforming the social structure of the country, where the combination of flexible immigration policies, labor access and a high standard of living have turned the Nation into an attractive destination for those who seek stability outside China. Image | Toshihiro Gamo In Xataka | The Chinese … Read more

The government has been at war against sugar for years. Now he wants to ban the sale of sugary drinks in schools

In recent years we have seen different administrations in many different geographical areas take measures to limit the consumption of sugary drinks and other similar products, such as industrial pastries and energy drinks. The last one has come from the hand of the Ministry of Social Rights, Consumption and Agenda 2030. New regulations on the horizon. The Ministry of Consumer Ultimate vending and coffee shops in schools and institutes, As he has advanced The country. These products include industrial pastries, refreshing drinks, and energy drinks, products with more than five grams of sugar per packaged portion. The measure would also affect the advertising that can be shown in these machines; as well as the location of these, which would be out of access to students in early and primary education. More than sugar. The draft decree raises restrictions based on other criteria beyond the sugar content of the products. The measure contemplates, for example, limiting the kiloacalories by packaged portion up to a maximum of 200. This would be accompanied by an additional limit: no more than 35% They could proceed with fat. In addition, saturated fats may not provide more than 10% of the calories of the product. The salt content of the products would also be limited so that a 200 kcal portion could have a maximum of 0.5 grams of salt or the equivalent of 0.2 grams of sodium. Touring ahead. The future regulations still have to go through the State Council and the Council of Ministers before approval, which implies that the details may vary before entry into force. One more on the list. The last Biannual Aladino study, focused precisely on the Spanish child population was made in 2023. Although it observed a decrease in excess weight, overweight and obesity with respect to the 2019 report, the authors indicated that values ​​were maintained. Administrations have been serious in the fight against obesity, especially childhood obesity. Sugary drinks have been a usual target in this regard. A few years ago, for example, the United Kingdom introduced a “sugar tax” that affected this type of drinks. The resluent was a success according to a study published last year. In our closest environment the latest legislative changes in this direction have occurred at the regional level. In 2023, Galicia put on the table a proposal to limit the consumption of energy drinks among minors. These drinks, sometimes sugary represent an additional problem related to their high content in caffeine. In Xataka | We already know what energy drinks cost your rest. They are bad news for your dream Image | Kanishka Burnwal

They report absences of immigrants in works and schools in the face of ICE raids

The undocumented immigrantseven without criminal record, they fear being trapped by Immigration and Customs Control Agents (ICE) that carry out operations nationwide, so various industries and even schools already report absences. “We are seeing absenteeism, not only of workers, but of students in schoolsparents are afraid to send their children to school, ”confirmed Mónica Villalobos, president and CEO of the Arizona Hispanic Chamber of Commerce. Villalobos participated in a press conference with businessmen and business leaders of several states, such as Florida, Texas and Illinois, to talk about the impact of the mass deportation plan of President Donald Trump and how they have negatively impacted migrant populations. “From Chicago, you know that our members report that pedestrian traffic and operations have decreased up to 50% during the last weekonly for fear, ”said Rebecca Shi, executive director of the US Business Immigration Coalition (ABIC), who operates in Illinois. Shi confirmed that in Chicago some companies have faced “difficulties to open”, due to the absence of people. In that city, the Tsar of La Frontera, Tom Homan, has led raids together with even ICE and ATF officers, some companies “Americans have difficulty obtaining some of the products they usually enjoy. So it is definitely having an impact, ”added Shi. Shi acknowledged that the migratory system is broken, but pointed out that most immigrants have been essential workers. “We know that the reality is that, you know, A significant amount of the population has been essential workers who are workingrespecting the law and can have a path to legal status in several bipartisan solutions, ”he said. The negative impacts for deportations in different industries begin to feel, mainly in agriculture, milk production, among other sectors in California, Florida, Texas. The National Agricultural Workers Survey indicates that 73% of agricultural workers are born abroadbut there is a high percentage, about 40%, it has no papers. The dairy sector also depends on undocumented workerswhere about 50% of them have no papers. End of deportation priorities The Trump administration ended with the deportation priorities of President Joe Biden who focused on people with criminal recordgiving ICE officers the ease of deciding to avoid the persecution of a person only for being undocumented. The Trump Executive Order called “Initial termination of harmful orders and executive actions” revokes the 13993 Executive Order of Biden (entitled “Review of the policies and priorities of compliance with the Civil Immigration Law”). “By eliminating that prioritization, anyone who is present without legal authorization in the United States, regardless of their community ties, family ties or how long it has lived here, will be An objective for ICE“, Warned the New York Immigration Coalition Organization (NYIC). The organization also noted that Trump’s immigration policies include expanding accelerated deportation, which was applied mainly for immigrants who were maximum 100 miles from the border. Homan told Fox News that the arrests of undocumented immigrants will increase. “I think the president is happy, but we are going to make it much happier,” said Homan. “These raids will continue throughout the country. We are not going to give up. ” On average, ICE is stopping almost 500 immigrants daily, but on Sunday he reported the arrest of 956, which is considered a record for a single day of operations. Continue reading:• What documents should a foreigner carry in the United States before ICE raids?• Border tsar attack against Pope Francis for criticizing immigrants deportations• The White House spreads the first images of immigrants by addressing a plane to be deported (Tagstotranslate) Donald Trump (T) Ice

