this is the first time in the United States that a doctor has been convicted of murder for over-prescribing drugs.
Sourced through Scoop.it from: www.cnn.com
this is the first time in the United States that a doctor has been convicted of murder for over-prescribing drugs.
Sourced through Scoop.it from: www.cnn.com
Black Students Expelled at a Higher Rate in 13 Southern States ……………………………….. http://t.co/FERAR4DNsl
— DcSlumdog (@DcSlumdog) August 26, 2015
#BlackLivesMatter Activists #ShutItDown https://t.co/dyDus59YI7
— Viva la causa! (@70torinoman) August 25, 2015
Just shut down 7th avenue in midtown. No justice, no peace!! #blacklivesmatter #peoplesmonday pic.twitter.com/e2BwCE7ujl
— Millions March NYC (@MillionsMarch) August 25, 2015
'Black on black crime' is the oppressors way of transferring blame of their own culpability in creating an oppressive capitalist project.
— Viva la causa! (@70torinoman) August 23, 2015
I've received 6 death threats today. As conservative media fans the flames they increase daily. Doubled my life insurance. This is no joke.
— Shaun King (@ShaunKing) August 26, 2015
Identifying, categorizing, and naming injustices helps me feel sane and not alone.
— Dr. Adrienne K. (@NativeApprops) August 25, 2015
An investigation that took me months: How companies pocket millions off lead-poisoned, poor blacks. http://t.co/ib9fauJ3mW
— Terrence McCoy (@terrence_mccoy) August 25, 2015
A nurse in Italy is accused of killing 38 patients because she thought they were “annoying.”
– Click through to read more –
Source: www.huffingtonpost.com
(CNN) — The tragedy of Ebola is not just its staggering toll. It’s also the implicit racism that the deadly virus has spawned. The anecdotes are sickening, particularly a Reuters report this week that children of African immigrants in Dallas — little ones with no connection to Thomas Duncan, the Liberian Ebola patient who died Wednesday in a local hospital — have been branded “Ebola kids” simply because of their heritage or skin color.
A Newsweek cover last month showed a picture of a chimpanzee with the headline: “A Back Door for Ebola: Smuggled Bushmeat Could Spark a U.S. Epidemic.” Whatever the intent, the picture was wrong.
Turns out the story was probably wrong, too, as a Washington Post investigation revealed. The new Ebola outbreak “likely had nothing to do with bushmeat consumption,” the Post reported, and there is no conclusive evidence that Ebola has been passed from animals to humans. A theory on animal-to-human transmission with some limited traction centers on dead fruit bats, not chimps.
“There is virtually no chance that ‘bushmeat’ smuggling could bring Ebola to America,” the Post concluded.
– Click through fore more –
Source: www.cnn.com
After a disturbing tip, PETA visited a farm that supplies milk to Kroger-owned supermarket chain Harris Teeter and found emaciated cows in pain trudging through deep manure.
Source: investigations.peta.org
My dad thinks that dairy cows live in fields of green grass.
From page 21 of
STATUS OF DESCENDANTS OF AFRICANS ENSLAVED IN THE UNITED STATES
and the United States’s Violation of the
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination
For more information check
Race, Racism and the Law
http://racism.org
Alabama has the most overcrowded prisons in the nation and spends one of the lowest amounts, per inmate, on health care. The prison system contracts with Corizon Inc. to provide medical care and MHM Correctional Services to provide mental health care. In 2012, when the ADOC released a “Request for Proposal” for a new health care contract, applicants were scored on a 3,000 point scale. Out of a possible 3,000 points, contract price accounted for a possible 1,350 points. Qualifications and experience counted for only 100 points.
The ADOC renewed its contract with Corizon in 2012, even though Corizon (the company providing health care in Alabama prisons since 2007) failed every major audit of its health care operations in Alabama prisons under its first contract with the state.
Source: www.splcenter.org
More than two dozen detainees at a notorious immigration detention center in Georgia staged a hunger strike and protest last week over inedible food, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution (AJC) reported. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) called the protest at Stewart Detention Center a “riot” that required that detainees be “segregated for disciplinary purposes,” according to the AJC. The ACLU and Georgia Detention Watch filed a complaint raising alarm about a hunger strike that detainees began on or around June 12, during which hundreds of detainees threw their food away. Detainees have complained that their food is often filled with maggots, or that the same water used to boil eggs is reused to brew coffee. Detainees who work in food preparation have also complained of a roach infestation in the facility’s kitchen. Detainees were frequently served rotten food. Click through to read more. Source: colorlines.com Serving rotten food is another way to dehumanize. The U.S. needs to be better than this.
Priscella Valdez says her father Pedro, a Vietnam vet, tried for months to get an appointment at the Phoenix VA only to die before he could.
See on www.cnn.com
The Republican Party in Virginia has resorted to what appears to be outright bribery in its ongoing effort to deny low-income residents in the state access to the Medicaid expansion authorized by Obamacare.
The Washington Post is reporting that R…
See on www.huffingtonpost.com