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Tuesday, June 27, 2023

Elizabeth Warren confronts JPMorgan CEO during heated testimony







JUNE 27, 2023

BACKSTORY - DUE DILIGENCE-ACCOUNTABILITY OF WELLS FARGO, BANK OF AMERICA, CITI BANK & CHASE BANK COVID YEAR 2020
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JAME DIMON is the CEO, of CHASE BANK. His 2023 net worth  is $1.6 billion.
CHASE BANK HAS BECOME THE "BANK OF GREED" IN THE BANKING MARKETPLACE.

Senator Elizabeth Warren shares numbers in the $BILLIONS taken from African American, Latinos, and struggling Americans during COVID 2020 in OVERDRAFT FEES.  Dimon's bank is listed as receiving 7x per account as much as Wells Fargo, Citi Bank, and Bank of America in overdraft fees.



TIME OUT FOLKS.
We the People must call the banks into account.
LISTEN TO SENATOR ELIZABETH WARREN FIGURES.
LISTEN TO THE FIGURES GIVEN BY SENATOR JOHN KENNEDY REGARDING CORPORATE TAXES at the same hearing.

Sunday, June 25, 2023

DR. FOLUSO FAKOREDE - a Cardiologist by trade and savior of African American limbs


BACK STORY- PROPUBLICA

The Black American Amputation Epidemic

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 JUNE 25, 2023

MISSISSIPPI || Take a look at this lengthy article about how African Americans are losing toes, feet, legs, and lives due to Diabetes neglect from our health industry.

This is about the efforts of Dr. Foluso Fakorede, a Cardiologist - a one-man show to save men and women in Mississippi.

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IT WAS A FRIDAY EVENING in the hospital after a particularly grueling week when Dr. Foluso Fakorede, the only cardiologist in Bolivar County, Mississippi, walked into Room 336. Henry Dotstry lay on a cot, his gray curls puffed on a pillow. Fakorede smelled the circumstances — a rancid whiff, like dead mice. He asked a nurse to undress

                                                CLICK PHOTO TO Enlarge

the wound on Dotstry’s left foot, then slipped on nitrile gloves to examine the damage. Dotstry’s calf had swelled to nearly the size of his thigh. The tops of his toes were dark; his sole was yellow, oozing. Fakorede’s gut clenched. Fuck, he thought. It’s rotten.

Fakorede, who’d been asked to consult on the case, peeled off his gloves and read over Dotstry’s chart: He was 67, never smoked. His ultrasound results showed that the circulation in his legs was poor. Uncontrolled diabetes, it seemed, had constricted the blood flow to his foot, and without it, the infection would not heal. A surgeon had typed up his recommendation. It began: “Mr. Dotstry has limited options.”

Fakorede scanned the room. He has quick, piercing eyes, a shaved head and, at 38, the frame of an amateur bodybuilder. Dotstry was still. His mouth arched downward, and faint eyebrows sat high above his lids, giving him a look of disbelief. Next to his cot stood a flesh-colored prosthetic, balancing in a black sneaker.  CLICK

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LUVENIA STOKES
Click photo to Enlarge

When Luvenia Stokes came to Fakorede, she had already lost her right leg at the age of 48. Like many Delta residents, she grew up in a food desert, and without money for fresh produce, she’d developed diabetes at a young age. She said that a pedicurist nicked her toe, and the small cut developed an infection. Without good blood flow, it began bubbling with pus. Stokes told Fakorede that no doctor had performed an angiogram to get a good look at the circulation or a revascularization to clean out the arteries. A surgeon removed her second toe. Without cleared vessels, though, the infection spread. Within weeks, a new surgeon removed her leg.

Stokes lived in a single-wide trailer with her mother. Her wheelchair could not fit in the doorways, so she inched through sideways with a walker. Because she could hardly exercise, she gained 48 pounds in two years. The amputation hadn’t treated her vascular disease, and a stabbing pain soon engulfed her remaining leg, “like something is clawing down on you,” she said. When she finally made it to Fakorede, she told him that one doctor had prescribed neuropathy medication and another had diagnosed her with arthritis. “I’m not letting them get that other leg,” Fakorede told her. Stokes’ grandmother, Annie, who lives in a nearby trailer, had lost both her legs, above the knee, to diabetes. Her cousin Elmore had lost his right leg, too.

