5 Burst results for "Local Homeowners Association"

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"local homeowners association" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"Ever since the lockdowns in their closure started they've suffered more than i've ever seen in my nine years of private practice. He said in a panel discussing the reopening of of schools. He gave an example of a local homeowners association deciding to close their private park because they noticed that children are playing on the grass. Without wearing a mask. Think we cover that surround. Free talk live. This was dangerous because well children were rolling around on the grass. they're also touching it and therefore could potentially spread or pick up. The virus from the grass is way worse things that are normally in the ground then a cold they could potentially spread pick up the virus from the grass and kill their grandparents when they go home with the virus can sign a. I won't go around old people waiver if this is actually the problem and i'm gonna kill. This guy is grandparents that just like promise not to go around them and a quick mentioned on the playing in the grass thing to like. Okay yes it does Potentially contain pathogens has ever. It also contains the bacteria that are necessary for your microbiome children's specifically do not get that stuff in their mouths and in their digestive tracts they won't be able to digest their food. It will cause them all sorts of of medical problems throughout their life including allergies. Well and there is a natural anxiety that people feel when you point out that where they are what they are. Trusting is not worthy of the trust..

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"local homeowners association" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"Decide are necessary. Perhaps the most important point mentioned by dr mcdonald is lasting negative effect. This mass paranoia will have on future generations. Dr macdonald has witnessed the highest increase of psychiatric issues among his young patients. Ever since the lockdowns in their closure started they've suffered more than i've ever seen in my nine years of private practice. He said in a panel discussing the reopening of of schools. He gave an example of a local homeowners association deciding to close their private park because they noticed that children are playing on the grass. Without wearing a mask. I think we cover that surround. Free talk live. This was dangerous because well children were rolling around on the grass. they're also touching it and therefore could potentially spread or pick up. The virus from the grass is way worse things that are normally in the ground then a cold they could potentially spread pick up the virus from the grass and kill their grandparents. Go home with the virus. Like just sign a. I won't go around old people waiver. Actually the problem. And i'm gonna kill this guy is grandparent's badges like promise not to go around them and a quick mentioned on the playing in the grass thing to like. Okay yes it does Potentially contain some pathogens however it also contains the bacteria that are necessary for your microbiome children's specifically do not get that stuff in their mouths and in their digestive tracts they won't be able to digest their food it will cause them all sorts of of medical problems throughout their life including allergies. If you take children and put them in a bubble where nothing ever bad gets into right. They're not gonna build your immune system and they're going to be malfunctioning adults. Every time they're out of that bubble and not just not just won't build their immune system but human beings cannot on our own digest. Our food we rely on bacteria to do the lion's share of the work. And if we don't get that helpful bacteria.

