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Censorship without uniforms: how media pressure works today
In Europe, censorship rarely arrives as a ban. It arrives as a lawsuit, a budget cut, platform dependence, and the slow shrinking of independent journalism. In Europe, censorship no longer always looks like censorship. It does not necessarily come as a newsroom raid, a confiscated newspaper, or a journalist dragged away in public. More often, it comes dressed as something ordinary: a legal threat too expensive to answer, a newsroom too fragile to sustain difficult reporting, an advertiser no one wants to irritate, an ownership structure that narrows the range of acceptable speech, or a platform change that quietly pushes serious reporting out of sight. The methods look softer than…
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Across Europe, the city is becoming a luxury
Across Europe, rents have outrun wages. Homes are treated as investments, tourist pressure remakes neighbourhoods, and more people can still work in the city than afford to live in it. Across Europe, the housing problem no longer feels temporary. It has settled into ordinary life. You see it when a room costs what a small flat used to cost. You see it when leaving home is postponed again, when moving closer to work is no longer realistic, when the same income buys less space, less calm, less future than it did a few years ago. Across Europe, housing is no longer just a difficult expense. It is becoming the line…





