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Middleboro Review 2

NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Tuesday, June 25, 2019

Paul Krugman | Notes on Excessive Wealth Disorder





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25 June 19

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Paul Krugman | Notes on Excessive Wealth Disorder 
People waiting in line at a job fair in Bloomington, Minn., in 2011. (photo: Craig Lassig/NYT)
Paul Krugman, The New York Times
Krugman writes: "In a couple of days I'm going to be participating in an Economic Policy Institute conference on 'excessive wealth disorder' - the problems and dangers created by extreme concentration of income and wealth at the top."
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Iran denies responsibility for attacks on two tankers in the Gulf of Oman. (photo: AP)
Iran denies responsibility for attacks on two tankers in the Gulf of Oman. (photo: AP)

US Proposes Tanker Protection Force in Wake of Gulf Attacks
Julian Borger and Patrick Wintour, Guardian UK
Excerpt: "The US is to propose an international maritime Gulf protection force, its special envoy on Iran has said, as the Trump administration prepared to announce fresh economic sanctions on Tehran."
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Satsuki Ina (right) and other Japanese Americans who were held in an internment camp as a child, hold photos of themselves, during a protest Saturday at Fort Sill. (photo: J. Pat Carter/Getty Images)
Satsuki Ina (right) and other Japanese Americans who were held in an internment camp as a child, hold photos of themselves, during a protest Saturday at Fort Sill. (photo: J. Pat Carter/Getty Images)

Japanese-American Internment Survivors Protest Plan to Jail Migrant Kids at Fort Sill, a WWII Camp
Democracy Now!
Excerpt: "What happened was that there was an activation and a unification of the outrage of a generation of children that were incarcerated in U.S. concentration camps. They found their voices, and they are coming forward into the public to defend children."
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E. Jean Carroll in New York on Sunday. She told CNN: 'I want women to know I did not stand there, I did not freeze, I was not paralysed. No, I fought.' (photo: Craig Ruttle/AP)
E. Jean Carroll in New York on Sunday. She told CNN: 'I want women to know I did not stand there, I did not freeze, I was not paralysed. No, I fought.' (photo: Craig Ruttle/AP)


Trump Sexual Assault Accuser E. Jean Carroll Considers Police Complaint
Ed Pilkington, Guardian UK
Pilkington writes: "E Jean Carroll, the celebrated advice columnist who has accused Donald Trump of sexually assaulting her in the mid-1990s, has said she is considering bringing a complaint to the New York police department."
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The Rio Grande. (photo: John Moore/Getty Images)
The Rio Grande. (photo: John Moore/Getty Images)

Three Children, Young Woman Found Dead Near US-Mexico Border
Paul Blest, Splinter
Blest writes: "America’s horrific immigration policy has a body count, and it keeps piling up."
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The Women's World Cup. (photo: Getty Images)
The Women's World Cup. (photo: Getty Images)

African Teams Showed Advancement at the Women's World Cup. The Way Media Talked About Them Didn't.
Lindsay Gibbs, ThinkProgress
Gibbs writes: "This Women’s World Cup was a historic one for African football: For the first time ever, two African teams, Cameroon and Nigeria, advanced to the knockout rounds. South Africa also qualified for the tournament for the first time, but did not advance outside of the group stages."
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Ken Holbrook of the Maidu Summit Consortium visits Yellow Creek in the Humbug Valley in Plumas County. (photo: Michael Macor/SF Chronicle)
Ken Holbrook of the Maidu Summit Consortium visits Yellow Creek in the Humbug Valley in Plumas County. (photo: Michael Macor/SF Chronicle)

PG&E Owns Land Across California. What Will Happen to It?
Spencer Silva, The San Francisco Chronicle
Silva writes: "If Ken Holbrook has his way, the Humbug Valley, a sprawling tract of alpine meadow high in the northern Sierra, will become California’s first American Indian tribal cultural park. That distinction doesn't yet exist, but it would apply to tribal land open for public recreation."
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