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Page 59 - ப்ரெஸிடெஂட் பிராங்க்ளின் ரூஸ்வெல்ட் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

What Does Culture Do?

What Does Culture Do? What we know as 20th-Century fascism, or synarchism as we fought against it under President Franklin Roosevelt’s leadership lies in a persisting effort to overturn those principles of civilized relations among sovereign nation-states which were adopted by the 1648 Treaty of Westphalia. As we have documented this fact in locations published earlier, the turn in direction of pathway, away from President Franklin Roosevelt’s leadership, toward the catastrophe which is our nation’s terrible condition today, was begun as part of an operation in which the later head of our Central Intelligence Agency, John Foster Dulles’ brother Allen, played a key role, toward the close of World War II. This is a role he played together, and over the later decades of his life, with accomplices, including his James Jesus Angleton. Dulles and Angleton, typify those who played a key role in bringing a key part of the Nazi SS intelligence apparatus into the inside of what becam

Korematsu Day rises from injustices of Japanese internment camps during WWII | Cronkite News

Arizona PBS May 19, 2021 Two Japanese families are shown at a Salinas, California, assembly center. Fred Korematsu was sent to a California center for processing to a Utah internment camp. He fought the relocation all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court but lost; his sentence was vacated years after the camps were shuttered and called out as a national shame. (Photo courtesy of U.S. War Relocation Authority/Library of Congress) Known during World War II as a reception center, according to Library of Congress archives, this California center was a type of holding facility for those of Japanese descent who were to be relocated to internment camps. (Photo courtesy of Clem Albers/U.S. War Relocation Authority via Library of Congress)

Biden Commission: Will Dems Take Their Sweet Revenge on the GOP and Pack US Supreme Court?

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COMMENTARY: Low wages lend to trouble hiring

We’ve had comments on our Facebook page like, “They need to get off unemployment,” and “No one wants to work,” referencing Gov. Greg Abbott’s recent decision to cut off extra unemployment benefits created during the pandemic. The thing is, people do want to work. A study from economists at Yale University, published on July 14, 2020, found that expansion of the social safety net during the pandemic overall helped families, especially those on unemployment insurance. “We find no evidence that more generous benefits disincentivized work either at the onset of the expansion or as firms looked to return to business over time,” the abstract for the study, published at news.yale.edu states.

Korematsu Day rises from injustices of WWII Japanese internment camps

View Comments Nearly eight decades after the United States forced Japanese Americans into prison camps during World War II, Arizona will recognize the efforts of a man who turned his pain into a lifetime of activism for equity and inclusion. A new state law designates Jan. 30 as Fred T. Korematsu Day of Civil Liberties and the Constitution. Arizona joins 10 other states in honoring the activist on his birthday. The bipartisan-supported honor comes as harassment and hate crimes against people of Asian descent rise, as Asian Pacific Heritage Month is celebrated in May, and education around challenges to democracy for underserved communities still falls short.

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