Greyhound Lines and its subsidiaries offer intercity bus service within the United States, Canada, and Mexico. As of 2015, service is offered along the timetable listed below.
Routes
Greyhound has Maintenance Centers (also referred to as hubs) in the United States located in Atlanta, Atlantic City, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Denver, Los Angeles, Miami, Philadelphia, Richmond (VA), and St. Louis. Canadian hubs are located in Calgary, Edmonton, Ottawa, Toronto, Vancouver, and Winnipeg. Greyhound designates the following U.S. cities as "focus cities": Albuquerque, Amarillo, Baltimore, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus, Dayton, Detroit, El Paso, Houston, Las Vegas, Memphis, Mobile, Nashville, Orlando, Phoenix, Sacramento, Salt Lake City, San Antonio, San Diego, San Francisco, Tampa, and Washington D.C. Canadian "focus cities" include Dawson Creek, Kamloops, Kelowna, Montreal, Niagara Falls, Prince George, and Sudbury.
Greyhound does not serve the states of North Dakota, or South Dakota in the continental United States nor the provinces and territories of New Brunswick, Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, Nunavut, and Prince Edward Island in Canada.
*Atlanta-St. Louis
*Atlanta-Detroit
*Atlanta-Cincinnati
*Atlanta-Cleveland
*Atlanta-Savannah
*Chicago-Atlanta
*Chicago-Cleveland
*Chicago-Los Angeles
*Chicago-Memphis
*Chicago-Minneapolis
*Chicago-St. Louis
*Dallas-Houston
*Dallas-Laredo
*Dallas-Kansas City
*Dallas-Chicago
*Dallas-Detroit
*Dallas-Richmond
*Dallas-Atlanta
*Denver-New York
*Denver-Portland
*Denver-Reno
*Denver-Las Vegas
*Denver-Dallas
*Denver-El Paso
*Houston-Austin
*Houston-Orlando
*Los Angeles-Dallas
*Los Angeles-Phoenix
*Los Angeles-Las Vegas
*Los Angeles-San Diego
*Los Angeles-Mexicali
*Los Angeles-El Paso
*Los Angeles-San Francisco
*Los Angeles-Sacramento
*Los Angeles-Palmdale
*Los Angeles-Vancouver
*New York-Atlanta
*New York-Chicago
*New York-Detroit
*New York-Indianapolis
*New York-Los Angeles
*New York-Miami
*New York-St. Louis
*Richmond-Atlanta
*Richmond-Detroit
*Richmond-Dallas
*Richmond-Miami
*Richmond-Orlando
*Richmond-Tampa
*Salt Lake City-Las Vegas
*Salt Lake City-Reno
*St. Louis-Los Angeles
*San Antonio-El Paso
*San Francisco-Arcata
*San Francisco-Reno
*San Francisco-Sacramento
*Seattle-Portland
*Seattle-Vancouver, BC
*Seattle-Missoula
*Seattle-Stanfield
*Tucson-Phoenix
*Washington-Chicago
Timetable listings
The timetables below list only major cities served. These timetables do not equate to routes. Many routes only encompass part of a timetable, or are split between two timetables. For example, timetable 360 shows Saint Louis-Salt Lake City, yet there is no such route; instead the timetable shows segments of the New York-Denver, Denver-Portland, and Saint Louis-Kansas City routes.
