Secretary of Homeland Security – Biden 2021

Alejandro Mayorkas: Nominee Currently: Chad Wolf (acting)

Under President Trump, the Department of Homeland Security’s focus shifted notably from counterterrorism to immigration and border enforcement. Trump turned the nation’s third-largest federal entity into a powerful tool of domestic policy and electoral politics, using DHS to carry out a wide-ranging immigration crackdown and quell street protests in American cities.

Created after the Sept. 11 attacks to reassure the American public and project stability, DHS went through unprecedented leadership turmoil under Trump, with five secretaries in four years. Biden is expected to try to stabilize the department by returning its focus to a broad range of threats, including counterterrorism, cyber threats and the pandemic response.

Alejandro Mayorkas

Former Obama immigration and homeland security official

Currently an attorney at the D.C. law firm WilmerHale, Mayorkas served as director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services during President Obama’s first term, and was promoted to DHS deputy secretary under Jeh Johnson for Obama’s second term. Born in Cuba and raised mostly in Los Angeles, Mayorkas’s experience navigating the politics of immigration enforcement and border security could be an asset to Biden if the issue remains a topic of intense partisan focus. Mayorkas’s nomination could run into trouble over a 2015 report by the DHS inspector general faulting him for inappropriately helping several companies obtain employment visas. Mayorkas refuted those findings. He would be the first Latino and first immigrant to run that department.

Source: Wahington Post Reported by Nick Miroff.

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Alejandro Mayorkas – Wikipedia

2021-01-20 Who is Alejandro Mayorkas, Biden’s Troubling Pick to Lead DHS (right wing media) Given what Pres. Biden and Vice Pres. Kamala Harris repeatedly promised during their campaign and the recent news of their plan to grant amnesty and an eight-year pathway to citizenship more than 11 million illegal aliens, this incoming Secretary will almost certainly face an immigration crisis that will make the surges of 2019 look like child’s play.

The question that should be in every American’s mind is whether Alejandro Mayorkas will act with integrity and honor in following his oath to protect and uphold the Constitution and only propose, accept, and execute immigration policies that put the interests of American workers first while understanding the detrimental implications of continued uncontrolled mass immigration?

After spending nine years as a prosecutor (1989-1998), Mayorkas became the youngest U.S. Attorney in the country under President Bill Clinton in 1998, again explicitly overseeing the prosecution of more white-collar crimes like financial fraud, violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, public corruption, cybercrime, environmental crime, international money laundering, and securities fraud.

In 2009 Mayorkas moved to Obama’s DHS as the director of USCIS with unanimous consent from the Senate. He made his first real national impact in 2012 as the architect of the disastrous Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals Executive Order. DACA gave amnesty to hundreds of thousands of illegal aliens residing in the country through deportation protection and work permits but also an indirect “pathway to citizenship” through the practice of “Advance Parole.”

Despite President Trump’s best efforts to dismantle it and expose its illegality and unconstitutionality, the program is still in effect. U.S. District Judge Nicholas Garaufis recently ordered the federal government to post a public notice that it would begin accepting new applications under terms in place under Mr. Obama.

Open-border activists view Mayorkas as the best option to revive and expand the DACA program to its heyday under the Obama administration. Currently, the program is still acting as an amnesty for hundreds of thousands of aliens residing in the US illegally, protecting “dreamers” from deportation and giving them work permits.

2021-01-19 Sen. Hawley moves to block swift confirmation for Biden’s homeland security pick But Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), the focus of deep resentment for challenging Biden’s election and, critics say, helping to incite the violent mob who attacked the Capitol, moved later Tuesday to block the fast-track confirmation process, saying he was dissatisfied with Mayorkas’s responses to questions about the Biden immigration agenda. Hawley is a member of the homeland security committee.

2021-01-19 Alejandro Mayorkas, Biden’s homeland security pick, faces senators at confirmation hearing

2021-01-19 From Border Wall To Capitol Riot, Homeland Security Nominee Takes Senate Questions

2020-11-23 Biden picks Alejandro Mayorkas, a son of Jewish Cuban refugees, to lead the Department of Homeland Security

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Secretary of Health and Human Services – Biden 2021

Xavier Becerra: Nominee Currently: Alex Azar

The Department of Health and Human Services, one of the government’s largest, has been the Trump administration’s main vehicle to weaken the Affordable Care Act and shift health policy in a more conservative direction in other ways. The department has sought to let states require some people on Medicaid to work or prepare for jobs, a move blocked by the courts. It has restricted federal funding of research that uses human fetal tissue.

Though a Republican Congress failed to repeal the ACA, HHS took many steps though executive action. It slashed funding to help boost enrollment in the insurance marketplaces created under the law, ended one type of subsidy for insurers, and widened the availability of inexpensive health plans that can bypass the law’s rules for insurance benefits and consumer protections.In contrast, the ACA is the basis of plans President-elect Biden has advocated for helping more Americans get affordable health coverage. He says that federal insurance subsidies should expand to help more middle-class families. He wants ACA health plans to be given to poor residents of a dozen states that have not expanded their Medicaid programs under the law. Biden also has proposed lowering from 65 years old to 60 the age for people to join Medicare, the vast federal insurance programs for older Americans. All these changes would require Congress to adopt them.

Xavier Becerra

California’s attorney general

Former congressman Becerra is the attorney general of California. An unorthodox pick, he has led a multistate lawsuit to preserve the Affordable Care Act. Amid the coronavirus pandemic, which has disproportionately hit Black and Hispanic populations, he would be the first Latino to run HHS.

Source: Washington Post Reported by Amy Goldstein and Yasmeen Abutaleb.

