On April 22, 2013, Meredith Bennett-Smith wrote the article, "Nike Pulls 'Boston Massacre' T-Shirts After Marathon Bombings" in The Huffington Post. A baseball-themed T-shirt from the Nike company was removed after being considered insensitive after the Boston bombings. The T-shirt said
"Boston Massacre" with blood spilled on it to represent the "Boston Massacre", to commemorate two the series sweeps in 1978 and 2006, when the New York Yankees swept the Boston Red Sox. This became known as the first and second "Boston massacres" to fans of the rival teams. Producer of "Late Show by David Letterman", Eric Stangel, was the one who pointed out the offending T-shirt this weekend. The producer tweeted a picture of the shirt, and said that employees told him they had started to take the shirts down. In a statement emailed to The Huffington Post, a Nike spokeswoman said the company was aware of the issue. "The shirts being referenced are older baseball shirts that were
predominantly being sold through our Factory Stores Outlets," the
representative wrote. "In light of the tragedy in Boston we took
immediate action last week to remove this product from distribution. We
conducted this process as quickly as possible and are confident the
product has been removed from distribution." The T-shirt might become a collector's item now that it is no longer in stores.
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
Armenian GENOCIDE
On April 24, 2013, Mark Kellam wrote the article, "Armenian genocide recognition overdue, congressman says" in the LA Times. Representative Adam Schiff (D-Burbank) spoke in Armenian on the House of Representatives floor today, as he honored the 1.5 million lives that were lost in the massacres of the 1915 committed by the Ottoman Empire. As the lead sponsor of the Armenian Genocide resolution in Congress, Rep. Schiff, in Armenian, said, "I speak to you from the floor of the House of Representatives
in the language of your grandparents and your great-grandparents — the
language they used to speak of their hopes, their dreams, their lives
and their loves in the years before 1915.... I speak to you in the
language of sons who watched their fathers murdered. I speak to you in the language of the girls begging the gendarmes for mercy. I speak you in the language of the children begging for a drop of water. I speak to you in the language of those who were lost. Their voices drift across the decades, begging us to remember." This speech was made Wednesday, April 24, 2013, the same day President Obama once again did not use the term "genocide" in his annual statement about the event. For the past ninety eight years, the Turkish government continues to deny the systematic annihilation of the Armenian race from the years 1915-1917, and continues to financially aid the media, along with the United States government for them to disguise and hide any evidence of the Armenian genocide. Rep. Schiff noted that their is "overwhelming evidence" from American diplomats and journalists, as well as Turkish historians, that the genocide occurred, and should be globally accepted and recognized. The Armenian community remains forever grateful for non-Armenian individuals, such as Rep. Schiff, for advocating the truth and endorsing the end of the cycle of denial.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KX6nHPiuhqg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KX6nHPiuhqg
Wednesday, April 17, 2013
Poisonous Letter
The article, "Obama Ricin Letter: Poison-Tainted Mailer to President Intercepted at Screening Facility" was written on April 17, 2013 by the Associated Press in The Huffington Post. On Tuesday night, a letter sent to Senator Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) was tested positive for the deadly poison ricin. Less than a day later, two more letters tainted with ricin have surfaced, including one to President Obama. The second letter was intercepted on its way to the U.S. Senate. President Obama's letter and Senator Wicker's letters were intercepted in facilities outside of the White House and Senate. On Wednesday, Senator Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) said police have a suspect in mind who, "writes a lot of letters to members." There has also been a rumor of a suspicious package in the Senate's office, where a bomb squad has been called. Events like these, including the tragedy of the Boston marathon, instill fear into innocent people and make them cautious, in a negative and obsessive way, of their surroundings. Especially after the September 11 incident, the American people are still trying to recover. How are we allowed to do that when the world refuses to offer us peace?
Medical Emergencies from the Boston Marathon
On April 16, 2013, Svea Herbst-Bayliss wrote the article, "Boston Marathon Amputations: Faced with Legs Mangled By Bombs, Doctors Had To Amputate" in The Huffington Post. On Monday, April 15, 2013, two bombs exploded more than four hours into the race, as hundreds of runners approached the finish line after running the forty three kilometer race, and as a thousand spectators stood cheering them on. Surgeon's at Boston's largest hospitals raced to save the lives injured. Although only three people have died so far, more than 170 are critically injured. Doctors said that the injuries were so gruesome that they had no choice other than to amputate legs. So far ten legs above the knee have been amputated, some of which bones were sticking out and limbs were hanging on by shreds of muscle. However, the amputees woke up to the shock of finding that they only have one leg were graced with gratitude. They believed they were going to die from the bomb, and did not expect to live. Doctors frantically raced around the entire night trying to save the injured, and said that had it not been for those doctors and nurses waiting at the finish line for the usual, minor injuries, this many people would not have survived. Doctors also said it took them the most time cleaning the dirt from patients' bodies and finding metal objects, such as pieces of metal trashcan and carpenter nails implanted in the bomb. Although most have survived their injuries, many still cannot breathe on their own, making it difficult to speak.
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