Okay so,
1) an American citizen exercises his First Amendment right to peaceably assemble and his Second Amendment right to bear arms, out of apparent concern that a tyrannical federal government is violating basic protections afforded under the Constitution
2) after coming to the aid of an unarmed woman who's been shoved to the ground by a masked federal agent, the citizen -- impaired by pepper spray, holding nothing but a cell phone -- is dragged to the ground by a group of other masked agents
3) during the scuffle, shortly after one masked agent removes the weapon from the restrained citizen's person, several other masked agents open fire, unloading 10 shots from close range and killing the unarmed citizen
4) despite video evidence, a spokesman for the federal government says the citizen approached agents with a gun, provoked a violent confrontation, and planned to "massacre" law enforcement
You really want to defend this? Go ahead. Just know, you look like an absolute fool.
Please use your own eyes. Believe what you see with your own eyes. Do NOT let them lie to you and make you believe something else other than the fact that there was absolutely no justification for killing an observer in such a cruel, inhumane way.
The Miami Hurricanes will play for a national championship for the first time in 25 years.
They will be playing for the title in their own home stadium.
Imagine running a restaurant & suddenly only having budget for ingredients & chefs—no rent, electricity, heat, water, support staff, insurance, trash, toilet paper.
This is what 'cutting indirects' did to every major biomedical center & hospital in the US.
This "administrative overhead" covers aspects of research that are literally not allowed as part of the direct costs, like space, utilities, printing, etc.
Last year, $9B of the $35B that the National Institutes of Health (NIH) granted for research was used for administrative overhead, what is known as “indirect costs.” Today, NIH lowered the maximum indirect cost rate research institutions can charge the government to 15%, above what many major foundations allow and much lower than the 60%+ that some institutions charge the government today. This change will save more than $4B a year effective immediately.
It's the first full day of our campaign, so I'm heading up to Wilmington, DE later to say "hello" to our staff in HQ.
One day down. 105 to go. Together, we're going to win this.
How does one balance the respect you may have for someone and the work they have done and the reality of their current status due to either age or severe illness?? If someone refuses to retire, what then?? via @nytimes https://t.co/lHoOfNREFr
The Inaugural Sylvester #Cancer Survivorship Symposium was as inspirational as it was educational! Our experts led engaging talks about symptom burden and #QualityOfLife, disparities in #survivorship outcomes, #SurvivorshipCare implementation, and much more!
Hey all! I'm part of the @HispanicNS Neuropsych Society Science Committee and we're hosting the following events for Hispanic Heritage Month! Sign up @ https://t.co/Llyh9qL9XY