The abbreviations below are:
* CN: Canada
* MX: Mexico
000-099
060: Bar Harbor - Bangor - Portland - Boston
062: Boston - Burlington - Montreal (CN)
067: Springfield - White River Junction
080: New York City - Atlantic City
092: Washington DC - Atlantic City
096: Philadelphia/Bristol - Mt. Laurel - Atlantic City
100-199
104: Boston - Worcester - Springfield - Hartford - New Haven - New York
105: Boston - New York (Express Service)
106: New York Chinatown - Boston
108: Boston/Providence/Foxwoods - New York
119: New York Chinatown - Philadelphia
120: New York - Mt. Laurel - Philadelphia
121: Long Island - New York
122: Philadelphia - Baltimore - Washington - Richmond
123: Wilmington (DE) - Baltimore (via US 40)
124: New York - Richmond - Fayetteville
126: New York - Newark - Wilmington - Baltimore - Washington
127: Washington - New York
143: Washington - Charlottesville
144: Richmond - Roanoke - Nashville
152: Montreal (CN) - Plattsburgh - Albany - New York
166: Scranton - Easton - Philadelphia
170: Boston - Albany - Syracuse - Buffalo - Toronto (CN) or Cleveland
174: Washington - Baltimore - Harrisburg - Scranton
178: Erie - Pittsburgh
190: Harrisburg - State College - Pittsburgh
200-299
200: Chicago/Detroit - Cleveland - Washington/New York
201: Cleveland - New York
202: New York - Philadelphia - Pittsburgh - Columbus - Indianapolis - St. Louis
215: Detroit - Columbus - Charleston
234: Cincinnati - Columbus - Akron - Cleveland
238: Chicago - Indianapolis - Louisville/Cincinnati
239: Detroit - Indianapolis
242: Muskegon - Detroit
250: Detroit - Jackson - Kalamazaoo - Chicago
255: Chicago - Springfield - St. Louis
260: Memphis - St. Louis
265: Chicago - Memphis
280: St. Louis - Evansville/Paducah - Nashville
300-399
304: Chicago - Milwaukee - Madison - Minneapolis
328: Green Bay - Milwaukee
360: Salt Lake City - Denver - Kansas City - St. Louis
362: Kansas City - Wichita - Oklahoma City - Dallas
364: Denver - Salt Lake City
400-499
400: Richmond - Fayetteville - Charleston/Savannah - Jacksonville
401: Charleston - Charlotte - Columbia - Jacksonville
402: Richmond - Raleigh - Wilmington (NC) - Myrtle Beach
403: Tallahassee - Tampa
404: Jacksonville - Gainesville
406: Jacksonville - Tampa
410: Tampa - St. Petersburg - Miami
411: Miami - West Palm Beach - Ft. Myers
414: Miami - Key West
416: Jacksonville - Orlando - Miami
418: Jacksonville - New Orleans/Baton Rouge
419: Raleigh - Camp Lejune
420: New York/Philadelphia - Norfolk - Virginia Beach
421: Baltimore - Eastern Shore (Annapolis, Cambridge, Easton, Vienna, Mardela, Salisbury, and Ocean City)
422: Richmond - Williamsburg - Norfolk
423: Norfolk - Elizabeth City - Raleigh
424: Richmond - Charlotte - Atlanta
425: Atlanta - Montgomery - Mobile - New Orleans
426: Atlanta - Knoxville - Cincinnati
427: Knoxville - Winston-Salem
433: Memphis - Birmingham
435: Memphis - Baton Rouge
436: Jackson - Mobile
437: Atlanta - Birmingham - Shreveport - Dallas
438: Atlanta - Chattanooga - Nashville
439: Atlanta - Savannah - Jacksonville
440: Atlanta - Albany - Tallahassee
441: Atlanta - Albany - Jacksonville
444: Nashville - Louisville - Cincinnati - Detroit
445: Nashville - Birmingham - Tallahassee
447: Mobile - Columbus - Birmingham
448: Anniston - Birmingham
457: Shreveport - New Orleans
462: New Orleans - Houston
463: Wichita Falls - Lubbock - El Paso
465: Amarillo - El Paso
466: Amarillo - Lubbock - San Angelo - San Antonio
467: Dallas - Wichita Falls - Amarillo - Denver
470: St. Louis - Albuquerque - Phoenix - Los Angeles
472: Springfield - Rolla - Columbia - Ottumwa
477: Dallas - Ft. Worth - Austin - Houston
478: Nashville - Memphis - Little Rock - Dallas
480: Dallas - El Paso
481: San Antonio - Fort Stockton - El Paso
482: Tulsa - Dallas
484: Dallas - Austin - San Antonio - Laredo - Monterey (MX) - Guadalajara (MX)
485: Nuevo Laredo (MX) - Laredo
