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Israel-Gaza war live: European nations debate recognition of Palestine as starvation spreads in Gaza

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UK’s Keir Starmer is under pressure from MPs while Italy’s Giorgia Meloni said she was in favour but not prior to the state being established

European nations are becoming split on the question of whether to recognise a Palestinian state, as the desperate situation in Gaza continues.

Britain’s prime minister Sir Keir Starmer has rejected calls to immediately recognise a Palestinian state, after some 221 MPs signed a letter urging the British Government to recognise the state of Palestine at a meeting of the UN next week. While the PM said he was “unequivocal” about wanting to see a Palestinian state, he insisted this needed to be part of a “wider plan which ultimately results in a two-state solution and lasting security for Palestinians and Israelis”.

The Israeli military said a “projectile” was fired from the Gaza Strip towards Israel on Saturday. “A projectile was identified crossing the Gaza Strip from the south and most likely falling in an open area,” the military said in a statement, adding that there were no injuries reported.

Four Palestinian-Americans have been killed in the occupied West Bank since the war in Gaza began and their families are losing hope for justice. They told AP Israel and its law enforcement have made them feel like culprits – by imposing travel bans and, in some cases, detaining and interrogating them.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Friday his government was considering “alternative options” to ceasefire talks with Hamas after Israel and the US recalled their negotiating teams, throwing the future of the negotiations into further uncertainty. Netanyahu’s statement came as a Hamas official said negotiations were expected to resume next week and portrayed the recall of the Israeli and American delegations as a pressure tactic.

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New Mexico Pinon Coffee recalls pods due to contamination risk

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The affected batch is about 154 Dark Pinon 10ct Single Serve cups.

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Get your act together on immigration, Trump tells Europe as he lands in Scotland

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The US president will meet with British prime minister Keir Starmer and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen during his visit.

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Gregg Wallace apologises but says he is ‘not a groper, a sex pest or a flasher’

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In an interview with The Sun, the TV presenter also defended his sacked former co-host John Torode, telling the paper he is ‘not a racist’.

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A Gen Xer with an MBA and $50K in student debt has been job hunting for nearly 2 years, so she’s pivoting to an industry where hiring is still hot

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A nurse
Ann Francis (not pictured) is pursuing nursing jobs after struggling to land human resources roles.

  • Ann Francis is pivoting to nursing after struggling to find HR jobs.
  • Francis has $50,000 in student debt and said she’s at risk of being evicted from her home.
  • The healthcare sector has had robust job growth amid a slowdown in white-collar hiring.

Ann Francis thought grad school would be her ticket to a stable and fulfilling career. Nearly two years later, she’s hoping a pivot to nursing will get her out of a deep financial hole.

Since earning an MBA in 2023, Francis has struggled to land human resources roles. She said she’s received some government assistance to help cover food and rent, but that it hasn’t been enough, and she’s now at risk of eviction. Earlier this year, despite carrying around $50,000 in student debt, she decided to pursue training for a new career.

In June, Francis completed a six-week, 90-hour nurse training program. After passing the state exam, she earned her certified nursing assistant license — a credential she hopes will finally open doors.

“I’m basically starting over — that’s the part that bothers me,” said Francis, who’s in her 50s and based in the Northeast US. “But I have to do what I have to do to survive.”

Francis’s experience reflects a broader shift happening in the US labor market, where workers sidelined by slowdowns in white-collar hiring are considering pivots to more in-demand sectors. Amid economic uncertainty, ranging from tariffs to the early impacts of AI adoption, US businesses are hiring at nearly the slowest pace in over a decade. In addition, MBA degrees aren’t paying off like they used to. Still, a few sectors, including healthcare, have continued to hire at robust levels.

“I’m very confident the jobs are there,” she said.

From February to May, private education and health services saw the strongest job growth of any sector. In healthcare, jobs are especially plentiful at hospitals and in individual and family services. In June, only state and local government education added more jobs, while many sectors like professional and business services and financial activities shed roles.

“If you’re not a teacher, if you’re not a nurse, and you’re not a doctor, you’re not seeing those opportunities,” Cory Stahle, an economist at the Indeed Hiring Lab, said of the June jobs report.

Finding a career that aligns with work experience and offers more job opportunities

In 2016, Francis immigrated to the US from Jamaica, sponsored by her then-husband. She received her green card the following year and began working part-time as an informal caregiver for older adults while she waited for formal work documentation.

By 2018, she’d secured her work authorization and was working at a day care that she said paid around $11 an hour. Over the next few years, she worked a wide range of gigs, including as a Lyft driver, a contact tracer, and a customer service representative, but none offered the financial stability she was looking for.

In 2021, Francis enrolled in an online master’s program at the for-profit school DeVry University, hoping it would improve her chances of landing a job. By October 2023, she’d earned an MBA and a graduate certificate in human resources management — and was actively applying for HR jobs while continuing her part-time caregiving work.

She hoped her graduate studies would help her leverage the professional experience she gained before moving to the US. Francis said she earned a bachelor’s degree at an overseas university and spent two decades working at a vocational training organization in Jamaica. In her final role, she managed student services, overseeing everything from student intake to graduation.

“In my heart, I’m thinking this will allow me to transition to the next level,” she said.

But over the next year, her job search led nowhere. She reached out to an HR professional for advice, and the response was discouraging. They said her recent work experience didn’t align with the roles she was pursuing, and that this was likely working against her.

In addition, former President Biden’s Education Department in January announced debt cancellation for 4,100 borrowers who were found to have been defrauded by DeVry for misleading prospective students about their job prospects. The charges spanned 2008 to 2015, years before Francis attended the program, and she said that she was happy with her experience there.

“I have no regrets about attending the institution,” she said. “It was a good program with great professors, and I gained knowledge while there.”

Still, after two years of job hunting, Francis started thinking it was time to change course. She reflected on her recent work experience — caregiving — and began looking into nursing programs. She ultimately decided on a six-week certified nursing assistant program she said cost about $1,900.

Francis saw nursing as a practical path forward because she sensed there was a high demand for workers in the industry. A nurse she knew told her she’d “never been out of work,” and Francis said there seemed to be plenty of postings on job platforms.

“When I went on Indeed, I saw many, many jobs,” she said.

Looking ahead, Francis said she’s optimistic she’ll be able to land a nursing role — and that she recently interviewed for a position at a long-term care facility. She said she’s also signed up for freelance nursing apps like Clipboard Health and Shiftmed.

Over time, she’d like to explore healthcare training or administrative positions — roles she feels would better draw on her past experience and education. But in the meantime, her unstable financial situation continues to weigh heavily on her.

“The uncertainty of how long this joblessness will continue is extremely stressful,” she said. “But I believe that once given an opportunity, I will rise above my current situation.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

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Southwest Airlines flight takes dramatic plunge in response to nearby aircraft

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The close call is the latest incident to raise questions about aviation safety.

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Hundreds gather at vigil for mother and children killed in Fermanagh shooting

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A book of condolence was opened at Maguiresbridge Primary School.

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Chuck Todd blasts podcasters for platforming Hunter Biden, ‘spectacle’ hurting Democrats

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Todd argued that Hunter’s recent interviews do no good for himself, his father or the Democratic Party

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Dear Abby: My friend has become mean since getting diagnosed with Alzheimer’s

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Dear Abby gives advice to a reader whose friend has been rude since being diagnosed with early Alzheimer’s disease.

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LA home linked to ‘TikTok cult’ pastor seen in Netflix docuseries raided in sex-trafficking probe

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Several people were detained after a home partially owned by Pastor Robert Shinn was raided by federal authorities.

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