Youtube comments of Roy Harper (@royharper2003).
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@smy5607 When President Donald Trump canceled a visit to the Aisne-Marne American Cemetery, near Paris, in 2018, he blamed rain for the last-minute decision, saying that “the helicopter couldn’t fly” and that the Secret Service wouldn’t drive him there. Neither claim was true.
Trump rejected the idea of the visit because he feared his hair would become disheveled in the rain, and because he did not believe it important to honor American war dead, according to four people with firsthand knowledge of the discussion that day. In a conversation with senior staff members on the morning of the scheduled visit, Trump said, “Why should I go to that cemetery? It’s filled with losers.” In a separate conversation on the same trip, Trump referred to the more than 1,800 marines who lost their lives at Belleau Wood as “suckers” for getting killed. By the war, trump admitted to faking an injury to avoid the draft which is illegal but since he is a convicted felon that's no surprise.
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@lifter1000 Mariam Nabatanzi Babirye (born c. 1980)[1] also known as Maama Uganda or Mother Uganda, is a Ugandan woman known for birthing 44 (38 living) children.[2][3] As of April 2023, her eldest children were 31 years old, and the youngest were six years old.[2] In 2015, her husband abandoned the family, reportedly unable to support so many children.[4][5]
Born around 1980, Babirye first gave birth when she was 13 years old, having been forced into marriage the year prior. By the age of 36, she had given birth to a total of 44 children, including three sets of quadruplets, four sets of triplets, and six sets of twins, for a total of fifteen births. The number of multiple births was caused by a rare genetic condition causing hyperovulation as a result of enlarged ovaries. In 2019, when Babirye was aged 40, she underwent a medical procedure to prevent any further pregnancies.[6]
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When President Donald Trump canceled a visit to the Aisne-Marne American Cemetery, near Paris, in 2018, he blamed rain for the last-minute decision, saying that “the helicopter couldn’t fly” and that the Secret Service wouldn’t drive him there. Neither claim was true.
Trump rejected the idea of the visit because he feared his hair would become disheveled in the rain, and because he did not believe it important to honor American war dead, according to four people with firsthand knowledge of the discussion that day. In a conversation with senior staff members on the morning of the scheduled visit, Trump said, “Why should I go to that cemetery? It’s filled with losers.” In a separate conversation on the same trip, Trump referred to the more than 1,800 marines who lost their lives at Belleau Wood as “suckers” for getting killed.
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@royalbiscuits8442 The average annual salary in Georgia is $52,264, which is about $25.13 per hour. The majority of salaries in Georgia fall between $36,196 and $66,450 annually.
A living wage is a socially acceptable income that covers basic needs like food, shelter, healthcare, and child services. In Georgia, the living wage for one adult is $23.29 per hour, and $25.58 per hour for two adults working. In Georgia, the average wage is a living wage. Where are you getting your information? I think your talking about crappy jobs that don't pay much more than minimum and working one job wouldn't be able to pay for a decentish style of living if you're flipping burgers or making minimum wage.
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@gewurztramina I didn't watch the entire video but, at least in the beginning, it was looking at an extremely expensive area so I don't think that is comparable as far as affordability and people with regular jobs. What is a regular job with regular pay? Obviously, people with a household income of $45,000 are not going to be able to afford a $700,000 house. Stockton, CA is about 54 miles to San Jose (the city they used in the video you directed me to) and houses there are much cheaper, some near $100,000 or about $200,000. The rents look affordable as well. Where I live (Atlanta), there are neighborhoods all over the place in terms of prices which can go well into millions of dollars depending where you live. It is not uncommon for people to commute an hour or more to their place of work. People live where they can afford.
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@darraghgibney705 You are incorrect: here is a ranking from worst to least worse: Countries with the Highest Total Gun Deaths (all causes) in 2019
Brazil (49436)
United States (37038)
Venezuela (28515)
Mexico (22116)
India (14710)
Colombia (13169)
Philippines (9267)
Guatemala (5980)
Brazil has the highest number of total gun deaths from all causes in the world, with 49,436 out of 250,227 worldwide. The United States has the second-highest number of gun deaths with 37,038.
