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Rantz: State funneled federal COVID relief to radical political groups, all based on race

Rantz: State funneled federal COVID relief to radical political groups, all based on race February 16, 2021 at 2:10 pm Broken windows at a Tacoma Aladdin Bail Bonds. Some activists find cash bail racist. One group is trying to end cash bail for that reason. In the meantime, they ll pay for a suspect s bail. Now, federal tax dollars helped. (Jason Rantz, KTTH) The Washington State Department of Commerce gave federal COVID relief tax dollars to nonprofits pursuing radical political agendas. Tax dollars even went to indirectly bail criminals out of jail. The selection process for funding was based on race. And some of the vetting seems influenced more by ideology than by need.

Cuestionan presencia de Guardia Nacional en Capitolio de EU

Cuestionan presencia de Guardia Nacional en Capitolio de EU
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15 Sackville students forced from historic former mansion over zoning infractions

Posted: Jan 22, 2021 5:26 PM AT | Last Updated: January 22 Built in 1841, and owned by some of the town s more prominent families over the years, the building was most recently used as apartments and office space. (Tori Weldon/CBC) Fifteen Mount Allison University students have to move by Feb. 13 because their apartment building in Sackville was not zoned to be used as apartments.  The Town of Sackville brought the matter to civil court because it claims the owner of the historic former mansion  committed a zoning infraction and was doing work on the building without the proper permit. Justice Darrell Stephenson presided over the proceedings in Moncton on Friday by phone. 

Letter: We could all see it coming

For Black-Owned Businesses In Kansas City Hit By The Coronavirus, This Nonprofit Has Been A Lifesaver

/ Jeremiah Crow, right, pauses with his business partner, A.J. Carson, at a Benton Boulevard house they are transforming into a duplex. The nonprofit, started by a group of Black business owners to help others gain access to capital, has been a boon for small businesses suffering from the economic toll of the coronavirus. Jeremiah Crow was released from prison about five years ago after serving a five-year stretch for robbery, hoping to use some of the electrical wiring skills he learned in confinement to get a job. But employers were wary of hiring an ex-felon. So with the odds stacked against him, Crow struck out on his own, doing residential handyman jobs like wiring, painting and remodeling.

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