Tuesday, December 22, 2020

Disease X


One of the Congo's main exports is "bushmeat" from crocodiles, turtles, chimpanzees, and other exotic animals which are slaughtered and sold in the country's own thriving wet markets.

Any of these animals could be harboring a dangerous new virus just waiting to cross over to humans, and the fact that the meat is then shipped all over the world is of great concern to experts.

Doctors in Kinshasa are currently treating a woman showing signs of hemorrhagic fever.

Ebola victim's grave

Doctors in the Congo worry about the development of a deadly new 'Disease X' 

They're testing her for Ebola, but they're worried she could be patient zero of a new "Disease X" with the potential to spread as quickly as a coronavirus - but also the terrifying mortality rate of Ebola, between 50 and 90%.

"We've all got to be frightened," Dr. Dadin Bonkole, who is treating the patient, told CNN.

"Ebola was unknown. Covid was unknown. We have to be afraid of new diseases."

Sunday, December 20, 2020

No ‘Negative’ News: How China Censored the Coronavirus


No ‘Negative’ News: How China Censored the Coronavirus

December 19, 2020, in News


In the early hours of Feb. 7, China’s powerful internet censors experienced an unfamiliar and deeply unsettling sensation. They felt they were losing control.


The news was spreading quickly that Li Wenliang, a doctor who had warned about a strange new viral outbreak only to be threatened by the police and accused of peddling rumors, had died of Covid-19. Grief and fury coursed through social media. To people at home and abroad, Dr. Li’s death showed the terrible cost of the Chinese government’s instinct to suppress inconvenient information.


Yet China’s censors decided to double down. Warning of the “unprecedented challenge” Dr. Li’s passing had posed and the “butterfly effect” it may have set off, officials got to work suppressing the inconvenient news and reclaiming the narrative, according to confidential directives sent to local propaganda workers and news outlets.


They ordered news websites not to issue push notifications alerting readers to his death. They told social platforms to gradually remove his name from trending topics pages. And they activated legions of fake online commenters to flood social sites with distracting chatter, stressing the need for discretion: “As commenters fight to guide public opinion, they must conceal their identity, avoid crude patriotism and sarcastic praise, and be sleek and silent in achieving results.”


The orders were among thousands of secret government directives and other documents that were reviewed by The New York Times and ProPublica. They lay bare in extraordinary detail the systems that helped the Chinese authorities shape online opinion during the pandemic.


At a time when digital media is deepening social divides in Western democracies, China is manipulating online discourse to enforce the Communist Party’s consensus. To stage-manage what appeared on the Chinese internet early this year, the authorities issued strict commands on the content and tone of news coverage, directed paid trolls to inundate social media with party-line blather and deployed security forces to muzzle unsanctioned voices.


Though China makes no secret of its belief in rigid internet controls, the documents convey just how much behind-the-scenes effort is involved in maintaining a tight grip. It takes an enormous bureaucracy, armies of people, specialized technology made by private contractors, the constant monitoring of digital news outlets and social media platforms — and, presumably, lots of money.


It is much more than simply flipping a switch to block certain unwelcome ideas, images or pieces of news.


China’s curbs on information about the outbreak started in early January, before the novel coronavirus had even been identified definitively, the documents show. When infections started spreading rapidly a few weeks later, the authorities clamped down on anything that cast China’s response in too “negative” a light.


The United States and other countries have for months accused China of trying to hide the extent of the outbreak in its early stages. It may never be clear whether a freer flow of information from China would have prevented the outbreak from morphing into a raging global health calamity. But the documents indicate that Chinese officials tried to steer the narrative not only to prevent panic and debunk damaging falsehoods domestically. They also wanted to make the virus look less severe — and the authorities more capable — as the rest of the world was watching.


The documents include more than 3,200 directives and 1,800 memos and other files from the offices of the country’s internet regulator, the Cyberspace Administration of China, in the eastern city of Hangzhou. They also include internal files and computer code from a Chinese company, Urun Big Data Services, that makes software used by local governments to monitor internet discussion and manage armies of online commenters.


The documents were shared with The Times and ProPublica by a hacker group that calls itself C.C.P. Unmasked, referring to the Chinese Communist Party. The Times and ProPublica independently verified the authenticity of many of the documents, some of which had been obtained separately by China Digital Times, a website that tracks Chinese internet controls.


