Time to relax global travel restrictions
Aug 02,2021 - Last updated at Aug 02,2021
By Peter Boone and Simon Johnson
WASHINGTON, DC Anyone who risks a visit to Canada these days needs to take care. Canadians are threatening six months in jail, and up to $750,000 in fines, for disobeying testing and quarantine rules upon arrival. In the United Kingdom, the health secretary warned that travellers arriving from outside the UK could face ten years in prison for inaccurately recording their previous whereabouts on entry forms. The Biden administration recently extended the outright ban preventing most non-Americans in Europe from traveling to the United States, with threats of fines and deportation for non-compliance.
Time to relax global travel restrictions jordantimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from jordantimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Henry Makow has a Ph.D. in English Literature from the University of Toronto and is the author of the best-selling book
Cruel Hoax: Feminism & the New World Order.
JEA: There was only one president in American history who actually destroyed the banksters, and that person happened to be Andrew Jackson. Jackson knew that the rich and powerful more precisely the banksters were using their power to oppress the weak and essentially destroy the economy.
Jackson declared that “the mass of the people have more to fear from combinations of the wealthy and professional classes from an aristocracy which through the influence of riches and talents, insidiously employed, sometimes succeeded in preventing political institutions, however well adjusted, from securing the freedom of the citizen.”[1] He continued,
WASHINGTON, DC In March and April 2020, when COVID-19 first struck the United States, the virus that causes it, SARS-CoV-2, swept through US nursing homes. The second phase of the crisis, from summer 2020, was marked by a drawn-out struggle to open universities and schools to in-person instruction. In the third phase, from the end of 2020, the fight has focused on getting as
UConn Magazine: Monopoly Busters
Daniel Hanley ’12 (BUS), ’19 JD and Jackie Filson ’16 (CLAS) lead a growing anti-monopoly movement at the Open Markets Institute in D.C.
Anti-monopoly crusaders Daniel Hanley, left, and Jackie Filson at the UConn Law School in Hartford.(Peter Morenus / UConn Photo) Copy Link
America’s economy is dominated by monopolies like Google and Tyson Foods that harm workers, suppress innovation, and threaten democracy, say Daniel Hanley ’12 (BUS), ’19 JD and Jackie Filson ’16 (CLAS). The alums lead a growing anti-monopoly movement at the Open Markets Institute, a Washington-based nonprofit seeking to restore antitrust laws to ensure a fair and equitable distribution of opportunity, wealth, and power. We asked these alumni about the growing movement and the exciting work they’re doing.