Recreación Real Madrid 2-0 Barcelona – La Liga 2020
Real Madrid 2-0 Barcelona Goles recreados espero les guste 🙂
Real Madrid 2-0 Barcelona Goles recreados espero les guste 🙂
“You want to give every customer a personal experience, but it’s difficult when you’re a small team. Having chatbots to pre-qualify our leads, means I can go to sleep knowing that when I wake up my inbox won’t be overflowing with unqualified contacts.”
“The Typeform chatbot was a more attractive and interactive option for sharing info that people needed, and a friendlier way to collect their details. So it worked as both a lead capture tool and a website assistant.”
“Simply filling in a form feels like a generic experience, like you’re answering questions for someone else’s benefit. Chatting with a bot gives the sensation that you’re the one who’s started the interaction. It feels like you’re more in control somehow.”
“A beautiful conversation doesn’t pressure you to give your details straight away. It accompanies you, providing the support and information you need before deciding if you’re interested. That’s a good experience.”
Die 50 Beste Deutschrap 2019 – Juli
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The ACLU of Hawai‘i released a report today titled “Decriminalizing Houselessness in Hawai‘i,” which shows how criminalizing people’s status of being unsheltered causes irreparable harm to individuals, wastes public resources, dehumanizes those experiencing houselessness in the eyes of the public, and directly undermines the government’s investments in housing and supportive services.
The report also shows that criminalizing houselessness deepens racial and ethnic disparities, disproportionately harming houseless Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders.
“The report we’re releasing today documents what government has done wrong, but also charts a path forward for how taxpayer dollars can be better spent, with positive results, all without dehumanizing and violating the rights of people who are experiencing houselessness,” said ACLU of Hawaiʻi Executive Director Joshua Wisch.
A public webinar will be held Monday, Nov. 29 at 6 pm to present and discuss the report. The speakers for the webinar include report author Asha DuMonthier, former houseless Oʻahu resident Lindsay Pacheco, ACLU of Hawaiʻi Legal DIrector Wookie Kim and Shayna Lonoaea-Alexander, a hapa queer community organizer working as a consultant mobilizing for criminal legal policy change through legislative advocacy and political education. This virtual event is free and will include lived close-captioning and ASL interpretation. To register for the webinar and read the report, click here.
The findings of the report are based in part on interviews with service providers, government employees, community organizers, academics, philanthropic organizations, and people who have experienced houselessness in Hawai‘i. Some of the topline recommendations resulting from the report include:
Aura Reyes, an O‘ahu resident who experienced sweeps while she and her family were houseless, said: “The sweeps are not only disruptive, they are degrading to the people who are targeted as a result of them. They send these people a message that the city believes that they are worthless and considered trash. It also hurts the providers who are trying to build the trust and relationships needed in order to get people off of our streets and into housing.”
Pacheco, a formerly houseless O‘ahu resident who has experienced sweeps in the past and who contributed to the report findings, spends her weekends assisting houseless people who have been affected by sweeps. She helps people navigate the complex processes to secure forms of identification like drivers’ licenses and birth certificates, which are often confiscated and discarded by the City during sweeps, making it impossible for many unhoused people to even apply for housing assistance. After many years on the street, Lindsay got housed in May 2020, with the assistance of a Housing First voucher.
In Honolulu, administrators are rebranding sweeps as “sanitation efforts,” according to the ACLU of Hawaiʻi press release.
“A sweep is a sweep no matter how you label it, or try to justify it, or how you conduct it,” Pacheco said. “When conducting a ‘sanitation outreach,’ how does one determine what is ‘trash’ and what is someone’s belongings, especially when houseless individuals are generally seen as trash in the eyes of society anyway? Treating houseless people like trash on the streets is in no way a solution to houselessness, nor criminalizing us either.”
The report’s author DuMonthier holds a Master of Public Policy degree from the University of California at Berkeley and has a background in community and labor organizing.
She said: “Houselessness is driven by structural factors — lack of housing that is affordable to low-income people, stagnant wages and inadequate renter protections and social safety net supports. Yet the primary local government response to houselessness is punitive — using the police to sweep, cite, arrest and incarcerate unhoused people. This response is ineffective at addressing the root causes of houselessness and does incredible damage to unhoused people’s health and well-being. Why continue with a losing strategy, when public resources could instead be invested in creating safer, healthier and more equitable communities?”
Looking at these new approaches is essential as it is increasingly clear that what we have been doing in Hawai‘i is not working. Policing costs the counties half a billion dollars a year, with each county spending 16 to 30 times on policing what it does on addressing houselessness, according to the press release.