The C.A.C. and Urun did not respond to requests for comment.


“China has a politically weaponized system of censorship; it is refined, organized, coordinated and supported by the state’s resources,” said Xiao Qiang, a research scientist at the School of Information at the University of California, Berkeley, and the founder of China Digital Times. “It’s not just for deleting something. They also have a powerful apparatus to construct a narrative and aim it at any target with huge scale.”


“This is a huge thing,” he added. “No other country has that.”


Controlling a Narrative

China’s top leader, Xi Jinping, created the Cyberspace Administration of China in 2014 to centralize the management of internet censorship and propaganda as well as other aspects of digital policy. Today, the agency reports to the Communist Party’s powerful Central Committee, a sign of its importance to the leadership.


The C.A.C.’s coronavirus controls began in the first week of January. An agency directive ordered news websites to use only government-published material and not to draw any parallels with the deadly SARS outbreak in China and elsewhere that began in 2002, even as the World Health Organization was noting the similarities.


At the start of February, a high-level meeting led by Mr. Xi called for tighter management of digital media, and the C.A.C.’s offices across the country swung into action. A directive in Zhejiang Province, whose capital is Hangzhou, said the agency should not only control the message within China, but also seek to “actively influence international opinion.”


Agency workers began receiving links to virus-related articles that they were to promote on local news aggregators and social media. Directives specified which links should be featured on news sites’ home screens, how many hours they should remain online and even which headlines should appear in boldface.


Online reports should play up the heroic efforts by local medical workers dispatched to Wuhan, the Chinese city where the virus was first reported, as well as the vital contributions of Communist Party members, the agency’s orders said.


Headlines should steer clear of the words “incurable” and “fatal,” one directive said, “to avoid causing societal panic.” When covering restrictions on movement and travel, the word “lockdown” should not be used, said another. Multiple directives emphasized that “negative” news about the virus was not to be promoted.


When a prison officer in Zhejiang who lied about his travels caused an outbreak among the inmates, the C.A.C. asked local offices to monitor the case closely because it “could easily attract attention from overseas.”


News outlets were told not to play up reports on donations and purchases of medical supplies from abroad. The concern, according to agency directives, was that such reports could cause a backlash overseas and disrupt China’s procurement efforts, which were pulling in vast amounts of personal protective equipment as the virus spread abroad.


“Avoid giving the false impression that our fight against the epidemic relies on foreign donations,” one directive said.


C.A.C. workers flagged some on-the-ground videos for purging, including several that appear to show bodies exposed in public places. Other clips that were flagged appear to show people yelling angrily inside a hospital, workers hauling a corpse out of an apartment and a quarantined child crying for her mother. The videos’ authenticity could not be confirmed.


The agency asked local branches to craft ideas for “fun at home” content to “ease the anxieties of web users.” In one Hangzhou district, workers described a “witty and humorous” guitar ditty they had promoted. It went, “I never thought it would be true to say: To support your country, just sleep all day.”


Then came a bigger test.


‘Severe Crackdown’

Dr. Li’s death in Wuhan loosed a geyser of emotion that threatened to tear Chinese social media out from under the C.A.C.’s control.


It did not help when the agency’s gag order leaked onto Weibo, a popular Twitter-like platform, fueling further anger. Thousands of people flooded Dr. Li’s Weibo account with comments.


The agency had little choice but to permit expressions of grief, though only to a point. If anyone was sensationalizing the story to generate online traffic, their account should be dealt with “severely,” one directive said.


The day after Dr. Li’s death, a directive included a sample of material that was deemed to be “taking advantage of this incident to stir up public opinion”: It was a video interview in which Dr. Li’s mother reminisces tearfully about her son.


The scrutiny did not let up in the days that followed. “Pay particular attention to posts with pictures of candles, people wearing masks, an entirely black image or other efforts to escalate or hype the incident,” read an agency directive to local offices.


Larger numbers of online memorials began to disappear. The police detained several people who formed groups to archive deleted posts.


In Hangzhou, propaganda workers on round-the-clock shifts wrote up reports describing how they were ensuring people saw nothing that contradicted the soothing message from the Communist Party: that it had the virus firmly under control.


