Keyword: jps
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A controversial far-left prosecutor in Virginia who's received enormous backing from liberal billionaire George Soros has been defeated despite significantly outspending her opponent. Loudoun County Commonwealth's Attorney Buta Biberaj, whom Soros has backed with nearly $1 million since 2019, lost to her Republican opponent, Bob Anderson, by 300 votes in a race that wrapped up counting its remaining ballots from last week's election on Tuesday evening, Fox 5 DC reported.
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George Soros is 89 years old, but by gosh, before he dies, he’s going to see to the internal destruction of America. At least that’s how it seems. How else can we listen to his words in Davos, Switzerland, track his funding of American political races and pay attention to what he says about President Donald Trump, capitalism, and the leftist causes he backs and the leftist Open Society Foundations he runs, and come to any other conclusion? In the last few years, Soros has taken to trying to take over local law enforcement agencies by pumping massive amounts of...
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Globalist George Soros scored two wins in Virginia this week when two prosecutor candidates he backed ejected incumbents in local Democratic primaries. Soros had poured almost a million dollars into the candidate's campaigns.Soros, who is infamous for backing liberal left-wing causes across the globe, used his Justice and Public Safety PAC to promote two progressive candidates against incumbent Democrats.
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The waiting room reeked. Along a crowded hallway, patients lay in beds, with only a thin curtain for privacy. Nurses readying for a new case in surgery noticed blood, bone and globules of fat on the walls and floor and stuck to wheels of carts.Chance brought to the hospital teenagers from car wrecks, fathers hurt on the job, police officers injured in the line of duty. Others -- the poor -- came because they believed they had nowhere else to go.They were greeted last year at an overburdened emergency department where the staff could be robotic and hardened to patients....
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FORT WORTH - Tarrant County once again has the largest hospital district in the state to decline to give taxpayer-subsidized preventive health care to illegal immigrants. JPS Health Network trustees voted 6-4 Thursday to rescind a policy in place since January that gave illegal immigrants access to JPS Connections, the program of charitable clinic care. It was a tough decision, said board Chairman Harold Samuels, who added that he made up his mind just before the vote was taken. Trustee Dan Serna left the meeting before the vote. More than 3,000 illegal immigrants have been approved for JPS Connections, and...
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FORT WORTH - JPS Health Network officials spent part of Friday tying up about 3,000 loose ends left a day earlier when the network's board of trustees reversed its policy on nonemergency care for illegal immigrants. Late Friday afternoon, the JPS spokeswoman sent an e-mail statement that the system's clinics will continue to treat illegal immigrants already enrolled in JPS Connection, Tarrant County's system of taxpayer-supported, nonemergency health care. But new applications from illegal immigrants will be refused, spokeswoman Drenda Witt wrote. No administrators involved in the decision were available to answer questions Friday, Witt said. In January, trustees opened...
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Posted on Sat, Jan. 24, 2004 JPS immigrant care: good move, bad attitude By Bud KennedyStar-Telegram Staff Writer Get off the Tarrant County hospital bosses. They did the right thing.Yet even as they open county clinics again to all families -- citizen or immigrant -- they are doing it for the wrong reason.Instead of triumph-antly announcing that the people of Tarrant County have won the seven-year legal struggle to keep all schoolchildren healthy and prevent hundreds of costly emergency-room visits, JPS Health Network officials are complaining about the cost and blaming the Legislature.The rest of Texas seems to understand that...
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County will fund nonemergency treatment of undocumented residents FORT WORTH - Undocumented immigrants will get unprecedented access to the county's charitable health care system, which could cost Tarrant County taxpayers millions of dollars, JPS Health Network trustees decided Thursday. The decision's proponents maintain that providing preventive care to indigent undocumented immigrants could save the county money in the future and would be a more humane way of dealing with vexing public-health problems. But hospital administrators' concerns are rooted in the present. "In the short term, I'm concerned about the capacity of the hospital to handle the new patients," said Gale...
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QUESTION: Does "replenish" in Genesis 1:28 mean "repopulate," like there was a world before ours?
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