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"local homeowners association" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"It's free talk live. Talk radio that you control six zero three two eight three sixty one. Sixty is the columbine that six zero three two eight. Three six point six zero wrapping up this article real quick. Perhaps the most important point mitcham by dr mcdonald is the lasting negative effect. This mass paranoia will have on future generations. He is witnessed the highest increase of psychiatric issues among his young patients. Ever since the lockdown cloture started they suffer more than i've seen in my eight nine years of practice. He started young people having a psych psych. We'll he's calling psychosis over Fear of contracting covid nineteen disease that doesn't appear to affect young people terribly. He gave an example of local homeowners associations decision to close their private park because they noticed it children. We're playing on the grass without wearing a mask. This was dangerous because while their children were rolling around on the grass there also touching it and therefore it could potentially spread or pick up the virus from the grass and killed their grandparents when they go home with the virus because of this the park had to be closed in the grass had to be disinfected in order to get rid of the virus while imagine a challenge being told they can't play outside because they might kill grandpa if they did and imagine the long term consequences of that to that child psychology psychology. Let's go to the phones. We got mark watson calling mark. You're on free talk live. Hey hey mark. How are you doing tonight on your mind. Hey studio twenty. Four hour is my channel. That's my internet affiliate for and we're doing the broadcast free talk live right now and when i heard you talk about This whole psychosis and basically gas citing. It occurred to me. I've done the numbers on this. And i do have to finish for the end of december the numbers for december out. But i created a spreadsheet And the spreadsheet covers. The numbers of all deaths all causes the united states relative to the us population year over year. Two thousand eight till the end of november of twenty twenty. What did you find and So i put that in the free talk live social and what i found was number dot com. That's correct that's media when you look at it. Anyone is free to join is a mastodon platform. It's social dot freetalklive dot com signing up a super quick super easy and it's decentralized so you don't have a corporate overlord waiting with a sword of damocles to chop your head off go ahead right so what i did is i thought that. So you guys can see what i'm seeing at the same time Basically the numbers show the year over year. And what you look at as you see. The percentages are roughly the same within a few points. Here and there your every year. Us stuff Percent us deaths and the change in your population People that more people didn't die at twenty twenty than they do every year. Roughly it's within a hundred percent hundred percent hundred percent. You know that kinda thing Every year so it's roughly the same. What we are noticing that. What's your username on. Social dot freetalklive dot com. Oh yes it's a studio eighty four twenty four l. art in studio okay. I so i've been looking at these numbers and there's a lot of deaths In two thousand. And twenty. And i'm looking at the deaths in two thousand nineteen and you know i haven't done a graph to show them but it doesn't it looks by just looking at it. There's a lot more people that died in twenty twenty than died in two thousand nine hundred and i don't. I don't see a significant rise in population in that timeframe. So what you should look at is when when you look at dozen all the way forward you see that some years we have you know. Say your thirteen thousand some years. You have so many three thousand and some years. You have sixty nine thousand. It kind of varies your thousand. What is that an average per week. No what i'm showing is. If you look at my chart the the second to last call or not looking at your chart radio is we need you to give us the information. That is air chart so in twenty twenty based on the numbers up to the end of november. Seventy three thousand five hundred and thirty nine People died off compared to the previous year. Seventy three thousand in tied. Yes somebody three thousand. Five hundred thirty. Three people died compared like for example in nineteen. It was thirteen thousand. Three hundred eighty five died relatively. Yes okay so the dead. Three didn't look the number of people dying basically going up each year is what you're saying some years it goes up by smaller amounts. Then well actually actually. I'm not saying that because of the year. Every year change fluctuates. But what i am saying. Is that the chart saw the percentages of change in your population. That percentage of us debts While there is a slight increase the percentage when you get down to it year every year. Uss is anywhere between one hundred to one hundred and two hundred three percent. Give or take When you look at it. So i'm i'm looking at your numbers. I'm looking at the websites that you reference. And i i'm just gonna go inside. Go ahead and say this. I think you've misrepresented these numbers like i don't know if you do it on purpose. I don't think you're doing it on purpose. I don't believe that but you're not interpreting these numbers the way i do by looking at them. Well i can tell you. December numbers are out in this number. This chart doesn't reflect december numbers for twenty twenty so as of the end of november. I had i had total. Us does end of november at under three million. Well i've got some says at least three hundred and it's coming to us from november. At least three hundred thirty four thousand more people have died so far in two thousand twenty two thousand and nineteen. That sounds about right. Three hundred and twenty nine total. Us population three percent. The change in us population From twenty twenty twenty team was a million six adversaries was a just a just over one. Hundred percents yeah. I'll take this. You differs off now following social dot freetalklive dot com. That's social dot. Freetalklive dot com. So that i can. I want to know too. You know. I will check that out at some point..

