Anonymous ID: 656509 March 7, 2025, 10:29 p.m. No.22723800   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3804 >>3823 >>3883 >>4163 >>4223

AOC Campaign Aide Self-Deports to Colombia

 

Diego de la Vega spent 23 years as an undocumented American—now, he’s building a life without fear in Bogotá.

 

Diego de la Vega has a new life in Colombia—one without fear, with freedom of mobility, and with the agency he never had during his 23 years in New York City. Born in Quito, Ecuador, de la Vega migrated to the United States as a 7-year-old in 2001 on a visitor’s visa that he overstayed. Thus began his life as an undocumented American.

 

“It was very clear to me early on that our status was different. Even as a child, I understood what being illegal meant. We knew we had to protect ourselves,” de la Vega said in an exclusive interview Wednesday with Migrant Insider. “We lived in fear because we were not of the right status, but I had a pretty good childhood in New York. We worked hard, starting out in a basement apartment. But we went to school and got jobs.”

 

De la Vega became politically active after witnessing the failure of the Dream Act in 2010, when the bill fell just five votes short in the Senate. He started organizing for immigrant rights, first as a communications worker in the New York State Assembly, then for Make the Road NY, an immigrant rights organization. His first major victory came in 2021 when, as digital organizer for Make the Road, he helped secure a $2.1 billion fund that provided $15,000 relief checks to undocumented workers excluded from federal pandemic aid.

 

“That was direct money in people’s pockets,” recalled de la Vega, who by then had enrolled in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program.

 

His work did not go unnoticed. Within a year, he was hired by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s reelection campaign, where he eventually became her deputy communications director. “Alexandria comes from an organizing background herself, so she likes to hire people who share that experience,” he said. “She’s an excellent communicator, and the team she built is top-notch.”

 

The respect was mutual: “Diego is amazing,” said AOC on Wednesday in a brief hallway interview, adding: “We love him.” However, de la Vega's aspirations to work on Capitol Hill were stymied by House rules barring DACA recipients from serving as aides in Congress.

 

Our conversation with de la Vega covered a range of topics, and his perspective offered a rare insider’s critique of immigration advocacy. Below are key excerpts from our interview:

 

"In my late 20s, I began to seriously consider how precarious my future in the U.S. was. I thought about what would happen if I just left, if I went to Latin America, if I embraced my identity as a Latino instead of trying to fit the image of a picture-perfect immigrant.

 

Not being able to leave the U.S. or visit my country was hard. Regardless of the 2024 election outcome, the likelihood of amnesty, citizenship, or comprehensive immigration reform seemed slim. Even if Kamala [Harris] won, we could be waiting another four years, and then another four after that.

 

People infantilize Dreamers as youth, but I’m 31. I have a wife. We were thinking about children, but we had no certainty. I wanted to be somewhere where I wasn’t considered illegal, where I wasn’t persecuted by the state, where I was welcome. So in December, my wife and I moved to Bogotá. She was undocumented too, but without DACA, so she was far more vulnerable. In Colombia, I easily got a visa. We have a future here. We have rights. These were things we had been searching for—for 23 years."

 

"I became frustrated with how the immigration movement was operating. The messaging, the policy proposals—there was a massive amount of money behind them, yet they all failed. The movement has become calcified. It’s run by executives with foundation ties who are disconnected from field workers and grassroots leadership.

 

For 20 years, it’s followed the same Obama-era strategies, with its biggest success being DACA, which has been on life support for years. When it became clear that DACA was heading to the Supreme Court, it did not seem hopeful. Protections are going away, regardless of who is in the White House. The strategy hasn’t adapted to the modern era.

 

Biden had a trifecta—the House, Senate, and White House—but dropped the ball. The push for reform ended with a Senate parliamentarian ruling. They needed to step back and ask, ‘How did it come to this?’ But instead, they followed the same playbook. The same marches. The same rallies with the same speakers. And then they repeated it the next year."

 

"Why didn’t that strategy work? To me, it’s clear: They failed to shape public opinion outside of blue cities. They left a messaging vacuum that Republicans filled with anxieties about rising costs and border imagery. The Democratic Party and the movement never presented a persuasive, aggressive vision to counter that.