That said, if one isolates the violent gun deaths and adjusts for population size by expressing the rate as the number of homicides per 100k people, the list changes significantly.
Countries with the Highest Rates of Violent Gun Death (Homicides) per 100k residents in 2019
El Salvador (36.78)
Venezuela (33.27)
Guatemala (29.06)
Colombia (26.36)
Brazil (21.93)
Bahamas (21.52)
Honduras (20.15)
U.S. Virgin Islands (19.40)
Puerto Rico (18.14)
Mexico (16.41)
Gun violence in Latin America is exceptionally high, due in no small part to the prevalence of criminal gangs and a vibrant drug trafficking industry. The Inter-American Development Bank released a report highlighting several critical factors in Latin American cities that contribute to increased gun violence, including economic deprivation, residential instability, family disruption, absence from school, the population’s age structure, and alcohol consumption.
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@darraghgibney705 Since 1991, Australia has experienced six school shootings. Two of these shootings, La Trobe University and Monash University, had one and two deaths respectively. The other four shootings did not have any deaths. The most recent school shooting in Australia was at Modbury High School in Adelaide on May 7, 2012, which resulted in no deaths and no injuries. Australia instituted strict gun control laws after a 1996 mass shooting (but not a school shooting) in which a gunman walked into a cafe in Port Arthur, Tasmania, and murdered 35 people and wounded another 23.
Brazil has had five school shootings since 2001, resulting in a total of 30 deaths. The deadliest of these shootings was the Realengo massacre, in which a former student killed 12 students inside the school before killing himself. In contrast, another event, known as the Medaneira School shooting, resulted in zero deaths. Canada has experienced a total of 19 school shootings between 1884 and 2016. The deadliest of these events was the Ecole Polytechnique massacre in Montreal, which resulted in 15 deaths, including that of the shooter. Several Canadian school shootings have resulted in a single death or no deaths at all. Between 1999 and 2011, China endured four school shootings resulting in four deaths, two of which were the perpetrators.
European countries have had their share of school shootings, although not as frequently as in the United States or Canada. These include eight in Germany since 1913, one in Lithuania (1925), one in Sweden (1961), three since 1967 in the United Kingdom (none after the 1996 massacre), three in Finland since 1989, two in the Netherlands (1999 and 2004), one in Denmark (1994), one in Hungary (2009), two in France (2012 and 2017), one in Estonia (2014), Spain (2015), at least five in Russia since 2014 (including events in May and Seotember 2021), one in Crimea (2018), and one in Poland (2019, no deaths).
Gun violence in Central American countries is extremely common. In Honduras, the homicide rate is many times the global average. Because of heavily armed gangs in Honduras, school shootings “are so common, they are subsumed quickly into the country's news cycle and barely register outside its borders.”. As such, the true number of school shootings in Honduras is unknown, but believed to be high. Mexico has experienced 17 reported school shootings since 2004. All of these incidents have resulted in zero to two deaths each. In each of the three shootings that had two deaths, one was the perpetrator. South Africa has experienced five school shootings since 1994, resulting in eight deaths in total.
Excluding China, several Asian nations have experienced school shootings. These include one in Taiwan (1962), two in Israel (1974 and 2008), one in Yemen (1997), one in the Philippines (1999), one in Thailand (2003), one in Lebanon (2007), one in India (2007), one in Azerbaijan (2009), and one in Pakistan. The "Peshawar siege" in 2014 was a Taliban attack that killed 145 (plus the gunmen), making it the deadliest school shooting in Asia
School shootings in other countries include on in Argentina (2004), one in New Zealand (1923), one in Nigeria (2013), and one in Kenya in 2015. The shooting in Kenya was a terrorist attack that killed 147 people and injured another 79.
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@carriebizz Really? The how come: here have been a number of notable shootings in Australia, in which the victims were family members.
In 2014, in Lockhart, New South Wales, a farmer shot his wife and three children before killing himself.
And in 2018, seven people—three adults and four children—were found dead at a property in the rural town of Osmington, Western Australia. The victims were found with gunshot wounds and two firearms were also recovered from the scene.
One incident in 2019 in which four people were killed in Darwin, Northern Territory, was initially reported by some media outlets as a mass shooting.
