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Sunday, April 8, 2018

70 Women Ages 5-75 Answer: What Trend Do You Wish Would Come Back? | Gla...

Why Most Animals Don’t Have Periods

The genius floor plan for your tiny bathroom

Lost and found

Drawing Machine Makes Selfies

Dare to Try These Five Signature Dishes

Weekend Update on National Guard at Mexican Border - SNL

$100 in Dubai in 24 Hours? How Much Can You Get?

Making Money Online

From StumbleUpon -

35 Creative Ways to Make Money Online
By Sophie Miura

http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/29NJjj/:jPcV8Ttc:l19_EslK/www.mydomaine.com/make-money-online

Hmmmm


H/T Forrest

Evictions in America

An excerpt from the New York Times -

In 83 Million Eviction Records, a Sweeping and Intimate New Look at Housing in America
By EMILY BADGER and QUOCTRUNG BUI

RICHMOND, Va. — Before the first hearings on the morning docket, the line starts to clog the lobby of the John Marshall Courthouse. No cellphones are allowed inside, but many of the people who’ve been summoned don’t learn that until they arrive. “Put it in your car,” the sheriff’s deputies suggest at the metal detector. That advice is no help to renters who have come by bus. To make it inside, some tuck their phones in the bushes nearby.

This courthouse handles every eviction in Richmond, a city with one of the highest eviction rates in the country, according to new data covering dozens of states and compiled by a team led by the Princeton sociologist Matthew Desmond.

Two years ago, Mr. Desmond turned eviction into a national topic of conversation with “Evicted,” a book that chronicled how poor families who lost their homes in Milwaukee sank ever deeper into poverty. It became a favorite among civic groups and on college campuses, some here in Richmond. Bill Gates and former President Obama named it among the best books they had read in 2017, and it was awarded a Pulitzer Prize.

But for all the attention the problem began to draw, even Mr. Desmond could not say how widespread it was. Surveys of renters have tried to gauge displacement, but there is no government data tracking all eviction cases in America. Now that Mr. Desmond has been mining court records across the country to build a database of millions of evictions, it’s clear even in his incomplete national picture that they are more rampant in many places than what he saw in Milwaukee.

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/04/07/upshot/millions-of-eviction-records-a-sweeping-new-look-at-housing-in-america.html?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=newsletter_axiosam&stream=top-stories

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Federally Funded Ghettos

An excerpt from the New York Times -

America’s Federally Financed Ghettos
By The Editorial Board

Ben Carson, the secretary of housing and urban development, showed utter contempt for his agency’s core mission last month when he proposed deleting the phrase “free from discrimination” from the HUD mission statement. Yet Mr. Carson is not the first housing secretary to betray the landmark Fair Housing Act of 1968 — which turns 50 years old this week — by failing to enforce policies designed to prevent states and cities from using federal dollars to perpetuate segregation.

By its actions and failure to act, HUD has prolonged segregation in housing since the 1960s under both Democratic and Republican administrations. The courts have repeatedly chastised the agency for allowing cities to confine families to federally financed ghettos that offer little or no access to jobs, transportation or viable schools. The lawsuits, filed by individuals and fair housing groups, have forced the agency to adopt rules and policies that have been crucial in advancing the goals of the Fair Housing Act.

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/07/opinion/sunday/americas-federally-financed-ghettos.html?smprod=nytcore-ipad&smid=nytcore-ipad-share

White House Scandals

https://hlsrv.vidible.tv/prod/5ac528c0d900854392e201cb/2018-04-04/hls/playlist_v2.m3u8?PR=E&S=yApqXxNWdU2L8oZhxDxCoCDw4PbEkJiRgXT7RXbHG3UtfnlW20z1UEm5sKoWbKCq

Black Jeopardy with Chadwick Boseman - SNL

Summer Camp Letters - Priceless

From the Huffington Post -

Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Childhood Letters Are Way Too Real For People Who Hated Summer Camp
“Please come and take me back to New York, away from this hell hole.”
By Hilary Hanson

https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/lin-manuel-miranda-letters-from-camp_us_5ac8f2fbe4b07a3485e52f30


Notes to Stangers

From Instagram -

A post shared by Andy Leek (@notestostrangers) on