Thursday, July 8, 2021

White People Silence Is Violence T-shirts Black

White People Silence Is Violence T-shirts Black

Buy this shirt: Why Are We Such Strange People We Spend The Days Alone In The Dark Having Conversations With Ourselves Shirt Fox News Flash top headlines for June 1 Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what’s clicking on Foxnews.com. A U.S. Navy sailor who died aboard the USS Oklahoma during the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 has been identified and is set to be buried in his Utah hometown, according to officials and a local report. The remains of Navy Radioman 3rd Class Theodore Q. Jensen, 22, were expected to be flown to Salt Lake City on Tuesday for burial in his hometown of Delta, FOX13 Salt Lake City reported. MEMORIAL DAY: 6 AMERICANS WHO GAVE THEIR LIVES FIGHTING FOR FREEDOM Jensen was assigned to the USS Oklahoma when the battleship was attacked by Japanese aircraft on Dec. 7, 1941, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA) said in a statement in April. “The USS Oklahoma sustained multiple torpedo hits, which caused it to quickly capsize,” the DPAA said. “The attack on the ship resulted in the deaths of 429 crewmen, including Jensen.” Navy Radioman 3rd Class Theodore Q. Jensen was 22-year-old was he was killed aboard the USS Oklahoma during the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. (Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency ) Jensen�s family told FOX13 that he was on leave that day but had returned to the battleship after forgetting personal belongings. “His buddies drove back to my mom and said as he got off the ship, he said, ‘Oh, I forgot my camera,'” said Sharon Senecal, Jensen’s niece. “And that was the last they saw of him.” WORLD WAR II VETERAN TRAVELS TO SOUTH CAROLINA TO GIVE FINAL SALUTE TO THE MAN WHO SAVED HIS LIFE The Navy spent three years recovering the remains of the deceased. However, by 1947 scientists had been able to identify only 35 crew members. Those who went unidentified were subsequently buried in 46 plots at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific, known as the Punchbowl, in Honolulu, the DPAA said. In 2015, DPAA personnel exhumed the USS Oklahoma Unknowns from the Punchbowl and scientists used anthropological analysis to begin the identification process. Jensen was accounted for on Dec. 17, 2020, the DPAA said. His burial was scheduled for June 2. The 22-year-old was survived by aunts, cousins and his father, his family told the station. His mother had died when he was six. Jensen�s family was overjoyed that after nearly 80 years the sailor would finally be returned to his hometown, as his father would have wished. “My grandfather always wanted him home,” Margaret Ribeek, another of Jensen’s nieces, told the station. “I’m excited to have him back in Utah and be buried back in Delta where he belongs.” Fox News Flash top headlines for June 1 Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what’s clicking on Foxnews.com. A U.S. Navy sailor who died aboard the USS Oklahoma during the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 has been identified and is set to be buried in his Utah hometown, according to officials and a local report. The remains of Navy Radioman 3rd Class Theodore Q. Jensen, 22, were expected to be flown to Salt Lake City on Tuesday for burial in his hometown of Delta, FOX13 Salt Lake City reported. MEMORIAL DAY: 6 AMERICANS WHO GAVE THEIR LIVES FIGHTING FOR FREEDOM Jensen was assigned to the USS Oklahoma when the battleship was attacked by Japanese aircraft on Dec. 7, 1941, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA) said in a statement in April. “The USS Oklahoma sustained multiple torpedo hits, which caused it to quickly capsize,” the DPAA said. “The attack on the ship resulted in the deaths of 429 crewmen, including Jensen.” Navy Radioman 3rd Class Theodore Q. Jensen was 22-year-old was he was killed aboard the USS Oklahoma during the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. (Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency ) Jensen�s family told FOX13 that he was on leave that day but had returned to the battleship after forgetting personal belongings. “His buddies drove back to my mom and said as he got off the ship, he said, ‘Oh, I forgot my camera,'” said Sharon Senecal, Jensen’s niece. “And that was the last they saw of him.” WORLD WAR II VETERAN TRAVELS TO SOUTH CAROLINA TO GIVE FINAL SALUTE TO THE MAN WHO SAVED HIS LIFE The Navy spent three years recovering the remains of the deceased. However, by 1947 scientists had been able to identify only 35 crew members. Those who went unidentified were