The man responsible, at trial, plead guilty to three murders and one case of manslaughter. The manslaughter conviction appears to have subsequently altered some of the reporting of the event as a mass shooting.
So, while there have been shootings in Australia in which four or more victims were killed, it can be argued that, under a stricter definition of 'mass shootings,' Australia has had no such cases since 1996.
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@UNIVERSAL-UR who is everyone? New budget plans from Republicans in Congress propose sweeping new tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans. Specifically, among other changes, the budget plans seek to extend the individual income and estate tax provisions of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. According to the U.S. Treasury Department, doing so would cost nearly $4.2 trillion over the next decade—with nearly 60 percent of the tax cuts, or about $2.5 trillion, going to the top 10 percent of taxpayers, who earn more than $228,060 annually. Meanwhile, the top 1 percent of earners—those making at least $743,247 annually—would see their taxes reduced by more than $1.24 trillion over the next decade, accounting for roughly 30 percent of the total tax cut.
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@bigvaxmeanie925 It's actually not taxpayer funded. The bill just saves them money. The new law will require retired postal employees to enroll in Medicare when eligible and repeals a previous mandate for the agency that forced it to cover health care costs up front and years in advance. Those two measures would save the USPS nearly $50 billion over the next decade, according to the House Oversight Committee.
The legislation also requires the Postal Service to create an online public dashboard with local and national delivery and performance data, as well as allow USPS to work with local governments to offer other helpful non-postal services.
“Today, we enshrined into law, our recognition that the Postal Service is fundamental to our economy, to our democracy, to our health, and the very sense of who we are as a nation,” Biden said to an audience at the White House filled with members of Congress from both sides of the aisle.
Unlike other government institutions, the US Postal Service must rely on revenue it collects from deliveries, not taxpayer funding, to support itself. This means that the agency, established in 1775, must operate without the usual financial benefits of being a federal agency while still having to bear those costs.
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So, you don't think the attorney is biased? The family paid for an independent autopsy which found nothing different than the original. It has also been determined that two of the drugs the attorney refers to as a date rape cocktail were Lauren's own prescription medication. It has also been determined her brother, who went to see her that night and who Lauren met outside, has a criminal history along with opioid drug abuse. Lauren's FB page references the sugar baby lifestyle and she captioned one of her IG photos as self destructive. The story of the police saying he was a nice guy so they let him go is according to what her brother said. There is no evidence that is what actually was said. For all anyone knows, her brother brought her the drugs and is trying to blame the date. It sounds like a pay for play date to me so why would he need to drug her and since her brother has a history of opioid use it is likely to me he would know where to get some fentanyl. As far as the attorney goes, he has his own legal problems: A Stamford attorney was arrested today and charged with Bribery of a Witness, Tampering with a Witness and Conspiracy to Commit Tampering with a Witness.
DARNELL D. CROSLAND, age 50, of 25 Grand Street, Apt. 202, Stamford, was arrested by Connecticut State Police on a warrant issued in conjunction with the Statewide Prosecution Bureau of the Office of the Chief State’s Attorney.
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@michaelgorilla9910 and there is another article which goes on to say "The autopsy report from Hennepin County Medical Examiner's Office concludes the cause of death was "cardiopulmonary arrest complicating law enforcement subdual, restraint, and neck compression." That conclusion, death due to heart failure, differs from the one reached by an independent examiner hired by the Floyd family; that report listed the cause of death as "asphyxiation from sustained pressure."
This medical examiner's report does not mention asphyxiation. However, according to prosecutors, in charging documents filed last week, early results "revealed no physical findings that support a diagnosis of traumatic asphyxia or strangulation."
The medical examiner's report also details blunt-force injuries to the skin of Floyd's head, face and upper lip, as well as the shoulders, hands and elbows and bruising of the wrists consistent with handcuffs.
Signed by Dr. Andrew M. Baker, it says Floyd had tested positive for the novel coronavirus on April 3. A post-mortem nasal swab confirmed that diagnosis. The report notes that because a positive result for coronavirus can persist for weeks after the disease has resolved, "the result most likely reflects asymptomatic but persistent ... positivity from previous infection."
