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Опубликовано: February 10, 2023 в 6:10 pm

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The George Bryan Christian School

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About the Provider

Little Sunshine’s Playhouse And Preschool – Colorado Springs CO Child Care Center

Description: The George Bryan Christian School is a Licensed Center – Child Care Program in HOUSTON TX, with a maximum capacity of 187 children. This child care center helps with children in the age range of Infant, Toddler, Pre-Kindergarten, School. The provider also participates in a subsidized child care program.

Additional Information: Initial License Date: 8/9/2016.

Program and Licensing Details

  • License Number:
    1613316
  • Capacity:
    187
  • Age Range:
    Infant, Toddler, Pre-Kindergarten, School
  • Enrolled in Subsidized Child Care Program:
    Yes
  • Initial License Issue Date:
    Aug 09, 2016

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The George Bryan Christian School | Houston

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The George Bryan Christian School

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About The George Bryan Christian School

The George Bryan Christian School hosts early child care and education in a center-based environment in Houston. As a center, The George Bryan Christian School provides a structured, stable environment that’s optimized to provide students with the best of quality education alongside the empathetic care you’d expect from anyone watching children. Centers like The George Bryan Christian School are popular choices for parents that want the resources and enrichment opportunities for their children that can come at a larger facility but also value rich socialization with both peers and non-family adults. With the after-school program at The George Bryan Christian School, Houston parents can furthermore get the benefits of continue supervised programming for their children beyond traditional care hours. The after-school program at The George Bryan Christian School gives students extra time to socialize, cooperate and learn with peers, more structured learning time and another community for students to benefits from, all the while giving parents the extra time they need to wrap up with work or take care of other responsibilities. The George Bryan Christian School also offers a religious curriculum emphasizing the love of learning through the lens of the faith tradition. Students at The George Bryan Christian School will learn early in life about faith traditions and the joy that comes from a life lived in communion with others. Early seeds of belief and faith will be planted through fun, joyful activities that illustrate what it means to be a part of the greater faith community. Parents will benefit, as well, from joining a community of like-minded parents and believers.

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90,000 George Floyd was buried yesterday. Who was the person who became the symbol

Floyd’s life is more than 8 minutes of video made by someone from passersby. Here is his story.

Yesterday in Houston they said goodbye to George Floyd. He was killed on May 25, and the video of Officer Derek Chauvin kneeling his neck for 8 minutes so outraged people across America that it provoked the largest wave of protests.

He was born in Fayetteville, North Carolina, the city that gave us rap activist J. Cole. When Floyd’s parents divorced, the mother took the children to Houston. George had two more brothers and two sisters, he was the eldest.

In Houston, Floyd grew up in The Third Ward, one of the city’s poorest neighborhoods.

At school they called him “Big Floyd” because of his height of 180 meters. He would later turn this nickname into his rap nickname. He was a promising athlete: in 1992 he helped the high school football team win the championship (video), and the performance on the basketball court ensured George Floyd an invitation to the community college team in Texas. The coach remembers him as a stable player, he brought the team 12-14 points per match.

Two years later, in 1995, he was transferred to the Texas A&M University team, but Floyd did not last long there and returned to Houston without graduating.

It was around this time that he began rapping as part of the Screwed Up Click, one of Houston’s key rap acts centered around DJ Screw, the man who invented the chopped-n-screwed technique. It’s when the beats and vocals slow down like the wings of a fly in a jar of honey.

Here is one of the tracks with his participation. At the 14:05 mark, Screw, who died in 2000 from a codeine overdose in his studio, can be heard calling Big Floyd to the microphone, and he reads for two minutes about his childhood spent in The Third Ward, and about the dream of one day buying Bentley.

Another unusual item in his biography: Floyd tried to act in porn. We won’t give a link, but if you need proofs, google “floyd kimberly brinks”.

In 1997, problems with the law began. Floyd was arrested 6 times for criminal offenses and 3 times for misdemeanors, writes the Daily Mail, citing court documents. The first time a case was filed against Floyd for the manufacture and distribution of drugs weighing up to one gram. Once he was detained with drugs in the amount of $ 10 – and it cost him 10 months in prison.

