Sonia Maritza Inoa-Rosado Maughan
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soniawins.bsky.social
Sonia Maritza Inoa-Rosado Maughan
@soniawins.bsky.social
DominiRican Actor stuck in the Mountain West. I love living that theatre life here! 🎭 🎶 Pero, my ❤️ is in the East Cost and the Caribbean 🏝️.
Reposted by Sonia Maritza Inoa-Rosado Maughan
For all my #BookSky friends that are trying to move away from the Bezos infrastructure, just a reminder that Goodreads is owned by him through Nash Holdings.
Clicks are currency friends
@thestorygraph.com is a Black Woman founded company
www.womenwhocode.com/blog/world-b...
Women Who Code - Empowering women to excel in tech careers
Women Who Code is on a mission to empower diverse women to excel in technology careers. We support engineers, developers, data scientists, architects, designers and other technologists with the resour...
www.womenwhocode.com
January 23, 2025 at 11:57 PM
Reposted by Sonia Maritza Inoa-Rosado Maughan
This moon phase is nicknamed the Wolf Moon, which is rooted in Native American culture.
The first full moon of 2025 is here
This moon phase is nicknamed the Wolf Moon, which is rooted in Native American culture.
www.npr.org
January 13, 2025 at 4:10 PM
Reposted by Sonia Maritza Inoa-Rosado Maughan
Read Diverse Books in 2025
Read Diverse Books in 2025
Read Diverse Books in 2025
Read Diverse Books in 2025
Read Diverse Books in 2025
Read Diverse Books in 2025
Read Diverse Books in 2025
#BookSky #BlackBookSky
January 14, 2025 at 1:20 AM
Repost from @wetheurban.bsky.social . Thank you.
November 29, 2024 at 3:51 AM
bsky.app/profile/npr....

A City Council voting unanimously FOR a Reparation is historic, sure. But I hesitate to celebrate. I’m no mathematician, but $5.9 Million divided by 1,200 is roughly close to $5,000 per person. 😬 . It’s better than Zero dollars, sure. But I feel they were robbed. 👀
npr.org NPR @npr.org · Nov 15
In a historic move, the Palm Springs City Council voted unanimously Thursday night to approve a settlement offer for the surviving former residents and descendants of a Black and Latino neighborhood that the city burned to the ground 60 years ago to make way for commercial development.
Palm Springs OKs $5.9 Million in Reparations for Black and Latino Families Whose Homes the City Burned | KQED
In a unanimous vote, the City Council approved a settlement offer of $5.9 million to an estimated 1,200 surviving former residents and descendants of a Black and Latino neighborhood the city burned do...
www.kqed.org
November 17, 2024 at 1:57 PM