subsequently buried in 46 plots at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific, known as the Punchbowl, in Honolulu, the DPAA said. In 2015, DPAA personnel exhumed the USS Oklahoma Unknowns from the Punchbowl and scientists used anthropological analysis to begin the identification process. Jensen was accounted for on Dec. 17, 2020, the DPAA said. His burial was scheduled for June 2. The 22-year-old was survived by aunts, cousins and his father, his family told the station. His mother had died when he was six. Jensen�s family was overjoyed that after nearly 80 years the sailor would finally be returned to his hometown, as his father would have wished. “My grandfather always wanted him home,” Margaret Ribeek, another of Jensen’s nieces, told the station. “I’m excited to have him back in Utah and be buried back in Delta where he belongs.” ‘TAPS’ non-profit supports families of fallen heroes Ashlynne Haycock from the charity’s educational support services program joins ‘Fox News Live’ Paying tribute to fallen soldiers on Memorial Day comes in many forms. For Joe Mesiano, a Pittsburgh-based musician, that form of tribute is a song. Mesiano�s song “Broken Purple Hearts” is a tribute to those who lost their lives fighting in the Vietnam War. But it could still apply to all U.S. soldiers who lost their lives fighting for their country. The Vietnam War was winding down when Mesiano was just barely a teenager. In the early 1990s, he wrote “Broken Purple Hearts,” inspired by two people he knew who served in Vietnam. One of those men was Mesiano�s uncle, whose mind was “totally shattered” and “never the same ever again” when he came back. Mesiano also had a friend who served, was wounded in battle, and received a Purple Heart. Still, Mesiano emphasized the song is not meant to be political, but simply a tribute to the people who fought for our country. AMERICANS UNMASK, GATHER, REMEMBER OVER MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND AS SENSE OF NORMALCY RETURNS Kurt Simmen, a friend of the songwriter, told Fox News how important Memorial Day is to Mesiano. He said a few years ago, he decided to put pictures to Mesiano�s song and make a video. At a Memorial Day picnic, Simmen played the video for attendees and, by his account, “there was not a dry eye in the house.” Simmen said they played the video every year, until the COVID-19 pandemic prevented friends and family from having their annual Memorial Day picnic. He said he still posts “Broken Purple Hearts” on Facebook every Memorial Day. “The song is about Vietnam and the (memorial) wall, but I think it applies to everybody who has ever served and sacrificed,” Simmen said. “I think the song speaks to their legacies and the folks that they leave behind and who miss them.”WASHINGTON � President Joe Biden called for the U.S. to “come to terms” with the darkest moments of its history Tuesday during a trip to Tulsa, Oklahoma, 100 years after a white mob burned the city’s “Black Wall Street” to the ground, killing hundreds of Black Americans and forcing thousands from their homes. Biden brought a national spotlight to the Tulsa Race Massacre, long neglected and glossed over in history books, becoming the first president to visit Tulsa on an anniversary of the bloodiest race massacre in U.S. history. �I come here to help fill the silence. Because in silence, wounds deepen,” Biden said. In a speech that bluntly talked about racism in America, Biden made a “through-line” from the massacre of Tulsa 100 years later to a weekend in 2017 in Charlottesville, Virginia, which saw a white nationalist rally with tiki torches, racist chants and violence. He also announced Vice President Kamala Harris will lead an effort aimed at protecting voting rights, saying the right to vote “is under assault with incredible intensity like I�ve never seen” in the face of restrictive Republican-led voting measures in state legislatures. Biden arrived in Tulsa in the afternoon, toured the Greenwood Cultural Center and met with the three remaining survivors of the massacre, Viola Fletcher, Hughes Van Ellis and Lessie Benningfield Randle, who are 101 to 107 years old. “You are the three known remaining survivors seen in the mirror dimly. But no longer,” Biden said. “Now your story will be known in full view. The events we speak of today took place 100 years ago, and yet I’m the first president in 100 years ever to come to Tulsa. More:Not just Tulsa: Racist 6 Easy Step To Grab This Product: Click the button “Buy this shirt” Choose your style: men, women, toddlers, … Pic Any color you like! Choose size. Enter the delivery address. Wait for your shirt and let’s take a photograph. Herapremium