When Celtics guard, Jaylen Brown, was asked about his thoughts in relation to Irving's comments about racism in Boston, he replied:
“Systemic racism should be addressed in the city of Boston and United States, however I don’t like the manner it was brought up centering around a playoff game. It bothers me if the construct of racism is used as a crutch or an opportunity to execute a personal gain. I’m not saying that’s the case, but racism is bigger than a playoff game and bigger than Game 3 of the playoffs." As Brown later states, "I know not every Celtics fan is a racist. We have a lot of fans from all walks of life and all colors. Painting every Celtics fan as a racist is unfair, but Boston we have a lot of work to do ."
#Celtics #JaylenBrown #KyrieIrving
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: "We are trying to do a cheers with mugs of tea after finishing a day of hiking on the W Trek, but a gust of wind tangles the tea bags, causing one to fall out."
Former President Barack Obama suggested on Monday that "mommy issues" are holding America back, reports the Kansas City Star. During a speech at the Obama Foundation Summit, he addressed the country's lack of progress on important matters including education and climate change. He then commented: "The reason we don't do it is because we are still confused, blind, shrouded with hate, anger, racism, mommy issues." "We are fraught with stuff, and so if that is the case, then the single most important thing we have to invest in is...people," Obama further noted. "We have got to get people to figure out how they work together in a cooperative, thoughtful, constructive way." In a later discussion with author Dave Eggers, the former president said he still believes that if given the choice of a place and time to live, people would pick the United States.
He added: "You'd choose now – or maybe two years ago."
: "We are trying to do a cheers with mugs of tea after finishing a day of hiking on the W Trek, but a gust of wind tangles the tea bags, causing one to fall out."
do not know when you will arrive..............
worlds weather has changed,
do not know when you will arrive,
the sights their ruptures
shown, have gone to sleep,
the stars their luminence
stripped ,have gone to sleep
every lamp has gone out
do not know when you will arrive,
the plesant night is over,
here ,we re suffering agitation in your expectation ,
in your expectation.......in your expectation.............................
shades of autumin is creeping in the time of blossom,
even the wind has changed its course
dont know when you will arrive,
this is a soothing,sweet,romantic song from 1949.....
film-dulari
music naushad
lyrics-shakil badayuni
siger-mohmmed rafi
stars-madubala/suresh/
“You don’t have to be a full-on racist, just being a tiny bit racist is enough,” Kiwi director Taika Waititi says in a video for the New Zealand Human Rights Commission.
“Racism needs your help to survive.”
The New Zealander of the Year, known for What We Do in the Shadows and the upcoming Thor: Ragnarok, launched a tongue-in-cheek campaign on June 14 for those “suffering in silence” from racism. Race Relations Commissioner Susan Devoy, speaking with Radio NZ, said one in three formal complaints to the Human Rights Commission were about racial discrimination.
She said Waititi was an obvious choice for the “Give Nothing to Racism” campaign and said he took a day off from working on Thor to shoot this video. The campaign site states that “racism starts small and is a light feeder” and the sarcastic humour used by Waititi could “stop casual racism from growing into something more extreme.” Credit: New Zealand Human Rights Commission via Storyful
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off the moon. No one is awake and yet
sunlight streams across
the hundred still beds
of the public wards
for children. At ten
do we truly sleep
in a blessed sleep
guarded by angels
and social workers?
Do we dream of gold
found in secret trunks
in familiar rooms?
Do we talk to cats
and dogs? I think not.
I think when I was
ten I was almost
an adult, slightly
less sentimental
than now and better
with figures. No one
could force me to cry,
nothing could convince
me of God's concern
for America
much less the fall of
a sparrow. I spit
into the wind, even
on mornings like this,
the air clear, the sky
utterly silent,
the fresh light flooding
across bed after
bed as though something
were reaching blindly --
for we are blindest
in sunlight -- for hands
to take and eyelids
to caress and bless
before they open
to the alder gone
still and the winds hushed,
before the children
waken separately
into their childhoods.
Philip Levine
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/in-a-light-time/
to the sound of the surf as it beat at our feet
and the sun was rising crimson with love
as we walked hand in hand and flew like the doves.
Do you remember the feel of the wind in our hair
as we sat on the sands without any cares
and the tears in our eyes were for joy not for grief
as we sat and felt as one with the beach.
Do you remember the time we walked on the beach
to the sound of the surf as it beat at our feet
your heart was in mine and mine was in yours
as we walked hand in hand on those magical shores.
Do you remember the feel of the wind in our hair
as we sat on the sands without any cares
and we joined with the ocean that came to our feet
making us the beach and the ocean complete.
Do you remember the time we walked on the beach
with the healing, the feeling, of being at peace
the sand at our feet, the surf in our mind
an ocean of stillness in one heart that's combined.
Do you remember the feel of the wind in our hair
with our eyes full of stars our hearts without cares
and a sun that was rising crimson with love
as our souls were set free into the sky up above.
Do you remember the time we walked on the beach
to the sound of the surf as it beat at our feet
and the sun was rising crimson with love
as we walked hand in hand and flew like the doves.
David Taylor
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/complete-rising-crimson-with-love/