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Whites Still Fleeing

By The American Psychological Association

As the population of people of color grows across the United States, white Americans are still prone to move when neighborhoods diversify, and their fears and stereotypical beliefs about other racial and ethnic groups may help maintain segregation, according to research published by the American Psychological Association.
In a nationally representative survey and six additional studies, white Americans perceived a threat to their culture and way of life when presented with information about changing demographics in hypothetical white-majority neighborhoods and schools, compared with when no demographic change was projected. The projected population growth of Arab Americans, Latino Americans and Asian Americans evoked the strongest feelings of foreign cultural threat, followed by the projected population growth of Black Americans. The research was published online in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: General.

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Posted on October 27, 2021

Welcome To The ER. Private Equity Will See You Now.

By Lynn Parramore/Common Dreams

The emergency room. You go there for help when you’re really in trouble or have no place else to turn. But who decides what happens to you there? If you think the answer is doctors, think again. Large corporations are increasingly taking over these centers of life and death, and they are focused far less on your health than squeezing as much profit from your situation as possible.
That’s why a growing chorus of physicians, advocates and patients is sounding the alarm on what they say is a corporate-fueled catastrophe in the making. The pandemic, they warn, has amplified problems rampant in a healthcare system managed not for the benefit of human lives but for the corporations and elite executives who control it. This path, they warn, is both unsustainable and dangerous.
Ground zero for the newest form of greed-driven medicine is hospital emergency rooms.

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Posted on October 24, 2021

IDOC Still Violating Constitution

By The Uptown People’s Law Center

More than two years after the Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC) promised a federal court that it would improve health care for those detained in their facilities, the department has failed the fundamental task of creating a plan for making necessary changes. That is the finding contained in a report last week by a court-appointed expert with the federal court.
Dr. John Raba, who serves as the independent, court-appointed monitor in Lippert v. Jeffreys, made the point in the report, writing, “IDOC does not yet have a comprehensive plan to address this Consent Decree; instead, it seems to primarily respond to crises and threats of legal action.”
The report is the latest development in the case that was settled in January 2019.

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Posted on October 23, 2021

When Wall Street Came To My Mobile Home Park

By Francine Townsend/Other Words

For the last 20 years, I have lived and thrived in a mobile home community. I loved where I live – right up until Wall Street bought the park and threatened the well-being of myself, my neighbors, and my family.
Mobile homes are a vital source of affordable housing for around 3 million households across 45,000 communities in the United States. These households have a median income of about $36,000, and include vulnerable populations like seniors, the disabled and immigrants.
Our mobile home community was the sort of place where every neighbor helped everybody. If my grass wasn’t cut, the neighbor across the street would cut it. If their grass didn’t get cut that week, I would take care of it. That’s just how we were.
But things started to get harder in 2012, when RHP Properties – a corporation entwined with Brookfield Asset Management, a Toronto-based private equity firm – took ownership of our mobile home community in Spring Valley, New York.

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Posted on October 13, 2021

“Let ‘Em Have It, Boys, Let ‘Em Have It. Fuck These People.”

By Abby Zimet/Common Dreams

From Minneapolis, a too-common tale of racist, brutal, corrupt policing in America. On the night of May 30, 2020, five days after George Floyd’s public execution, with the city under curfew and BLM protests raging, a heavily armed SWAT team of Minneapolis cops in helmets and tactical vests set out in an unmarked, unlit, white van with up to 20 police cars trailing behind them; a SWAT member later likened the van to “the tip of a spear.”
In the words of a police report, the team was “patrolling” to “control the crowds that were causing severe property damage” in the wake of Floyd’s murder. In English, that translated into slowly creeping down a largely quiet street to terrorize random pedestrians, Taliban-like, by shooting them without warning with rubber bullets or 40mm launchers from the van’s open sliding door; they also sometimes yelled, “Go home!”
In later court testimony, they acknowledged the shootings as “pain compliance;” in later body-cam footage, their ugly mood was clear. In the van, Sgt. Andrew Bittell orders his team, “You see a group, call it out. Fuck ’em up, gas ’em, fuck ’em up . . . The first fuckers we see, we’re just hammering ’em with 40s.”

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Posted on October 11, 2021