In fiscal year 2020 the City of Honolulu carried out 1,634 sweeps over the course of 320 days, an average of more than 5 sweeps per day. The ACLU of Hawai‘i estimates that sweeps alone cost Honolulu almost $5 million per year. Based on that, the county funds used to conduct sweeps in one year could instead be used to fund 192 Housing First vouchers and save taxpayers $2.2 Million per year in costs related to healthcare, arrests and incarceration.
“In 2016 the ACLU of Hawai‘i successfully sued the City and County of Honolulu over its treatment of houseless people’s property, which the City was seizing and destroying without due process,” said Legal Director Wookie Kim. “And on Oct. 20, 2021 the ACLU of Hawai‘i filed suit against Maui County for violations of the constitutional rights of people swept from Kanahā. While we can and will continue to bring such suits to protect peoples’ rights under the state and federal constitutions, we hope that instead government will look carefully at these recommendations as an alternative to criminalizing houselessness.”
TASTY BREAKFAST IDEAS | FAST & EASY MORING RECIPES | BREAKFAST MEAL PREP | LET’S GET COOKING! Welcome back my cooking friends! Today I have 5 new breakfast meal prep recipes that go FAR! These take only a few minutes in the morning to heat up and it’s a breakfast you can truly feel good
President Joseph R. Biden
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
Washington, DC 20500
Re: Addressing the Climate Crisis’ Domestic Impacts on Maternal and Infant Health Outcomes
Dear President Biden,
We are a group of human rights, reproductive rights, reproductive justice, environmental justice, maternal and child health, health care professional organizations, medical societies, and other advocates writing with a spirit of energized support for your January Executive Order (EO) on Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad[1] and for your commitment to racial justice and environmental justice in addressing the climate crisis in the United States.
Pregnant People, Infants, Children Particularly Vulnerable
We are also writing to emphasize that addressing the climate crisis appropriately includes considering how heat, wildfires, floods, and other impacts stand to worsen the maternal health crisis that is dominated by unjust racial disparities, widening further the shocking gap in this country between who has a healthy pregnancy and baby and who does not.
Climate health adaptation efforts should adopt a reproductive justice lens and acknowledge the added vulnerability faced by birthing people, particularly Black and Indigenous women, and others most affected by the country’s maternal health crisis. There has been too little attention paid to human health consequences of the climate crisis over the past years, and even less to the distinct impacts on pregnant people, particularly reproductive-aged women of color.[2] We note with appreciation the White House proclamation last week on Black Maternal Health Week.[3]
Maternal mortality and morbidity, premature birth rates, and other adverse birth outcomes in the US are among the worst in the industrialized world and are continuing to worsen.[4] Ending racial disparities by naming and addressing factors that contribute to systemic racism is a necessary step as we continue to combat the maternal health crisis.
As the Environmental Protection Agency has noted, “[during] pregnancy, physiologic changes, such as higher respiratory rates and increases in blood and plasma volumes, increases a woman’s vulnerability to environmental exposures”.[5] A broad array of studies and government resources have shown or noted links between exposure to heat, wildfire smoke, flooding, hurricanes, air pollution, fracking and other forms of fossil fuel extraction for example, and poor maternal health and birth outcomes.[6]
Both pregnant people themselves and the developing fetus, as well as newborns and children, are at unique risk. Exposure to wildfire, heat, heavy metals (and other contamination like mold after flooding), hurricanes, or stress associated with extreme weather disasters may all have impacts on fetal development.[7] Newborns and children are especially vulnerable to heat and air pollution, for example.[8]
Pregnant people themselves are also more at risk of heat stress, particularly while working low-income jobs with few labor rights protections like those in the agriculture industry sector.[9] The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists has noted about the climate crisis that, “women in affected regions [are] at elevated risk of disease, malnutrition, sexual violence, poor mental health, lack of reproductive control, negative obstetric outcomes, and death”.[10]
To address the climate crisis’ impact on maternal and infant health outcomes, we recommend the following actions:
We deeply appreciate your ongoing commitment to maternal health and addressing the climate crisis and would be delighted to discuss further.
Sincerely,
A Better Balance
Allergy & Asthma Network
Alliance of Nurses for Healthy Environments
American Academy of Pediatrics
American College of Nurse-Midwives
American Society of Peri Anesthesia Nurses
Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America
Black Women’s Health Imperative
Break the Cycle of Climate Change
Break the Cycle of Health Disparities, Inc.