This product belong to quoc-huy White People Silence Is Violence T-shirts Black Buy this shirt: Why Are We Such Strange People We Spend The Days Alone In The Dark Having Conversations With Ourselves Shirt Fox News Flash top headlines for June 1 Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what’s clicking on Foxnews.com. A U.S. Navy sailor who died aboard the USS Oklahoma during the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 has been identified and is set to be buried in his Utah hometown, according to officials and a local report. The remains of Navy Radioman 3rd Class Theodore Q. Jensen, 22, were expected to be flown to Salt Lake City on Tuesday for burial in his hometown of Delta, FOX13 Salt Lake City reported. MEMORIAL DAY: 6 AMERICANS WHO GAVE THEIR LIVES FIGHTING FOR FREEDOM Jensen was assigned to the USS Oklahoma when the battleship was attacked by Japanese aircraft on Dec. 7, 1941, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA) said in a statement in April. “The USS Oklahoma sustained multiple torpedo hits, which caused it to quickly capsize,” the DPAA said. “The attack on the ship resulted in the deaths of 429 crewmen, including Jensen.” Navy Radioman 3rd Class Theodore Q. Jensen was 22-year-old was he was killed aboard the USS Oklahoma during the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. (Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency ) Jensen�s family told FOX13 that he was on leave that day but had returned to the battleship after forgetting personal belongings. “His buddies drove back to my mom and said as he got off the ship, he said, ‘Oh, I forgot my camera,'” said Sharon Senecal, Jensen’s niece. “And that was the last they saw of him.” WORLD WAR II VETERAN TRAVELS TO SOUTH CAROLINA TO GIVE FINAL SALUTE TO THE MAN WHO SAVED HIS LIFE The Navy spent three years recovering the remains of the deceased. However, by 1947 scientists had been able to identify only 35 crew members. Those who went unidentified were subsequently buried in 46 plots at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific, known as the Punchbowl, in Honolulu, the DPAA said. In 2015, DPAA personnel exhumed the USS Oklahoma Unknowns from the Punchbowl and scientists used anthropological analysis to begin the identification process. Jensen was accounted for on Dec. 17, 2020, the DPAA said. His burial was scheduled for June 2. The 22-year-old was survived by aunts, cousins and his father, his family told the station. His mother had died when he was six. Jensen�s family was overjoyed that after nearly 80 years the sailor would finally be returned to his hometown, as his father would have wished. “My grandfather always wanted him home,” Margaret Ribeek, another of Jensen’s nieces, told the station. “I’m excited to have him back in Utah and be buried back in Delta where he belongs.” Fox News Flash top headlines for June 1 Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what’s clicking on Foxnews.com. A U.S. Navy sailor who died aboard the USS Oklahoma during the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 has been identified and is set to be buried in his Utah hometown, according to officials and a local report. The remains of Navy Radioman 3rd Class Theodore Q. Jensen, 22, were expected to be flown to Salt Lake City on Tuesday for burial in his hometown of Delta, FOX13 Salt Lake City reported. MEMORIAL DAY: 6 AMERICANS WHO GAVE THEIR LIVES FIGHTING FOR FREEDOM Jensen was assigned to the USS Oklahoma when the battleship was attacked by Japanese aircraft on Dec. 7, 1941, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA) said in a statement in April. “The USS Oklahoma sustained multiple torpedo hits, which caused it to quickly capsize,” the DPAA said. “The attack on the ship resulted in the deaths of 429 crewmen, including Jensen.” Navy Radioman 3rd Class Theodore Q. Jensen was 22-year-old was he was killed aboard the USS Oklahoma during the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. (Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency ) Jensen�s family told FOX13 that he was on leave that day but had returned to the battleship after forgetting personal belongings. “His buddies drove back to my mom and said as he got off the ship, he said, ‘Oh, I forgot my camera,'” said Sharon Senecal, Jensen’s niece. “And that was the last they saw of him.” WORLD WAR II VETERAN TRAVELS TO SOUTH CAROLINA TO GIVE FINAL SALUTE TO THE MAN WHO SAVED HIS LIFE The Navy spent three years recovering the remains of the deceased. However, by 1947 scientists had been able to identify only 35 crew members. Those who went unidentified were subsequently buried in 46 plots