486: Houston - San Antonio - Laredo - Guadalajara (MX)
490: San Antonio - Brownsville
494: Houston - Corpus Christi (via Gulf route)
495: Texarkana - Houston
497: Ft. Worth/Dallas - Houston
499: Houston - McAllen - Reynosa (MX), Houston - Brownsville - Matamoros (MX)
500-599
500: Salt Lake City - Boise - Portland
502: Spokane - Portland
509: Fargo - Billings - Butte - Spokane - Seattle
540: Reno - San Francisco
545: Salt Lake City - Las Vegas
550: Salt Lake City - Reno - San Francisco
553: Las Vegas - Phoenix
554: Las Vegas - Los Angeles
555: Denver - Grand Junction - Salt Lake City/Las Vegas
556: Las Vegas - Los Angeles
558: San Bernandino - San Diego
576: El Paso - Juarez (MX)
578: Denver - Albuquerque - El Paso - Durango (MX)
580: Los Angeles - El Paso
582: Phoenix - Tucson - Nogales (MX)
600-699
600: Portland - Sacramento
601: Vancouver (CN) - Seattle - Portland
607: Arcata - San Francisco
615: San Francisco - Oakland - San Jose - Los Angeles (via Interstate 5)
618: San Francisco - Santa Barbara - Los Angeles
620: San Francisco - San Jose - Fresno
630: San Francisco - Fresno - Los Angeles
674: Los Angeles - Palm Springs - Indio - Calexico - Mexicali (MX)
676 - Los Angeles - San Diego
Routes
Greyhound has Maintenance Centers (also referred to as hubs) in the United States located in Atlanta, Atlantic City, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Denver, Los Angeles, Miami, Philadelphia, Richmond (VA), and St. Louis. Canadian hubs are located in Calgary, Edmonton, Ottawa, Toronto, Vancouver, and Winnipeg. Greyhound designates the following U.S. cities as "focus cities": Albuquerque, Amarillo, Baltimore, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus, Dayton, Detroit, El Paso, Houston, Las Vegas, Memphis, Mobile, Nashville, Orlando, Phoenix, Sacramento, Salt Lake City, San Antonio, San Diego, San Francisco, Tampa, and Washington D.C. Canadian "focus cities" include Dawson Creek, Kamloops, Kelowna, Montreal, Niagara Falls, Prince George, and Sudbury.
Greyhound does not serve the states of North Dakota, or South Dakota in the continental United States nor the provinces and territories of New Brunswick, Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, Nunavut, and Prince Edward Island in Canada.
*Atlanta-St. Louis
*Atlanta-Detroit
*Atlanta-Cincinnati
*Atlanta-Cleveland
*Atlanta-Savannah
*Chicago-Atlanta
*Chicago-Cleveland
*Chicago-Los Angeles
*Chicago-Memphis
*Chicago-Minneapolis
*Chicago-St. Louis
*Dallas-Houston
*Dallas-Laredo
*Dallas-Kansas City
*Dallas-Chicago
*Dallas-Detroit
*Dallas-Richmond
*Dallas-Atlanta
*Denver-New York
*Denver-Portland
*Denver-Reno
*Denver-Las Vegas
*Denver-Dallas
*Denver-El Paso
*Houston-Austin
*Houston-Orlando
*Los Angeles-Dallas
*Los Angeles-Phoenix
*Los Angeles-Las Vegas
*Los Angeles-San Diego
*Los Angeles-Mexicali
*Los Angeles-El Paso
*Los Angeles-San Francisco
*Los Angeles-Sacramento
*Los Angeles-Palmdale
*Los Angeles-Vancouver
*New York-Atlanta
*New York-Chicago
*New York-Detroit
*New York-Indianapolis
*New York-Los Angeles
*New York-Miami
*New York-St. Louis
*Richmond-Atlanta
*Richmond-Detroit
*Richmond-Dallas
*Richmond-Miami
*Richmond-Orlando
*Richmond-Tampa
*Salt Lake City-Las Vegas
*Salt Lake City-Reno
*St. Louis-Los Angeles
*San Antonio-El Paso
*San Francisco-Arcata
*San Francisco-Reno
*San Francisco-Sacramento
*Seattle-Portland
*Seattle-Vancouver, BC
*Seattle-Missoula
*Seattle-Stanfield
*Tucson-Phoenix
*Washington-Chicago
Timetable listings
The timetables below list only major cities served. These timetables do not equate to routes. Many routes only encompass part of a timetable, or are split between two timetables. For example, timetable 360 shows Saint Louis-Salt Lake City, yet there is no such route; instead the timetable shows segments of the New York-Denver, Denver-Portland, and Saint Louis-Kansas City routes.
