- Jun 28, 2004
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I know it’s only February but I can confidently declare that this year’s award for being a crank goes to…
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Fun Fact: The screaming girl directly behind her actually became her friend. I think they wrote a book about it.
Fun Fact: The screaming girl directly behind her actually became her friend. I think they wrote a book about it.
Conservatives would have us compose history the way that they construct their résumés.
This is hardly the first time someone tried to put a positive spin on Arkansas' massive resistance campaign. Forty years after the Little Rock Nine were barred entry to Central High School by the Arkansas National Guard, Will Counts, who photographed the above image, captured Elizabeth Eckford and Hazel Bryan Massery - the enraged White woman behind her - smiling together in front of their old school. Feelgood stories blithely promoted the pair's unlikely friendship. Posters produced from the photo, presumptuously entitled "Reconciliation", even went on sale in the Little Rock visitors' center.
Contemporary coverage of "the civil rights movement" is the story of premature celebration. No sooner had the ink dried than the pair experienced a falling-out.
Unsurprisingly, it appears that Bryan Massery, who ferociously resisted integration, would bitterly resist accountability for her own behavior.
Subsequently, "reconciliation" came with a caveat: a gold sticker that read, "True reconciliation can occur only when we honestly acknowledge our painful, but shared, past” was placed on each poster, at Elizabeth Eckford’s request.
https://www.history.com/news/the-story-behind-the-famous-little-rock-nine-scream-image
There can be no reconciliation without truth, accountability, and restitution.
How Portugal is tackling their housing crisis.
im guessing the same is true in portugal,
telling a person struggling to pay rent in Lisbon that there's a 100 year old house in rural portugal
is totally useless fake radicalism.
pretending to help people so you can ignore the real issues.
I read the article and one of the supporting articles it links to, and I am kinda confused by the response in here. I am wondering if people actually read the article.
Seems like In Portugal you have to register tourist apartments. After COVID tourism exploded which caused a lot of landlord to convert residential units to tourist units. This lowered the amount of units available to rent to locals, and this policy is meant to reverse that.
While I will always support increasing supply through building as a main thing to do, I don't have a strong reaction to this because it is trying to increase supply. And it goes against the "housing as an investment" mentality that negatively affects housing politics.
I can see some pitfalls to this, but I'll wait and see how it shakes out.
Seems like Portugal has a special feature of it's housing market that doesn't exist (maybe it does but is not common) in North America.
I mean one of the biggest issues with home ownership in the US is the he amount of homes owned by hedge funds, REITe, and other similar investment strategies. Cnbc reporting today thwt 40% of all single family homes will be owned by Wall Street by 2030…. That’s a big big issue.
I understand why we allowed them to buy out inventory post 2008 recession. But now they should force them to curb that.