Waging Peace
Making Lasting Contact with Iran in 2021 By Kate Cavanaugh on January 1, 2021 at 9:30 AM
Like many older Americans who live alone, I’ve spent the last ten months without tactile contact with another human being. So, like everyone else, I’m eager for universal mask-wearing and the widespread distribution of a vaccine, so we can reach herd immunity, stop “socially distancing,” and get back to being literally in touch. Meanwhile, among the many parallels that this pandemic has suggested, the events since the death of George Floyd have reinforced how systemically white Americans are distanced from people of color, especially Blacks, and how much all racial and ethnic groups need to have meaningful contact with each other to finally lead to some real change in this historical and ongoing inequality
عقاريون يتوقعون استقرار أسعار الإيجارات في الدولة خلال العام المقبل emaratalyoum.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from emaratalyoum.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The Daily 202: ‘Robbing Peter to pay Paul.’ Congress chooses checks over other relief that might help economy more. James Hohmann We must not grow numb to the human and economic carnage of the contagion. Wednesday was the deadliest day yet of the pandemic: At least 3,367 of our fellow Americans succumbed to covid-19. At least 233,651 new cases were confirmed nationwide, and the United States set another record for hospitalizations – breaking the record set the day before. As we enter what public health experts fear may be the darkest winter in American history, the Labor Department announced Thursday morning that 885,000 Americans applied for jobless benefits for the first time last week, up from 862,000 the week before. These numbers are not as bad as during the lockdowns of the spring, but they are worse than the worst jobs reports of the Great Recession. In addition, 455,037 Americans filed initial claims last week for Pandemic Unemployment Assis