So carjacking is up in Portland to the surprise of no one. Stop prosecuting car theft and you get lots of car theft. Some blame the lack of police. They are catching the perps then letting them go. Decline is a choice and the people of Portland and Seattle have chosen poorly.
Democracy isn't going to die in darkness on the Washington Post's watch
Love #MyKristi.
But she needs to lay off the fucking Botox. Jesus Christ. How do these balloon-faced celebrities and public personas not see the absurdity of their own faces?
The school district says the problem is urgent. So, the solution is no school. F'ing brilliant. Not so urgent as to suspend the trouble makers for three weeks. What we clearly need is less discipline and more money. No escape for good students and their parents. Just accommodate the lowest common denominator.
The school district says the problem is urgent. So, the solution is no school. F'ing brilliant. Not so urgent as to suspend the trouble makers for three weeks. What we clearly need is less discipline and more money. No escape for good students and their parents. Just accommodate the lowest common denominator.
The morons in charge of our children will always be concerned with PC equity before anything else. Everyone has to go or no one goes. Insanity. If you have a disruptive person at work, does everyone just go home? This is what these kids are learning. They've handed control over to the worst elements and it appears they are blind to it.
The school district says the problem is urgent. So, the solution is no school. F'ing brilliant. Not so urgent as to suspend the trouble makers for three weeks. What we clearly need is less discipline and more money. No escape for good students and their parents. Just accommodate the lowest common denominator.
The morons in charge of our children will always be concerned with PC equity before anything else. Everyone has to go or no one goes. Insanity. If you have a disruptive person at work, does everyone just go home? This is what these kids are learning. They've handed control over to the worst elements and it appears they are blind to it.
Killing advanced classes for smart kids is the ultimate example of this societal suicide. Anything that demonstrates the hard work or built-in intelligence of kids gets trashed and cancelled as racist and exclusive. Begs the question, how good do you want your doctor to be? Excellent or Mediocre?
Patrick Chavis, 50, a former Los Angeles area physician whose medical career was cited by both supporters and opponents of affirmative action as evidence for their case, was killed July 23 in Los Angeles.
A spokesman for the Los Angeles County sheriff's homicide office said Dr. Chavis was shot during a carjacking. The spokesman said Dr. Chavis was leaving a store and entering his car when three men attempted to take his car and shot him.
Dr. Chavis received a degree of fame through the quest of Allan Bakke to gain admission to the medical school at the University of California-Davis in the 1970s. The medical school rejected the application of Bakke, who was white, but accepted five black applicants, including Dr. Chavis, who had lower test scores and lower college grades than Bakke. The five won admission under a special racial-preference quota.
Bakke sued. What became a landmark case, Bakke v. Regents of the Board of the University of California, reached the U.S. Supreme Court, where the school's affirmative action program was struck down in 1978. The court maintained that while an applicant's race could be used as an admissions factor, it could not be the only factor. Bakke was admitted to the school and later graduated, as did Dr. Chavis.
There it might all have ended but for the partisans [more of that honest conversation on race that the left hates] on both sides of the affirmative action issue. By 1995, Bakke was an anesthesiologist in Rochester, Minn., and Dr. Chavis was an obstetrician-gynecologist in an inner-city section of Los Angeles where his patients were largely poor women of color.
Nicholas Lemann, in the New York Times Magazine, Tom Hayden, in the Nation magazine, and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.), speaking before a Senate committee, all called attention to the careers of the two medical school graduates. They pointed out that while Dr. Chavis was helping the poor of California, Bakke made his practice among much wealthier, largely white patients in the upper Midwest.
They suggested that the state of California was being repaid much higher dividends on the education it had given the poor California black student than by Bakke.
Then, it all started to go wrong for Dr. Chavis. As reported by conservative commentators as well as by such newspapers as The Washington Post and the Boston Globe, Dr. Chavis lost his medical license in 1997. He had switched his practice from ob-gyn to cosmetic surgery, including liposuction, areas in which he met with difficulties and was accused of malpractice.
An administrative law judge found Dr. Chavis guilty of gross negligence and incompetence in the treatment of three women, one of whom died, and the California medical board suspended his license, saying he had an "inability to perform some of the most basic duties required of a physician."