Officials in one district reported that workers in their employ had posted online comments that were read more than 40,000 times, “effectively eliminating city residents’ panic.” Workers in another county boasted of their “severe crackdown” on what they called rumors: 16 people had been investigated by the police, 14 given warnings and two detained. One district said it had 1,500 “cybersoldiers” monitoring closed chat groups on WeChat, the popular social app.


Researchers have estimated that hundreds of thousands of people in China work part-time to post comments and share content that reinforces state ideology. Many of them are low-level employees at government departments and party organizations. Universities have recruited students and teachers for the task. Local governments have held training sessions for them.


Engineers of the Troll

Government departments in China have a variety of specialized software at their disposal to shape what the public sees online.


One maker of such software, Urun, has won at least two dozen contracts with local agencies and state-owned enterprises since 2016, government procurement records show. According to an analysis of computer code and documents from Urun, the company’s products can track online trends, coordinate censorship activity and manage fake social media accounts for posting comments.


One Urun software system gives government workers a slick, easy-to-use interface for quickly adding likes to posts. Managers can use the system to assign specific tasks to commenters. The software can also track how many tasks a commenter has completed and how much that person should be paid.


According to one document describing the software, commenters in the southern city of Guangzhou are paid $25 for an original post longer than 400 characters. Flagging a negative comment for deletion earns them 40 cents. Reposts are worth one cent apiece.


Urun makes a smartphone app that streamlines their work. They receive tasks within the app, post the requisite comments from their personal social media accounts, then upload a screenshot, ostensibly to certify that the task was completed.


The company also makes video game-like software that helps train commenters, documents show. The software splits a group of users into two teams, one red and one blue, and pits them against each other to see which can produce more popular posts.


Other Urun code is designed to monitor Chinese social media for “harmful information.” Workers can use keywords to find posts that mention sensitive topics, such as “incidents involving leadership” or “national political affairs.” They can also manually tag posts for further review.


In Hangzhou, officials appear to have used Urun software to scan the Chinese internet for keywords like “virus” and “pneumonia” in conjunction with place names, according to company data.


A Great Sea of Placidity

By the end of February, the emotional wallop of Dr. Li’s death seemed to be fading. C.A.C. workers around Hangzhou continued to scan the internet for anything that might perturb the great sea of placidity.


One city district noted that web users were worried about how their neighborhoods were handling the trash left by people who were returning from out of town and potentially carrying the virus. Another district observed concerns about whether schools were taking adequate safety measures as students returned.


On March 12, the agency’s Hangzhou office issued a memo to all branches about new national rules for internet platforms. Local offices should set up special teams for conducting daily inspections of local websites, the memo said. Those found to have violations should be “promptly supervised and rectified.”


The Hangzhou C.A.C. had already been keeping a quarterly scorecard for evaluating how well local platforms were managing their content. Each site started the quarter with 100 points. Points were deducted for failing to adequately police posts or comments. Points might also be added for standout performances.


In the first quarter of 2020, two local websites lost 10 points each for “publishing illegal information related to the epidemic,” that quarter’s score report said. A government portal received an extra two points for “participating actively in opinion guidance” during the outbreak.


Over time, the C.A.C. offices’ reports returned to monitoring topics unrelated to the virus: noisy construction projects keeping people awake at night, heavy rains causing flooding in a train station.


Then, in late May, the offices received startling news: Confidential public-opinion analysis reports had somehow been published online. The agency ordered offices to purge internal reports — particularly, it said, those analyzing sentiment surrounding the epidemic.


The offices wrote back in their usual dry bureaucratese, vowing to “prevent such data from leaking out on the internet and causing a serious adverse impact to society.”


The post No ‘Negative’ News: How China Censored the Coronavirus appeared first on New York Times.


Thursday, December 17, 2020

Atlantic City To Auction Spot To Push Demolish Button To Blow Up Trump Plaza Casino

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (CBS/AP) — One of President Donald Trump’s former Atlantic City casinos will be blown up next month, and for the right amount of money, you could be the one to press the button that brings it down. The demolition of the former Trump Plaza casino will become a fundraiser to benefit the Boys & Girls Club of Atlantic City that Mayor Marty Small hopes will raise in excess of $1 million.

Opened in 1984, Trump’s former casino was closed in 2014 and has fallen into such a state of disrepair that demolition work began earlier this year. The remainder of the structure will be dynamited on Jan. 29.