at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific, known as the Punchbowl, in Honolulu, the DPAA said. In 2015, DPAA personnel exhumed the USS Oklahoma Unknowns from the Punchbowl and scientists used anthropological analysis to begin the identification process. Jensen was accounted for on Dec. 17, 2020, the DPAA said. His burial was scheduled for June 2. The 22-year-old was survived by aunts, cousins and his father, his family told the station. His mother had died when he was six. Jensen�s family was overjoyed that after nearly 80 years the sailor would finally be returned to his hometown, as his father would have wished. “My grandfather always wanted him home,” Margaret Ribeek, another of Jensen’s nieces, told the station. “I’m excited to have him back in Utah and be buried back in Delta where he belongs.” ‘TAPS’ non-profit supports families of fallen heroes Ashlynne Haycock from the charity’s educational support services program joins ‘Fox News Live’ Paying tribute to fallen soldiers on Memorial Day comes in many forms. For Joe Mesiano, a Pittsburgh-based musician, that form of tribute is a song. Mesiano�s song “Broken Purple Hearts” is a tribute to those who lost their lives fighting in the Vietnam War. But it could still apply to all U.S. soldiers who lost their lives fighting for their country. The Vietnam War was winding down when Mesiano was just barely a teenager. In the early 1990s, he wrote “Broken Purple Hearts,” inspired by two people he knew who served in Vietnam. One of those men was Mesiano�s uncle, whose mind was “totally shattered” and “never the same ever again” when he came back. Mesiano also had a friend who served, was wounded in battle, and received a Purple Heart. Still, Mesiano emphasized the song is not meant to be political, but simply a tribute to the people who fought for our country. AMERICANS UNMASK, GATHER, REMEMBER OVER MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND AS SENSE OF NORMALCY RETURNS Kurt Simmen, a friend of the songwriter, told Fox News how important Memorial Day is to Mesiano. He said a few years ago, he decided to put pictures to Mesiano�s song and make a video. At a Memorial Day picnic, Simmen played the video for attendees and, by his account, “there was not a dry eye in the house.” Simmen said they played the video every year, until the COVID-19 pandemic prevented friends and family from having their annual Memorial Day picnic. He said he still posts “Broken Purple Hearts” on Facebook every Memorial Day. “The song is about Vietnam and the (memorial) wall, but I think it applies to everybody who has ever served and sacrificed,” Simmen said. “I think the song speaks to their legacies and the folks that they leave behind and who miss them.”WASHINGTON � President Joe Biden called for the U.S. to “come to terms” with the darkest moments of its history Tuesday during a trip to Tulsa, Oklahoma, 100 years after a white mob burned the city’s “Black Wall Street” to the ground, killing hundreds of Black Americans and forcing thousands from their homes. Biden brought a national spotlight to the Tulsa Race Massacre, long neglected and glossed over in history books, becoming the first president to visit Tulsa on an anniversary of the bloodiest race massacre in U.S. history. �I come here to help fill the silence. Because in silence, wounds deepen,” Biden said. In a speech that bluntly talked about racism in America, Biden made a “through-line” from the massacre of Tulsa 100 years later to a weekend in 2017 in Charlottesville, Virginia, which saw a white nationalist rally with tiki torches, racist chants and violence. He also announced Vice President Kamala Harris will lead an effort aimed at protecting voting rights, saying the right to vote “is under assault with incredible intensity like I�ve never seen” in the face of restrictive Republican-led voting measures in state legislatures. Biden arrived in Tulsa in the afternoon, toured the Greenwood Cultural Center and met with the three remaining survivors of the massacre, Viola Fletcher, Hughes Van Ellis and Lessie Benningfield Randle, who are 101 to 107 years old. “You are the three known remaining survivors seen in the mirror dimly. But no longer,” Biden said. “Now your story will be known in full view. The events we speak of today took place 100 years ago, and yet I’m the first president in 100 years ever to come to Tulsa. More:Not just Tulsa: Racist 6 Easy Step To Grab This Product: Click the button “Buy this shirt” Choose your style: men, women, toddlers, … Pic Any color you like! Choose size. Enter the delivery address. Wait for your shirt and let’s take a photograph. Herapremium This product belong to quoc-huy