The abbreviations below are:
* CN: Canada
* MX: Mexico
000-099
060: Bar Harbor - Bangor - Portland - Boston
062: Boston - Burlington - Montreal (CN)
067: Springfield - White River Junction
080: New York City - Atlantic City
092: Washington DC - Atlantic City
096: Philadelphia/Bristol - Mt. Laurel - Atlantic City
100-199
104: Boston - Worcester - Springfield - Hartford - New Haven - New York
105: Boston - New York (Express Service)
106: New York Chinatown - Boston
108: Boston/Providence/Foxwoods - New York
119: New York Chinatown - Philadelphia
120: New York - Mt. Laurel - Philadelphia
121: Long Island - New York
122: Philadelphia - Baltimore - Washington - Richmond
123: Wilmington (DE) - Baltimore (via US 40)
124: New York - Richmond - Fayetteville
126: New York - Newark - Wilmington - Baltimore - Washington
127: Washington - New York
143: Washington - Charlottesville
144: Richmond - Roanoke - Nashville
152: Montreal (CN) - Plattsburgh - Albany - New York
166: Scranton - Easton - Philadelphia
170: Boston - Albany - Syracuse - Buffalo - Toronto (CN) or Cleveland
174: Washington - Baltimore - Harrisburg - Scranton
178: Erie - Pittsburgh
190: Harrisburg - State College - Pittsburgh
200-299
200: Chicago/Detroit - Cleveland - Washington/New York
201: Cleveland - New York
202: New York - Philadelphia - Pittsburgh - Columbus - Indianapolis - St. Louis
215: Detroit - Columbus - Charleston
234: Cincinnati - Columbus - Akron - Cleveland
238: Chicago - Indianapolis - Louisville/Cincinnati
239: Detroit - Indianapolis
242: Muskegon - Detroit
250: Detroit - Jackson - Kalamazaoo - Chicago
255: Chicago - Springfield - St. Louis
260: Memphis - St. Louis
265: Chicago - Memphis
280: St. Louis - Evansville/Paducah - Nashville
300-399
304: Chicago - Milwaukee - Madison - Minneapolis
328: Green Bay - Milwaukee
360: Salt Lake City - Denver - Kansas City - St. Louis
362: Kansas City - Wichita - Oklahoma City - Dallas
364: Denver - Salt Lake City
400-499
400: Richmond - Fayetteville - Charleston/Savannah - Jacksonville
401: Charleston - Charlotte - Columbia - Jacksonville
402: Richmond - Raleigh - Wilmington (NC) - Myrtle Beach
403: Tallahassee - Tampa
404: Jacksonville - Gainesville
406: Jacksonville - Tampa
410: Tampa - St. Petersburg - Miami
411: Miami - West Palm Beach - Ft. Myers
414: Miami - Key West
416: Jacksonville - Orlando - Miami
418: Jacksonville - New Orleans/Baton Rouge
419: Raleigh - Camp Lejune
420: New York/Philadelphia - Norfolk - Virginia Beach
421: Baltimore - Eastern Shore (Annapolis, Cambridge, Easton, Vienna, Mardela, Salisbury, and Ocean City)
422: Richmond - Williamsburg - Norfolk
423: Norfolk - Elizabeth City - Raleigh
424: Richmond - Charlotte - Atlanta
425: Atlanta - Montgomery - Mobile - New Orleans
426: Atlanta - Knoxville - Cincinnati
427: Knoxville - Winston-Salem
433: Memphis - Birmingham
435: Memphis - Baton Rouge
436: Jackson - Mobile
437: Atlanta - Birmingham - Shreveport - Dallas
