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Trenton NJ Has Haitian Levels Of Corruption There s A Reason For That | Articles

The Trentonian Newspaper] As America is unwillingly transformed into a Third World society, what VDARE.com calls the Minority Occupation Government is becoming more common in cities and states throughout the country. The minority-majority city of Trenton, capital of the state of New Jersey (and one-time capital of the US), is a case study: former municipal Judge Renee Lamarre-Sumners exemplifies the kind of corruption, naked self-interest, and cynical exploitation of multiculturalism likely to be the new standard. A majority black city, Trenton features the kind of racialized one-party rule all too common in American cities, in which a series of often corrupt African-American politicians use the institutions of government like their own private piggy bank. The city is also home to a “hugging drug court judge” releasing non-white drug offenders and it is a “sanctuary city” that offers ID’s to illegal aliens [

LIU Hudson Introduces MBA Cohort For the Observant Jewish Community

By Chaya Glaser | January 07, 2021 Professor Michael Stone remembers his years at City College of New York, when he and a group of Orthodox Jewish students would meet on campus to socialize after class, and then quickly head to RJJ (Rabbi Jacob Joseph) Yeshiva on the Lower East Side to be on time for shiur. “That rush to class and shiur, back and forth, always stuck with me,” he said. Stone went on to receive a scholarship to The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania where he completed his master’s degree in business administration. “It was an excellent experience because there was mentoring from highly skilled professionals,” Stone remembered, “but I was one of the few Orthodox guys in the program at the time.”

Paramus Hires 10 Officers to Start 2021

PARAMUS, NJ - The borough hired 10 police officers at its final meeting of 2020. The following officers were officially approved by a 4-3 vote at the Dec. 28 council meeting at a starting salary of $45,048. The following biographies were issued by Chief of Police Kenneth Ehrenberg. Jamie Takahashi was born in New York City and is a long time resident of Paramus. Jamie graduated from Paramus High School, and then went on to earn a bachelor’s degree from Syracuse University in economics. Shortly after graduating from college, Jamie was commissioned into the New York Army National Guard as a Transportation Officer. Jamie is presently a 1st Lieutenant and assigned as the Executive Officer for the 719th Composite Truck Company. In 2017, Jamie joined the Paramus Volunteer Fire Department and became a Special 1 Police Officer with the Borough of Paramus.  Jamie then attended and graduated from the Morris County Police Academy in 2018. Jamie speaks both Korean and Japanese.

The most intriguing books on religion we read in 2020

Our reading list in 2020, like the rest of our lives, was colored by the triple whammy of pandemic, racial justice protests and the presidential election. But given the unpredictability of these 12 jam-packed, crisis-filled months, how did the thinkers, researchers, preachers and their publishers of the books we clung to know to furnish us with such timely analyses? As several of the authors of the most interesting books have noted, the answer is all too grim: In many cases, we only reaped what we had long sown. But among our favorite histories, travelogs and memoirs below, there are as many solutions as there are jeremiads, and books as fun as they are enlightening.

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