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Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

This blog includes resources, videos and discussion on the current, debt-based monetary system. This simple design is driven by function. Limited graphics are used to bring more focus to the content.

www.economicstability.org

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Good morning, I will shortly be seeing His Majesty the King to offer my resignation as Prime Minister.

 

To the country, I would like to say, first and foremost, I am sorry.

 

I have given this job my all.

 

But you have sent a clear signal that the government of the United Kingdom must change…

 

…and yours is the only judgement that matters.

 

I have heard your anger, your disappointment; and I take responsibility for this loss.

 

To all the Conservative candidates and campaigners who worked tirelessly but without success…

 

…I am sorry that we could not deliver what your efforts deserved.

 

It pains me to think how many good colleagues…

 

…who contributed so much to their communities and our country…

 

…will now no longer sit in the House of Commons.

 

I thank them for their hard work, and their service.

 

Following this result, I will step down as party leader…

 

…not immediately, but once the formal arrangements for selecting my successor are in place.

 

It is important that after 14 years in government the Conservative Party rebuilds…

 

…but also that it takes up its crucial role in Opposition professionally and effectively.

 

When I first stood here as your Prime Minister, I told you the most important task I had was to return stability to our economy.

 

Inflation is back to target, mortgage rates are falling, and growth has returned.

 

thxnews.com/2024/07/05/uk-pm-rishi-sunak-final-downing-st...

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.

More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.

   

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