Center for Biological Diversity
Center for Reproductive Rights
CHANGE (Center for Health & Gender Equity)
Children’s Environmental Health Network (CEHN)
Citizens’ Environmental Coalition
ClimateMama
Climate for Health, ecoAmerica
The Climate Resilience Fund
Every Woman Connecticut
Flint Rising
Freshwater Future
Friends of UNFPA
Harambee Village Doulas
Human Rights Watch
If/When/How: Lawyering for Reproductive Justice
In Our Own Voice: National Black Women’s Reproductive Justice Agenda
Indigenous Environmental Network
International Center for Research on Women (ICRW)
Ipas
Jacobs Institute of Women’s Health
MADRE
Medical Society Consortium on Climate and Health
Medical Students for a Sustainable Future
Mom and Baby Action Network
Moms Clean Air Force
National Association of Nurse Practitioners in Women’s Health
National Birth Equity Collaborative
National Black Nurses Association
National Hispanic Council on Aging
National League for Nursing
National Partnership for Women and Families
National WIC Association
New Mexico Social Justice and Equity Institute
Philippine Nurses Association of America
Population Institute
Public Health Advisory Council of the Climate Action Campaign
San Francisco Bay Physicians for Social Responsibility
Sixth World Solutions
Society for Public Health Education Midwest Chapter
Stetson University’s Environmental Club
This is Zero Hour NYC/Ludovica Martella
We the People of Detroit
White Ribbon Alliance
Wisconsin Alliance for Women’s Health
Women’s Earth and Climate Action Network (WECAN)
Women’s Environment and Development Organization (WEDO)
CC:
Vice President Kamala Harris
Gina McCarthy, White House National Climate Advisor
Jennifer Klein, Co-Chair and Executive Director of the Gender Policy Council
Julissa Reynoso, Co-Chair of the Gender Policy Council
[1] Executive Order on Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad, January 27, 2021, https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/presidential-actions/2021/01/27/executive-order-on-tackling-the-climate-crisis-at-home-and-abroad/ (accessed April 8, 2021).
[2] For example, President Obama’s national climate plan did not acknowledge or plan for health impacts of the crisis. The Climate Health Action coalition noted earlier this year: “Of the nearly 80,000 HHS employees, fewer than a dozen have expertise in climate and health. Other than a small initiative at CDC (representing 0.0007% of the HHS budget), HHS has no formal programming on climate and health.” Human Rights Watch has been unable to find any federal or state climate crisis health adaptation program providing interventions for maternal health and most state level climate action plans omit this vulnerable population, or mention pregnancy as a vulnerability only in passing, even when others are included.
[3] “A Proclamation on Black Maternal Health Week, 2021,” April 13, 2021, https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/presidential-actions/2021/04/13/a-proclamation-on-black-maternal-health-week-2021/ (accessed April 19, 2021).
[4] For example, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) says that Black women’s pregnancies end in premature birth 50 percent more often than those of white women, low birth weight is also twice as common among babies born to Black women, and stillbirth is more than twice as common for Black women as for white women. The March of Dimes, which works to end premature birth in the US, provides analysis that shows that Hispanic and Indigenous American women also have worse birth outcomes than white women. See: “Reproductive Health,” CDC, last reviewed September 3, 2019, https://www.cdc.gov/reproductivehealth/maternalinfanthealth/index.html (accessed April 8, 2021); and “Peristats,” March of Dimes, https://www.marchofdimes.org/Peristats/ViewSubtopic.aspx?reg=99&top=3&stop=63&lev=1&slev=1&obj=1 (accessed April 8, 2021).
[5] “Wildfire Smoke and Your Patients’ Health,” Environmental Protection Agency, last updated September 30, 2019, https://www.epa.gov/wildfire-smoke-course/which-populations-experience-greater-risks-adverse-health-effects-resulting (accessed April 8, 2021).
