Anonymous ID: 8dc8ef March 8, 2022, 1:19 p.m. No.15814410   🗄️.is đź”—kun

 

Ft. Lauderdale police chief fired for discriminating against white police officers, depriving them promotions

 

At one point, he had remarked while looking at pictures of the agency’s command staff, “That wall is too white.”

 

Scirotto’s termination follows a series of complaints that alleged the now-former chief, 48, made a number of hiring and promotion decisions based on racial bias. Scirotto, a former assistant chief in Pittsburgh, PA., is of mixed race. He is also gay.

 

https://www.lawenforcementtoday.com/ft-lauderdale-police-chief-fired-for-discriminating-against-white-police-officers-depriving-them-promotions/

 

Bet he ain't smilin' now.

Anonymous ID: 8dc8ef March 8, 2022, 1:28 p.m. No.15814460   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4487 >>4597 >>4668

>>15814403

 

He mentioned hantavirus. Remember this?

 

DING, DING, DING!!

 

Hantavirus and the Navajo Nation: A Double Jeopardy Disease

 

>This case discusses the outbreak of hantavirus in 1993, focusing on the impacts to the Navajo Nation in terms of the loss of life and health from the disease, followed by events that were sometimes linked to negative external and internal events. The investigation and media coverage following the disease itself created a double-jeopardy situation for the Navajo people who were already suffering from the impacts of the disease. The case unfolds around the differing, but sometimes parallel approaches of Western medicine and Navajo traditional medical knowledge in the areas of understanding, diagnosing, and caring for patients who came down with what came to be known as Sin Nombre Virus. This particular variety of the global disease hantavirus appeared in the United States in 1993. The case offers the opportunity to compare perceptions about the scientific investigations into the disease from the perspectives of Western science and from the unique perspectives of Navajo culture and healing methodologies.

 

https://nativecases.evergreen.edu/collection/cases/hantavirus-navajo

 

[They] blamed it on mice droppings.