But anyways, one day years later, I came home and blew up and told them I was having these problems. My parents just called the police on me. I tried to tell the Policeman, and he just sent me to the psychologists. I e-mailed them, and got no response; or they'd just talk through the parents but refuse to investigate.
Then, I rejoin the military as a reservist. I was with some introductory unit for a year or so, and then they sent me to VR-57, a cargo plane(C-40; it's a military version of the 737). This squadron has it good and knows it. From the very start, the C.O. didn't like me; he had trouble shaking my hands. Towards the end of the first C.O.(commanding officer), a Commander Hill, the guy was threatening me in front of everyone and laughing, and so was his X.O. Crump. They'd do all these sny remarks, but they'd cowardly never bring me in to ask and tell me what their thinking.
When Crump became C.O. I reenlisted and they accepted. They gave me a good conduct award(my second; my first was in active duty between 1995-99). They had some former VR-57 guy now a Reservist Admiral come to give an open forum talk where we can ask whatever questions we want. I asked him why are we at war with Iraq. The next thing I know they're sending me to a psych ward. They said, "you're trying to use the Admiral to get the blacks in trouble." In other words, they admit to the truth of it! I explain to this to the psychologists, they just ignore it.
I e-mailed the f.b.i. No response. I get these scared threatening looks from these rich well to do people in Alpine; I can only assume these people are f.b.i.
I e-mail the President Barrack Obama. I'm pretty sure I got the response. It was kind of vague and just like one line. I've never gotten anybody over a ten year period to come and investigate. They all run and get rid of me as soon as they can. I've told him that M.I.T has these brain readers now, and that when nanotechnology advances enough, they'll be in abundant use. And, I'll get him and everyone else. No response!
I tried contacting Switzerland about getting them to help me get out of here; they gave some vague response of, 'we think you're too acclimated to the environment." You can read into this any number of things.
I don't know what to expect as a response from you; but, then again, I get no response from anyone anyways.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sy8E8dDsR4M , Doug Williams showing his true colors.
I finaly found it, https://www.youtube.com/watch?
university black professor who wants all whites killed. https://www.youtube.com/watch?
http://www.bbc.com/news/blogs-echochambers-27403003
ReplyDeleteVice President Joe Biden's son joins Ukraine gas company
ReplyDeleteBurisma, a private oil and gas company in Ukraine, announced this week that it has appointed Hunter Biden, the youngest son of US Vice President Joe Biden, to its board of directors.
The company, founded in 2002, is controlled by a former energy official in the government of deposed Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych.
The move has raised some eyebrows in the US, given the Obama administration's attempts to manage the ongoing crisis in Ukraine.
"Joe Biden has been the White House's go-to guy during the Ukraine crisis, touring former Soviet republics and reassuring their concerned leaders," writes the National Journal's Marina Koren. "And now, he's not the only Biden involved in the region."
She says that by appointing Hunter Biden head of its legal affairs unit, "Burisma is turning to US talent - and money and name recognition - for protection against Russia".
The younger Mr Biden isn't the only American with political ties to have recently joined Burisma's board. Devon Archer, a former senior advisor to current Secretary of State John Kerry's 2004 presidential campaign and a college roommate of Mr Kerry's stepson HJ Heinz, signed on in April.
Mr Biden and Mr Archer are also managing partners at Rosemont Seneca Partners, a Washington, DC-based investment company.
Both Mr Biden and Mr Archer have not responded to requests from reporters for comment. In Burisma's press release announcing his hiring, Mr Biden says:
I believe that my assistance in consulting the company on matters of transparency, corporate governance and responsibility, international expansion and other priorities will contribute to the economy and benefit the people of Ukraine.
All this could be explained simply as a foreign energy company looking to increase its visibility in the US and spur investment, writes the Federalist's Mollie Hemingway. State-controlled companies currently account for 90% of Ukraine's gas production, but this year Burisma became the nation's largest private producer.
Hemingway adds, however, that there may be another, less savoury possibility:
The most disturbing explanation is that the company is attempting to curry favour with the US government by enlisting the services of the close family friend and campaign bundler of the secretary of state and the son of the vice president. After all, Archer notes on one of his company's web pages that his firm's "relationship network creates opportunities for our portfolio companies which then compound to greater outcomes for all parties".
She concludes that this seems like a "cliched movie plot": "a shady foreign oil company co-opts the vice president's son in order to capture lucrative foreign investment contracts".
The White House has emphasised that the vice president's son's new job will have no influence on US foreign policy.
"Hunter Biden is a private citizen and a lawyer," Kendra Barkoff, a spokeswoman for the vice president, told the Wall Street Journal. "The vice president does not endorse any particular company and has no involvement with this company."
https://shine.yahoo.com/healthy-living/black-prep-school-president-steps-down-after-mocking-white-classmates-171901010.html
ReplyDeletehttp://news.yahoo.com/obama-focus-civil-rights-struggles-past-present-082102676--politics.html by By NEDRA PICKLER and ERIC TUCKER
ReplyDelete"WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama said Monday the deaths of unarmed black men in Missouri and New York show that law enforcement needs to change practices to build trust in minority communities, as a White House task force called for independent, outside investigations when police use deadly force."
