day laborers had lost their jobs. farmers were already facing one of the worst droughts in decades. so by late october, november, december, you were seeing mothers and grandmothers bringing in kids who were already severely malnourished because they had hadn t a proper meal at that point. and those are folks who would usually had things to get them through the winter. so they re bringing kids in trying to get life-saving treatment. and once they were stable enough, they re going back to rural villages or cities and home to empty cupboards. incredible. a massive humanitarian crisis unfold in weeks, something that we see in civil wars happen in a matter of years happen in a matter of days and weeks.
border. so that there is constant traffic back and forth with day laborers, people coming across to buy groceries, people who pick up vodka and cigarettes, among them, and go home. what we don t see is a lot of panic migration. in fact, instead of people fleeing, there is a lot of defiance. russia expected everyone to panic and flee to europe. but we all thought machine guns and weapons and cartridges. no one is afraid. no one will abandon their homes. no one will flee. you don t see panic amongst our residents. certainly people are asking questions. they are concerned about mass migration. that was their biggest concern. it s the leadership that is very concerned about what can happen here at the border. ukraine is really surrounded on three sides. in the event of an invasion, you
A 59-year-old general contractor was arrested for his alleged failure to pay a pair of day laborers for work and for his alleged failure to complete a construction job in Duarte for which he was paid.
A 59-year-old general contractor was arrested for his alleged failure to pay a pair of day laborers for work and for his alleged failure to complete a construction job in Duarte for which he was paid.
anthony: the seven train winds over and through queens like a main cable. every stop can seem like another country, another region. get off at roosevelt avenue and you re going to eat well for sure. example, this cart sells ecuadorian food. hernado, roast pork with sublime crispy skin straight from heaven. anthony: crunch, that s the sound of victory right there. anthony: morcilla, blood sausage with potato cakes. anthony: oh, man, that s looking really good. anthony: this is a working-class neighborhood with people coming to and from work. shawn: yeah. anthony: how often do you think the average person eats at one of these things? shawn: a lot of the day laborers, a lot of the men that are here that might live in these tiny apartments with these tiny shared kitchens, they can t cook. anthony: right. shawn: they re not going to go into the restaurants. they don t have time for that. so it s for them it might be