White People Silence Is Violence T-shirts Black - from birthstonedeals.info 1

White People Silence Is Violence T-shirts Black - from birthstonedeals.info 1

White People Silence Is Violence T-shirts Black - from birthstonedeals.info 2

White People Silence Is Violence T-shirts Black - from birthstonedeals.info 2

White People Silence Is Violence T-shirts Black - from birthstonedeals.info 3

White People Silence Is Violence T-shirts Black - from birthstonedeals.info 3

White People Silence Is Violence T-shirts Black - from birthstonedeals.info 4

White People Silence Is Violence T-shirts Black - from birthstonedeals.info 4

Buy this shirt: Why Are We Such Strange People We Spend The Days Alone In The Dark Having Conversations With Ourselves Shirt Fox News Flash top headlines for June 1 Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what’s clicking on Foxnews.com. A U.S. Navy sailor who died aboard the USS Oklahoma during the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 has been identified and is set to be buried in his Utah hometown, according to officials and a local report. The remains of Navy Radioman 3rd Class Theodore Q. Jensen, 22, were expected to be flown to Salt Lake City on Tuesday for burial in his hometown of Delta, FOX13 Salt Lake City reported. MEMORIAL DAY: 6 AMERICANS WHO GAVE THEIR LIVES FIGHTING FOR FREEDOM Jensen was assigned to the USS Oklahoma when the battleship was attacked by Japanese aircraft on Dec. 7, 1941, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA) said in a statement in April. “The USS Oklahoma sustained multiple torpedo hits, which caused it to quickly capsize,” the DPAA said. “The attack on the ship resulted in the deaths of 429 crewmen, including Jensen.” Navy Radioman 3rd Class Theodore Q. Jensen was 22-year-old was he was killed aboard the USS Oklahoma during the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. (Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency ) Jensen�s family told FOX13 that he was on leave that day but had returned to the battleship after forgetting personal belongings. “His buddies drove back to my mom and said as he got off the ship, he said, ‘Oh, I forgot my camera,'” said Sharon Senecal, Jensen’s niece. “And that was the last they saw of him.” WORLD WAR II VETERAN TRAVELS TO SOUTH CAROLINA TO GIVE FINAL SALUTE TO THE MAN WHO SAVED HIS LIFE The Navy spent three years recovering the remains of the deceased. However, by 1947 scientists had been able to identify only 35 crew members. Those who went unidentified were subsequently buried in 46 plots at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific, known as the Punchbowl, in Honolulu, the DPAA said. In 2015, DPAA personnel exhumed the USS Oklahoma Unknowns from the Punchbowl and scientists used anthropological analysis to begin the identification process. Jensen was accounted for on Dec. 17, 2020, the DPAA said. His burial was scheduled for June 2. The 22-year-old was survived by aunts, cousins and his father, his family told the station. His mother had died when he was six. Jensen�s family was overjoyed that after nearly 80 years the sailor would finally be returned to his hometown, as his father would have wished. “My grandfather always wanted him home,” Margaret Ribeek, another of Jensen’s nieces, told the station. “I’m excited to have him back in Utah and be buried back in Delta where he belongs.” Fox News Flash top headlines for June 1 Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what’s clicking on Foxnews.com. A U.S. Navy sailor who died aboard the USS Oklahoma during the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 has been identified and is set to be buried in his Utah hometown, according to officials and a local report. The remains of Navy Radioman 3rd Class Theodore Q. Jensen, 22, were expected to be flown to Salt Lake City on Tuesday for burial in his hometown of Delta, FOX13 Salt Lake City reported. MEMORIAL DAY: 6 AMERICANS WHO GAVE THEIR LIVES FIGHTING FOR FREEDOM Jensen was assigned to the USS Oklahoma when the battleship was attacked by Japanese aircraft on Dec. 7, 1941, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA) said in a statement in April. “The USS Oklahoma sustained multiple torpedo hits, which caused it to quickly capsize,” the DPAA said. “The attack on the ship resulted in the deaths of 429 crewmen, including Jensen.” Navy Radioman 3rd Class Theodore Q. Jensen was 22-year-old was he was killed aboard the USS Oklahoma during the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. (Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency ) Jensen�s family told FOX13 that he was on leave that day but had returned to the battleship after forgetting personal belongings. “His buddies drove back to my mom and said as he got off the ship, he said, ‘Oh, I forgot my camera,'” said Sharon Senecal, Jensen’s niece. “And that was the