In 2009, he was sentenced to four years in prison for an armed robbery he committed with a group of accomplices. According to court documents, the robbery was planned as follows: first, a man in a plumber’s uniform knocked on the door. A woman opened the door for him. Almost immediately, a black Ford Explorer drove up to the entrance, from which five more got out. Floyd approached Aracely Henriquez (that was the name of the victim) and put a gun to her stomach. He searched the house, took out a piece of jewelry and a cell phone. A neighbor of the victim managed to write down the license plate of the car in which the raiders were moving.

Since his release in 2013, George Floyd’s lifestyle has changed.

He starts going to church. People who spoke with him say that the birth of his second daughter, Gianna, influenced the revolution in his worldview. The church service was held right in the middle of the basketball field. Floyd set up chairs on the court and dragged the main artifact, a Baptist ablution bath, into the center of the field.

Church pastor Patrick Ngwolo recalls that Floyd found people for a Christian program that helped the poor go through drug rehabilitation and get a job.

He moves to Minneapolis, where he works as a driver and security guard at a shelter for the Christian organization The Salvation Army.

“You have to have a special mentality to work in a place like this,” recalls Salvation Army Regional Executive Director Brian Molohon. “Every day you are surrounded by abandoned and unfortunate people.”

Later, Floyd took a job as a bouncer at the Conga Latin Bistro, a restaurant and club where they held Latin American dance evenings.

He lost his job due to the coronavirus, and in early April he was also diagnosed with COVID-19.

On May 25, a police patrol arrived at the Cup Foods store to respond to a call. The seller suspected George Floyd of paying with a fake twenty.

Store owner Mike Abumaiali, who had the day off, told NBC that Floyd was a regular customer and never had any problems.

When the police handcuffed Floyd and put him in the car, he sat on the ground and refused to do what the officers said. This was recorded by video cameras.

Some passer-by in the vicinity filmed what happened next with a smartphone.

Officer Chauvin put his knee on Floyd’s neck and held it for eight minutes while Floyd wheezed that he couldn’t breathe. George Floyd has died in intensive care.

The examination confirmed that the death was caused by the actions of a policeman – due to pressure on the neck, suffocation occurred and blood flow to the brain became insufficient.

Floyd’s family has launched a fundraising campaign to help pay for the funeral, psychological support for George’s loved ones, and court-related travel and lodging expenses. We hoped to raise half a million. At the time of writing, there were already 14 million dollars.

Floyd’s funeral was held June 10 in Houston. Thousands of people came to say goodbye to him. The ceremony was broadcast by all major American TV channels.

Floyd was buried in a golden coffin. He was 46 years old.

After Floyd’s death, a video of his 6-year-old daughter Gianna went viral online. Sitting on the shoulders of former NBA player Stephen Jackson, she says, “My dad changed the world.”


“Our industry is built on hypocrisy”: Soda Luv – about the new album, Kizaru’s goods and censorship

“Monkey business”: how the theory of evolution through the courts made its way to schools institutions the Darwinian theory of the origin of man. It was called “Butler’s Law” after its author, John Washington Butler. “Butler’s Law” was intended to protect religion and the theological view of the origin of man from, as the writer of the text then said, the humiliating inventions of science, which tries to connect man with kinship ties with creatures of a lower order – monkeys.

Darwin’s theory was banned in all public schools and universities in Tennessee, though not in its entirety: public funds of the state, a theory that denies the creation of man by God, as taught by the Bible, and talk instead of the descent of man from animals of a lower order. Thus, the ban did not extend to the entire theory of evolution, but only to that part of it that was devoted to the genesis of man. The dissemination in educational institutions of information spoiling the pedigree of homo sapiens was punishable by a fine of $100 to $500.