In addition to fentanyl and methamphetamine, the toxicology report from the autopsy showed that Floyd also had cannabinoids in his system when he died.
Floyd also had heart disease, hypertension and sickle cell trait — a mostly asymptomatic form of the more serious sickle cell disease, an inherited blood disorder that primarily affects African Americans. There is also video of Floyd complaining that he can't breathe long before he was placed on the ground suggesting he was in medical distress. The asian cop's deposition indicates he called an ambulance before he was placed on the ground and says the ambulance was late and he called to elevate the urgency before he was placed on the ground and that Floyd was bleeding from the nose before he was placed on the ground which indicated medical distress. I'm not a health professional but this information is compelling and, if I were on the jury, would be the deciding factor for me in deciding what exactly anyone was guilty of. This reminds me of the case i of Eric Garner. You should also look up Tony Timpas death on youtube if you really want to be "woke" as they say.
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@zzzaras No ones trying to argue here but, like you said, you don't live here so you don't know as much about the US as you think you do and it appears they deleted my comment and I can't remember exactly what I said but I don't even know where you live so I don't understand how I could have said anything as though I knew anything about your country. Those cities you were at sounds like you were in downtown areas where the homeless tend to congregate, CA and New York are also two of the most expensive cities to live in the US. I live in a major US city and don't see any homeless. If you saw large congregations of homeless where you were when you were here, they weren't the greatest parts of town, otherwise the police would run them off. If you did your research,. you nwould know that the US has a homelessness rate of about .1% of the population of about 500 million, yet you seem to think it is everywhere. As far as access to housing, if you are talking about free to low income housing then yes not everybody can access it but there are programs that help people. People working, if they have a brain should live somewhere they can afford, it's that simple. Not everyplace is as expensive as New York or California. Rahte than addressing each of your complaints about how the US works, let me just say that the government spends about 1% of it's annual budget on foreign aid and 12% on its military. About 50% of the budget goes towards social prorams to help US citizens. There are scholarships, granst, loans to help people who want to go to college if they can't pay and not every college costs $80K. Health insurance pays healthcare costs so if I take a 2K ambulance ride I pay nothing. It costs next to nothing for doctor's visits or prescriptions so perhaps you are the one who needs to do research before acting before actting how things work in another country and putting it down.
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I'm also a federal employee of 28 years and I'm under the TSP plan. I have mixed feelings. I'm a relatively high graded employee making over 6 figures and when I retire, hopefully, after 30 years, my pension will only be about 3,000 a month before taxes. I will get the supplement of 75% of my estimated social security which will be anywhere from my guestimate of $1,000 to $1,500 a month. That's not as lot of money unless I had a home I had that was paid for which I don't. However, under the old retirement plan, I would gross about $90,000 a year. I'm not complaining because I have my own savings as well as my TSP to draw on if I fall short an any given month but I know many other feds that have no savings at all, even higher graded people than me (don't ask me why). That is why I see more and more feds working 40 years so they can max out their pension and collect SS.
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@tishwitch Not quite, did you even bother to read her FB page comments where she talks about copping drugs, getting high, getting drunk & fucked up, selling dope & being a sugar baby (aka hooker)? The coroner's report and the segment on The Real confirm that the promethazine and hydroxyzine were Lauren's prescription medication. Here is info about the family attorney :A Stamford attorney was arrested today and charged with Bribery of a Witness, Tampering with a Witness and Conspiracy to Commit Tampering with a Witness.
DARNELL D. CROSLAND, age 50, of 25 Grand Street, Apt. 202, Stamford, was arrested by Connecticut State Police on a warrant issued in conjunction with the Statewide Prosecution Bureau of the Office of the Chief State’s Attorney.
Crosland, an attorney with offices in Stamford, was released on $35,000 bond and is scheduled to appear in Stamford Superior Court, G.A. No. 1, on October 10, 2019.
He is charged with one count of Bribery of a Witness, one count of Tampering with a Witness and one count of Conspiracy to Commit Witness Tampering. All three offenses are class C felonies punishable by not less than one year nor more than 10 years in prison and a fine of up to $10,000 on each count. Her brother's name is Lakeem Jetter, google him and you will see he has a criminal history as well, including narcotic use.
