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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



Wednesday, October 23, 2019

'I Am Back': How Bernie Sanders' Revolution Is Proving Resilient





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22 October 19
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'I Am Back': How Bernie Sanders' Revolution Is Proving Resilient
Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders at a campaign rally in Queensbridge Park in New York on Saturday. (photo: Kena Betancur/Getty Images)
Asma Khalid, NPR
Khalid writes: "About three weeks ago, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders had a heart attack that threw his campaign into question. But now, it's more apparent than perhaps at any point in this presidential race that the 78-year-old white-haired politician and his revolution will remain a powerful force in the Democratic primary."
READ MORE


Trump is accused of withholding foreign aid to get dirt on Joe Biden. (photo: Hilary Swift/NYT)
Trump is accused of withholding foreign aid to get dirt on Joe Biden. (photo: Hilary Swift/NYT)

Trump Foolishly Compares Impeachment Inquiry to a Lynching: 'Republicans Must Remember What They Are Witnessing Here'
Jay Connor, The Root
Connor writes: "Since the conclusion of the Civil War, lynching has been one of the country's most prominent manifestations of racialized violence."
READ MORE

Former president Jimmy Carter. (photo: Jack Gruber/USA TODAY)
Former president Jimmy Carter. (photo: Jack Gruber/USA TODAY)

Jimmy Carter Fractures Pelvis, Is Hospitalized After Fall
Brittany Shammas, The Washington Post
Shammas writes: "Jimmy Carter, the longest-living former U.S. president, has been hospitalized with a pelvic fracture after falling Monday evening at his Georgia home, the Carter Center said."
READ MORE

Madison West High School senior Noah Anderson, 17, president of the school's Black Student Union and son of the school's recently fired security guard Marlon Anderson, leads a rally in support of his father outside the school in Madison on Friday. (photo: John Hart/Wisconsin State Journal)
Madison West High School senior Noah Anderson, 17, president of the school's Black Student Union and son of the school's recently fired security guard Marlon Anderson, leads a rally in support of his father outside the school in Madison on Friday. (photo: John Hart/Wisconsin State Journal)

Madison High School Security Guard Who Was Fired for Telling Student Not to Use N-Word Says He Has His Job Back
Molly Beck, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Beck writes: "A high school security guard in Madison got his job back Monday after outrage over his termination spread across the country, prompting school district officials to overturn their decision to fire him for saying the N-word while urging a student not to call him the racial slur. "
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World-Check's promotional material states that 49 of the world's largest 50 banks use its database. (photo: Al Jazeera)
World-Check's promotional material states that 49 of the world's largest 50 banks use its database. (photo: Al Jazeera)

Blacklist: Many Muslims Listed by World-Check Without Evidence
Al Jazeera
Excerpt: "Numerous Muslim individuals and institutions have been placed on an influential database as potential risks without evidence of wrongdoing, Al Jazeera's analysis of the list has revealed."
READ MORE

Military police shoot demonstrators during a protest against high living costs in Concepcion, Chile, October 21, 2019. (photo: Reuters)
Military police shoot demonstrators during a protest against high living costs in Concepcion, Chile, October 21, 2019. (photo: Reuters)

Chile: State Violence Leads to 1,420 Arrests and 11 Deaths
teleSUR
Excerpt: "Chile's National Institute of Human Rights (NHRI) presented on Monday night the latest statistics of detainees and injured since the social protests began on October 17th. According to its report, there have been 1,420 arrests and 84 people wounded by gunfire so far."

EXCERPT:
"The official death toll, which we have to regret in these last two days, is three dead on Saturday and eight on Sunday," the Metropolitan Region mayor Karla Rubilar confirmed.
"While the world is a silent accomplice of the murderer Sebastian Piñera, the Chilean people live through repression and human rights violations."


An Exxon station in Florida remains open despite losing its roof during Hurricane Katrina on Aug. 29, 2005. (photo: Master Sgt. Shaun Withers/Florida Air National Guard)
An Exxon station in Florida remains open despite losing its roof during Hurricane Katrina on Aug. 29, 2005. (photo: Master Sgt. Shaun Withers/Florida Air National Guard)

Exxon Goes on Trial for Lying About the Climate Crisis
Jordan Davidson, EcoWatch
Davidson writes: "The country's largest fossil fuel company goes on trial today to face charges that it lied to investors about the safety of its assets in the face of the climate crisis and potential legislation to fight it, as the AP reported.

EXCERPT:
"Regardless of the outcome [of the New York case] the reality that is clear and not inescapable is that the future of Exxon and [other fossil fuel] companies is filled with litigation and it's only going to grow," said Muffet to the BBC.










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