The author of the law, farmer John Butler, who was in the House of Representatives, initially had only a rough idea about the theory of evolution. “I didn’t know anything about evolution,” Butler admitted, “I just read in the newspapers about how boys and girls come home and tell dads and moms that the Bible is complete nonsense.” Then Butler decided to fight for the preservation of the faith. In addition to the scary notes in the newspapers, the leader of Christian fundamentalists William Jennings Bryan pushed him to this step: the farmer read a copy of Bryan’s lecture “Is the Bible True?”, and then took up Darwin’s works and found them very dangerous for religion. Bryan himself, who in part inspired Butler, was a staunch supporter of the bill and expressed gratitude to Governor Austin Pius, who signed the bill, in such terms: “The state’s Christian parents owe you for saving their children from the poisoning effects of unproven theories.” In the history of anti-evolution law, Bryan has distinguished himself not only as a speaker, but also as a lawyer: he was on the side of the prosecution in the sensational case of Tennessee v. John Thomas Scopes, also known as the Monkey Trial. This happened shortly after the entry into force of the “Butler Law”, namely in May-June 1925 years old.

The defendant was John Thomas Scopes, a high school teacher in Dayton, Tennessee. Scopes himself was not quite sure that he was really teaching the evolutionary theory of the origin of man, but for the common good he decided not to argue and go to court as an accused. This was facilitated by several factors, or rather, several associations interested in such a process. First, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which sponsored the litigation of anyone who would be accused of violating the Butler Act. Secondly, a circle of local enthusiasts influenced the development of events: on April 19For 25 years, the manager of a coal and iron company, George Rapley, superintendent, superintendent of schools, Walter White, and lawyer Sue C. Hicks met at Robinson’s Pharmacy and at this chamber meeting decided that the case in which Butler’s Law would be challenged will give the town the publicity it needs and the members of this small group who can cash in on the fame of their town. They agreed with 24-year-old Scopes that he would participate in the trial as a defendant. The future accused himself doubted that, in fact, he had violated the law, but recalled that he seemed to be going through the chapter of the textbook devoted to evolution with the class. Be that as it may, Scopes stated: “If you can prove that I taught evolution and that I can stand in the case as a defendant, I will gladly stand trial.

The teacher warned the students not to be afraid to testify against him, and the investigators collected testimonies from three children against the teacher. John Scopes was charged with violating the Butler Act, but he was not placed under arrest, as required by law, because Paul Patterson, owner of The Baltimore Sun, immediately posted a $500 bail for him. Initially, the prosecutors were local lawyers and friends of Scopes, the brothers Herbert and Sue Hicks, but then the prosecution was headed by Tom Stewart, who later became a senator. He hired local lawyer Gordon McKenzie as an assistant, and then the team began to advise and direct William Jennings Bryan – he eagerly agreed to take part in the process, although he had not conducted a single case for 36 years. The defense was led by prominent lawyer and head of the American Civil Liberties Union Clarence Seward Darrow. The process was covered by journalists from all over the world, including Henry Louis Mencken, who wrote for The Baltimore Sun. Mencken also paid part of the costs of the defense and awarded the case with such historic titles as “The Trial of the Monkey” and “The Case of Scopes the Unbeliever”.

Initially, the defense planned to oppose the “Butler Law” on the grounds that it violated the rights of the teacher and the freedom of teaching, but as the process progressed, the strategy changed, and the first argument that the defense made in court was that the theory of evolution does not contradict biblical the history of the beginning of mankind – such a view was later called theistic evolutionism. To defend this view, Darrow brought in eight evolutionary experts. However, the judge allowed only one to speak orally, and asked the others to present their views in written statements so that they could later be used at the appeal stage. At the opening of the trial, Judge John Rolston quoted the Bible, and the jurors were instructed to evaluate not the law (what, in fact, the trial was devoted to), but the presence or absence of its violation in the case.

On the sixth day, the lawyers ran out of witnesses. The judge declared the testimony of defense experts to be irrelevant and offensive to the Bible, and therefore ordered that they not be brought to the attention of the jury, who were absent during the defense. Then Darrow made an unexpected move: since all the defense experts were rejected, let the fundamentalist Brian act as an expert witness. The lawyer agreed on the condition that Darrow, in this case, would also be a witness for the prosecution.

On the seventh day, Brian appeared in court as a defense witness. The lawyer asked questions about the biblical stories and religious views of Brian himself, including the details of the book of Genesis: if God created Eve from Adam’s rib, then where did Cain get his wife? How many people lived in ancient Egypt? Darrow sought to show that the Bible cannot be regarded as a source of accurate knowledge and its parables cannot be taken literally. In the end, Brian accused Darrow of insulting the Scriptures, and Darrow flared up and called Brian’s answers “stupid. ” The judge hastened to interrupt the interrogation.

