AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, Pool
This is part two of an article series detailing Dr. Fauci’s funding of Dual-Use Research of Concern (DURC) and Gain-of-function research through the NIH and NIAID. Part I can be found here.
In the early part of 2003, doctors around the world became baffled by thousands of cases of people with flu-like symptoms and pneumonia. Originally beginning in the Hong Kong region and then spreading around the world, this mystery illness was killing people faster than they could be diagnosed. When American businessman Johnny Chen became ill on a flight to Singapore, the plane diverted to Hanoi in Vietnam to rush Chen to the hospital. There, doctors were unable to stop the progression of Chen’s symptoms, and within hours of his arrival, Chen was dead. Over the course of the next several days, nearly 40 people would become ill at that hospital with 7 of those people dying from this new mysterious disease. That disease went on to infect people all over the worl
spoke.
“The class of 2021 is making history in some form from being the first person in their family to graduate from high school, (to going to) college, and to do this in the midst of a pandemic makes it even more historical,” Morgan said
.
She ended her address in Spanish by thanking her biggest supporter her mother.
“My mom, my family, my brothers I feel like my whole family is so supportive of me,” she said after the ceremony. “They all love me so much and support me through everything I do and want to do.”
Born in the Dominican Republic, Morgan earned a full-ride scholarship to study business administration at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She came to the U.S. with her family eight years ago, and said she dreams of attending law school
IO21, the Dubai-based technology company that provides innovative solutions, has been selected as a finalist for the Women Tech Founders Programme in the Middle East and North Africa.
An ethnic studies professor has argued that
“white supremacy” is the real reason why blacks are attacking Asians.
Jennifer Ho, professor of Asian American Studies at the University of Colorado Boulder, published an article last month titled
“White supremacy is the root of all race-related violence in the US.”
“When a Black person attacks an Asian person, the encounter is fueled perhaps by racism, but very specifically by white supremacy,” Ho writes.
“White supremacy does not require a white person to perpetuate it.”
How is this the case? Ho says it’s because
“white supremacy is an ideology, a pattern of values and beliefs that are ingrained in nearly every system and institution in the U.S.”