[6] On heat, for example, see “Chapter 14: Human Health” in Fourth National Climate Assessment, US Global Change Research Program, 2018, https://nca2018.globalchange.gov/chapter/14/ (accessed April 18, 2021); and Bruce Bekkar, MD, Susan Pacheco, MD; Rupa Basu, PhD, et al., “Association of Air Pollution and Heat Exposure With Preterm Birth, Low Birth Weight, and Stillbirth in the USA Systematic Review” Journal of the American Medical Association Network Open 3, no. 6 (2020), accessed April 8, 2021, doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.8243. On wildfire smoke, see “Wildfire Smoke and Your Patients’ Health,” Environmental Protection Agency; and Gregory Joseph, Paul J. Schramm, Ambarish Vaidyanathan, Patrick Breysse, and Bradley Goodwin, “Evidence on the Use of Indoor Air Filtration as an Intervention for Wildfire Smoke Pollutant Exposure,” BRACE Technical Report Series, July 2020, https://www.cdc.gov/air/wildfire-smoke/socialmedia/Wildfire-Air-Filtration-508.pdf (accessed April 8, 2021). On flooding, see, for example, Lea H Mallett PhD, Ruth A Etzel MD, PhD, “Flooding: what is the impact on pregnancy and child health?” Disasters 42, no. 3 (July 2018): 432-458, accessed April 8, 2021, doi:10.1111/disa.12256; and Van T. Tong, Marianne E. Zotti, and Jason Hsia, “Impact of the Red River Catastrophic Flood on Women Giving Birth in North Dakota, 1994–2000,” Maternal and Child Health Journal 15 (2011): 281-288, accessed April 8, 2021, doi:10.1007/s10995-010-0576-9. On hurricanes, see, Shengzhi Sun, Kate R. Weinberger, Meilin Yan, G. Brooke Anderson, Gregory A. Wellenius, Tropical cyclones and risk of preterm birth: A retrospective analysis of 20 million births across 378 US counties, Environmental International 140 (July 2020); and Janet Currie and Maya Rossin-Slater, “Weathering the storm: Hurricanes and birth outcomes,” Journal of Health Economics 32, no. 3 (May 2013): 487-503. On air pollution, see, Bruce Bekkar, MD, Susan Pacheco, MD; Rupa Basu, PhD, et al., “Association of Air Pollution and Heat Exposure With Preterm Birth, Low Birth Weight, and Stillbirth in the USA Systematic Review.” On fossil fuel extraction, see, for example, Lisa M. McKenzie, William Allshouse, and Stephen Daniels, “Congenital heart defects and intensity of oil and gas well site activities in early pregnancy,” Environment International 132 (November 2019); and Lara J. Cushing, Kate Vavra-Musser, Khang Chau, Meredith Franklin, and Jill E. Johnston, “Flaring from Unconventional Oil and Gas Development and Birth Outcomes in the Eagle Ford Shale in South Texas,” Environmental Health Perspectives 128, no. 7 (2020). On fracking, see, Concerned Health Professionals of New York and Physicians for Social Responsibility, “Compendium of scientific, medical, and media findings demonstrating risks and harms of fracking (unconventional gas and oil extraction) (7th ed.),” December 2020, http://concernedhealthny.org/compendium/ (accessed April 8, 2021).
[8] “Climate Change & Children’s Health,” Center for Climate, Health, and the Global Environment, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, https://www.hsph.harvard.edu/c-change/subtopics/climate-change-and-childrens-health/ (accessed April 8, 2021).
[9] “Reproductive Health and the Workplace,” The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), last reviewed April 20, 2017, https://www.cdc.gov/niosh/topics/repro/heat.html (accessed April 8, 2021).
[10] “Climate Change and Women’s Health,” The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists position statement, April 2018, https://www.acog.org/clinical-information/policy-and-position-statements/position-statements/2018/climate-change-and-womens-health (accessed April 8, 2021).
Kylie Jenner is giving Jordyn Woods a run for her money…literally. The reality star got herself a new summer house and it’s pretty spectacular. It all makes sense considering her cosmetics line is really taking off…she even received support from one unlikely person. Khloe Kardashian got real about walking away from Tristan Thompson. And Rob Kardashian seems to be falling back into old habits…here’s why his family is concerned: the news you want is coming up right now.
#kyliejenner #jordynwoods #kuwtk
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En esta gran oportunidad, fuimos parte del ciclo AUTORES EN VIVO que realiza AGADU, el cual fomenta y apoya a compositores de la Cultura Uruguaya contemplándolos en un clima íntimo y exclusivo junto al público con una gran puesta en escena.
Una gran distinción a nuestro compositor Alvaro Rabaquino el que hayamos sido una de los pocos grupos musicales de Cumbia Pop en formar parte de tan magnífico ciclo y estamos muy contentos de tan grandiosa oportunidad donde repasamos algunos de los temas que marcaron la historia de Mano Arriba como Llámame Más Temprano, Lo Que Pasa en la Noche, Admítelo y La Noche No Es Para Dormir, siendo nuestro primer show en vivo en un teatro.
Sin más que agradecimiento y emoción les presentamos Lo que pasa en la noche …
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