Fear between immigrants grows by allowing arrests in schools and churches

Under the new directives of the Trump administration, immigrants can be carried out in schools, churches and hospitals, spaces in which the detention operations of migration agents were prohibited. The announcement was made on the first day that Trump assumed the presidency of the United States, with which the new president ended a policy of at least ten years of validity that prohibited immigrants arrests in sensitive places such as schools, hospitals and hospitals Churches. “Parents are spending moments of panic. Although it is important that they are informed, I ask you to try not to listen to the news much, ”said Evelyn Alemán, founder and president of Our Voice: Communities for Quality Education, A group of Hispanic parents in the Los Angeles area. He mentioned the case of a mother with six daughters who has a deportation order, and after Trump’s executive orders fears going out. “She cleans buildings in the west of the city. You cannot miss your work. Now he is very afraid. Other mothers are saying that they do not want to send their children to schools for the fear of being arrested and not knowing who they are going to stay, ”he said. Evelyn commented that although the city of Los Angeles has the best intentions to protect immigrants, it is not enough, Trump has federal powers, and not putting police officers outside schools, they will be able to avoid arrests. “What we are doing in order to calm parents is to maintain contact through telephone applications, and we have had meetings every week we invite leaders, legislators and experts to give them information about their rights and how to prepare ” He added that although fires have left mental and physical trauma in families, Trump’s executive orders are causing emotional trauma especially in children. And he remembered how when he was a child, although he was born in this country, in 1970 he had to return to El Salvador with his mother whom they had deported for having the defeated visa. “We spent two years separated from my father until he could fix my mother’s papers. It is a trauma that my parents never exceeded. And to my almost 55 years, I am living again that drama through the parents who are terrified of being separated from their children. The country has been decades in the same situation without giving a solution to the undocumented population. ” A spokesman for the Department of National Security (DHS) said that the new policy strengthens the actions of the Migration and Customs Service (ICE) and the Office of Customs and Border Protection (CBP) “to comply with immigration laws and catch criminal foreigners , including murderers and rapists, who have illegally entered our country. “Criminals may no longer hide in the United States schools and churches to avoid being arrested. The Trump administration will not tie the hands of our brave forces of order and, on the other hand, trust that they use common sense. ” After the announcement, the Archbishop of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, José H. Gómez said that the statements and actions of the new administration in Washington have caused fear in parishes, schools and communities. “That is not good for anyone. I pray for our leaders to proceed in moderation and compassion, with respect for law and for the rights and dignity of all involved. ” He showed that any compliance action of immigration laws must be prudent and accompanied by immediate action in Congress to fix the immigration system, which has been broken for decades. “For Catholics, immigration is not a political issue. It is a matter of our deeply entrenched religious beliefs. Jesus Christ ordered us to love God as our Father and love our brothers and sisters, especially the most vulnerable, and regardless of which country come or how they got here. ” Alberto M. Carvalho, Superintendent of the Unified School District of Los Angeles (Lausd) published on the X site that have heard many concerns in the community about federal migration policies. “Lausd is forced by legal, professional and moral obligations to protect the private and legal rights of our students and employees, and to ensure constitutional rights to public education.” He added that these obligations seriously take and will continue working with their allies in the community to provide support and resources to students, families and employees. With regard to hospitals, California prosecutor, Rob Bont The execution of arrests. Pastor Guillermo Torres, director of the Clergy and Laity United for Economic Justice (CLUE) decision to enter schools, hospitals and churches to arrest immigrants. “How do you think we are going to turn your back on immigrants. God’s law asks us to give special attention to the orphan, to the immigrant and the widow; And in the Hebrew texts, God is very specific by asking us not to hurt the immigrant, and that we treat it as if it were part of the country. ” He said that stop supporting the immigrant is to leave the biggest commandment, “love God with all your heart and your neighbor the immigrant as yourself.” He emphasized that if someone is violating the law they are politicians. “Although the Biden administration was not so cruel and inhuman, it also made many mistakes by not having the value of passing the immigration reform when they had power; and not doing so, they have led us to an extreme government and lacking compassion. ” He said that because of politicians, they will now criminalize immigrants, who are human beings, not illegal. “There has been disconnection of both Democrats and Republicans towards immigrants. It is the responsibility of both that is happening. They will be accounts before God. ” (Tagstotranslate) Immigrant arrests (T) Schools (T) Iglesias

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