There are many variations of passages of Lorem Ipsum available, but the majority have suffered alteration in some form, by injected humour, or randomised words which don't look even slightly believable. If you are going to use a passage of Lorem Ipsum, you need to be sure there isn't anything embarrassing hidden in the middle of text. All the Lorem Ipsum generators on the Internet tend to repeat predefined chunks as necessary, making this the first true generator on the Internet. It uses a dictionary of over 200 Latin words, combined with a handful of model sentence structures, to generate Lorem Ipsum which looks reasonable. The generated Lorem Ipsum is therefore always free from repetition, injected humour, or non-characteristic words etc.
Donec accumsan neque eget neque eleifend, et molestie enim tempus. Nulla iaculis nulla facilisis orci aliquet viverra. Maecenas vitae risus vitae neque ultrices molestie maximus vitae sapien. Sed sit amet tellus nec ipsum interdum vehicula eu eu lectus. Maecenas turpis nibh, rhoncus vitae sagittis ut, dignissim eget metus. Vestibulum cursus ultrices ex, ut lobortis velit porta vitae. Cras ultrices nunc nec imperdiet viverra.
Sed rutrum libero augue, ut congue urna venenatis in. Vestibulum mattis accumsan est, ut ullamcorper ante blandit a. Donec vestibulum elit placerat, tristique ex quis, sollicitudin quam. Nullam quis varius lorem, eu malesuada metus. Maecenas a ipsum suscipit, sodales velit at, consectetur nunc. Aenean commodo aliquam lacinia. Nulla mattis vulputate urna, at finibus urna gravida ac. Sed dignissim lectus velit. Vestibulum lobortis metus sit amet felis maximus porta. Nunc et viverra justo, id scelerisque quam.
It’s no secret how President Donald Trump feels about sports teams turning away from Native American mascots. He’s repeatedly called for the return of the Washington Redskins and Cleveland Indians, claiming their recent rebrands were part of a “woke” agenda designed to erase history.
But one surprising team has really gotten the president’s attention: the Massapequa Chiefs.
The Long Island school district has refused to change its logo and name under a mandate from New York state banning schools from using team mascots appropriating Indigenous culture. Schools were given two years to rebrand, but Massapequa is the lone holdout, having missed the June 30 deadline to debut a new logo.
kra40 cc
The district lost an initial lawsuit it filed against the state but now has the federal government on its side. In May, Trump’s Department of Education intervened on the district’s behalf, claiming the state’s mascot ban is itself discriminatory.
Massapequa’s Chiefs logo — an American Indian wearing a yellow feathered headdress — is expected to still be prominently displayed when the fall sports season kicks off soon, putting the quiet Long Island hamlet at the center of a political firestorm.
kra40 cc
The district is now a key “battleground,” said Oliver Roberts, a Massapequa alum and the lawyer representing the school board in its fresh lawsuit against New York claiming that the ban is unconstitutional and discriminatory.
The Trump administration claims New York’s mascot ban violates Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibits recipients of federal funds from engaging in discriminatory behavior based on race, color or national origin — teeing up a potentially precedent-setting fight.
The intervention on behalf of Massapequa follows a pattern for a White House that has aggressively applied civil rights protections to police “reverse discrimination” and coerced schools and universities into policy concessions by withholding federal funds.
“Our goal is to assist nationally,” Roberts said. “It’s us putting forward our time and effort to try and assist with this national movement and push back against the woke bureaucrats trying to cancel our country’s history and tradition.”
kra40 сс
https://kra-35.com