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Attorney General Xavier Becerra | State of California

Xavier Becerra for California Attorney General

BECERRA, Xavier | US House of Representatives: History

2021-01-21 Sen. Tom Cotton: Xavier Becerra nomination – here’s why Senate should reject culture warrior for HHS post

2021-01-20 California AG Xavier Becerra could be 1st Latino to run Health & Human Services

2021-01-20 California Attorney General Files Nine Lawsuits In One Day As Trump Leaves Office Becerra filed nine new lawsuits Tuesday against the Trump administration, targeting efforts to roll back greenhouse gas emission regulations and the Endangered Species Act, among others. “We have held the Trump Administration accountable time and again for their failure to follow the rules or respect our nation’s environmental laws,” Becerra said in a statement. “It will take time to unwind the havoc the Trump Administration has wrought. That’s why the nine lawsuits we filed today are so important.”

Becerra will finish his time as California’s attorney general having filed 122 lawsuits against the Trump administration, an average of one every two weeks during Trump’s time in office.

2021-01-20 Incoming HHS Secretary Becerra will be a champion for whistle-blowers Most are applauding Xavier Becerra as President-elect Joe Biden’s choice to run the U.S Health and Human Services. This is the agency — with nearly $1.3 trillion at its disposal — that oversees the safety of our drugs (through the Food and Drug Administration), deals with outbreaks and pandemics (through Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), and administers Medicare and Medicaid. It is at the epicenter of ensuring our ultimate public health and safety. No easy task, especially these days.

But there is another key attribute of this regulatory body that perhaps even further separates it from its sister agencies. It is a magnet for fraud. Billions of dollars a year of it. And surely to grow larger as the trillions in COVID relief snake through the system into the hands of those who would put profit before patient well-being. With all the strengths and conviction we can expect to see from our new health care czar, it is in the area of fraud-busting where we likely will see soon-to-be Secretary Becerra shine brightest. Based on his strong record as California attorney general, he likely will use the one-two punch of whistle-blowers and the False Claims Act to get the job done.

2021-01-15 Is Medicare For All A Possibility Under Xavier Becerra? Becerra had a pivotal role in helping to draft the Affordable Care Act (ACA) during his 12 terms in the House of Representatives representing California. And as California’s attorney general, Becerra led a coalition of 20 states and the District of Columbia to protect the ACA against the Trump administration’s efforts to dismantle it.

However, while Becerra has fought to protect the ACA, he has expressed that he wants to see a single-payer health care system—commonly called Medicare for All—established in the U.S. “For me, health care is a right,” he said. “I’ve been a single-payer advocate all my life,” Becerra told Kaiser Health News in Feb. 2019. Those who approve of Becerra for the job say that his willingness to fight for a national health care system, combined with his extensive background working with lawmakers, is exactly the combination that can help advance Biden’s national health care plan.

2021-01-13 Xavier Becerra’s Nonprofit Problem No federal agency works as much with nonprofits as the Department of Health and Human Services. That is one reason Xavier Becerra, President-elect Biden’s pick to lead the agency, will face opposition. His record, as California attorney general since 2017 and in Congress for nearly a quarter-century, has been one of hostility to nonprofit institutions and the donors who support them. In the House Mr. Becerra often accused charitable foundations of failing to donate funds equitably. 

2020-12-07 5 things to know about Xavier Becerra, Joe Biden’s nominee for top health official

2020-12-06 Biden picks Xavier Becerra as nominee for health and human services secretary

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Secretary of Energy – Biden 2021

Jennifer Granholm: Nominee Currently: Dan Brouillette

The Energy Department has been one of Trump’s numerous fronts in rolling back environmental regulations. Under Biden, the department would likely move to tighten energy efficiency standards across industries and products and invest heavily in renewable energy. During the campaign, Biden introduced a $2 trillion plan to fight climate change that included pledges to eliminate carbon emissions from the electric sector by 2035, impose stricter gas mileage standards and fund investments to weatherize millions of homes and commercial buildings.

Jennifer Granholm

Former governor of Michigan

Granholm, a CNN contributor and former two-term Michigan governor, is an advocate for renewable energy jobs who led the hard-hit industrial state during the Great Recession.

Source: Washington Post Reported by Juliet Eilperin.

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Jennifer Granholm – Wikipedia

2021-01-18 Biden energy secretary nominee Jennifer Granholm has millions in energy investments, per new filing President-elect Joe Biden’s energy secretary pick, Jennifer Granholm, has disclosed millions of dollars of investments in corporate and private business interests, including millions in companies linked to the energy industry, as lawmakers prepare to consider her nomination.

The former two-term Michigan governor and her husband, Daniel Mulhern, reported owning from $4.4 million up to $16.8 million in corporate interests and private assets like residential real estate properties, according to her new financial disclosure report released by the Office of Government Ethics on Monday.

2020-12-29 Jennifer Granholm’s energy record in Michigan should frighten America That’s a foolish decision that should frighten every American taxpayer. A big part of her job will be to dole out taxpayer dollars to “green” companies and industries favored by the Biden administration — a strategy she deployed in Michigan, but with little to show for it.

When Granholm was governor, she directed hundreds of millions of dollars to politically favored companies in the hopes of creating “green” jobs. She famously promised Michiganders, “In five years, you’re going to be blown away.” 

That prediction came true in a way: Michigan taxpayers were shocked at how spectacularly the effort failed. Her key subsidy program, the Michigan Economic Growth Authority, approved billions of dollars in tax credits for 434 projects. A Mackinac Center analysis found that only 10, or 2.3%, of those projects were successful in meeting their job creation promises. Despite the lack of success in creating jobs, the deals she made still cost Michigan taxpayers today billions even though she left office a decade ago.

2020-12-17 Biden Energy secretary pick Jennifer Granholm has past ties to utilities, chemical companies Since her time as governor, Granholm has been supportive of the idea of electric and autonomous cars and has pushed back on any potential impact the creation of these vehicles could have on jobs. Biden’s campaign energy plan includes a push for a “100% clean energy economy,” for the U.S. to reach “net-zero emissions no later than 2050″ and for a “historic investment in clean energy and climate research and innovation.” People familiar with the transition told CNBC that Granholm has a strong record when it comes to clean energy. 

