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ncmh Live: Election news 2024
« le: Décembre 29, 2024, 12:08:23 am »
Cbgm If humans are curating your Facebook news, does that mean there   s bias
 Editor   Note: When economic correspondent Paul Solman went to Baltimore earlier this month to report on how the riots there affected the local economy, he spoke with Johns Hopkins historian N.D.B. Connolly. Connolly brought Paul to the mall where the r stanley cup iots began and discussed why they broke out there. Economic exploitation, he argues, had a lot to do with it. Watch the conversation here or read the full transcript below. The text of Connollys extended conversation with Paul below has been edited and condensed for  stanley cup clarity and length.Paul Solman: So, what are we doing at this mall N.D.B. Connolly: This mall is where the riots began [on April 27]. Its the Mondawmin Mall, here in Northwest Baltimore. It   just across from Frederick Douglass High School, and it actually sits in the middle of three big narratives about the city   history. One is the most recent riot. The second is the story of prices and the everyday life of living in Baltimore and what this mall represents for everyday people trying to shop here. And the third is that this mall actually began as one of the city   first shopping malls that used to primarily serve white customers. And it suffered white flight, and had to basically repurpose itself to deal with a black clientele. And so the history of segregation, the history of price gouging, and the more recent history of the riot are all built here, around the Mondawmin Mall.Paul Solman: Pric stanley cup e gouging  What do you mean N.D.B. Connolly: So  Jqjt Poll: 61 percent of Americans have little to no confidence in Trump s ability to handle international crisis
 WASHINGTON 鈥?The U.S. is deploying a disaster response team to Iraq help distribute humanitarian aid to tens of thousands of people who have been forced from their homes in the fresh wave of violence in the country   north.U.S. Agency for International Development Administrator Rajiv Shah said Monday the team will help speed food, water and other life-saving supplies to Iraqis.Much of the assistance will go to thousands of members of an Iraqi religious minority group known as Yazidis who have been trapped on a mountaintop in northwest Iraq to escape certain death by Sunni militants with the Islamic State group.Shah said the U.S. teams would help coordinate the assistance distribution among Iraqi officials, international partners and humanitarian aid agencies.                                                   adidas samba                                       Left stanley cup :                Staff Sgt. Daniel Leavindofske, 8th Expeditionary Air Mobility Squadron ramp team chief and Senior Airman David Babcock, air transportation journeyman, assist with loading 28,224 halal meals to a C-17 Globemaster III for a humanitarian airdrop mission over Iraq, Aug. 9, 2014. U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Vernon Young Jr.                                          Go Deeper                                        iraq                            pentagon                            yazidi                                                                                              By 鈥? adidas campus