Based on the exploration of archaeological sites in Piaui — which uncovered 15,000-year-old human bones, cave paintings estimated to be around 35,000 years old and evidence of fires dating back 48,000 years — Guidon argued that humans had arrived on the American continent from Africa via the sea, and much earlier than previously believed, the statement said.
He said the travel ban on an estimated 20,000 Afghans in Pakistan could encourage the government to begin deporting Afghans awaiting resettlement in the U.S. “President Trump has shattered hopes,” he told The Associated Press.He said his life would be at risk if he returned to Afghanistan with his family because he previously worked for the U.S. Embassy in Kabul on public awareness campaigns promoting education.
“You know the Taliban are. America has the right to shape its immigration policy, but it should not abandon those who stood with it, risked their life, and who were promised a good future.”Another Afghan, Khalid Khan, said the new restrictions could expose him and thousands of others to arrest in Pakistan.
He said police had previously left him and his family alone at the request of the U.S. Embassy. “I worked for the U.S. military for eight years, and I feel abandoned,. Every month, Trump is making a new rule,” said Khan. He fled to Pakistan three years ago.“I don’t know what to say. Returning to Afghanistan will jeopardize my daughter’s education. You know the Taliban have banned girls from attending school beyond sixth grade. My daughter will remain uneducated if we return.”
He said it no longer mattered whether people spoke out against Trump’s policies.
“So long as Trump is there, we are nowhere. I have left all of my matters to Allah.”But government attorneys told the judge that the Trump administration has no plans to apply the executive order to the FEC.
The judge said he can’t conclude from the text of the executive order alone that Trump orare on the verge of taking such an “extraordinary step.” The order doesn’t single out the FEC and applies broadly to all executive branch employees, the judge concluded.
“The Court does not doubt that the committees would have cause for profound concern were the FEC’s independence to be compromised,” he wrote. “Given the FEC’s central role in overseeing parties and campaigns, a compromise of its independence would pose an immense threat to our democratic elections, for all the reasons Congress established the FEC’s independence in the first place.”The portion of the executive order challenged by the lawsuit has raised particular concern among campaign finance watchdogs, who call it a conflict of interest. Congress created the FEC in 1974 after