438: Atlanta - Chattanooga - Nashville
439: Atlanta - Savannah - Jacksonville
440: Atlanta - Albany - Tallahassee
441: Atlanta - Albany - Jacksonville
444: Nashville - Louisville - Cincinnati - Detroit
445: Nashville - Birmingham - Tallahassee
447: Mobile - Columbus - Birmingham
448: Anniston - Birmingham
457: Shreveport - New Orleans
462: New Orleans - Houston
463: Wichita Falls - Lubbock - El Paso
465: Amarillo - El Paso
466: Amarillo - Lubbock - San Angelo - San Antonio
467: Dallas - Wichita Falls - Amarillo - Denver
470: St. Louis - Albuquerque - Phoenix - Los Angeles
472: Springfield - Rolla - Columbia - Ottumwa
477: Dallas - Ft. Worth - Austin - Houston
478: Nashville - Memphis - Little Rock - Dallas
480: Dallas - El Paso
481: San Antonio - Fort Stockton - El Paso
482: Tulsa - Dallas
484: Dallas - Austin - San Antonio - Laredo - Monterey (MX) - Guadalajara (MX)
485: Nuevo Laredo (MX) - Laredo
486: Houston - San Antonio - Laredo - Guadalajara (MX)
490: San Antonio - Brownsville
494: Houston - Corpus Christi (via Gulf route)
495: Texarkana - Houston
497: Ft. Worth/Dallas - Houston
499: Houston - McAllen - Reynosa (MX), Houston - Brownsville - Matamoros (MX)
500-599
500: Salt Lake City - Boise - Portland
502: Spokane - Portland
509: Fargo - Billings - Butte - Spokane - Seattle
540: Reno - San Francisco
545: Salt Lake City - Las Vegas
550: Salt Lake City - Reno - San Francisco
553: Las Vegas - Phoenix
554: Las Vegas - Los Angeles
555: Denver - Grand Junction - Salt Lake City/Las Vegas
556: Las Vegas - Los Angeles
558: San Bernandino - San Diego
576: El Paso - Juarez (MX)
578: Denver - Albuquerque - El Paso - Durango (MX)
580: Los Angeles - El Paso
582: Phoenix - Tucson - Nogales (MX)
600-699
600: Portland - Sacramento
601: Vancouver (CN) - Seattle - Portland
607: Arcata - San Francisco
615: San Francisco - Oakland - San Jose - Los Angeles (via Interstate 5)
618: San Francisco - Santa Barbara - Los Angeles
620: San Francisco - San Jose - Fresno
630: San Francisco - Fresno - Los Angeles
674: Los Angeles - Palm Springs - Indio - Calexico - Mexicali (MX)
676 - Los Angeles - San Diego
Bezalel, Inc. is an American hardware company headquartered at the Information Sciences Institute in Marina del Rey, California, that designs wireless charging devices for smartphones and smartwatches. After a successful Kickstarter campaign in that ended in February 2014, Bezalel was incorporated the following month and released its first product, the Prelude, in June 2014.
History
2013: Founding
Frank Wu graduated with the degree of mechanical engineering from USC in 2012. He noticed that the current wireless charging solutions were too complicated or not truly portable and wireless, then he form the idea of a portable wireless charger. He forms of group of people to design and develop the first prototype for around 3 months, which had already been recognized by few medias.
