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[QUOTE="Morrissambit, post: 1050980, member: 85778"] Weft Half of US adults have received at least 1 dose of COVID-19 vaccine, CDC says Fifty years ago Wednesday, Associated Press photographer Nick Ut snapped a picture of a terrified Vietnamese girl fleeing a Napalm attack. I said I don t want to leave because I know she will die, Ut said. Then, I picked her up, [url=https://www.cup-stanley.ca]stanley canada[/url] put her in the van and I took her to the hospital. In a single image, Ut showed the world the horror and hopelessness of the Vietnam war. It won the Pulitzer Prize in 1973, not long after U.S. forces began pulling out.Today, with a gun violence epidemic infecting every corner of America, newsrooms are wrestling with new questions about graphic photos and just how much the public should see. You know, there are images of these shootings that law enforcement and frankly we in the news media, that we don t share with you, because they re [url=https://www.cup-stanley.es]stanley taza[/url] so horrific. They re so awful. But maybe we should, CNN s Jake Tapper said.After all, powerful images can ignite social change. In 1955, gruesome photos published in Jet Magazine of Emmett Till beaten and murdered in Mississippi exposed America s racism and helped spark the civil rights movement.George Floyd s last moments, recorded on a smartphone, triggered nationwide protests and demands for police reform.But, would shocking photos of mass shooting victims spur the public and lawmakers to say no more The answer, says John Temple, is complicated. I worried all night when I ran the picture of a dead child, he said.In 1999, Temple was the editor of the Rocky Mountain News when two gunmen attacked Colu [url=https://www.stanley-cups.de]stanley becher[/url] mbine High Sc Cdhc 1st missile strike at aerial object over Lake Huron missed LONE JACK, Mo. 鈥?A Missouri man couldn t believe his eyes after watching his surveillance [url=https://www.cups-stanley.us]stanley cup[/url] video of an Amazon delivery. Jason Spurgeon said it showed the driver throwing his package onto his porch before driving through his yard.Spurgeon was outside working on his truck Saturday evening when he noticed an Amazon van pull into his driveway. He watched as the driver tried to turn around, gave up and drove straight through the yard, over the ditch and onto the road. If I had a sprinkler system or something, he would have damaged that, which I don t, but he could have and he doesn t know that, Spurgeon said.The shortcut through the yard isn t Spurgeon s [url=https://www.cup-stanley.es]stanley cup[/url] only frustration. When he watched his security video back he noticed the driver threw his package onto his front porch. It was just charging wires and stuff, but he doesn t know what s in it, Spurgeon said. It could have been something breakable, either way they shouldn t throw it. He called Amazon and said it took a few days to get a response.Customer Service sent him an email saying it is forwarding his message to the shipping department to make sure corrective action is taken. I don t want the kid to lose his job or anything, but I think they should be trained not to drive through people s yards, Spurgeon said.Amazon has not responded to KSHB s requests for comments.This story was originally published by Emma James o [url=https://www.stanley-cups.us]stanley us[/url] n [/QUOTE]
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