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And they get robbed a lot, because people know they don't have bank accounts.
Someone should've hit him in the head with a can of beer
Someone should've hit him in the head with a can of beer
Some West African people aren't opposed to the idea of a “strong man”. These people have an archetype of what they look for as a leader. Think of them politically as trout or carp. They are a “hardy” species.South Florida spics love the strong cracker image.
I had a guy I went to HS with that became a cop and went to prison because he was stealing drugs out of evidence and selling them on the streets.Dude who I wrmt to college went Became a copy. His dumb ass got caught taking cash from Hispanics on traffics stops because he know they got paid in cash on Fridays. They did a sting on him with marked money and he got caught red handed.
Lost his job, gor probation but caught another case transporting cartel cash for bail bonds company that was helping cartels launder money.
For Reference: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/01/12/...-environmental-racism-alabama-black-belt.html![]()
Trump Announces ‘Termination’ of ‘Illegal DEI’ Settlement Over Raw Sewage in Poor, Majority-Black Alabama Communities - Inside Climate News
The Trump administration announced Friday that it was terminating a historic settlement aimed at improving wastewater treatment services for Alabamians in majority-Black communities harmed by raw sewage, calling the agreement an “illegal DEI and environmental justice policy.” The announcement...insideclimatenews.org
The Trump administration announced Friday that it was terminating a historic settlement aimed at improving wastewater treatment services for Alabamians in majority-Black communities harmed by raw sewage, calling the agreement an “illegal DEI and environmental justice policy.”
The announcement came two years after the departments of Justice and Health and Human Services under the Biden administration negotiated the settlement with Alabama officials. It represented the first time in U.S. history that federal civil rights laws had been used to alleviate an environmental injustice.
Catherine Coleman Flowers, a Lowndes County native whose civil rights complaint led to the 2023 settlement, has fought for years to help improve the lives of residents of the Alabama Black Belt. The Trump administration, in its announcement, said Lowndes County had been made a “target.”