Sat, May 22, 2021 6:40 p.m.
USDA to Begin Paying Off Loans of Minority Farmers in June
https://www.chron.com/news/nation-world/article/USDA-to-begin-paying-off-loans-of-minority-workers-16195146.php?utm_campaign=CMS%20Sharing%20Tools%20(Premium)&utm_source=share-by-email&utm_medium=email
Lyin' lede: Minority farmers who for decades have faced systemic discrimination will begin to receive...
ATR: This is why I don’t pay taxes.
More “free” s--t for blacks.
Of course, blacks are the world’s biggest parasites.
2 comments:
They would never have paid the loans back EVEN if they had the money. Just a bunch of deadbeats.
OREGON PUSHES FOR MANDATORY PROOF OF VACCINE TO MOVE ABOUT AT ESTABLISHMENTS AND BUSINESSES.
(ZH)
The state’s health authorities updated their masking guidance on May 19, following the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) rollback of strict mask mandates.
“Businesses, employers and faith institutions now have the option to adjust their masking guidance to allow fully vaccinated individuals to no longer wear a mask in their establishments,” the OHA declared in a statement.
“Businesses, employers and faith institutions doing so must have a policy in place to check the vaccination status of all individuals before they enter their establishment. Businesses, employers and faith institutions who do not create such policies will maintain the same masking guidance listed below, regardless of an individual’s vaccination status.”
The statewide policy is the first of the kind in the country and is raising concerns for those who don’t want to wear masks or take the vaccine due to a number of concerns including safety, side effects, efficacy, mistrust in pharmaceutical companies, and a lack of full FDA approval. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in late March flagged vaccine passport systems’ potential problems in an opinion piece, arguing they would create two tiers of unvaccinated and vaccinated people.
(GRA:But will the ACLU do anything about it?)
A spokesperson for business group Oregon Business and Industry, Nathaniel Brown, told the New York Times that they “have serious concerns about the practicality of requiring business owners and workers to be the enforcer.”
GRA:That won't stop them from trying(in cooperation with state and local governments).
--GRA
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