2020-12-15 Biden to name Granholm as energy secretary The former Michigan governor is a strong advocate for electric vehicles. She’ll need an experienced deputy to handle nuclear weapons programs.

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Secretary of Education Biden 2021

Miguel Cardona: Nominee Currently: Betsy Devos

Under Secretary Betsy DeVos, the Education Department has rolled back some civil rights protections as well as Obama-era efforts to hold for-profit colleges accountable for poor outcomes. She has promoted alternatives to public schools and tried to slash federal funding for education. Biden is expected to reverse all of that, with more money for K-12 and higher education, new and revived civil rights protections and a focus on racial equity.

[Biden picks Miguel Cardona, Connecticut schools chief, as education secretary]

Miguel Cardona

Connecticut commissioner of education

Cardona, a former fourth grade teacher, was named Connecticut’s education commissioner last year. Previously, he served as co-chairman of a state task force examining achievement gaps. A low-profile pick, he has pushed to reopen ­pandemic-shuttered schools and is not aligned with either side in the education policy battles of recent years.

Source: Washington Post Reported by Laura Meckler.

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Miguel Cardona – Wikipedia

2021-01-20 For Miguel Cardona, the ability to build community and confront racism was forged in his Connecticut hometown

2021-01-19 Miguel Cardona’s ideas about education were forged in Meriden, CT. Now he will bring them to Washington, D.C.

2021-01-14 Who Is Miguel Cardona? Education Secretary Pick Has Roots in Classroom, Principal’s Office

2021-01-04 How Education Secretary Nominee Miguel Cardona Works With Teachers Miguel Cardona, a former teacher, school administrator, and currently Connecticut’s education commissioner, was recently nominated to lead the federal Education Department. Cardona’s selection reflects a shift from those who spearheaded education policy under Joe Biden’s Democratic predecessor, Barack Obama.

As president, Obama aligned himself with the pro–charter school PAC Democrats for Education Reform, which, as co-founder Whitney Tilson put it, was founded “to break the teacher unions’ stranglehold over the Democratic Party.” Obama tapped DFER’s top choice for education secretary—Chicago Public Schools CEO Arne Duncan—and for the next seven years Duncan pushed controversial reform policies, including charter school expansion, weakening teacher tenure, and tying teacher salaries to student test scores. Unions despised Duncan, and Obama, who largely left the dirty work to his appointee, made clear he approved of the job Duncan was doing. “Arne has done more to bring our educational system—sometimes kicking and screaming—into the 21st century than anybody else,” Obama said in 2015.

While Biden didn’t go so far as picking former National Education Association president Lily Eskelsen García to lead the Education Department, the choice of Cardona has nonetheless been a relief to union advocates, who knew education reformers were lobbying behind the scenes for other candidates. It’s another example of how Democratic leaders have drifted away from the Obama-era agenda and more toward a platform focused on traditional public schools and their schoolteachers.

2020-12-22 Teachers Blast Biden’s Education Secretary Pick Miguel Cardona: ‘A Slap in the Face’ While his nomination has been met with praise by education groups like the American Federation of Teachers, the National School Boards Association and the National Education Association, some classroom teachers disagree.

“The big issue is that he’s not a teacher. He’s somebody who taught for a short amount of time on his way to becoming an administrator, which is not in and of itself a bad thing,” Salt told Newsweek.”We were told that we were going to have a classroom teacher, and this is not a classroom teacher,” she said.

During the president-elect’s campaign, Biden vowed to select a “teacher” to replace the current education secretary, Betsy DeVos, who has no professional experience working in a school or classroom.

2020-12-22 Biden picks Miguel Cardona, Connecticut schools chief, as education secretary

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Secretary of Defense Biden 2021

Lloyd J. Austin III: Nominee Currently: Christopher C. Miller (acting)

A Biden presidency is expected to strike a relatively steady course at the Pentagon, seeking to restore stability in military decision-making while reemphasizing alliances and pressing ahead with efforts to respond to China’s rise.Analysts expect Biden to continue troop cuts in Afghanistan, where violence is surging as diplomats seek to advance peace talks. But while the Trump administration has sent mixed messages about whether it will withdraw all troops in coming months in line with a U.S.-Taliban deal, Biden’s campaign has suggested it would opt to leave a small force to counter al-Qaeda and the Islamic State.

Promising a break with often chaotic foreign policy, the new administration is expected to strike a less adversarial stance against Iran, which Trump has depicted as a chief American adversary.

Lloyd J. Austin III

Retired Army general and U.S. Central Command chief

Austin rose to become a four-star general before retiring in 2016 as the chief of U.S. Central Command, from which he oversaw U.S. military operations across the Middle East for three years. His tenure there included the rise of the Islamic State, which began seizing cities in Iraq in 2014, and the U.S.-led military intervention to stop it. Austin’s selection could run into strong opposition from lawmakers who want to ensure civilian control of the military. As a recently retired military officer, he would have to gain a waiver from a law that states that any service member must be out of uniform for seven years before becoming defense secretary. If confirmed Austin would be the first Black Pentagon chief.

Source: Washington Post Reported by Missy Ryan and Seung Min Kim

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Lloyd Austin – Wikipedia

Lloyd Austin | Military Wiki | Fandom

Lloyd Austin – Ballotpedia

Lloyd J. Austin III is a member of the Raytheon Technologies Board of Directors

2021-01-19 Lloyd Austin, Biden’s nominee to lead Pentagon, vows to take on extremism in the military

2021-01-19 Defense Secretary Confirmation Hearing The Senate Armed Services Committee held a confirmation hearing for General Lloyd Austin (Ret.) to serve as secretary of defense. Following witness statements by former Defense Secretary Leon Panetta (Obama administration, 2011-13) and Senator Dan Sullivan (R-AK) in support of the general’s confirmation, the nominee answered a range of questions, including on China and Russia as global threats, the Middle East, cybersecurity, modernization efforts, sexual assault in the military, and the coronavirus pandemic. General Austin also answered questions regarding the upholding of civilian leadership of the Pentagon, for which the Senate needs to approve a waiver allowing the retired general to serve as defense secretary since he has not been a private citizen for more than seven years. Previously, the general served as commander of United States Central Command (Obama administration, 2013-16). 