Encyclopedia Womannica
Storytellers: Lorraine Hansberry
"Today's storyteller was a playwright and activist. Who stories centered. African american working class families despite tragically short career. She became the first black woman to have a play produced on broadway half a century later her work remains one of the most celebrated snapshots of black struggles and black joy. Here's the story of lorraine hands berry lorraine hands berry was born on may nineteenth nineteen thirty on the south side of chicago. Her father carl. Augustus was a prominent figure. Within the city's black community having founded one of the first african american banks growing up lorraine and her three older siblings played host to a number of famous people including langston hughes. Wabc boys duke ellington and olympic gold. Medalist jesse owens. Despite their middle class status and cultural connections the hands berries were still subject to chicago's deeply ingrained. Housing segregation agreements known as restrictive covenants were widespread throughout the city. White property owners could collectively agree not to sell to african americans. This practice created a ghetto known as the black belt which ran through the south side when lorraine was eight years old. Her father secretly bought a home. In one of the so-called restricted heads in nineteen thirty seven when the family moved in a white mob attacked a brick was thrown through the window narrowly missing lorraine the local homeowners association filed an injunction for the hands berries to vacate lorraine her siblings were chased spat and beaten during their walks to and from school the supreme court of illinois doubled down on the legality of the restrictive covenant. And the hands. Berries were forced out of their home eventually the. Us supreme court overruled this ruling on a technicality. Thirty blocks subsequently opened up to black families across the south side while this ruling and the hands fight did not outlaw restrictive covenants. It did signal. The beginning of the end for the practice lorraine attended. Chicago's englewood high school where she became interested in theatre. She initially attended the university of wisconsin. Where she cut her teeth with the communist party but left after two years in one thousand nine hundred fifty lorraine moved to new york to be a writer by nineteen fifty one lorraine had found a home in harlem and began socializing with many of the great thinkers who had once visited her family back in chicago. She started writing for paul robeson freedom a progressive newspaper at a protest against racial discrimination at new york university lorraine met robert number off a jewish writer. They married at her family home in chicago. In nineteen fifty three in nineteen. Six robert co wrote the hit song. Cindy oh cindy it's prophets allowed lorraine to stop working to focus on writing. She began developing a play that she initially called. The crystal stair langston hughes poem mother to son she would later changed the name to a raisin in the sun. This too was from a langston hughes poem called harlem. What happens to a dream deferred. Does it dry up like a raisin in the sun or faster like a sore and then run a raisin in the sun centers on a black working class family in chicago south side as they try to improve their financial situation. The patriarch of the family has died and a ten thousand dollar insurance payout is imminent they the money to buy a house in the cheaper all white neighborhood nearby to they use it to invest in a liquor store and education lorraine based many of the characters on the families who rented from her father and with whom she attended high school the cast safer one character was entirely black lorraine was in her twenties and the play itself dealt with racism life in chicago's black belt and the pain of assimilation into white culture topics that were considered risky for the predominantly white theater. Going crowd it took over a year to raise enough money to put the play up. When it debuted in nineteen fifty-nine a raisin in the sun was the first play written by a black woman to be produced on broadway and the first to be led by an african american director lorraine was twenty nine years old. The play was an almost instant. Hit the new york drama critics circle named it. The best play of the year just five months after its broadway debut arisen in the son of in london's west end in nineteen sixty one. A film starring much of the original cast was released and several of the actors received golden globe. Nominations perhaps the most important element of the play success was that entailing box stories. Lorraine also make theater accessible and previously unimaginable ways as the writer. James baldwin noted. I had never in my life seen so many black people in the theater and the reason was that never before in the entire history of the american theatre had so much of the truth of black people's lives and seen on the stage. Black people had ignored the theatre because the theatre had always ignored them lorraine would go on to finish in stage. Just one other. Play the sign in sidney bruce. Deans window about a jewish intellectual the play which explored themes of homosexuality and the bohemian lifestyle. Debuted to mixed reviews in nineteen sixty four. It ran for just over one hundred performances closing on january twelfth. Nineteen sixty five. That's same day. Lorraine hanbury died of pancreatic cancer. She was thirty four years old. After lorraine's death. Her ex husband robert had several of her plays produced posthumously to be young gifted and black became an autobiographical work. Drawing on lorraine's letters interviews and journal entries the title came from a nineteen sixty four speech of lorraine's when she spoke to the winners of a united negro fund writing competition. She said speech though. It be thrilling marvellous thing to be merely young and gifted in such times it is doubly so w dynamic to be young gifted and black

Newsradio 600 KOGO
"local homeowners association" Discussed on Newsradio 600 KOGO
"There are a number of requirements you need to meet, including already have A clear re opening plan once the state allows businesses to reopen. Now, after you meet the requirements, businesses will then be scored based on the industry that have been most impacted by the pandemic. They'll look at the geographic location and where they fall in terms of underserved small business groups that's based on neighborhoods if It was a military connection, or if they're run by minorities. The deadline to applying for this specific opportunity is January 8th. That's Marie Cornell. With 10 news reporting. There are several laws taking effect in 2021 that you need to know about one new law requires an investigation by the state attorney general. Any time police kill an unarmed civilian. Others allow more oversight of sheriffs and require evaluations of peace officers to include any racial bias. Another bill signed into law says homeowners in fire prone areas must further reduced vegetation within 100 FT. Of structures. And yet another, says employers. Most quickly notify workers of potential coronavirus exposure. Phil Farrar, KOGO News. Parts of Torrey Pines State Beach are still blocked after a bluff collapsed last week, a bystander caught Thursday's collapse and posted a video to Social media. No one was hurt in the collapse, and people were asked to stay clear of the bluffs over the weekend. State Park officials say it could take a week before tides wash away All the debris bluff collapses can be caused by heavy rain and are common in the North County. Three women were killed in 2019 when a bluff collapsed in Encinitas, prompting their families to file a lawsuit against the city state and local homeowners Association. Joshua will lift in Cocoa News A British judge rules on the U. S request to extradite Wikileaks founder Julian Assange on from the U. K. A judge here in London ruling Julian Assan should not be extradited to the United States. U. S. Prosecutors want him to face spying charges for his websites work publishing Secret American files, But judge Vanessa operator says there's two higher risk that a songs would kill himself in U. S custody. She calls him a depressed and sometimes despairing man. The U. S government says it will appeal the decision that Simon Owen reporting from London Alex Trebek's final five episodes of Jeopardy Air this week. Starting tonight, Trebek announced he was battling patriotic pancreatic cancer in March of 2019, but continued to shoot episodes of the quiz show Up until his death last November..