 

If Democrats don’t change their approach, Republicans will continue defining the terms of the debate. There needs to be a new strategy beyond the calcified party machines. Immigration advocates need a national campaign that is visible everywhere, not just in progressive circles. Because right now, things are worse than ever. The movement has regressed."

 

"We were always honest with voters in New York City. We didn’t dumb it down or tell them what they wanted to hear. We engaged with them honestly. We listened, then explained that Alexandria was fighting for reform, but Republicans were blocking it.

 

The fundamental message was always: The American people agree the immigration system is broken, but it’s up to people in office to change it. To reform the system altogether, that has to include citizenship. When we talked to voters, they tended to support these policies."

 

"It’s bittersweet. I hadn’t left the country in 23 years—from age seven to age thirty. Now, I can’t go back to the U.S. It feels like exile. It’s a very permanent move. But my wife and I are confident we made the right decision. And after some time, it’s been a real pleasure to be here.

 

It feels surreal to not be illegalized anymore. I don’t have to live in the shadows or constantly worry about paperwork. That freedom of movement is incredibly satisfying. I might not be able to return to the United States for many years—I don’t know how long. But it feels fulfilling to be home."

 

https://migrantinsider.com/p/aoc-campaign-aide-self-deports-to

Anonymous ID: 656509 March 7, 2025, 10:32 p.m. No.22723811   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3883 >>4163 >>4223

OSINTdefender

@sentdefender

One police officer was killed and another seriously injured after a 14-year old opened fire on them when they responded to a ShotSpotter alert in the city of Newark, New Jersey tonight. The 14-year old suspect was subsequently killed. Bystanders reportedly heard over 10 gunshots in the exchange. Both New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy and the New Jersey Attorney General Matt Platkin have been made aware of the incident and have released statements on the slaying of the officer.

 

https://x.com/sentdefender/status/1898227322399932484

Anonymous ID: 656509 March 7, 2025, 10:33 p.m. No.22723816   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3851 >>3860 >>3883 >>4163 >>4223

Mario Nawfal

 

@MarioNawfal

🚨🇨🇦 TORONTO SHOOTING UPDATE: 12 INJURED, SUSPECT STILL AT LARGE

 

A mass shooting at a pub near Progress Ave & Corporate Drive in Toronto has left 12 victims injured.

 

Four have non-life-threatening injuries, while the conditions of the others remain unknown.

 

The suspect is still on the run, and police have no description at this time. Authorities are urging the public to avoid the area.

 

Source:

@TPSOperations

 

https://x.com/MarioNawfal/status/1898243532961304674

Anonymous ID: 656509 March 7, 2025, 10:35 p.m. No.22723823   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3862 >>3883 >>4163 >>4223

>>22723800

Robby Starbuck

@robbystarbuck

Umm this should be a massive story. She was reportedly paying him $80,000 a year. How was she paying taxes for him if he’s illegal? Was she knowingly allowing him to use a fake social security number? DOJ must investigate this!

 

https://x.com/robbystarbuck/status/1898201115172167928

Anonymous ID: 656509 March 7, 2025, 10:37 p.m. No.22723830   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3883 >>3935 >>4163 >>4223

Meet the Columbia Radicals Arrested for Storming a Barnard Building

 

Students were charged with disorderly conduct, trespassing, and obstructing governmental administration.

 

Nearly half the radical activists arrested Wednesday after storming a Barnard College library are Columbia University students, a Washington Free Beacon review found.

 

Of the nine individuals arrested after storming Millstein Library, four are Columbia students: Gabrielle Wimer, Hannah Puelle, Yunseo Chung, and Symmes Cannon. One, Tramy Dong, is a Barnard student. Another, Christopher Holmes, attends Union Theological Seminary, a Columbia affiliate, while the remaining three appear unassociated with either school. They were charged with disorderly conduct, trespassing, and obstructing governmental administration, according to an NYPD spokesman.

 

Barnard president Laura Ann Rosenbury, however, stressed that the police weren’t called in because the radicals stormed Milstein Library. Rather, she felt the building needed to be cleared to protect the broader student body because of a bomb threat in the building.