2021-01-12 Civilian-military concerns trail Biden’s defense secretary pick

During a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing Jan. 12, some Democrats made it clear during the hearing that they would vote down a legal exception for Austin, who has only been retired for four years, but would consider his nomination.

Lindsay Cohn, an associate professor at the U.S. Naval War College, said that another exception to statute that requires military officers be at least seven years removed from their service would set a dangerous precedent that moves the military further away from being under civilian control. “I think that the civilian side of the Department of Defense has lost both influence and respect over the last several years,”

Cohn said the trend impacts the department’s need for diverse experiences and the need for political aptitude in being able to think about national security in policy terms rather than practical military terms. “The military side is well represented in the debates internal to the department. What’s happening now is that the civilian side is less well-represented and that creates an imbalance, and I think produces worse policy,” she said.

2020-12-10 Iraq troop withdrawal was Gen. Austin’s failure — and Biden’s Biden is certainly in a position to know this. He was the Barack Obama administration’s point man on Iraq when he served as vice president. What’s puzzling is why Biden would select Austin because of — not in spite of — his role in the U.S. retreat from Iraq. The 2011 decision was a strategic blunder that Biden and Obama reversed in part in 2014, after an Islamic State army had taken Iraq’s second largest city and was threatening Baghdad.

A big reason why Obama agreed to a full withdrawal of forces from the country was because Austin, Biden and U.S. Ambassador James Jeffrey failed to get the Iraqi parliament to approve a provision that stipulated U.S. forces remaining in Iraq would not be tried in Iraqi courts. This may seem like a technical detail, but almost all status-of-forces agreements with foreign countries include such provisions.

2020-12-08 Susan Collins, Jared Golden skeptical of Biden’s pick of retired general to lead Pentagon But getting him installed as Pentagon chief will be more complicated than usual. He must win a congressional waiver of a requirement that a defense secretary be out of uniform at least seven years before taking office. Austin retired in 2016 after 41 years in the Army.

Such a congressional waiver has been granted only twice: in 1950 for George Marshall and in 2017 for James Mattis, the retired Marine general who became President Donald Trump’s first defense secretary. Among Maine’s delegation, Sens. Angus King and Susan Collins both voted in favor of the waiver for Mattis, while Rep. Chellie Pingree of the 1st District voted against it.

Some prominent Democrats opposed the Mattis waiver outright, and among those who voted for it, Sen. Jack Reed of Rhode Island said then that he would not support another. Civilian control of the military is rooted in Americans’ historic wariness of large standing armies with the power to overthrow the government it is intended to serve. That is why the president is the commander in chief of the armed forces, and it reflects the rationale behind the prohibition against a recently retired military officer serving as defense secretary.

2020-12-08 Gen. Lloyd Austin, defense secretary nominee, brings deep combat experience and a connection with Biden

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Secretary of Commerce – Biden 2021

Gov. Gina Raimondo: Nominee Currently: Wilbur Ross

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross led the department to take an active role in President Trump’s trade wars. He championed an expansive interpretation of U.S. trade law, enabling Trump to impose tariffs on imported steel and aluminum in response to alleged national security threats. The so-called Section 232 tariffs were deeply controversial and alienated major U.S. trading partners, including Canada.Commerce also was a key player in the president’s confrontation with China. The department put prominent Chinese corporations such as Huawei on an export blacklist, all but severing them from critical American-made components, an important step toward decoupling the world’s two largest economies.The Biden administration is unlikely to immediately roll back the Trump tariffs. But the department may put a greater emphasis on export promotion and, through its management of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, take a more proactive stance on climate change. Commerce, customarily considered a business community outpost, is unlikely to be among the first department jobs filled and the ultimate pick may depend on the demographic and political makeup of the rest of the Cabinet.

Gov. Gina Raimondo

Governor of Rhode Island

Raimondo has been Rhode Island’s governor since 2015 and previously served as the state’s general treasurer. Raimondo, who has often been at odds with major labor unions, also previously worked in venture capital.

Source: Washington Post Reported by David J. Lynch and Amy B Wang.

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Gina Raimondo – Wikipedia

2021-01-20 Smithfield Urges Gov. Raimondo To Ease Coronavirus Restrictions

2021-01-19 RI House Republicans call on Governor Raimondo to set a specific date for the transference of power

2021-01-15 Were you OK with Gov. Gina M. Raimondo not taking questions from reporters during her final COVID-19 briefing?

2021-01-08 Rhode Island Governor Gina Raimondo Tapped for Commerce Chief

2020-12-25 Rhode Island Governor Gina Raimondo criticized for flouting lockdown rules The Democratic governor was photographed at Barnaby’s Public House in Providence on Dec. 18 for a wine and paint event after instructing residents to obey a “pause” on social gatherings, the Washington Examiner reported. “Please, stay home except for essential activities & wear a mask anytime you’re with people you don’t live with. Together, we can turn our case numbers around,” she added. The day after Raimondo was seen eating out, Rhode Island’s Health Director Dr. Nicole Alexander-Scott tested positive for COVID-19, prompting the governor and other officials to go into quarantine, the Washington Examiner reported.

2020-18 How a Status Quo Biden Cabinet Pick Would Burn One of the few remaining unfilled slots in Joe Biden’s Cabinet is the commerce secretary. The oddball Commerce Department is a strange mélange of different agencies that don’t really fit together, but in the hands of someone committed to reviving U.S. industrial policy, it could prove fearsome and important.