2014: Establish Publicly
In January 2014, Frank Wu has co-founded the company, Bezalel Inc, with Yao Lee, Kris Tong, and Jam Isaga. In the same time, the team has launched their first prototype of Prelude, Ark, through a website, Kickstarter, as platform to campaign their fundraising money.
2015: CES
In January, the company had attended and exhibit in the CES in the Las Vegas Convention Center, Las Vegas, Nevada from January 6 to January 9.
Kickstarter
Bezalel launched a Kickstarter campaign for the Ark (previous of Prelude) in January 13, 2014. Within three days, it already had presses for the product. By the end of the funding, the campaign have already surpassed its goal and raised the money to $131,939 as total. Ark was ranked among "the top 3 Kickstarter projects" in the Technology category for the entirety of the campaign period and was featured by TechCrunch, Buzzfeed during the campaign. In December 2014, the campaign was named a top 10 Kickstarter campaign of 2014 by both PCR and SiliconIndia News.
USC Viterbi Startup Garage
In June 2014, Bezalel entered the USC Viterbi Startup Garage in Marina Del Rey, where the company is currently located as headquartered. Bezalel participated in the Garage’s six-month incubator program that provides seed money and industry mentoring to its participating teams.
Product
Prelude
Previously known as Ark, the Prelude is a portable wireless charger for smartphones and smartwatches. Using the , the Prelude recharges mobile devices through contact with its top surface. The Preluse model size and weight are 92x92x22mm and 170 grams; it has the capacity of 7,000 mAh with the features of a wireless output of 1A and a USB output (for wired charging) at 2A.
The Prelude is compatible with a range of mobile devices, including smartphones, tablets, and wearables. Devices with built-in Qi wireless charging (such as the Moto 360 smartwatch from Motorola) can be charged with the Prelude out of the box. The Prelude charges non-Qi-compatible devices (such as the Apple iPhone line) by installing a wireless charging patch or case onto the device. The charger comes in white or black.
Future Project
History
2013: Founding
Frank Wu graduated with the degree of mechanical engineering from USC in 2012. He noticed that the current wireless charging solutions were too complicated or not truly portable and wireless, then he form the idea of a portable wireless charger. He forms of group of people to design and develop the first prototype for around 3 months, which had already been recognized by few medias.
2014: Establish Publicly
In January 2014, Frank Wu has co-founded the company, Bezalel Inc, with Yao Lee, Kris Tong, and Jam Isaga. In the same time, the team has launched their first prototype of Prelude, Ark, through a website, Kickstarter, as platform to campaign their fundraising money.
2015: CES
In January, the company had attended and exhibit in the CES in the Las Vegas Convention Center, Las Vegas, Nevada from January 6 to January 9.
Kickstarter
Bezalel launched a Kickstarter campaign for the Ark (previous of Prelude) in January 13, 2014. Within three days, it already had presses for the product. By the end of the funding, the campaign have already surpassed its goal and raised the money to $131,939 as total. Ark was ranked among "the top 3 Kickstarter projects" in the Technology category for the entirety of the campaign period and was featured by TechCrunch, Buzzfeed during the campaign. In December 2014, the campaign was named a top 10 Kickstarter campaign of 2014 by both PCR and SiliconIndia News.
USC Viterbi Startup Garage
In June 2014, Bezalel entered the USC Viterbi Startup Garage in Marina Del Rey, where the company is currently located as headquartered. Bezalel participated in the Garage’s six-month incubator program that provides seed money and industry mentoring to its participating teams.
Product
Prelude
Previously known as Ark, the Prelude is a portable wireless charger for smartphones and smartwatches. Using the , the Prelude recharges mobile devices through contact with its top surface. The Preluse model size and weight are 92x92x22mm and 170 grams; it has the capacity of 7,000 mAh with the features of a wireless output of 1A and a USB output (for wired charging) at 2A.
