Not exact matches
The
murders have reignited calls
for the Confederate flag - a symbol of slavery and white supremacy - to be taken down from public
institutions.
In a time when Los Angelinos witness the foundering efforts of «Rebuild L.A.» and New Yorkers numbly wait
for the annual
murder count to surpass the 2,000 mark, we see in the fates of our cities the consequences of inadequate and neglected
institutions and can perhaps read a lesson
for all of society.
Their enthusiasm and cloying love
for an
institution built on child
murder was so infuriating in The Hunger Games, but it's slowly eroding away here.
And in Jonathan Kellerman's riveting and ingenious new novel, Monster, he faces one of the most grisly and baffling mysteries of his career: How can a nonfunctional psychotic locked up in a supposedly secure
institution for homicidal madmen predict brutal
murders in the outside world?
All of this is reason
for everyone and his brother, aunt and sister to greatly reduce their own GHG emissions, and to scream bloody
murder till every corporation,
institution and governmental body they have any influence over to immediately institute policies to rapidly bring down GHG emissions and look at reliable ways of drawing down atmospheric CO2 levels directly (especially replanting grasslands in the north, tree planting toward the equator where albedo change is not an issue).
Food
for thought: James Gordon Wolcott, age 15,
murdered his entire family, went to a mental
institution, got out, changed his name, got a degree in psychology, and now is psychology professor James David St. James at Millikin University.