Leaks to the press, however, have shown Biden flirting with the notion of doing something on the inexplicable/infuriating continuum, picking a Republican to prove his fondness for a party that still isn’t certain he won, or a Wall Street–friendly steward to build relationships with a business community that has already staffed much of his administration. In turn, Republican Meg Whitman and Democrat Gina Raimondo have dominated the rumor mill.

It’s hard to believe that the business community needs yet another goodwill ambassador within the Biden administration. It’s even harder to understand why corporate executives (think Penny Pritzker or Wilbur Ross) are almost always floated for the post of commerce secretary. But adding Burns to the mix would be anything but apolitical. Given her legacy from her time atop Xerox, Burns could very well undermine Biden’s credibility on a number of his most important priorities, and bring with her a ton of baggage from some of the most high-profile scandals in the corporate world.

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Keep Gina Raimondo out of Joe Biden’s Cabinet! Gina Raimondo has been a steadfast ally of Wall Street and corporate America throughout her time in politics: as state treasurer, she sold out her state’s pension fund to Wall Street hedge funds, whilst compelling a regime of cuts to benefits for retirees, over strenuous objection from the American Federation of Teachers, the National Education Association, the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, the International Association of Fire Fighters, and others. A Koch-funded conservative libertarian advocacy group later tried to spread this policy nationwide.

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Secretary of Agriculture – Biden 2021

Tom Vilsack Nominee – Currently: Sonny Perdue

The Trump administration has authorized tens of billions of dollars in direct payments to American ranchers and commodity row crop farmers. Federal payments to farmers hit a record $46 billion in 2020, with trade mitigation payments and pandemic relief flowing swiftly to President Trump’s rural base in the South and Midwest. Trump’s other signature USDA initiatives have been regulatory policies aimed at reducing the number of Americans eligible for food assistance.

It is likely Biden would reverse erosions of SNAP and other food assistance programs, as well as restoring more rigorous school nutrition standards that were the centerpiece of Michelle Obama’s Let’s Move! effort. Biden has said he would support beginning farmers, pursue “smarter pro-worker and pro-family-farmer…policies,” and reward sustainable farming practices that reduce atmospheric carbon.

Tom Vilsack

Former agriculture secretary and Iowa governor

During the Biden campaign, former Iowa governor Vilsack was a top rural and agriculture policy adviser. Since 2017, Vilsack has been chief executive of the U.S. Dairy Export Council, prompting some critics to argue he is too closely tied to agribusiness. Vilsack recently told The Post that climate change initiatives such as carbon credits provide a range of new revenue streams for American farmers as “more and more consumers and companies are interested in where their food comes from and how it’s being sustainably produced. Farmers are in a position to provide help and assistance, but they shouldn’t be asked to foot the bill for this.” Fun fact: This year Vilsack was a $150,000 Powerball prize winner of the Iowa Lottery.

Source: Washington Post Reported by Laura Reiley and Seung Min Kim.

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Tom Vilsack – Wikipedia

2021-01-20 Opinion: How Tom Vilsack can be a champion for school food as USDA secretary

2021-01-14 Tom Vilsack’s nomination as agriculture secretary reopens old wounds for Black farmers

2020-12-22 Back to the Future with Tom ”Mr. Monsanto” Vilsack – Part I

2020-12-21 Fierce pushback, fear of new and onerous regulations from small farmers on Joe Biden’s choice of Tom Vilsack for USDA

2020-12-21 Biden’s pick for agriculture secretary raises serious red flags

2020-12-19 Tom Vilsack Is the Wrong Person To Lead the Department of Agriculture

2020-12-09 Black farmers, civil rights advocates seething over Vilsack pick

2020-12-09 Who Is Tom Vilsack? Biden Reportedly Nominates “Mr. Monsanto” As Agriculture Secretary

2020-12-09 Biden Plans To Bring Vilsack Back To USDA Despite Criticism From Reformers

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Honoring Martin Luther King Jr.

MLK: Beyond Vietnam — A Time to Break Silence (Full)  

Poor People’s Campaign -1968

Applying Dr. King’s six philosophical principles of nonviolence

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2021-01-18 MLK Day Special: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in His Own Words | Democracy Now!

2021-01-18 Dr. Martin Luther King’s Challenge to the Movement, as the Fascists Storm the Capital – CounterPunch.org

2021-01-18 Martin Luther King’s Revolutionary Dream Deferred – PopularResistance.Org

2021-01-18 Martin Luther King Jr. Defended Democracy Against Racism and So Must We (truthout.org)

2021-01-18 Opinion | The Nation Must Have the Moral Courage To Carry on the Work of Martin Luther King Jr. (commondreams.org)  

2021-01-18 Martin Luther King, Jr.: The Three Evils of Society: Racism, Militarism and Capitalism – Dandelion Salad (wordpress.com)

2021-01-17 Remembering Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. as a Fierce Critic of US Foreign Policy (truthout.org)

2021-01-17 The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. loved Black music and musicians loved him back

2021-01-17 This Martin Luther King Jr. Day, let’s not whitewash what he stood for

2021-01-17 The Radicalization of Martin Luther King, Jr. + Dr. Martin Luther King: Where Do We Go From Here? – Dandelion Salad (wordpress.com)

2021-01-16 Today even the FBI loves Martin Luther King Jr. It sure didn’t in the ’60s

2018-04-04 The Last March of Martin Luther King Jr. In the months leading up to his assassination, King’s greatest focus was on poverty and economic injustice.

1995-01-04 The Martin Luther King You Don’t See on TV – Jeff Cohen and Norman Solomon: By 1967, King had also become the country’s most prominent opponent of the Vietnam War, and a staunch critic of overall U.S. foreign policy, which he deemed militaristic. In his “Beyond Vietnam” speech delivered at New York’s Riverside Church on April 4, 1967 — a year to the day before he was murdered — King called the United States “the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today.”