The Hollywood Tutor's AMERICAN ENGLISH on sale now at AMAZON      https://www.amazon.com/dp/1733311041/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_b.90FbM8BCSTB 



Friday, December 4, 2020

Supercapacitors, the future is here.







Supercapacitors are involved in our current technology and will be excessively more applicable to our future environment. 

The demand will increase due to the need for eco-friendly energy sources and will boost the development of supercapacitors by improving its material property design and decreasing batteries' use. 

The superior design of the supercapacitor allows them to operate similarly to batteries but not precisely. Combining a battery with a supercapacitor in a system improves the performance and complements the operation.


Thursday, November 19, 2020

Update-Phoenix has never seen a hot spell like this so late in the year before

'It's going to be pretty intense': After reaching the first 110-degree day of the year, Phoenix could break records this coming week
No records were broken on Saturday and the first 110-degree day of the year in Phoenix occurring on June 12 was not unusual, weather service officials said. 


Phoenix is normally one of the hottest cities in the United States, but this year has been abnormally hot in the Valley of the Sun. As of Wednesday, Nov. 17, the city has tied or broken daily high-temperature records on 33 occasions, including three times this week.

Monday, November 16, 2020

Melania could get ‘$50MILLION’ if she calls it quits







 Some began speculating that the president's relationship with Melania was souring after she was spotted at a Veteran's Day ceremony in Virginia holding the arm of a serviceman instead of her husband.

Thursday, November 5, 2020

Virus schematic SARS-CoV2

 












A) Schematic representation of the genome organization and functional domains of S protein for COVID-19. The single-stranded RNA genomes of COVID-19 encode two large genes, the ORF1a and ORF1b genes, which encode 16 non-structural proteins (nsp1–nsp16). The structural genes encode the structural proteins, spike (S), envelope (E), membrane (M), and nucleocapsid (N). The accessory genes denoted in shades of green. The structure of S protein is shown beneath the genome organization. The S protein is consisting of the S1 and S2 subunits. The S1/S2 cleavage sites are highlighted by dotted lines. In the S-protein, cytoplasm domain (CP); fusion peptide (FP); heptad repeat (HR); receptor-binding domain (RBD); signal peptide (SP); transmembrane domain (TM) are shown B) The viral surface proteins, spike, envelope and membrane, are embedded in a lipid bilayer. The single-stranded positive-sense viral RNA is associated with the nucleocapsid protein.

Saturday, October 31, 2020

Autism spectrum disorder

Evidence found of the link between gut microbe deficiency and an autism spectrum disorder

by Bob Yirka , Medical Xpress


A team of researchers affiliated with a host of institutions in China has found evidence of a gut microbe deficiency in children who develop autism spectrum disorder (ASD). In their paper published in the journal Science Advances, the group describes their study of gut microbes in ASD children and what they found.


Prior research has suggested that problems with the gut microbiome may be behind the onset of ASD in affected children, but what those problems might be has remained a mystery. In this new effort, the researchers may have taken another step toward solving that mystery.


The work involved collecting stool samples from 39 children diagnosed with ASD, and also from 40 children who did not have the disorder. But because large gut biome differences are common between people, the researchers were careful to choose children for the study who would normally have similar biomes due to age, where they lived and other factors. Each of the stool samples were subjected to metagenomic sequencing to determine if there were noticeable differences between the children with ASD and those who did not have it.


The team focused most specifically on 18 microbial species that have previously been linked to ASD. In so doing, the team found differences in the ratios of detoxifying enzymes in the children with ASD compared to those who did not. Feeling they were onto something, the team further tested another 65 children with ASD and found the same results. They suggest that ASD likely develops in children due to a gut microbiome impact on the detoxification process in the gut. And this, in turn, allows environmental toxins to enter the bloodstream where they injure mitochondria in brain cells, leading to symptoms related to ASD.


The researchers acknowledge that more work is required, but also suggest that it might be possible to create a therapy that assists in the detoxification process, thereby heading off the onset of ASD—or better yet, to overcome the elements that lead to detoxification problems in the first place.

