Lady Freedom Returns
Lady Freedom Returns's JournalGood news. I can move my toes at the same time!
Going to phisical therapy now to show them this fantastic news. Also Saturday, my right hand started to tingle like when you go shaking a hand when it goes to sleep.
Guess my body is trying to rewrite it's programming.
Yes, still kicking... sort of
Legs are getting a little worse. Still can't use my right hand. Eyes going downhill , but at a slow pace
Been having to go to this doctor and that doctor. All with a different expertise to find the best course to stop me from being in a wheelchair.
And thanks to the one that donated to my GoFundMe account. Thank has helped with getting me to all these appointments, and got me a decent cup of coffee 😀
The pain is getting worse and spreading.
When it (MS) started, it didn't hurt. Just body parts didn't want to work.
Now I hurt. And my hands burn and scratch for long periods of time. It feels really weird on my right since I can't feel anything with it.
And this strange feeling like needles are poking into my head.
Don't know if I should call my doctor and beg to see him or if it's just one of those things with MS.
LFR checking in.
'anti-homeless architecture
Please hit the link to read more and see photos of the different kinds of barriers.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-7461899/Online-thread-sees-people-calling-cities-installed-anti-homeless-architecture.html
Shocking online thread sees people calling out cities that have installed 'anti-homeless architecture' - from sharp spikes to bench bars - to stop people from sleeping in public places
By Freya Drohan For Dailymail.com
08:15 EDT 16 Sep 2019 , updated 16:42 EDT 16 Sep 2019
The origin of the term is unknown, but cities throughout the world show examples of the purposefully obstructive design features. However, some - like sloping benches or 'artwork' in wide doorways - are subtle enough that members of the public never really pause to think of their intent.
The thread called out the most prevalent examples of anti-homeless architecture, causing outrage and forcing people to take notice of inhumane and insidious design practices.
Several images show benches with bars in the middle of the seating area - a normal sight in many urban areas.
A Canadian Twitter user shared an image of a park bench painted in LGBTQ-friendly rainbow colors that had multiple dividing bars in the middle.
Social media users were angered at how the bench could promote inclusivity to one community while discriminating against people who were seeking a place to sleep.
Get him Bette.
Bette Midler
✔
@BetteMidler
Dear Donnie, Yesterday you attacked the homeless for living on "our best highways, our best streets, our best entrances to buildings." Why dont you put them up in your hotels & rentals? I hear youve got plenty of room these days!
https://twitter.com/BetteMidler/status/1174303618968760320?s=20
Obama meets with teen climate activist Greta Thunberg: 'You and me, we're a team'
By Paul LeBlanc, CNN
Updated at 7:06 PM ET, Tue September
Obama meets with teen climate activist Greta Thunberg: 'You and me, we're a team'
By Paul LeBlanc, CNN
Updated at 7:06 PM ET, Tue September 17, 2019
This teen activist has a message for Trump
This teen activist has a message for Trump 00:45
Washington (CNN) Former President Barack Obama on Monday met with Swedish teenage climate activist Greta Thunberg as part of her visit to Washington, DC, to promote environmental issues.
"Just 16, @GretaThunberg is already one of our planet's greatest advocates," Obama tweeted after his meeting with Thunberg. "Recognizing that her generation will bear the brunt of climate change, she's unafraid to push for real action."
Thunberg established herself as a bona fide climate action figure after staging weekly sit-ins outside the Swedish Parliament, spawning a burgeoning movement of youth climate activists to hold their own protests in more than 100 cities worldwide.
Read more at https://www.cnn.com/2019/09/17/politics/barack-obama-greta-thunberg-climate-change/index.html
https://twitter.com/CNN/status/1174103572071497728?s=20
Invisible People Report: Who Do We Call When a Homeless Person Needs help?
Homelessness Is a Nationwide Crisis That Must Be Addressed.
A lot can happen in 15 years: You attend college. You get a new job. You rent your first apartment. You get married, start a family, buy a house. For Jossalyn, little has happened. She has spent the past 15 years homeless.
Like many others I meet on the streets, Jossalyn has fallen through the gaps in the safety net. She is surviving now, but how long will it be before Jossalyn becomes critically vulnerable?
Im reminded of a question Nancy Lublin and her daughter asked me repeatedly on a recent tour of Skid Row. Besides 911, who can people call when they see a homeless person needing help? And there are people in dire need of homeless services everywhere.
Please read full story at https://invisiblepeople.tv/who-do-we-call-when-a-homeless-person-needs-help
https://twitter.com/invisiblepeople/status/1174012157559824387?s=20
Cokie Roberts, Pioneering Female Journalist Who Helped Shape NPR, Dies at 75
Read full story at https://www.npr.org/2019/09/17/761050916/cokie-roberts-pioneering-female-journalist-who-helped-shape-npr-dies-at-75
Veteran journalist Cokie Roberts, who joined an upstart NPR in 1978 and left an indelible imprint on the growing network with her coverage of Washington politics before later going to ABC News, has died. She was 75.
Roberts died Tuesday due to complications from breast cancer, according to a family statement.
A bestselling author and Emmy Award winner, Roberts was one of NPR's most recognizable voices and is considered one of a handful of pioneering female journalists along with Nina Totenberg, Linda Wertheimer and Susan Stamberg who helped shape the public broadcaster's sound and culture at a time when few women held prominent roles in journalism.
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Current location: Tucson,AZ
Member since: Sun Aug 28, 2011, 06:20 PM
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