Three men Canadian police say were part of a hit team have been charged in the assassination of a Sikh separatist last year in British Columbia—a killing that Prime Minister.
The mere fact that this question has been asked since the election of President Barack Obama speaks to the changing role of race in our society. Although [.]
Next month marks 10 years since the attack on the Sikh Temple in Oak Creek. In all, seven worshippers died and more would have if it weren't for the bravery of an Oak Creek police lieutenant.
When Alex Hanesakda saw the tragic news that eight people were shot and killed in Atlanta on March 16, and that six of them were Asian women, he knew it was time for him to speak out.
What he wrote in the post, he also submitted to the Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service (bit.ly/3dwZlBU). The editorial was titled: â âIâm done keeping my head down:â Why we must stop the hate against Asian Americans (and everyone else).â
âAt first, I was like, âDo I say something?â â Hanesakda said, recalling when he first started seeing more reports of the hate crimes. âBut then (the shooting) happened. That was the straw that broke the camelâs back for me.â
i think paul ryan has taken 13 years and done his best to demolish the middle class and his home district is feeling it. me being from middle class descent, immigrant, know it best. i ve seen people go through hardships his stances and party stances have caused. lets talk a little about your personal experience. you mentioned your immigrant background. your father was slain in the sikh temple shooting, our condolences for that. how much is that going to be part of the narrative and how far can you push gun laws. 47% want them to be more strict, 43 stay the same. my father, absolutely has he on my mind, heavy on a lot of the community s mind. when he was murdered by a neo-nazi, white extremist who