last they saw of him.” WORLD WAR II VETERAN TRAVELS TO SOUTH CAROLINA TO GIVE FINAL SALUTE TO THE MAN WHO SAVED HIS LIFE The Navy spent three years recovering the remains of the deceased. However, by 1947 scientists had been able to identify only 35 crew members. Those who went unidentified were subsequently buried in 46 plots at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific, known as the Punchbowl, in Honolulu, the DPAA said. In 2015, DPAA personnel exhumed the USS Oklahoma Unknowns from the Punchbowl and scientists used anthropological analysis to begin the identification process. Jensen was accounted for on Dec. 17, 2020, the DPAA said. His burial was scheduled for June 2. The 22-year-old was survived by aunts, cousins and his father, his family told the station. His mother had died when he was six. Jensen�s family was overjoyed that after nearly 80 years the sailor would finally be returned to his hometown, as his father would have wished. “My grandfather always wanted him home,” Margaret Ribeek, another of Jensen’s nieces, told the station. “I’m excited to have him back in Utah and be buried back in Delta where he belongs.” ‘TAPS’ non-profit supports families of fallen heroes Ashlynne Haycock from the charity’s educational support services program joins ‘Fox News Live’ Paying tribute to fallen soldiers on Memorial Day comes in many forms. For Joe Mesiano, a Pittsburgh-based musician, that form of tribute is a song. Mesiano�s song “Broken Purple Hearts” is a tribute to those who lost their lives fighting in the Vietnam War. But it could still apply to all U.S. soldiers who lost their lives fighting for their country. The Vietnam War was winding down when Mesiano was just barely a teenager. In the early 1990s, he wrote “Broken Purple Hearts,” inspired by two people he knew who served in Vietnam. One of those men was Mesiano�s uncle, whose mind was “totally shattered” and “never the same ever again” when he came back. Mesiano also had a friend who served, was wounded in battle, and received a Purple Heart. Still, Mesiano emphasized the song is not meant to be political, but simply a tribute to the people who fought for our country. AMERICANS UNMASK, GATHER, REMEMBER OVER MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND AS SENSE OF NORMALCY RETURNS Kurt Simmen, a friend of the songwriter, told Fox News how important Memorial Day is to Mesiano. He said a few years ago, he decided to put pictures to Mesiano�s song and make a video. At a Memorial Day picnic, Simmen played the video for attendees and, by his account, “there was not a dry eye in the house.” Simmen said they played the video every year, until the COVID-19 pandemic prevented friends and family from having their annual Memorial Day picnic. He said he still posts “Broken Purple Hearts” on Facebook every Memorial Day. “The song is about Vietnam and the (memorial) wall, but I think it applies to everybody who has ever served and sacrificed,” Simmen said. “I think the song speaks to their legacies and the folks that they leave behind and who miss them.”WASHINGTON � President Joe Biden called for the U.S. to “come to terms” with the darkest moments of its history Tuesday during a trip to Tulsa, Oklahoma, 100 years after a white mob burned the city’s “Black Wall Street” to the ground, killing hundreds of Black Americans and forcing thousands from their homes. Biden brought a national spotlight to the Tulsa Race Massacre, long neglected and glossed over in history books, becoming the first president to visit Tulsa on an anniversary of the bloodiest race massacre in U.S. history. �I come here to help fill the silence. Because in silence, wounds deepen,” Biden said. In a speech that bluntly talked about racism in America, Biden made a “through-line” from the massacre of Tulsa 100 years later to a weekend in 2017 in Charlottesville, Virginia, which saw a white nationalist rally with tiki torches, racist chants and violence. He also announced Vice President Kamala Harris will lead an effort aimed at protecting voting rights, saying the right to vote “is under assault with incredible intensity like I�ve never seen” in the face of restrictive Republican-led voting measures in state legislatures. Biden arrived in Tulsa in the afternoon, toured the Greenwood Cultural Center and met with the three remaining survivors of the massacre, Viola Fletcher, Hughes Van Ellis and Lessie Benningfield Randle, who are 101 to 107 years old. “You are the three known remaining survivors seen in the mirror dimly. But no longer,” Biden said. “Now your story will be known in full view. The events we speak of today took place 100 years ago, and yet I’m the first president in 100 years ever to come to Tulsa. More:Not just Tulsa: Racist 6 Easy Step To Grab This Product: Click the button “Buy this shirt” Choose your style: men, women, toddlers, … Pic Any color you like! Choose size. Enter