"The president said last year's deaths of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, and Eric Garner in New York City exposed "deep rooted frustration in many communities of color around the need for fair and just law enforcement." He said a policing task force that he appointed found it's important for law enforcement to improve training, data collection and cooperation with the communities they cover."
ReplyDelete""The moment is now for us to make these changes," Obama said from the White House during a meeting with members of the task force, who worked for three months to develop the recommendations. "We have a great opportunity coming out of some great conflict and tragedy to really transform how we think about community law enforcement relations so that everybody feels safer and our law enforcement officers feel — rather than being embattled — feel fully supported. We need to seize that opportunity."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shuckin%27_and_jivin%27#:~:text=From%20Wikipedia%2C%20the%20free%20encyclopedia,an%20opponent%20or%20avoid%20punishment. shucking and jiving wiki
ReplyDeletehttps://www.yahoo.com/news/trump-retweets-videos-of-black-men-attacking-white-victims-asking-where-are-the-protesters-145515460.html - Trump retweets videos of Black men attacking white victims, asking, 'Where are the protesters?'
ReplyDeletehttps://www.yahoo.com/news/american-medical-association-nations-largest-001303955.html
ReplyDeleteAmerican Medical Association, the nation's largest group of doctors, deems racism a 'public health threat'
Nada Hassanein, USA TODAY
Tue, November 24, 2020, 7:38 AM PST
As the coronavirus pandemic continues to threaten hard-hit minority communities, the nation’s largest association of doctors has passed a policy that recognizes racism as a public health threat.
The new policy recognizes racism as a social determinant of health, and highlights the health disparities and lack of access to health care that have significantly hindered good health in Black and other historically marginalized communities in the U.S.
The American Medical Association’s House of Delegates – which includes 600-plus members from every medical specialty – released a statement last week that describes three tiers of racism detailed in the policy: systemic, cultural and interpersonal. Each poses specific barriers to quality medical care and good health and hinders the advancement of health equity, the group wrote.
The AMA also implored its medical professionals to identify strategies to mitigate racism’s health impacts, teach future doctors about racism in medical school curricula and support policy development for researching the issue.
Racism is a declared public health issue in 145 cities and counties across 27 states. Now what happens?
Baltimore-based board member Dr. Willarda Edwards chaired the AMA Task Force on Health Equity and lobbied for action that led to the creation of the AMA Center on Health Equity last year. She said the AMA's new policy is a continuation of those efforts – and the result of a confluence of racial unrest amid protests against police brutality and the pandemic.
Delete“Essentially, with COVID, the Band-Aid was ripped off our health care system,” said Dr. Edwards, an internist. “And the disparities were so blatant as we see more Black and brown and Native American communities hard-hit by COVID. And we just said, ‘This has got to stop.’ We’ve got to be able to do something more than just talk about the stats.”
She’s referring to the disproportionate impact certain illnesses like heart disease and diabetes have on Black and Hispanic communities. But she's also talking about unconscious bias that has influenced medical treatment for minority patients.
“We have found that there has been a real evidence of disparity with respect to the way people of color are treated in the medical world,” she said, citing C-sections performed on minority women more than white women, and less pain medication prescribed for young minority men and women.
Last week, the AMA also officially recognized race as a social construct rather than a biological one, nodding to a vast net of socioeconomic factors that come along with it and impact health and well-being.
Dr. Otis Brawley, a renowned oncologist and professor of oncology and epidemiology at Johns Hopkins University, has been studying health disparities and treatments in Black people and minorities for three decades.
Perceiving race as a mere biological factor diminishes its far-reaching implications, he said.
“It takes the emphasis away from the fact that a substantial number of those people have poor outcomes because they either don’t get treatment or they have poor quality treatment,” Brawley said.
We're 'guinea pigs for the rich': Black Americans are the most hesitant to get a COVID-19 vaccine
He cited several examples from numerous studies he’s written, including one study that explores breast cancer treatment in Black women patients treated at military hospitals.
He said the results showed “Black women treated for breast cancer lost two-thirds of disparity that Black women treated in the real world of the United States had. There was a disparity still between Blacks and whites – but two-thirds of it was gone."
“We need to get good care for Black people."
Ravi Perry, political science chair of HBCU Howard University, said the AMA’s announcement could be a significant catalyst in the progress of national racial dialogue and policy development to fight disparities.
Navajo woman are 'sacred' keepers of the cultural flame: They're also particularly vulnerable to COVID-19.
"I think it has the potential to be a game changer – just like it was when homosexuality was ruled no longer a mental health disorder (by the American Psychological Association) ... that began a long trek to justice," he said.
Perry, a member of the American Lung Association’s COVID-19 Advisory Panel, has himself contracted COVID-19. He's signed up for clinical trials for the vaccine and lends his perspective on the panel about vaccine distribution among the minority communities he is a part of and studies, such as people with HIV.
“The fact that the scientific community has said that racism is in fact a public health matter – what that suggest is that this is no longer a grassroots political talking point,” he said. “It’s now a public policy matter backed up by scientific verification."
Reach Nada Hassanein at nhassanein@gannett.com