It was also the eighth day of the trial, and the jury returned a guilty verdict in just nine minutes. Scopes was sentenced to pay a $100 fine (currently the equivalent of $1,345). But the parable of the “Monkey Trial” did not end there: in order to defeat the “Butler’s Law” at the appeal stage, the defense decided to strike at several points. First, the lawyers said, evolution is too broad a concept, so the ban on its teaching is very vague. The court objected to this by saying that the law clearly stipulates which part of the teaching is prohibited. Then the lawyers said that the law is unconstitutional, as it restricts the freedom of speech of the teacher (it is protected by the First Amendment to the US Constitution). To this, the court replied that the teacher was hired by the state, and under the contract he was obliged to follow the rules that the employer had established. Lawyers also pointed out that the state authorities, according to the Tennessee constitution, are obliged to protect and encourage science. The court said that it has no right to decide which law encourages science and which does not – this is the business of the legislature. Finally, the defense reminded that no particular religion should be given preference in the US. But the court replied that it did not see how the ban on the teaching of the theory of kinship between man and ape gives the advantage of any religion. In a word, the appeal supported the previous decision.

Although the court did not question the constitutionality of the law at the appeal stage, Brian’s sentence was overturned on technical grounds. The fact is that the size of the fine should have been determined by the jury, not the judge. At the same time, according to state laws, judges could not impose a fine of more than $50, and the Butler Law stipulated a minimum penalty of $100.

The Scopes case received wide publicity and split believers into two camps – those who believed only the Bible, and those who were ready to compromise with science – however, at that time the former prevailed. Prior to the trial, laws restricting the teaching of evolutionary theory existed only in South Carolina, Oklahoma, and Kentucky. After him, a wave of activity of creationists (supporters of the theory of the creation of man by God) went through all the United States, and by 19In 1927, some bills were already considered in 13 states to limit the spread of Darwin’s theory. However, everywhere except Mississippi and Arkansas, these initiatives did not materialize. And in these two states, the new laws survived the Butler Act. It was canceled in 1967 after the case of teacher Gary Scott of Jacksboro, Tennessee. Scott was fired for violating Butler’s Law. The teacher sued, arguing that the law violated the First Amendment to the US Constitution, which protects freedom of speech. Scott was reinstated by court decision, but he did not stop there. The militant teacher initiated a class action lawsuit that was heard by the Nashville District Federal Court. This time the attempt to abolish the anti-evolutionary law was successful.

If in the 1920s and 30s the vast majority of textbooks in the United States did not even mention the theory of evolution, but quoted the Bible in the introduction, then after the 1930s, when the anti-evolution trend began to decline, textbooks no longer ignored Darwin’s teachings. Gradually, the supporters of science began to win more and more space from the Christian fundamentalists in schools and in the minds of citizens. A brief chronology of this crusade—more precisely, of its return trip—is as follows:

In 1968, the US Supreme Court declared that all anti-evolution laws violated the Constitution and repealed them.

In 1987, the US Supreme Court ruled that the teaching of creationism violated the Constitution by placing a particular religion in a privileged position.

In 1996, Pope John Paul II reaffirmed a previous papal encyclical (1955) that the theory of evolution was compatible with the doctrine of the Roman Catholic Church, as it only talked about physical changes and did not address the question of the presence of a soul in every human being.

In 2004, the school committee in Dover, Pennsylvania, decided that before starting any course on the theory of evolution, the theory of intelligent design (the theory that the universe is supposed to be based on an intelligent beginning, although its divine essence is not directly indicated) must be taught. However, already in 2005, this installation was canceled, since the theory was considered not to meet scientific criteria.

Now the question is not about teaching Darwin’s theory, but about whether creationism and intelligent design should be taught. According to a 2013 poll by research organization YouGov, 40% of Americans think they should, 32% oppose it, and 28% are undecided. As far as politicians are concerned, 57% of Republicans support the teaching of creationism, compared to only 30% of Democrats. The same poll showed that most Americans still believe in the theological explanation of human origins. Only 21% of US residents believe that God had nothing to do with the creation of man, and of these, 25% still tend to believe that “man originated through evolution, but this process was led by God.