the delivery address. Wait for your shirt and let’s take a photograph. Herapremium This product belong to quoc-huy White People Silence Is Violence T-shirts Black Buy this shirt: Why Are We Such Strange People We Spend The Days Alone In The Dark Having Conversations With Ourselves Shirt Fox News Flash top headlines for June 1 Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what’s clicking on Foxnews.com. A U.S. Navy sailor who died aboard the USS Oklahoma during the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 has been identified and is set to be buried in his Utah hometown, according to officials and a local report. The remains of Navy Radioman 3rd Class Theodore Q. Jensen, 22, were expected to be flown to Salt Lake City on Tuesday for burial in his hometown of Delta, FOX13 Salt Lake City reported. MEMORIAL DAY: 6 AMERICANS WHO GAVE THEIR LIVES FIGHTING FOR FREEDOM Jensen was assigned to the USS Oklahoma when the battleship was attacked by Japanese aircraft on Dec. 7, 1941, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA) said in a statement in April. “The USS Oklahoma sustained multiple torpedo hits, which caused it to quickly capsize,” the DPAA said. “The attack on the ship resulted in the deaths of 429 crewmen, including Jensen.” Navy Radioman 3rd Class Theodore Q. Jensen was 22-year-old was he was killed aboard the USS Oklahoma during the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. (Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency ) Jensen�s family told FOX13 that he was on leave that day but had returned to the battleship after forgetting personal belongings. “His buddies drove back to my mom and said as he got off the ship, he said, ‘Oh, I forgot my camera,'” said Sharon Senecal, Jensen’s niece. “And that was the last they saw of him.” WORLD WAR II VETERAN TRAVELS TO SOUTH CAROLINA TO GIVE FINAL SALUTE TO THE MAN WHO SAVED HIS LIFE The Navy spent three years recovering the remains of the deceased. However, by 1947 scientists had been able to identify only 35 crew members. Those who went unidentified were subsequently buried in 46 plots at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific, known as the Punchbowl, in Honolulu, the DPAA said. In 2015, DPAA personnel exhumed the USS Oklahoma Unknowns from the Punchbowl and scientists used anthropological analysis to begin the identification process. Jensen was accounted for on Dec. 17, 2020, the DPAA said. His burial was scheduled for June 2. The 22-year-old was survived by aunts, cousins and his father, his family told the station. His mother had died when he was six. Jensen�s family was overjoyed that after nearly 80 years the sailor would finally be returned to his hometown, as his father would have wished. “My grandfather always wanted him home,” Margaret Ribeek, another of Jensen’s nieces, told the station. “I’m excited to have him back in Utah and be buried back in Delta where he belongs.” Fox News Flash top headlines for June 1 Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what’s clicking on Foxnews.com. A U.S. Navy sailor who died aboard the USS Oklahoma during the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 has been identified and is set to be buried in his Utah hometown, according to officials and a local report. The remains of Navy Radioman 3rd Class Theodore Q. Jensen, 22, were expected to be flown to Salt Lake City on Tuesday for burial in his hometown of Delta, FOX13 Salt Lake City reported. MEMORIAL DAY: 6 AMERICANS WHO GAVE THEIR LIVES FIGHTING FOR FREEDOM Jensen was assigned to the USS Oklahoma when the battleship was attacked by Japanese aircraft on Dec. 7, 1941, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA) said in a statement in April. “The USS Oklahoma sustained multiple torpedo hits, which caused it to quickly capsize,” the DPAA said. “The attack on the ship resulted in the deaths of 429 crewmen, including Jensen.” Navy Radioman 3rd Class Theodore Q. Jensen was 22-year-old was he was killed aboard the USS Oklahoma during the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. (Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency ) Jensen�s family told FOX13 that he was on leave that day but had returned to the battleship after forgetting personal belongings. “His buddies drove back to my mom and said as he got off the ship, he said, ‘Oh, I forgot my camera,'” said Sharon Senecal, Jensen’s niece. “And that was the last they saw of him.” WORLD WAR II VETERAN TRAVELS TO SOUTH CAROLINA TO GIVE FINAL SALUTE TO THE MAN WHO SAVED HIS LIFE The Navy spent three years recovering the remains of the deceased. However, by 1947 scientists had been able to identify only 35 crew members. Those who went unidentified were subsequently buried in 46 plots at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific, known as the Punchbowl, in Honolulu, the DPAA said. In 2015, DPAA personnel