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@sabin97 you obviously haven't been watching the testimony because several prosecution witnesses have agreed with the defense theory that he overdosed. The key thing you don't seem to understand is that overdosing and being asphyxiated or having a cardiopulmonary arrest would have the same symptoms. More importantly, the defense has pointed out that the prosecutions theory that he was "choked" to death as you put it can not be supported by anything on Floyd's body, i.e., no bruises, no injuries to his windways or anything at all, nothing was crushed, so where you are getting the information that as you say "...that his body showed all the signs of being choked to death." Is beyond me. Show me the video and time stamp and then I will believe you but I already know you can't do that. The medical experts are testifying that he died of cardio pulmonary arrest and asphyxiation which means, to the best of my knowledge, lack of oxygen and he stopped breathing, both of which could be caused by overdosing on fentanyl which prosecution witnesses have agreed to. Do you understand that overdosing on fentanyl causes the same reasons why he died according to the expert testimony? Do you understand that several prosecution witnesses have agreed to the defense theory that Floyd could have also overdosed? The video doesn't prove he was choked to death, the defense has already proven that no one knows exactly where Chauvin's knee was and that no one can say it was in the exact position for a long enough time to "choke" someone to death. Furthermore, the toxicology report shows Floyd had about 4 times the lethal dose of fentanyl in his system. There were fentanyl pills found in the car he was in that had his DNA and saliva on them plus an officer testified he had white powder around his mouth plus Floyd is on video on a previous arrest saying the same crap he was in this case all to buy time to swallow drugs which the cops said. When you swallow drugs or stick them up your butt they enter into your bloodstream much quicker and you have a higher chance of overdosing even if you had used the same level of drugs before.
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@faithhall830 well I'm not in that field I've just known some people who are/were. Unfortunately, I think it is safe to say that education, smarts, hard work and effort in any field is no guarantee of success, especially one where you get paid on commissions. There are many other factors such as timing - being in the right place at the right time for that one great opportunity, having the right connections or knowing the right people who can open doors for you, where you live, your personality, how well you get along with other people, etc. I would suggest doing your own research and not relying on youtubers. If you are in school now, talk to pharm companies and see about getting an internship and network online - perhaps there are groups of pharm sales reps online somewhere such as facebook or somewhere else.
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@stephencreates2764 do you still believe the lawyer's statements: A Stamford attorney was arrested today and charged with Bribery of a Witness, Tampering with a Witness and Conspiracy to Commit Tampering with a Witness.
DARNELL D. CROSLAND, age 50, of 25 Grand Street, Apt. 202, Stamford, was arrested by Connecticut State Police on a warrant issued in conjunction with the Statewide Prosecution Bureau of the Office of the Chief State’s Attorney.
Crosland, an attorney with offices in Stamford, was released on $35,000 bond and is scheduled to appear in Stamford Superior Court, G.A. No. 1, on October 10, 2019.
He is charged with one count of Bribery of a Witness, one count of Tampering with a Witness and one count of Conspiracy to Commit Witness Tampering. All three offenses are class C felonies punishable by not less than one year nor more than 10 years in prison and a fine of up to $10,000 on each count.
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@pyscez93 and why would I believe Roland Martin? I have seen absolutely no new updates on the news of this case in the last few weeks on the internet. One thing I could find on the internet is about this attorney who you think is so credible, not to mention the fact he claimed Lauren had a date rape cocktail in her system which later proved to include her own prescription drugs. If there are articles verifying this information other than what Roland Martin or her attorney says then please provide the links or the search words to find them. DARNELL D. CROSLAND, age 50, of 25 Grand Street, Apt. 202, Stamford, was arrested by Connecticut State Police on a warrant issued in conjunction with the Statewide Prosecution Bureau of the Office of the Chief State’s Attorney.
Crosland, an attorney with offices in Stamford, was released on $35,000 bond and is scheduled to appear in Stamford Superior Court, G.A. No. 1, on October 10, 2019.
He is charged with one count of Bribery of a Witness, one count of Tampering with a Witness and one count of Conspiracy to Commit Witness Tampering. All three offenses are class C felonies punishable by not less than one year nor more than 10 years in prison and a fine of up to $10,000 on each count
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