They suggested that the state of California was being repaid much higher dividends on the education it had given the poor California black student than by Bakke.
Then, it all started to go wrong for Dr. Chavis [and his patients]. As reported by conservative commentators as well as by such newspapers as The Washington Post and the Boston Globe, Dr. Chavis lost his medical license in 1997. He had switched his practice from ob-gyn to cosmetic surgery, including liposuction, areas in which he met with difficulties and was accused of malpractice.
An administrative law judge found Dr. Chavis guilty of gross negligence and incompetence in the treatment of three women, one of whom died, and the California medical board suspended his license, saying he had an "inability to perform some of the most basic duties required of a physician."
Comments
As long as the 10% for the Big Guy keeps flowing, old friend or not. China owns Joey but they let him bluster because they know Americans are stupid.
Democracy isn't going to die in darkness on the Washington Post's watch
But she needs to lay off the fucking Botox. Jesus Christ. How do these balloon-faced celebrities and public personas not see the absurdity of their own faces?
https://enewspo.oregonlive.com/data/10301/reader/reader.html?t=1637179434975#!preferred/0/package/10301/pub/18334/page/6/alb/558185
Patrick Chavis, 50, a former Los Angeles area physician whose medical career was cited by both supporters and opponents of affirmative action as evidence for their case, was killed July 23 in Los Angeles.
A spokesman for the Los Angeles County sheriff's homicide office said Dr. Chavis was shot during a carjacking. The spokesman said Dr. Chavis was leaving a store and entering his car when three men attempted to take his car and shot him.
Dr. Chavis received a degree of fame through the quest of Allan Bakke to gain admission to the medical school at the University of California-Davis in the 1970s. The medical school rejected the application of Bakke, who was white, but accepted five black applicants, including Dr. Chavis, who had lower test scores and lower college grades than Bakke. The five won admission under a special racial-preference quota.
Bakke sued. What became a landmark case, Bakke v. Regents of the Board of the University of California, reached the U.S. Supreme Court, where the school's affirmative action program was struck down in 1978. The court maintained that while an applicant's race could be used as an admissions factor, it could not be the only factor. Bakke was admitted to the school and later graduated, as did Dr. Chavis.
There it might all have ended but for the partisans [more of that honest conversation on race that the left hates] on both sides of the affirmative action issue. By 1995, Bakke was an anesthesiologist in Rochester, Minn., and Dr. Chavis was an obstetrician-gynecologist in an inner-city section of Los Angeles where his patients were largely poor women of color.
Nicholas Lemann, in the New York Times Magazine, Tom Hayden, in the Nation magazine, and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.), speaking before a Senate committee, all called attention to the careers of the two medical school graduates. They pointed out that while Dr. Chavis was helping the poor of California, Bakke made his practice among much wealthier, largely white patients in the upper Midwest.
They suggested that the state of California was being repaid much higher dividends on the education it had given the poor California black student than by Bakke.
Then, it all started to go wrong for Dr. Chavis. As reported by conservative commentators as well as by such newspapers as The Washington Post and the Boston Globe, Dr. Chavis lost his medical license in 1997. He had switched his practice from ob-gyn to cosmetic surgery, including liposuction, areas in which he met with difficulties and was accused of malpractice.
An administrative law judge found Dr. Chavis guilty of gross negligence and incompetence in the treatment of three women, one of whom died, and the California medical board suspended his license, saying he had an "inability to perform some of the most basic duties required of a physician."
They suggested that the state of California was being repaid much higher dividends on the education it had given the poor California black student than by Bakke.
Then, it all started to go wrong for Dr. Chavis [and his patients]. As reported by conservative commentators as well as by such newspapers as The Washington Post and the Boston Globe, Dr. Chavis lost his medical license in 1997. He had switched his practice from ob-gyn to cosmetic surgery, including liposuction, areas in which he met with difficulties and was accused of malpractice.
An administrative law judge found Dr. Chavis guilty of gross negligence and incompetence in the treatment of three women, one of whom died, and the California medical board suspended his license, saying he had an "inability to perform some of the most basic duties required of a physician."
Shorten the posts, gents. Copy Pasta the good parts.
Nobody is reading this on a phone.