Auteur Sujet: ibqo Obama, Clinton Embrace Earmark Moratorium  (Lu 4 fois)

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ibqo Obama, Clinton Embrace Earmark Moratorium
« le: Décembre 03, 2024, 02:47:36 am »
Nttq Obama on Palin: Not Worried About  Today s News
 Jackson, Mississippi s city council voted on Tuesday to move a statue of former President Andrew Jackson from outside its City Hall. The council voted 5-1 in favor of moving the statue of the man the city is named after to a new, undisclosed location.CBS Jackson affiliateWJTV reports that city leaders said they want to move the statue to a more  stanley flask appropriate location, but have yet to announce its new home. Andrew Jackson is guilty of one of the most heinous acts of genocide that this nation has ever seen,  Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba said in a statement,WJTV reports.  He was also known as one of the most brutal slave owners throughout slavery.                                          And so, as we build a city focused on progress and unit stanley france y we must make certain that we display images which reflect those aspirations. Jackson served as the country s 7th president and is notorious for his treatment of Native Americans. He signed the Indian Removal Act of 1830, forcing Native Americans to relocate off their ancestral land. At least 4,000 people died during the migration, known as the Trail of Tears.         The mayor said,  We should not have to constantly encounter the likenesses of those who profited off of the blood, stanley cup  sweat,  despair of our ancestors or see them immortalized as honorable.                 The City Hall in Jackson, Mississippi, is photographed on June 10, 1999. The building, constructed in the 1840s, has served continuously as City Hall, but was also use Seyj Trump s troop boost in Afghanistan to cost over $1 billion a year
 WASHINGTON - The  stanley thermos mug Nixon White House was so worried about broadcast Daniel Schorr s reporting that it ordered an investigation into the network correspondent whose tough stories landed him on the president s infamous enemies list, according to newly released FBI files.The administration had the bureau conduct a background investigation in 1971, according to one section from among hundreds of pages released Thursday from Schorr s FBI file.The White House said it was considering Schorr for a public affairs job in the environmental area. A day later, the investigation was canceled but the White House still wanted to see anything the FBI had managed to discover about Schorr.                                        Schorr asked the FBI to discontinue the investigation.The long-time newsman later said he had never applied for such a position.T stanley thermoskannen he 93-year-old Schorr died in July after a six-decade career with CBS, NPR and other news media outlets. He believed the White House had tried to intimidate him for his hard-hitting coverage of the administration.        The first reference to Schorr in FBI files dates from July 31, 1942, when FBI Director J Edgar Hoover asked the chief of the Special War Policies Unit for more information on Schorr s status as a  representative of a foreign princ stanley cup ipal  in his employment with the Netherland Indies News Agency.Eight years later, at the height of the post-war  Red Scare,  Hoover told the CIA director that the bureau had looked over Schorr s backgrou