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White supremacist gets sunstroke, helped to the shade by black policeman

This is something you couldn’t make up.

SOUTH CAROLINA IN the US is going through a period of heightened racial turmoil at present.

After the shooting dead of nine black churchgoers in the city of Charleston last month, with white supremacist Dylann Roof arrested and facing charges for the crime, things look a little bit bleak in the state at a time of pronounced racial tension nationwide.

Which makes this particular photo especially remarkable.

At a supremacist rally in the city of Columbia in the state over the weekend Rob Godfrey, deputy chief of staff to governor Nikki Haley, took a snap of an aging supremacist, who was suffering discomfort in the sun, being led to the shade by black police officer Leroy Smith.

Note the swastika on the older man’s t-shirt.

The rally was being held by the North Carolina-based Loyal White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan to protest the removal of the Confederate flag, seen as a symbol of white supremacy, from the state’s courthouse. Some 2,000 people attended.

The image has swiftly gone viral, with Smith’s actions seen as an ultimate example of human kindness in the face of adversity.

Read: What is the Confederate flag and why is it still flying?

Read: Barack Obama delivers rousing eulogy for those killed in hate crime

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    Mute john smith iv
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    Oct 21st 2021, 7:35 PM

    I stopped reading at “85% of jobs available in 2030 haven’t been invented yet”. There’s slightly more than 8 years left in that prediction and I doubt if it’s anywhere near true. The prediction itself is 5 years old so we should be close to 40% new jobs never before heard of. (And probably that’s 100% in the private sector because government hasn’t changed much since the 19C.)

    Maybe covid slowed it down.

    My prediction for 2030 – there will be construction workers, shop workers, plumbers, electricians, drivers, nurses, port workers, chefs, waitress, government workers, accountants, real estate agents, accounts and office workers in general (most of whom will be doing what they do now). I’m sure there will be some new jobs, too

    The tech industry is full of hype.

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    Mute Vonvonic
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    Oct 21st 2021, 7:56 PM

    @john smith iv: Totally agree. F$(k coding. Science and nature all the way.

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    Mute Patricia O'Reilly
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    Oct 21st 2021, 10:48 PM

    @john smith iv: naw, they might change the names but they’ve already been invented ,, people are getting more niche that’s all. We are still going to need plumbers electricians etc.. still need farmers , doctors the world has always moved on.. even without us on it..

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    Mute Rob Gale
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    Oct 21st 2021, 8:02 PM

    Stick to farming. Energy crises are guan be common.

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    Mute Nick Caffrey
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    Oct 22nd 2021, 9:44 AM

    We also need artists jewellery makers, cabinet makers, singers, songwriters, writers, poets, philosophers, naturalists, palaeontologists, dreamers, inventors, sculptors, architects, blacksmiths, farriers.
    It’s a bad idea to focus on STEM as if those subjects were an end in themselves.

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    Mute Ignorant Carbon
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    Oct 22nd 2021, 10:09 AM

    @Nick Caffrey: While I wholeheartedly agree we need people in all of those roles, the reality is that digital skills are hugely beneficial or maybe even required for most of them going forward.

    Many design and craft roles can use digital skills to support or improve their business.
    The ability to programme in a language like Python opens vast new landscapes of expression to artists, jewelers and architects.

    The best explorations of the limits of digital tools like CAD, CNC machines and 3D printers that I’ve seen are by artists and craftspeople thinking outside the box.
    In fact there are ongoing projects in Ireland looking opening opportunities at this area (Craft 4.0 and iAtelier)

    Digital skills are not just STEM, they can be part of STEAM with arts in the mix.

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