set aside. i wondered why it should be like that. we re all trying to get out. i accidentally actually it was an accident on my part went to the ukrainian side. instantly they told me to go to my side. do you think that there was a level of bias or a level of discrimination based on skin color as to who was being treated better at the border, who was being you know, getting preferential treatment in terms of admittance? if you were ukrainian, for instance, or maybe another nationality, but you were white, it s almost as though you got a fast track to the front of the gate. growing up in nigeria, growing up in an all-black country, having never experienced any racism ever before, did you understand what was happening and why you were being set aside? i i cried twice.
who was being you know, getting preferential treatment in term of admittance? issue ukrainian for instance or being another nationality, but you were white. it s almost as though you were fast tracked to the front of the gate. growing up in snigeria, growing up in an all black country, having never experienced any racism before did you understand what was happening, and why you were being set aside? i cried twice. i cried when i was in front and the border officials kept screaming, go back, go back. i was just so tired, and i was exhausted, and i cried. i cried a whole lot because i was cold and i did not understand what was going on. i wanted to give up several times but i kept reminding myself of my mom. reporter: eventually they managed to pass into neighboring romania. once they arrived at the
WOONSOCKET – Growing up in southern California, Deborah Krieger, exhibit and program coordinator at the Museum of Work and Culture, said she learned about Japanese internment in great detail while
wrongdoing are incredibly common, surfacing in every corner of this country. in one case, reported in usa today s investigation, even forcible admittance to a psychiatric ward. the issue is endemic, and any officer on the fence about reporting malfeasance can see the pattern. whistle-blowers get punished, and those who remain in the wall of silence gets prays and accolades. it is what causes activists to call policing unsalvageable as an institution. we re told it s a few bad apples, but as the saying goes, one bad apple spoils the whole bunch. so to all the good officers out there, keep protecting and serving, hold your heads high and report misconduct when you