From Vietnam to South Africa to Latin America, King said, the U.S. was “on the wrong side of a world revolution.” King questioned “our alliance with the landed gentry of Latin America,” and asked why the U.S. was suppressing revolutions “of the shirtless and barefoot people” in the Third World, instead of supporting them.  

1963-04-16 “Letter from a Birmingham Jail [King, Jr.]”


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Organizational MLK Statements (partial)

2021-01-18 Black Lives Matter Global Network  Today, as we honor the life and legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. (who was born on January 15th, 1929), we are still carrying so much of our own pain and grief.

We’re fighting for our lives and liberation. We’re mourning the Black lives lost to systemic racism, police brutality, and COVID-19. And we’re recovering from a white supremacist failed coup at our nation’s Capitol just 12 days ago — all while still trying to reckon with the racist roots of the country we are fighting so hard to improve.

But just as MLK did, we continue to persevere. We continue to center Black lives. And we continue to speak out and take action against injustice everywhere.

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. believed in the possibility of an America that celebrates, acknowledges, and allows for thriving Black lives. Today — and every day — we keep fighting to see his and our dream realized.

Although this MLK Day looks very different from years past, it is important that we take a moment to rest and reflect on all that our ancestors have contributed to the movement. With each passing day, we take more and more steps toward realizing the America that MLK so diligently believed in.

Keep checking in on each other, and keep on fighting. In love and solidarity,

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2021-01-18 Common Cause This Martin Luther King Jr. Day comes at what I hope can be a turning point in our history.  We saw the last-gasp of Donald Trump’s presidency at the U.S. Capitol two weeks ago — and it’s no surprise that it ended with the same violence, racism, and hate that he has inflicted on this country, and Black and Brown communities in particular, for his entire presidency.

It disgusted me to see a Confederate flag — a symbol of those who ripped our country apart to preserve the institution of slavery — in the U.S. Capitol building.  And it enraged me — after a summer marked by police violence against peaceful Black Lives Matter protesters — to see how unprepared (at best) law enforcement was for the onslaught that left five dead, with some officers appearing to actively support the insurrection.

Michael, the challenges we face are bigger than Donald Trump — which means they won’t magically get better when he leaves office on Wednesday.

After all, Trump’s attacks on the legitimacy of our election — and his efforts to suppress Black and Brown voters — were aided by hundreds of Members of Congress, state legislators, and attorneys general. Even after the violent attempt to overthrow our government and literally kill elected officials, many are still maintaining the lie that the election was illegitimate.

That lie fueled the violence we saw on January 6th, violence I fear could continue into the future. And, it will soon fuel an onslaught of state-level attempts to silence people through gerrymandering and voter suppression — on top of how the unrepresentative Senate and the broken Electoral College already stack the deck against truly representative government.

Today, as we honor Martin Luther King Jr.’s work with our nation’s only federally designated day of service — we must also recognize that his demands for justice and equality were caricatured, misrepresented, and demeaned as much as in their time as the Black Lives Matter movement is today.

Dr. King’s memory inspires hope, but it also demands that we continue to call out the injustice that we see — from this president, and also in an entire system built to keep people down along racial and economic lines.  We believe that each of us, no matter who we are, should have a meaningful say in the decisions that affect our lives. And, that principle is fundamentally incompatible with the white supremacist ideas and structures brought to the forefront in recent years.

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2021-01-18 Green Party As we commemorate the life and work and legacy of Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, it’s important to remember that he was a radical. Dr. King fought for the rights of cash-poor and marginalized people to live with dignity.

At this time of pandemic and rebellion, when so many people have been failed by their government, the remedies Dr. King called for are so necessary. We need a federal jobs guarantee. We need housing for all. We need Medicare-for-All. We need an end to war.

We need the immediate end of police violence in our communities. We need public community schools that serve all of the needs of students, families and educators.

We need reparations for Black people, as a way to address and remedy some of the unimaginable damage caused by enslavement and systemic racism. We need these things as much now as when Dr. King called for them during his lifetime. We are committed to making his dream of a Beloved Community a reality.

Angela Walker,
Green Party 2020 Vice Presidential Nominee

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2021-01-18 Indivisible   Today is Martin Luther King Jr. Day, and we think one great way to honor his legacy is by taking on the systemic injustices that have historically made this a country for the few, not the many. 

In 2021, we’re taking action and demanding justice for the 700,000 people who’ve been disenfranchised in the District of Columbia. One of the key priorities outlined in our latest Indivisible Guide is democracy reform, and that starts with addressing critical racial justice and civil rights issues like D.C. statehood. Historically, racist politicians have prevented D.C. from becoming a state because the city has long been a majority Black city. If you’re ready to start charting a new path forward, start calling your members of Congress this week and demand they support the D.C. statehood bill (H.R. 51). Then, keep reading for more on Dr. King and the Civil Rights Movement of today.

While we encourage our movement to reflect on King’s words, teachings, and impact, it’s important to recognize that King’s legacy has largely been sanitized and made more palatable for white audiences. Democratic Senator-elect Rev. Raphael Warnock spoke of this in 2018, drawing on the history of the Civil Rights Movement and his own experience as a pastor at the same church as King. He said, “When Dr. King died we resurrected a new Martin Luther King Jr., one who does not make us too uncomfortable … He was the best kind of patriot because he loved the country enough to tell the country the truth.” 

Like a mirror held up before the country, King was honest about America’s plagues — the white-supremacist violence, the racial segregation, the institutionalized discrimination and disenfranchisement — and for being honest, he was assassinated. In his ‘Letters From Birmingham Jail’, King expressed that freedom is never given voluntarily — it must be demanded.  

We can never forget that when demanding more power, when making the institutions that exploit us uncomfortable and quake, there will be a struggle. America was founded on the oppression of Black, Brown, and Indigenous peoples, and our democracy was rigged from the start. If we hope to make our democracy as inclusive and representative as possible, we’re going to have to demand change, and expect a backlash from those who are in power. 