The Prelude is compatible with a range of mobile devices, including smartphones, tablets, and wearables. Devices with built-in Qi wireless charging (such as the Moto 360 smartwatch from Motorola) can be charged with the Prelude out of the box. The Prelude charges non-Qi-compatible devices (such as the Apple iPhone line) by installing a wireless charging patch or case onto the device. The charger comes in white or black.
Future Project
Evaluative diversity (also known as moral diversity) is the degree to which different decision-makers in a population exhibit preferences for different forms of evaluation.
=="Evalutive diversity" vs. "moral diversity"==
The term "evaluative diversity" is attributed to a 1961 paper by P. F. Strawson. Antonio Cua referred to Strawson's concept of evaluative diversity as "the region of conflicting ideal images of man, the region of moral diversity." Evaluative diversity includes differences of moral sensibility--as an example, Richard Brandt observed that the Hopi people did not share his moral qualms about killing birds by tying them to strings and playing rough with them--yet one may prefer the term "evaluative diversity" over "moral diversity" because different philosophers disagree about which kinds of values qualify as moral.
Research
Studies comparing different kinds of diversity find that moral diversity is even more socially divisive than ethnic diversity. Other studies indicate that some such value differences correlate with biological differences including genes and brain-activation patterns.
Discrimination
Unlike discrimination against race, gender, sexual orientation, and disability, as of November 2014 there were no laws prohibiting discrimination against evaluative orientation.
=="Evalutive diversity" vs. "moral diversity"==
The term "evaluative diversity" is attributed to a 1961 paper by P. F. Strawson. Antonio Cua referred to Strawson's concept of evaluative diversity as "the region of conflicting ideal images of man, the region of moral diversity." Evaluative diversity includes differences of moral sensibility--as an example, Richard Brandt observed that the Hopi people did not share his moral qualms about killing birds by tying them to strings and playing rough with them--yet one may prefer the term "evaluative diversity" over "moral diversity" because different philosophers disagree about which kinds of values qualify as moral.
Research
Studies comparing different kinds of diversity find that moral diversity is even more socially divisive than ethnic diversity. Other studies indicate that some such value differences correlate with biological differences including genes and brain-activation patterns.
Discrimination
Unlike discrimination against race, gender, sexual orientation, and disability, as of November 2014 there were no laws prohibiting discrimination against evaluative orientation.
Riptide Communications is a full-service public relations firm for Progressive clientele. Riptide, based in New York City, was founded in 1989 by current president, David Lerner.
Overview
Riptide provides press, strategic communications, and public relations services to groups and individuals committed to Progressive social change. In its twenty-two years of operations, Riptide has broadened the impact of countless campaigns, movements, and initiatives for issues of human rights, social justice, economic inequality, environmentalism, immigrant rights and similarly aligned social issues.
In the February 15, 2003 anti-war protest Riptide helped to organize hundreds of thousands of protesters to the streets of Manhattan
Riptide continues to work closely on all initiatives and cases of the Center for Constitutional Rights, most notably in their ongoing efforts to afford rights to detainees of the Guantanamo Bay detention camp.
Clients
Riptide's clientele range from grass roots organizations like September Eleventh Families for Peaceful Tomorrows, to prominent nonprofit organizations like the Center for Constitutional Rights.
Overview
Riptide provides press, strategic communications, and public relations services to groups and individuals committed to Progressive social change. In its twenty-two years of operations, Riptide has broadened the impact of countless campaigns, movements, and initiatives for issues of human rights, social justice, economic inequality, environmentalism, immigrant rights and similarly aligned social issues.
In the February 15, 2003 anti-war protest Riptide helped to organize hundreds of thousands of protesters to the streets of Manhattan
Riptide continues to work closely on all initiatives and cases of the Center for Constitutional Rights, most notably in their ongoing efforts to afford rights to detainees of the Guantanamo Bay detention camp.
Clients
Riptide's clientele range from grass roots organizations like September Eleventh Families for Peaceful Tomorrows, to prominent nonprofit organizations like the Center for Constitutional Rights.