General surgeons have a financial incentive to amputate; they don’t get paid to operate if they recommend saving a limb. And many hospitals don’t direct doctors to order angiograms, the most reliable imaging to show if and precisely where blood flow is blocked, giving the clearest picture of whether an amputation is necessary and how much needs to be cut. Insurers don’t require the imaging, either. (A spokesperson for America’s Health Insurance Plans, a leading industry trade association, said, “This is not an area where there is likely to be unnecessary surgery.”) To Fakorede, this was like removing a woman’s breast after she felt a lump, without first ordering a mammogram.

Nationwide, more than half of patients do not get an angiogram before amputation; in the Delta, Fakorede found that the vast majority of the amputees he treated had never had one. Now, he was determined to make sure that no one else lost a limb before getting the test. This wasn’t a controversial view: The professional guidelines for vascular specialists — both surgeons and cardiologists — recommend imaging of the arteries before cutting, though many surgeons argue that in emergencies, noninvasive tests like ultrasounds are enough. Marie Gerhard-Herman, an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and a cardiologist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, chaired the committee on guidelines for the American College of Cardiology and the American Heart Association. She told me that angiography before amputation “was a view that some of us thought was so obvious that it didn’t need to be stated.” She added: “But then I saw that there were pockets of the country where no one was getting angiograms, and it seemed to be along racial and socioeconomic lines. It made me sick to my stomach.”

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DR. AKOREDE ON CBS



Tuesday, June 20, 2023

JUNETEENTH Day Parade in Milwaukee - June 19, 2023




HEAR YEHEAR YE.
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2023 THEME:
I AM JUNETEENTH

JUNE 19, 2023 || Milwaukee, WI
brought to you by:
    Channel 4 - WTMJ (click to start parade)






Sunday, June 18, 2023

TODAY IS PERSONAL - It is your Father's Day

 

REV. WILLIE B. GLASS

JUNE 18, 2023
TODAY, I RAISE A TOAST TO "THE REV."  my father.

A jovial and well-read man.




Sunday, June 11, 2023

Belmont Stakes - June 10, 2023

 

Arcangelo crosses finish line first at Belmont Stakes, Jena Antonucci first female trainer to win the race


146 Comments

NEW YORK (AP) — Arcangelo took the lead at the top of the stretch and won the Belmont Stakes on Saturday, making Jena Antonucci the first female trainer to win the race in its 155 years.

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Triple Crown season ended with a piece of history at Belmont Park on Saturday.

Arcangelo held off favorite Forte to win the 155th running of the Belmont Stakes, in the process making Jena Antonucci the first female trainer to win a Triple Crown race.

National Treasure came out of the gate rapidly and led for much of the early stages of the 1 1/2-mile race, but Arcangelo stayed close to the Preakness Stakes winner.

Thursday, June 8, 2023

WOKNESS IN SHARING our language - A NEW Dictionary

 The Oxford Dictionary of African American English: First 100 words


The Oxford Dictionary of African American English (ODAAE), a joint project of Oxford Languages (Oxford University Press) and Harvard University’s Hutchins Center for African & African American Research, is now well underway, and the first 100 entries have recently been completed. 

The project is spearheaded by Prof Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Editor-in-Chief, Director of the Center, and Alphonse Fletcher University Professor at Harvard.

Watch a presentation of the project’s progress, followed by a Q&A session.

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Be inspired.

Be wise.

Contribute.

Saturday, June 3, 2023

HAPPY 41st BIRTHDAY MS. YVETTE


 JUNE 3, 2023

IT'S BUDDIE'S BIRTHDAY.

WHO IS BUDDIE?

SHE IS MARY GLASS'S BEAUTIFUL DAUGHTER.

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TODAY SHE IS 41 YEARS OLD.


ALL WEEK LONG JUNE 5, 2023
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ALL WEEK LONG JUNE 8, 2023

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JUNE 3, 1982 - SEPTEMBER 8, 2004

Thursday, June 1, 2023