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2021-01-17 Innocence Project On MLK Day: The Continuing Quest for Justice and Fairness   We must reckon with the hard truth that racial discrimination leads to wrongful conviction.  Our work to free the staggering number of innocent people in American jails and prisons and to reform the system responsible for their unjust imprisonment is more urgent than ever. In this quest, we cannot be “more cautious than courageous.” Nor can we “remain silent behind the anesthetizing security of stained-glass windows,” as Dr. King wrote in his Letter from Birmingham Jail. 

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2021-01-18 KPFA    “Everybody can be great … because anybody can serve.” MLK, Jr.

Please join me in welcoming back our National Day of Service by giving to others on this day. I’ll be spending the afternoon mucking the stalls and cleaning the hooves of the equine members of the National Park Service, but the ways to assist others are myriad. If you are so led, AmeriCorps and the Presidential Inaugural Committee have gathered together a list of safe and vital volunteer opportunities in your area, or in your virtual arena, RIGHT HERE.

Have a safe and rewarding holiday! And as always, thank you for your continuing support of KPFA Radio. Kevin Hunsanger, Director of Development, KPFA Radio

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2021-01-18 Move to Amend On this Martin Luther King Jr. Day, amid our rapidly shifting political landscape, this MLK quote feels most salient:

a

At Move to Amend, we’ve never shied away from the labels “radical” (which means exposing and changing the root/core/foundation of problems) or “extremist.” Why? Because we are already living under extreme conditions.

What other choice do we have but to be extremists and radicals when the climate is collapsing, corporate rule and white nationalist fascism are consolidating all around us, and our government is barely doing the minimum to address our acute crises??

And we still need to build the people power necessary to oppose these forces in a meaningful way that can correct the disastrous course we are on!

Love is real democracy. Love is healthcare for all. Love is having the freedom to stay home and feel safe during a pandemic. Love is safety and comfort for refugees and asylum seekers. Love is ending homelessness forever. Love is choosing to listen to leaders on the front lines of struggle when they say “Defund the Police” and “Land Back”…

While we can celebrate the reprieve of some of the most hateful extremists for the moment, make no mistake that they are already finding new ways to organize, deceive, and come back stronger than before.

And even with this transfer of power we are going through, it is all still very much within a status quo of corporate rule, that has no plans to cease its systemic oppression, poisoning and plunder.

In fact, Corporate America is scrambling to rebrand itself as we speak in hopes of whitewashing its complicity in the political nightmare we find ourselves in today. We must remain ever vigilant and critical of these entities, regardless of whether they position themselves “pro” or “anti” Trump, or whether they claim to support a social cause we care about. 

Because if we truly had democracy, we wouldn’t need to look to these corporations to draw the lines in the sand for us. We would have drawn those lines ourselves a long time ago.

Martin Luther King, Jr. is still a beacon of clarity to those of us in the fight for a system that is based in genuine democracy, justice and love. May we all take some time today to meditate on his life and words, and (re)commit ourselves to applying them going forward. And we are proud to call ourselves “extremists” for the cause. 

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2021-01-18 Peace Action

“Returning violence for violence multiplies violence, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars.
Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that.
Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.”

-The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Dear Michael,

It certainly has been a dark time in our country, as the distressing recent storming of the Capitol by a white supremacist mob showed us, and we aren’t out of the proverbial woods yet. But there are solid reasons to believe the new Congress and Administration will quickly move to make the world a safer and more peaceful place.

The focus will of course be on COVID, the economy, and domestic priorities, but on war and peace issues, we should see progress and some victories very early in the year including:

  • Extending the New START treaty with Russia, and perhaps laying the groundwork for further nuclear weapons reductions;
  • Ending U.S. support for the calamitous civil war in Yemen, and also possibly curbing U.S. weapons sales to Saudi Arabia and its allies;
  • Re-entering the Iran Anti-Nuclear Agreement and Paris Climate Accord.

Of course, with your continued support and the activism of our grassroots network, Peace Action will also push hard for slashing Pentagon spending, reviving diplomacy for peace on the Korean Peninsula, and ending devastating economic sanctions and militarization of the police.

But first, I ask you to pause for a minute to help us honor the memory of one of our country’s finest drum majors for justice. Martin Luther King, Jr. and his wife Coretta were early supporters of SANE, as our organization was called at its founding in 1957, and Coretta is credited with helping shape her husband’s position against the Vietnam War. 

To honor them, please consider how you might best act in their memory in your local community. Besides my work for Peace Action, I support a local organization helping feed the hungry and unhoused outside Washington, DC, and local community radio stations helping spread progressive news and views. I’m sure you also do things to help better your community, and if you need more ideas on how to do that or to encourage others to do so, AmeriCorps has a website with helpful resources.

We know, as Dr. King did, that racism, militarism and economic exploitation, the intertwined Giant Triplets he decried decades ago, still plague our society. As a new year with many dangers but also possibilities dawns, please join me in re-dedicating to the struggle for a more peaceful and just society.

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2021-01-18 Public Citizen

Many of us recognize the ongoing reality of white supremacism for the very real threat it is — as a kind of defect in our national DNA (and going all the way back to 1492) that we still have not invested anywhere near enough in curing. So — on a day when we honor the life and legacy of Martin Luther King, Jr. — I wanted to share a few of Dr. King’s insightful and inspiring words:

From King’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail” (April 16, 1963):

I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro’s great stumbling block in his stride toward freedom is not the White Citizen’s Counciler or the Ku Klux Klanner, but the white moderate, who is more devoted to “order” than to justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice; who constantly says: “I agree with you in the goal you seek, but I cannot agree with your methods of direct action”; who paternalistically believes he can set the timetable for another man’s freedom; who lives by a mythical concept of time and who constantly advises the Negro to wait for a “more convenient season.”

