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London’s independent ad agencies will survive the AI apocalypse

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Explainers   来源:Science  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:The Republican presidential nominee has repeatedly criticised the Ukrainian leader on the US campaign trail, and a meeting between the pair had seemed unlikely until hours before.

The Republican presidential nominee has repeatedly criticised the Ukrainian leader on the US campaign trail, and a meeting between the pair had seemed unlikely until hours before.

Speaking on behalf of the charity Inquest, Lily Lewis told the inquiry it was "staggering" that authorities had not been able to provide an accurate number of deaths.Ms Lewis added that there was an "evident toxicity of the culture" in mental health in Essex.

London’s independent ad agencies will survive the AI apocalypse

Speaking on the second day of the Lampard Inquiry, Ms Lewis, from Garden Court North Chambers, said Inquest had worked on nearly 50 cases involving the deaths of those in the care of Essex mental health services covered by the inquiry’s scope.Responding to Baroness Lampard’s comments from the opening day of the inquiry – when she said she expected the total number of deaths covered by the inquiry– Ms Lewis said it pointed to "an abject failure in candour, data collection and governance on the part of the relevant trust".

London’s independent ad agencies will survive the AI apocalypse

“Inquest shares [the families'] horror and concern at the fact that despite countless investigations, inspection reports and inquests... preventable deaths have continued,” she said.Ms Lewis also criticised senior management at organisations such as Essex Partnership University Trust (EPUT), which provides mental health services in the county.

London’s independent ad agencies will survive the AI apocalypse

"Were senior leaders in the trust aware of the significant and repeated failings?” she asked the inquiry’s chair.

"Did they purposefully hide evidence of failings from the public and from investigators?"were found to have tried to enter the US without valid documentation in the 12 months to September of last year. That is the third highest number behind Mexicans and Venezuelans.

Olga Romero lives near a town called Olopa in the north-east of Guatemala. She has seven children, two of whom are working in the US without any visas."This is a poor region where work is hard to find, and families often pay someone called a coyote between $2,000 and $3,000 to take them to the US illegally," says Olga.

A big problem is that to raise that amount of money many families need to take out loans secured against the value of their home. They can then lose their properties if the money isn't paid back.And that is often the case, given that the chance of them making it to the US is far from guaranteed, with the risk of accidents along the way, or being turned back at the US border.

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