 

The radicals rushed in through a back exit that an accomplice held open, hoisted an effigy of Rosenbury, and passed out Hamas propaganda. They refused to leave, even after they were alerted of the bomb threat. Law enforcement eventually cleared the agitators from the library, but the protesters refused to clear the courtyard outside and clashed with police. Officers began making arrests.

 

Wimer is a medical student at Columbia’s Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons. According to screenshots of her LinkedIn that has since been deleted, she is "passionate about global health and human rights" and has "experience in research, program management, and community outreach in multicultural settings." Wimer is the Class of 2025 president, the programming coordinator for Columbia’s Human Rights and Asylum Clinic, and an active member of Columbia’s chapters of White Coats for Black Lives and Students for a National Health Program, according to an online bio.

 

Puelle is a Columbia senior studying philosophy and sociology. The Columbia Undergraduate Law Review website listed her as its publisher, but the page was removed Thursday afternoon. Puelle is also a research assistant at Columbia’s Labor Lab, according to her LinkedIn. A source familiar with Puelle said she was a resident adviser in the first-year residence dormitory John Jay Hall. She is also a member of Columbia’s Resident Advisers Collective Bargaining Committee, according to the Columbia Spectator.

 

The third, Chung, is a Columbia junior pursuing her bachelor’s degree in English and Women’s and Gender Studies. According to a screenshot of her LinkedIn taken before it was deleted, she is involved in Columbia’s Criminal Justice Coalition and Columbia’s Queer Alliance and was the valedictorian of the high school she attended.

 

Cannon is the deputy editor of Columbia Spectator’s weekly magazine, the Eye, but the page appears to have been removed.

 

Even though it was a Barnard building that was stormed, the focus will likely center more on Columbia because its students make up the bulk of those arrested. Since President Donald Trump took office, the university has taken a more aggressive posture toward its anti-Semitic students. In the past, however, it has been lenient. It dropped the vast majority of the suspensions leveled against students who participated in illegal anti-Israel protests last spring, for example.

 

"We have been notified that four Columbia students were arrested as part of yesterday’s disruption at Barnard’s Milstein Library and we are working swiftly through our discipline process. We regret that members of our community participated in this unacceptable disruption at Barnard," a Columbia spokeswoman told the Free Beacon. "Any violations of our rules, policies, and of the law must have consequences. We remain committed to supporting our Columbia student body of over 36,000 students and our greater campus community during this challenging time."

 

Columbia students Wimer, Puelle, Chung, and Cannon did not respond to requests for comment.

 

The only Barnard student arrested, Dong, is a junior studying computer science. She was listed as a communications intern with the Surveillance Technology Oversight Project, a nonprofit organization working to "fight against mass surveillance in New York and beyond"—the group’s intern page was removed Thursday afternoon. According to an online bio, which was also removed, Dong is "interested in the intersection of technology and activism, hoping to learn more about surveillance systems and possible solutions." According to her LinkedIn, she is part of Barnard’s Science Pathways Scholars Program, a "highly selective four-year program that supports young students from low-income or first-generation households."

 

Dong did not respond to a request for comment.

 

Barnard’s vice president for development and alumnae relations Michael Farley, however, in a statement claimed that "none of the individuals arrested on our campus Wednesday evening are Barnard students." It is unclear if Dong was one of the two students the college expelled for storming an Israeli history class at Columbia in January and targeting Jewish students with anti-Semitic flyers. Barnard did not respond to a request for comment.

 

The radicals stormed Barnard’s Milbank Hall last week to protest those expulsions. A third Barnard student was expelled soon after for storming a Columbia building last spring. The agitators behind Wednesday’s incident demanded the reversal of all three.

 

A mob led by Columbia University Apartheid Divest (CUAD) and Columbia Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP)—the Ivy League institution's most anti-Semitic student groups—stormed Barnard’s Milbank Hall on Feb. 26, sending a security guard to the hospital and causing $30,000 in damages. CUAD and SJP also took credit for orchestrating Wednesday’s incident at the Milstein Library.

 

Once inside, the agitators handed out Hamas propaganda justifying the Oct. 7, 2023, terror attack. They demanded the immediate reversal of the Barnard students’ expulsions, "amnesty for all students disciplined for pro-Palestine action," and a complete "abolition of the corrupt Barnard disciplinary process." They also renamed the library after Hussam Abu Safiya, a Gaza hospital director the Israel Defense Forces accused of being a terrorist and holding a rank in Hamas.