Monday, October 19, 2020

Federal minimum wage: Welcome to America

Oct 18

Federal minimum wage:


2009: $7.25

2020: $7.25


The wealth of 400 richest Americans:


2009: $1,270,000,000,000 

2020: $3,200,000,000,000 

Raising the federal minimum wage to $15 by 2024 would lift pay for nearly 40 million workers

Luxembourg ($13.78)

Australia ($12.14)

France ($11.66)

New Zealand ($11.20)

Germany ($10.87)

Netherlands ($10.44)

Belgium ($10.38)

United Kingdom ($10.34)

Ireland ($9.62)

Canada ($9.52)

Luxembourg has the highest minimum wage in the world of $13.78 per hour. The minimum wage rises 20% for individuals classed as skilled workers (must be 18 or older) and decreases by 20-25% for individuals classed as adolescent workers (17-18 years old). Salaries, wages, and minimum wage are all adjusted in line with the evolution of Luxembourg's cost; therefore, if the consumer price index falls by a certain percentage, salaries are adjusted by the same percentage.


The US minimum wage through the years

By Annalyn Kurtz, Tal Yellin and Will Houp, CNN Business

Published April 9, 2019

When President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed America’s first federal minimum wage into law in 1938, it was 25 cents per hour. Adjusted for inflation, that would be worth about $4.45 today.


Unadjusted wage

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics and Department of Labor


Note: Figures adjusted to 2018 dollars using the CPI-U


Throughout history, Congress has raised the minimum wage 22 times. The current level, at $7.25 an hour, was set in 2009.


Cities and states have the option of setting their own minimum wages. As of January 2019, 29 states had a minimum wage rate above the federal level.

Wednesday, August 26, 2020

China says US U-2 spy plane disrupted its military exercises


A US Air Force U-2 spyplane.


The US Air Force has been active around the Indo-Pacific too, recently sending three of its B-2 stealth bombers to an island base at Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean, as well as B-1 bombers to Andersen Air Force Base in Guam.US Navy F/A-18s, Marine Corps F-35s and a US Air Force B-1B bomber conduct a large-scale joint and bilateral integration training exercise earlier this month.

China says US U-2 spy plane disrupted its military exercises

Esper's statement came after the US Navy staged exercises involving two aircraft carrier strike groups in the South China Sea, the first time it had done so in six years.
On August 17, the US Pacific Air Forces touted the fact that B-1s, B-2s, plus US Navy and Marine Corps fighters and jets from the Japan Air Self Defense Force were all engaged in exercises in the Indo-Pacific in a single 24-hour period.

Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Two weeks left to choose a better future, Democracy. The Democratic Call. Freedom. Biden/Harris

.
@JoeBiden
: My fellow Americans, let me introduce to you for the first time your next Vice President of the United States Kamala Harris.


Tuesday, August 11, 2020

5 horses butchered near Texas town since May - and police think someone’s eating them

5 horses butchered near Texas town since May - and police think someone’s eating them


Witnessing animal abuse can be difficult, but according to the Humane Society of the Unites States, it is important not to turn away from animal cruelty.

At least five horses have been killed around Pearland, Texas since late May — but it’s the way they’re being killed and what’s being done to their carcasses that’s particularly disturbing to locals.

Pearland police made their first discovery June 10. Responding to an animal cruelty call along the 14000 block of Kirby Drive, they found a horse, dead and butchered.

Police told the property owner, Jason Bockel, that they had never seen anything like it, FOX 26 Houston reported.

T

His son Tyler was the first to see the dead horse. He went out that morning to feed the horses, Goldie and Sugar, and found them tied to a tree. The killer — or killers — picked Goldie and spared Sugar.

“I hit the ground immediately, she was butchered. She was murdered,

Saturday, August 8, 2020

Paris tops 100 F as London breaks all-time record high

Paris tops 100 F as London breaks all-time record high


A stifling heat wave that gradually built throughout much of western Europe this week produced some of the warmest conditions of the year so far. Triple-digit temperatures were recorded in some of the continent's biggest cities, including the United Kingdom's capital of London.

Thursday, July 30, 2020

Hong Kong students arrested on suspicion of inciting secession in first police operation under new security law

Four students have reportedly been arrested in Hong Kong in the first police operation to enforce China's new "national security" law, officials said Wednesday. Arrests have been made previously under the new law for banners and slogans displayed at protests.

"Three males and one female, age 16-21, who claimed to be students, have been arrested for breaching the #nationalsecuritylaw. They were suspected of secession by advocating #HKindependence. The investigation is underway," the Hong Kong police tweeted.

Prominent pro-democracy activist Joshua Wong said that one of those arrested was Tony Chung, a student activist and that he was detained after writing a Facebook post about "#China's nationalism."

