Starting in the 1960s with the group through to her efforts through the womens liberation and over several decades now her advocacy for the rights and recognition. The Freedom Prize for the lifetime achievement. [applause] roxannes latest work which we are here to talk about this evening examines the culture in the United States and looks hard at what roxanne describes as the racist roots. This view of the Second Amendment links it to the desire of citizens of a new nation to protect themselves from a tyrannical government while Roxanne Petraeus at a little differently. She portrays it as an instrument of White Nationalism, racial dominance and violent social control. She argues the support for the right to keep and bear arms was intended to facilitate the genocide of native americans and enable shareholders to control their human property. This past roxanne goes on to say he has evolved into the gun violence and in the more recent kinds of violence manifested in Mass Shootings at home
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PENDLETON â In the wake of a bleak week, the administrators of Sunridge Middle School donned costumes.
Sunridge Principal Dave Williams became an elf, Jingles McKringle-Berry, and Assistant Principal Jared Tesch turned into Santa Claus as they headed out into the community to deliver stockings filled with gifts to children in the community.
Williams noted that Sunridge and the Pendleton School Districtâs other schools have done this tradition for 15 years, but they usually leave the gifts with students before they depart for winter break.
The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has scrambled those plans, and although plenty of businesses and individuals have struggled financially this year, Sunridge still raised a considerable sum to send Christmas gifts to children in need. The $740 raised by staff was matched by businesses and organizations that committed $1,725 in cash, more than $400 in gift cards and several different in-kind donations, including a âhuge amount of candy