 

Even though the agitators voted to stay overnight, until Rosenbury returned to campus in the morning, a bomb threat reported in the building forced Barnard vice president for strategic communications Robin Levine to try to evacuate the library. She told students, "You need to leave now, this is not a joke," but the protesters refused to vacate the building, telling her, "you're lying" and "prove it."

 

NYPD Strategic Response Group officers were called to the scene and entered the occupied building, pushing most of the activists off campus. Those who resisted were among the nine arrested.

 

Holmes is a 26-year-old graduate student at the Columbia affiliate college Union Theological Seminary. He was arrested twice at Columbia during last spring’s illegal pro-Hamas encampments, once on April 18 and again on April 30 over the violent occupation of Hamilton Hall and was charged with third degree criminal trespass. In September, Holmes was featured in a video posted to X where he called for "the overthrow of the corporate totalitarian state."

 

The last individuals arrested are 21-year-old Pranavi Davuluri, a student worker at New York City’s School of Visual Arts, according to her LinkedIn, Alexander Nanci-Marr, 20, and Allison Wuu, 18.

 

In a statement sent to the Barnard community, Rosenbury said that the decision to allow NYPD on campus was due to the bomb threat, not the occupation of the campus library.

 

"The safety of our campus, and every single person on our campus, must be protected above all else. The moment we received the bomb threat, we had to clear the Milstein Center and inform the authorities," she said. "The decision to request NYPD assistance was guided and informed entirely by the absolute obligation we have to keep every member of our community safe."

 

https://freebeacon.com/campus/meet-the-columbia-radicals-arrested-for-storming-a-barnard-building/

Anonymous ID: 656509 March 7, 2025, 10:41 p.m. No.22723844   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3883 >>3964 >>4163 >>4223

'NASA insider JEFF NOSANOV blows the whistle on the space agency's plot to sabotage Elon Musk's rescue mission… at the cost of our stranded astronauts

 

The truth is out there.

 

Just don’t expect to hear it from NASA.

 

Nearly everyone on Earth seems desperate to know how the true condition of American astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams whose 8-day mission to the International Space Station has turned into a nearly 9-month zero-gravity slog.

 

Back in June, they launched onboard Boeing's new Starliner crew capsule to the ISS, but after the capsule encountered a cascade of thruster issues and helium leaks, NASA decided it was too risky to use the vessel to return them to Earth.

 

Wilmore and Williams have been stuck ever since. But ask NASA about what’s happening and you’ll hear the same dubious answer over and again - that Wilmore and Williams are not ‘stranded’ and that they are, in fact, grateful to be floating through space, more than 250 miles above their families, for a total of 274 days.

 

Well, as a former manager at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, who worked inside the space agency for nearly a decade and is now an aerospace industry consultant, I know that NASA's words have to be parsed carefully.

 

The agency lost its way a long time ago.

 

It was stunning to hear NASA’s Wilmore – a former Navy test pilot with three spaceflights under his belt – on Tuesday seemingly confirming SpaceX founder Elon Musk’s claim that the astronauts could have already been rescued had the mission not been blocked by Joe Biden’s White House.

 

'We offered to bring them back early, but the offer was rejected by the Biden administration,’ Musk said Monday on Joe Rogan's podcast.

 

The following day, Wilmore appeared to support Musk when asked about the claim, 'I can only say that Mr. Musk, what he says, is absolutely factual.'

 

Wilmore’s teenage daughter, Daryn, was even more emphatic in a recently resurfaced social media post from February: 'There's a lot of politics, there's a lot of things that I'm not at liberty to say… but there's been issues. There's been negligence. And that's the reason why this has just kept getting delayed.'

 

While I don’t claim to know what was said behind closed doors at NASA – and even though I am no fan of Elon Musk who I believe is recklessly slashing away at the federal workforce - I wouldn’t doubt his claims either.

 

No one on NASA’s payroll is permitted to freely speak their mind. But as a former employee of the agency, I can tell you what I believe it to be the truth: our astronauts are at risk and allegations of political corruption at NASA are not to be dismissed.