From King’s “Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence” speech at Riverside Church (April 4, 1967):

I am convinced that if we are to get on the right side of the world revolution, we as a nation must undergo a radical revolution of values. … We must rapidly begin the shift from a thing-oriented society to a person-oriented society. When machines and computers, profit motives and property rights, are considered more important than people, the giant triplets of racism, extreme materialism, and militarism are incapable of being conquered.

From King’s speech announcing the Poor People’s March on Washington (December 4, 1967):

America is at a crossroads of history, and it is critically important for us, as a nation and a society, to choose a new path and move upon it with resolution and courage. … Consider, for example, the spectacle of … a nation gorged on money while millions of its citizens are denied a good education, adequate health services, decent housing, meaningful employment, and even respect, and are then told to be responsible.

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2021-01-18 Roots Action

“A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death.” — Martin Luther King, Jr.

The U.S. discretionary budget devotes more to the military than to everything else combined. This spending generates wars, rather than preventing them. It destroys the natural environment, enriches the wealthy, drains the economy, erodes civil liberties and government transparency, fuels bigotry, and is a major source of death, injury, and homelessness.

Last summer, the public told pollsters it favored moving 10 percent of military spending to human and environmental needs, but the U.S. Congress voted down a proposal to do just that. Now President-elect Joe Biden is proposing massive spending packages, to be funded primarily through debt, with no mention of the military budget.

Biden’s proposal to immediately spend $1.9 trillion on the pandemic and economy (as well as boosting the minimum wage to $15/hour) has a lot that’s good in it, though it could be made better in a number of ways. It could be significantly funded by increased taxes on the super-wealthy, something Biden campaigned on. It should also be funded by tax dollars redirected from the military budget.

Problems with borrowing the necessary money include (1) it costs more than it looks like, because of interest, (2) it’s harder to pass through Congress, (3) it further empowers the people who loan the money, and especially (4) it creates a major lost opportunity to move funding out of places where it shouldn’t be into places where it should be. It also fuels the “big government” vs “small government” debate, displacing the badly needed “what kind of government” debate.

Pandemic rescues, economic rescues, and Green New Deals should not fail to draw on the massive, counterproductive funding that goes each and every year into militarism. Nor should they fail to take advantage of the plans and scholarship that have for decades been poured into the project of conversion to peaceful industries. Action

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2021-01-18 World Beyond War  “A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death.” — Martin Luther King, Jr.

The U.S. discretionary budget devotes more to militarism than to everything else combined. This spending generates wars, rather than preventing them. It destroys the natural environment, enriches the wealthy, drains the economy, erodes civil liberties and government transparency, fuels bigotry, and is a major source of death, injury, and homelessness. 

Last summer, the U.S. public told pollsters it favored moving 10% of military spending to human and environmental needs, but the U.S. Congress voted down a proposal to do just that. Now President-Elect Joe Biden is proposing massive spending packages, to be funded primarily through debt, with no mention of the military budget.   Click here to ask your Representative and Senators to join the Military Spending Reduction Caucus being created by Congress Members Barbara Lee and Mark Pocan, and to insist on immediately moving at least 10% of military funding to urgent projects (including all assistance required by every worker impacted by this shift).    

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Specific Issues Index

From Creating Better World

Posted in Martin Luther King Jr., non-violence, poverty, racial justice, racial segregation, racism, war | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Trump Incited Insurrection – Actions to take

ADD YOUR NAME: IMPEACH. EXPEL. INVESTIGATE  

Join the campaign to #RemoveTrumpNow (Whip Count Below!)     

Remove Trump Now – DFA 

Sign the petition: All federal officials with the constitutional power to remove Trump from office must do so immediately   

Hold Them Accountable   Republican members of Congress who incited this domestic terror attack through their attempts to overturn the election must face consequences. They have broken their sacred Oath of Office.  

Tell Your Member of Congress: Remove President Trump From Office    

*Investigate Police Breakdowns Related to Capitol Insurrection     Join Public Citizen in demanding answers:  

Why was law enforcement so apparently unprepared and under-deployed for Wednesday’s attack on the Capitol?

How could such a catastrophic “intelligence failure” happen when the insurrectionists advertised their plans on the internet for weeks?

Why was it so easy for the MAGA militia to overrun the very halls of Congress?

Why were violent insurrectionists afforded such a hands-off approach by law enforcement?

Are there any connections between law enforcement and the insurrectionists?

Why were so few arrests made despite countless obvious and serious crimes being committed in plain daylight and in full view of law enforcement?

Invoke the 25th amendment after the deadly terror attack at the U​.​S. Capitol.   

Congress Must Impeach & Remove Donald Trump       

Not fit for Congress: Expel the coup supporters now      

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Trump Coup Attempts

The Trump Presidency – Index

From Creating Better World

Posted in coup, insurrection, Petitions, Trump | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Trump U.S. 2020 Election Coup – Alternative Media

Alternet  

American Prospect

Black Agenda Report

Common Dreams

Consortium News    (search on website)

Counter Currents (search on website)

Counter Punch

Defense Monitor  

Democracy Now 

Dissent  

Dollars and Sense   (search on website)

Extra!  

Foreign Policy In Focus  

Information Clearing house   (no search)  

Intercept   (no search)  

International Socialist Review 

Intrepid Report   

Jacobin Magazine

Left Voice  

Lowdown  

Making Contact   

Mint Press

Mother Jones

Nation

New Republic

Park Center for Independent Media (PCIM)

People’s Dispatch

Popular Resistance

Portside

Progressive

Progressive Populist 

Project Censored

Raw Story

Reader Supported News

Reason

Roots Action

Russia Today

Salon

Shadow Proof

Socialist Action 

Sojourners Magazine

Strategic Culture

Talking Points Memo    (no search)  

Terrain

Think Progress    (no search)   

Tom Dispatch

Truthout

Washington Monthly

Yes Magazine

Young Turks (no search)  

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Trump Coup Attempts

The Trump Presidency – Index

From Creating Better World

Posted in Alternative Media, coup, insurrection, Trump | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment