Public reaction to killings at Atlanta-area massage parlors
The Associated Press
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1of3Law enforcement officials confer outside a massage parlor following a shooting on Tuesday, March 16, 2021, in Atlanta. Shootings at two massage parlors in Atlanta and one in the suburbs have left multiple people dead, many of them women of Asian descent, authorities said Tuesday.Brynn Anderson/APShow MoreShow Less
2of3A police officer watches as a body is taken from the Gold Spa massage parlor after a shooting, late Tuesday, March 16, 2021, in Atlanta. Shootings at two massage parlors in Atlanta and one in the suburbs left multiple people dead, many of them women of Asian descent, authorities said. A 21-year-old man suspected in the shootings was taken into custody in southwest Georgia hours later after a manhunt, police said.Brynn Anderson/APShow MoreShow Less
Posted By Sanford Nowlin on Wed, Mar 17, 2021 at 1:47 PM click to enlarge Courtesy Image / ADL These images were collected by ADL as it documented hate group propaganda in 2020. Texas-based group Patriot Front was responsible for 80% of racist, antisemitic and other hateful messages tracked in the U.S. by the Anti-Defamation League last year in its annual report on white supremacist propaganda. Dallas-headquartered Patriot Front, which espouses racism and antisemitism and prominently uses former President Donald Trump s America First messaging, was responsible for 4,105 of the incidents cited in the report. Texas also had the highest number of appearances of racist propaganda messages last year at 574.
Covid-19 especially lethal to younger Latinos
Akilah Johnson, The Washington Post
March 15, 2021
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1of6Maria Agnes Sanchez, center, and most of her family have contracted covid-19, the illness that can be caused by the novel coronavirus.Photo for The Washington post by Allison ZauchaShow MoreShow Less
2of6Dinora Villanueva receives information regarding coronavirus testing at her home in Thermal, Calif., on Feb. 24, 2021.Photo for The Washington post by Allison ZauchaShow MoreShow Less
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4of6Farmworker Ramon Talavera received a coronavirus vaccine in Thermal, Calif., on Feb. 25, 2021.Photo for The Washington post by Allison ZauchaShow MoreShow Less
5of6Nora Vasquez passed the coronavirus to her family members.Photo for The Washington post by Allison ZauchaShow MoreShow Less
DECATUR â The Rev. Wayne Dunning visibly braced himself for a sharp stick when getting his COVID-19 vaccine on Monday, but it was already done.
âHe tricked me,â Dunning said, laughing, afterward. Brendan Spence, a pharmacist with Walgreens, had told him he was going to count to three and give the injection, but he actually did it while he was talking.
Spence told Dunning to take a seat for 15 minutes in case of a reaction, which is rare, Spence said. Some people might feel faint, which is often due to anxiety rather than the vaccine, and rarely, there is an allergic reaction. Dunning had none of that and said the injection site wasn t even painful.