 

First, spaceflight is inherently dangerous. Every time a human blasts off on a rocket ship, we are daring the universe to kill them.

 

And even though Wilmore and Williams may indeed be happy to spend more time than they anticipated in service to their country, they want to return home.

 

At 274 days in zero-gravity, 59-year-old Williams is nearing the record for the oldest woman to spend the longest stretch in space.

 

Peggy Whitson spent 289 days in space when she was 56 years old. And Whitson knew what she was getting into.

 

Williams – while aware of the peril of her mission – likely didn’t expect to be in the running for a spot in the Guinness Book of World Records.

 

We know that women face a higher threat of suffering from the effects of osteoporosis, a loss of bone density resulting in weak and brittle bones, than their male counterparts. And older women are at even greater risk.

 

When Williams returns to Earth, the physical toll that she paid will be studied.

 

And second, after decades in existence, NASA is adrift.

 

The agency was established in 1958 to beat the Soviet Union in the space race and it did – putting a man on the moon in 1969. But in the wake of the collapse of the USSR in 1991, NASA struggled to find a new purpose.

 

Consider that the Apollo 17 mission marked the last moon landing in 1972. By 1992, America sent astronauts into Earth orbit. In 1998, construction of the International Space Station began – and it was completed in 2011. But now in 2025, the US sends astronauts to the ISS but struggles to get them home. Our horizons have shrunk.

 

The problem is that NASA has become more concerned with granting federal contracts than boldly pursuing progress in manned spaceflight.

 

NASA’s main contractor Boeing has also suffered in this aerospace era of burgeoning budgets and mediocracy.

 

All Americans are familiar with the problems plaguing Boeing’s commercial airliners. After a door-plug blew off a Boeing 737 Max jetliner during an Alaska Airlines flight in January 2024, at least 20 whistleblowers came forward to allege that the aerospace giant was cutting corners on safety to rush out as many aircraft as possible.

 

In March, Boeing’s CEO David Calhoun resigned along with several top executives.

 

Is it any surprise then that Boeing’s manufacturing problems have extended to its aerospace division as well.

 

In June 2023, Boeing delayed the launch of the first Starliner capsule – its first to carry humans into space – because of the discovery of hundreds of feet of flammable adhesive tape used to secure the craft's wiring.

 

Last August when NASA decided the Starliner capsule was too unsafe to return to Earth with human onboard, Boeing executives in the meeting reportedly exploded.

 

‘Boeing was convinced that the Starliner was in good enough condition to bring the astronauts home, and NASA disagreed. Strongly disagreed,’ an anonymous NASA executive said at the time. ‘The thinking around here was that Boeing was being wildly irresponsible.’

 

That’s chilling.

 

Though still, there was hesitation inside NASA to cut Boeing loose.

 

After all, it was NASA who signed a $4.2 billion contract with Boeing to fund Starliner's development and the mission that left Williams and Wilmore stuck on the ISS.

 

Now, after numerous delays and far too much obfuscation, Musk has been tasked with bringing our astronauts home.

 

SpaceX is preparing to launch its new Dragon capsule in about two weeks to the ISS. Perhaps, in the end we’ll have the best case scenario – Wilmore and Williams will be returned to their families as heroes and the truth will finally come out.

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-14474299/NASA-astronauts-Elon-Musk-rescue-mission-JEFF-NOSANOV.html

Anonymous ID: 656509 March 7, 2025, 10:45 p.m. No.22723855   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3883 >>4163 >>4223

Hundreds killed in Syria clashes, rights monitoring group says, in worst violence since ouster of Assad regime

 

CNN

In the worst outbreak of unrest since Syria’s transitional government took power, hundreds of people have been killed or wounded in clashes between the security forces and supporters of former President Bashar al Assad this week, according to a human rights monitoring group.

 

The clashes broke out Thursday in the Latakia and Tartous regions on the Mediterranean coast, areas where support among Syrian Alawites for Assad was strong and which has seen outbreaks of sectarian violence over the past three months.

 

More than 225 people have been killed since Thursday in the clashes, the Syrian Network for Human Rights (SNHR) said on Friday.