Baywatch, the link to Hong Kong's future

Sunday, July 26, 2020

Everybody knows this is Trump's last year in office, that's the way it goes, everybody knows. Trump and Epstein.

Biden holds a daunting lead over Trump as the US election enters the final stretch.


Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein's Connection, Explained

ImageVideo shows Donald Trump partying with Jeffrey Epstein in 1992 ...Image result for trump with epsteinVideo shows Donald Trump partying with Jeffery Epstein and ...Trump And Jeffrey Epstein Laughed And Discussed Women's Looks At A ...

China’s Move to Buy Arctic Gold Mine Draws Fire in Canada

TORONTO—The purchase of a gold mine in the Canadian Arctic by a state-run Chinese company is triggering alarms in Canada over China’s expanding presence in a region that is growing in strategic importance for its shipping lanes and resources.

Opposition parties and former government officials have called on Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government to block Shandong Gold Mining Co., one of China’s largest gold miners, from buying Toronto-based TMAC Resources Inc., whose operation is almost 120 miles north of the Arctic Circle.

Thursday, July 16, 2020

Beyond the Time Barrier (1960) Romance, Sci-Fi Full length movie. Seeing into future, Movie predicts pandemic.

Beyond the Time Barrier (1960) Romance, Sci-Fi 

In 1960, a military test pilot is caught in a time warp that propels him to the year 2024 where he finds a plague has sterilized the world's population.

Full-length movie
183,069 views•Feb 14, 2020
Beyond the Time Barrier Poster


Cult Cinema Classics
102K subscribers

Wednesday, June 24, 2020

Statues that are down or coming down.

 Andrew Jackson.

In-office from 1829 to 1837, he owned more than 500 slaves during his lifetime and was a key figure in the forced relocation of nearly 100,000 Native Americans.

Several monuments depicting one of his predecessors, US president Thomas Jefferson, (1801-1809), have also been vandalized. He drew up the US Declaration of Independence but owned more than 600 slaves.

And New York City is to remove a statue of former president Theodore Roosevelt, long criticized as a racist and colonialist symbol.

The bronze sculpture of Roosevelt, which has been at the entrance of the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) for 80 years, depicts the former leader on horseback towering over a black man and a Native American man -- who are both on foot.

US protesters have been avidly targeting statues symbolizing the Confederate States during the American Civil War, which pitted the pro-slavery South against the abolitionist North from 1861-1865.

A statue of Jefferson Davis, President of the Confederate States, was toppled in Richmond, Virginia.


Demonstrators in Washington also tore down a statue of Albert Pike, the only one of a Southern Civil War general in the nation's capital.

Earlier in June, in Boston, a statue of Christopher Columbus was beheaded, another vandalised in downtown Miami with red paint, and third was dragged into a lake in Richmond, Virginia.

The Italian explorer, long hailed as the so-called discoverer of "The New World," is considered by many to have spurred years of genocide against indigenous groups in the Americas

Take Em Down NOLA pushing to remove Andrew Jackson statue in ...

For eTake Em Down NOLA pushing to remove Andrew Jackson statue in Jackson SquareWatch 
In Prague, a statue to Britain’s World War II leader Winston Churchill was covered in graffiti daubed with the words "Black Lives Matter" in solidarity with the anti-racist movement in the United States
The Confederate War Memorial, Dallas, Texas.
Silent Sam, Chapel Hill, North Carolina (toppled August 20, 2018).
The statues of Robert E. Lee and "Stonewall" Jackson, in Charlottesville, Virginia
Spirit of the Confederacy, Houston, Texas.
John C.

These Confederate statues have been removed since George Floyd's ...What Should Happen to Confederate Statues? A City Auctions One for ...Confederate statues and memorials to be removed across US - CNNTarps covering Confederate statues removed three times in one dayRobert E Lee statue: Virginia governor announces removal of ...Black Lives Matter protests renew push to remove 'racist ...Controversial Cornwallis statue removed from Halifax park | CBC NewsFrom 2017: Confederate Monuments Are Coming Down Across the United ...


WATCH NOW: Confederate statue removed from Monroe Park after ...What happens to Confederate statues after they're removed? | Fox NewsNorth Carolina governor orders Confederate statues removed from ...Local residents at statueColumbus Statues Removed in Camden, New Jersey and Wilmington ...