Wednesday, December 19, 2007

If A Man Died Outside Their Door, Would the Boston Globe Know It?

Answer: NO!

"As city census starts, homeless man dies" by Megan Woolhouse, Boston Globe | December 19, 2007

Hours before Boston officials launched the latest census of the city's homeless population, police began investigating the death of a homeless man found yesterday on conservation land adjacent to the Globe's offices in Dorchester.

A passerby found the man's body on a blanket in the snow-covered park and contacted the newspaper, Boston police Sergeant Michael Locke said. Newspaper employees alerted police about 4:30 p.m. Locke said he did not know the identity of the man nor how long he had been there. But he said the man appeared to have died from exposure to the cold.

His identity was not immediately available.

And did ANYBODY CARE?


Locke said a medical examiner would inspect the body at the scene:

"There's no obvious signs of trauma."

The rest of this article was removed from the web.

Why?


The park abuts the Globe's trucking operation. Joe Jordan, a security guard at the newspaper for 27 years, said groups of homeless individuals live in the park year-round.

Yup, RIGHT UNDER the NOSES of the elite Globe!!!

They can't NOT KNOW about this AMERICAN SCANDAL while they supported TRILLIONS SPENT on WARS based upon LIES!!!!!

SHAME on YOU, Globe!!!


The body was discovered the same day groups of volunteers planned to fan out across the city by foot and car to count the city's homeless population. In past years, volunteers have included the mayor, homeless service providers, housing advocates, local faith-based organizations, and neighborhood groups."

Maybe you could get the
city employees and the cops to do it on their rounds, too!!!!

In 2006, the census identified 6,636 homeless men, women, and children in the city, a 4 percent increase over the previous year. The number of families who were homeless increased by 13 percent from 2005 to 2006 and there was an 85 percent increase in women living on the streets."

Yeah, I guess the Globe would want to keep this story low-key!

Well, at least we have got the WARS PAID FOR, huh, readers?

But WALKING through the PARK is a LEAD for the LOCAL SECTION!


"No Walk in the Park"

I'm going to have to stop now, reader, because I am starting to get sick!