 

At least 100 Syrian government “security personnel” are included in the death toll, the UK-based independent human rights monitoring group said, while 125 civilians were killed when joint forces from Syria’s Ministries of Defense and Interior “launched a large-scale security operation in dozens of villages across the countryside of Latakia, Tartous, and Hama.”

 

CNN cannot independently verify SNHR’s figures and is reaching out to the Syrian government for comment regarding the death toll.

 

The Assad family, members of the minority Alawite sect, ruled Syria for over half a century until Assad was ousted late last year by Sunni Islamist militants who sought to reshape the country’s political and sectarian order.

 

Syria’s Alawites – some 10% of the population – were prominent in the Assad regime, and while many Alawites have surrendered their weapons since December, many others have not.

 

The latest surge in violence highlights the challenges Syria’s new regime faces in appeasing disenfranchised groups, especially those that remain heavily armed.

 

Syria’s transitional president, Ahmad al-Sharaa, vowed in a televised speech on Friday to pursue those responsible for killing dozens of Syrian security personnel. He also urged security forces to “ensure no excessive or unjustified responses occur” following reports of many civilian casualties during clashes.

 

Syria’s interior ministry also said earlier on Friday that they are standing “at the threshold of a critical phase that demands awareness and discipline.”

 

The official Syrian news agency SANA said that after several police and security personnel had been killed, “large, unorganized crowds moved toward the coast,” citing an official with Syria’s Ministry of Interior.

 

Anas Khattab, head of Syrian intelligence, said that “former military and security leaders affiliated with the defunct regime were behind the planning and execution of these crimes.”

 

He said that the “treacherous operation” had claimed the lives of “dozens of our finest men in the army, security, and police.”

 

Khattab added: “To those who failed to heed our earlier warnings: you have been deceived by malicious hands into doing what you are doing today,” blaming individuals outside Syria.

 

Social media videos published since Thursday apparently show extensive casualties among both Syrian security forces and young men in civilian clothing.

 

One video showed several men lying dead beside a police vehicle. Another video geolocated by CNN showed women mourning among the bodies of at least twenty men in civilian clothes who appear to have been shot dead in a village near the town of al Jinderiyah. Another still showed security forces firing intensively at night towards a source of incoming fire.

 

Defense Ministry spokesman Colonel Hassan Abdel Ghani said Friday that “senior war criminals” were “scattered in the mountains with no refuge except the courts, where you will face justice.”

 

“Do not become fuel for a lost war… The choice is clear: surrender your weapons or face your inevitable fate,” he said, addressing other Assad supporters.

 

Other social media footage from Friday showed substantial military reinforcements converging on the area. The city of Tartous has been placed under curfew until Saturday.

 

The videos indicate that the security forces reached the coastal city of Jableh, near the Russian airbase at Hmeimim, and showed clashes and columns of smoke rising from near the base.

 

Other videos showed government forces entering Al-Qardaha, the home town of the Assad family, amid explosions and columns of smoke. An official with the defense ministry confirmed later on Friday that security forces carried out operations “against the remnants of the former regime,” in Al-Qardaha, according to SANA. And one video geolocated to the coast near Jableh showed improvised bombs being dropped from a military helicopter.

 

The Syrian Interior ministry issued a statement Friday urging “all civilians to stay away from military and security operation zones.”

 

It said all military and security units had been ordered “to strictly adhere to established procedures and laws to safeguard civilians.”

 

Syria’s Health Ministry said that six hospitals in the rural areas of Latakia and Tartous had come under attack on Thursday night by pro-Assad elements, resulting in several deaths.

 

Abdul Rahman Taleb, a Latakia-based activist and journalist, said he was attacked by Assad loyalists on Thursday while he was covering clashes with the Syrian security forces.

 

“We were besieged for about 12 hours in one of Latakia’s neighborhoods, with remnants of militants spreading all around us. I didn’t expect we’d make it out alive,” Taleb said.

 

He added he had been sheltered by other Alawites in the area “until the first reinforcements arrived and evacuated us.”

 

The violence has sparked pro- and anti-government demonstrations in several Syrian cities.

 

Saudi Arabia, a strong backer of the new government, condemned what it called “crimes committed by outlaw groups” in Syria.

 

https://www.cnn.com/2025/03/07/middleeast/syria-army-assad-deadly-clashes-intl/index.html