exhumed the USS Oklahoma Unknowns from the Punchbowl and scientists used anthropological analysis to begin the identification process. Jensen was accounted for on Dec. 17, 2020, the DPAA said. His burial was scheduled for June 2. The 22-year-old was survived by aunts, cousins and his father, his family told the station. His mother had died when he was six. Jensen�s family was overjoyed that after nearly 80 years the sailor would finally be returned to his hometown, as his father would have wished. “My grandfather always wanted him home,” Margaret Ribeek, another of Jensen’s nieces, told the station. “I’m excited to have him back in Utah and be buried back in Delta where he belongs.” ‘TAPS’ non-profit supports families of fallen heroes Ashlynne Haycock from the charity’s educational support services program joins ‘Fox News Live’ Paying tribute to fallen soldiers on Memorial Day comes in many forms. For Joe Mesiano, a Pittsburgh-based musician, that form of tribute is a song. Mesiano�s song “Broken Purple Hearts” is a tribute to those who lost their lives fighting in the Vietnam War. But it could still apply to all U.S. soldiers who lost their lives fighting for their country. The Vietnam War was winding down when Mesiano was just barely a teenager. In the early 1990s, he wrote “Broken Purple Hearts,” inspired by two people he knew who served in Vietnam. One of those men was Mesiano�s uncle, whose mind was “totally shattered” and “never the same ever again” when he came back. Mesiano also had a friend who served, was wounded in battle, and received a Purple Heart. Still, Mesiano emphasized the song is not meant to be political, but simply a tribute to the people who fought for our country. AMERICANS UNMASK, GATHER, REMEMBER OVER MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND AS SENSE OF NORMALCY RETURNS Kurt Simmen, a friend of the songwriter, told Fox News how important Memorial Day is to Mesiano. He said a few years ago, he decided to put pictures to Mesiano�s song and make a video. At a Memorial Day picnic, Simmen played the video for attendees and, by his account, “there was not a dry eye in the house.” Simmen said they played the video every year, until the COVID-19 pandemic prevented friends and family from having their annual Memorial Day picnic. He said he still posts “Broken Purple Hearts” on Facebook every Memorial Day. “The song is about Vietnam and the (memorial) wall, but I think it applies to everybody who has ever served and sacrificed,” Simmen said. “I think the song speaks to their legacies and the folks that they leave behind and who miss them.”WASHINGTON � President Joe Biden called for the U.S. to “come to terms” with the darkest moments of its history Tuesday during a trip to Tulsa, Oklahoma, 100 years after a white mob burned the city’s “Black Wall Street” to the ground, killing hundreds of Black Americans and forcing thousands from their homes. Biden brought a national spotlight to the Tulsa Race Massacre, long neglected and glossed over in history books, becoming the first president to visit Tulsa on an anniversary of the bloodiest race massacre in U.S. history. �I come here to help fill the silence. Because in silence, wounds deepen,” Biden said. In a speech that bluntly talked about racism in America, Biden made a “through-line” from the massacre of Tulsa 100 years later to a weekend in 2017 in Charlottesville, Virginia, which saw a white nationalist rally with tiki torches, racist chants and violence. He also announced Vice President Kamala Harris will lead an effort aimed at protecting voting rights, saying the right to vote “is under assault with incredible intensity like I�ve never seen” in the face of restrictive Republican-led voting measures in state legislatures. Biden arrived in Tulsa in the afternoon, toured the Greenwood Cultural Center and met with the three remaining survivors of the massacre, Viola Fletcher, Hughes Van Ellis and Lessie Benningfield Randle, who are 101 to 107 years old. “You are the three known remaining survivors seen in the mirror dimly. But no longer,” Biden said. “Now your story will be known in full view. The events we speak of today took place 100 years ago, and yet I’m the first president in 100 years ever to come to Tulsa. More:Not just Tulsa: Racist 6 Easy Step To Grab This Product: Click the button “Buy this shirt” Choose your style: men, women, toddlers, … Pic Any color you like! Choose size. Enter the delivery address. Wait for your shirt and let’s take a photograph. Herapremium This product belong to quoc-huy

Shop now: https://birthstonedeals.info/product/white-people-silence-is-violence-t-shirts-black-0963

No comments:

Post a Comment

I Don't Need To Get Organized All I Need Is A Bigger Sewing Room Tshirts White

I Don't Need To Get Organized All I Need Is A Bigger Sewing Room Tshirts White I’m so disgusted with your customer service I have used n...