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NI 100: Londonderry s forgotten week of bloodshed in 1920

BBC News By David Wilson image copyrightImage Courtesy of the National Library of Ireland When the Government of Ireland Act was granted Royal Assent in December 1920, it came at the end of a troubled year in Londonderry. Six months earlier in the city, a single week of violence had claimed 20 lives. It was the first upsurge of sectarianism , according to Ulster University historian Dr Adrian Grant. That week in June, he said, was a hugely significant but largely forgotten time . image copyrightThe Print Collector/Print Collector/Getty Images image captionMuch of the violence occurred in the Bishop Street area The city s electorate had returned a Sinn Féin MP in the 1918 Westminster elections.

Liberal Reporter s Take on Some of Trump s Pardons Are Bound to Trigger Progressives

  Share Source: AP Photo/Patrick Semansky Again, you may disagree with 90-95 percent of his takes, but Michael Tracey, a liberal reporter, has been calling out his side’s Russian collusion hysteria from day one. He and Glenn Greenwald, formerly of The Intercept, have been some of the original collusion skeptics which have driven progressives insane. Like conservative media, they noted the lack of evidence in this media-manufactured myth about Kremlin collusion with the Trump team during the 2016 election. They also pointed out how every “bombshell” turned out to be a nothingburger. And how utterly unhinged some people devolved over the past three years due to this story. To this day, there isn’t one solid shred of evidence to back up the Russian collusion myth.

How Racism Ruined Black Santa Monica

In the 1940s, Nick Gabaldón, an athletic, handsome student at Santa Monica High School, would often escape class to Bay Street Beach, a half-mile stretch of shoreline roughly between Pico and Bicknell Streets, by the Casa Del Mar hotel. Derisively called the Inkwell by some white Angelenos, Bay Street Beach was a haven for people of color. Here, Gabaldón would bodysurf for hours, impressing two white lifeguards who loaned him a rescue board. With this heavy, 13-foot board, Gabaldón taught himself to surf, becoming the first documented Black surfer in America. He eventually took to riding the waves in Malibu, paddling six miles north and another six miles back, because he knew he would not be welcome walking on most of Santa Monica s beaches.

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