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Nurse Protests Vaccine Mandate: Not Vaxxing A No-Brainer
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Across The U S , A Juneteenth Tinted With Sorrow And Buoyed By Hope
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Gas stations across the US are running out in the wake of a crippling cyberattack.
The Colonial Pipeline that supplies the East Coast has been down since it was hacked last week.
Sixty percent of gas stations in Atlanta were out, one analyst said, and 25% across North Carolina.
More than 1,000 gas stations in eastern US states ran out of gasoline after a cyberattack knocked out a crucial US pipeline that supplies much of the region s gasoline.
Price rises and panic-buying followed the news, which led to widespread shortages as operators struggled to move fuel supplies without the out-of-action Colonial Pipeline.
Watch: News On 6 s LeAnne Taylor Catches Up With Her Favorite Razorback Fan
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IN this final article in my #BlackHistoryMonth series, I bring you major expressions in the English language that owe entire debts to the linguistic ingenuity of Black Americans. As you will find below, the contributions that African Americans have made to global English also owe debts to the enduring influences of their (West) African origins.
1 Y’all. This colloquial abbreviation of “you all,” which functions as the plural form of the pronoun “you,” is recognized as the most famous American southernism (that is, the distinctive dialectal English of the American South) to be globalized. However, although “y’all” is now part of the linguistic repertoire of not just American southerners of all races and, increasingly, the entire English-speaking world it was invented by enslaved Black Americans during slavery.