Harvard/Yale, make sure they have private dorms with locks installed on doors - adding extra feature to locks such as supporting door handles with hiking or skiing poles is never too much. College/university campuses are a hotbeds for domestic terrorism often either ran by FBI and police alone or with at least some participating in one. I would love to vote for Donald Trump, BUT criminally insane Donald Trump(PARASITE, SNITCH, GANGSTER, AND FOREIGN AGENT) is a cause of what you see bellow - Trump's racially inflamed statements and DELIBERATELY insane public conduct will make job the impossible in the future for any individual whoever will try to deal with criminal phenomena. I was used as an experiment tool for terrorists from both spectrums(walks of life) to practice on me as pleased. Multiculturalism is a terrorism(ADDICTED TO NOTHING MORE THAN PSYCHIATRY) specially if ran in the environment such as the one in USA or United
Kingdom - countries with previous colonial or even neonazi past. JUST AS IN THE CASE OF DONALD TRUMP, COUPLE ALSO SUPPORTS PUTIN'S WAR ON UKRAINE. MY CASE WAS A MAGNET FOR DICTATORS AND THOSE WHO CRAVED TO EAT USA FROM WITHIN(ESPECIALLY LONDON WHICH DREAMED ABOUT TAKING DOWN USA FOR THE SAKE OF GOOD OLD TIMES AND HAVE USED MULTICULTURALISM AND SELF SABOTAGED DONALD TRUMP TO POSE IN FRONT OF THE WORLD AS A RIGHTEOUS VS USA) AND NO LONGER WAS ABOUT FAILED SLOVENIAN INDEPENDENCE. IT ALLWAYS STARTS FROM THE TOP MAKING LAWS/CONSTITUTION IRRELEVANT, THEN POPULATION ROLLOVER THROUGH SWIFT ACTS OF SOCIAL GENOCIDE A NEW LAWS AND CONSTITUTION ARE BORN BEFORE COUNTRY ENTERS INTO A TOTAL CHAOS/TERROR LED BY WHAT ONCE USED TO BE MINORITY - A NEW COUNTRY IS AND IT TOOK ONLY BORN - IN AMERICAN CASE ALMOST DONE DEAL WITHIN 4 DECADES. https://ausertimes.blogspot.com/2024/06/its-not-surgeon-general-vivek-murthy-is.html
Alice Chen
Alice Chen | |
---|---|
Education | Yale University (BS) Cornell University (MD) |
Spouse | |
Children | 2 |
Scientific career | |
Institutions | David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA Harvard Kennedy School |
Alice Chen is an American physician who is an assistant clinical professor at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. She has previously been a Hauser Visiting Leader at Harvard Kennedy School Center for Public Leadership and assistant clinical professor position at the George Washington University in Washington, D.C. Chen was a founding member and former director of the nonprofit organization Doctors for America.
Early life and education[edit]
Chen is from the San Francisco Bay Area.[1] She studied biology at Yale University.[2][3] When she arrived at Yale, Chen played violin and piano but she picked up several more extracurricular activities including Russian and Chinese calligraphy during the course of her undergraduate studies.[3] She lived in Morse College.[3]
Chen was a student at Yale when she first became involved with campaigning, taking part in a protest on New Haven Green to stand against land mines.[3] She moved to the Weill Cornell Medical College of Cornell University for her medical degree, and graduated in 2005.[1]
In the aftermath of the September 11 attacks, Chen volunteered as a caseworker for the American Red Cross.[4] For the following six months she helped to lead the largest service center in Manhattan. Chen was an internal medicine resident at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA.[3] Here she served as director of the UCLA residency program in Malawi.[4]
Research and career[edit]
In the leadup to the 2008 United States presidential election, Chen signed an open letter from Doctors for Obama calling for reform of the United States healthcare system.[3][5] After the election of Barack Obama, the doctors regrouped and renamed themselves Doctors for America.[6] Chen became an advocate for engaging members of the academic community in policy issues.[3]
In 2011, she became the executive of Doctors for America, and led the organisation for six years.[4][7] Doctors for America is a nonprofit which mobilizes physicians and medical students to improve the health of people in the United States.[8] In this capacity she was at the forefront of policy changes, such as the implementation of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.[9] She called for mass shootings to be treated as a public health issue.[10]
In 2017, Chen was appointed a Hauser Leader at the Center for Public Leadership, John F. Kennedy School of Government.[4] During her position Chen studied the epidemic of loneliness, which was thought to impact almost half of American adults, as well as the health impacts of global warming.[11][12] She studied how public health policy changed in the post-Obama administration world.[2]
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Chen called for people who were isolating to remember to set aside time everyday to check-in with their friends and families, and to use their time in lockdown to find ways to help others.[13][14]
In an interview with CBC News, Chen said that the social isolation "can spiral into depression or anxiety, and this can have serious ramifications on a person's physical and mental health".[13] Writing with her husband and fellow physician, Vivek Murthy, in The Atlantic, Chen argued that the lingering damage of breaking up communities would be more difficult to measure than the effect of SARS-CoV-2 on the economy.[15] She was appointed to Kishan Putta's [who?] COVID-19 advisory board, which looked to advise the council member on how to handle the COVID-19 pandemic.[16]
Personal life[edit]
In 2015, Chen married Vivek Murthy, M.D., Surgeon General of the United States.[17][18] They have a son and a daughter.[2]
America's diversity explosion, in 3 charts
In Diversity Explosion: How New Racial Demographics are Remaking America, demographer William Frey offers an illustrated overview of the way unprecedented racial changes are transforming the United States.
One of its most striking themes: the rapid increase in numbers of Hispanics, Asians, and people who identify with two of more races — groups Frey has dubbed "new minorities" because of an influx, and likely swift expansion, of immigrants settling in the US.
Hand in hand with this is the sharply diminished growth of the white population, which is expected to decrease by 6 percent between 2010 and 2050, as every other racial/ethnic group sees increases.
When it comes to the proportion of the country made up of people who identify as white compared with the proportion of people who don't, the change will be dramatic. Compare the orange and gray bars on the chart below for the year 1970 with the ones that represent 2050 projections.
The predicted shifts are striking. What are we supposed to make of them? "Certainly in the past, the specter of a minority white nation instilled fear among some Americans, and to some extent it continues to do so today — fear of change, fear of losing privileged status, or fear of unwanted groups in their communities," Frey writes. But the demographer says there's no real basis for this, arguing, "Rather than be feared, America's new diversity — poised to reinvigorate the country at a time when other developed nations are facing advanced aging and population loss — can be celebrated."
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