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We Cannot Afford to Forget the Death and Damage Trump Has Caused

We Cannot Afford to Forget the Death and Damage Trump Has Caused Details MEDIA WATCH-America prefers to look forward rather than back. We re a land of second acts. We move on.  This can be a strength. We don t get bogged down in outmoded traditions, old grudges, obsolete ways of thinking. We constantly reinvent. We love innovation and disruption.   Trump is consolidating his power over the Republican Party, based on his big lie.  The downside is a collective amnesia about what we ve been though, and a corresponding reluctance to do anything about it or hold anyone accountable.  Now, with Covid receding and the economy starting to rebound and the 2020 election and the attack on the Capitol behind us the future looks bright. 

Valley News - Some states plan big spending with Biden s aid, others wait

Some states plan big spending with Biden’s aid, others wait FILE - In this Monday, Feb 8, 2021 file photo, Gov. Brian Kemp speaks during a news conference about expanding rural internet access in the state, at the Georgia Capitol in Atlanta. The federal American Rescue Plan, comes on top of $150 billion the federal government sent directly to states and local governments in 2020. This year s law cites infrastructure for water, sewer and broadband internet as allowable uses. (Curtis Compton/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via AP) FILE - In this Wednesday, March 30, 2021 file photo, workers replace old water lines under Main Street as part of work to update water and sewer systems as well as prepare the road for the expansion of a street car line in Kansas City, Mo. The federal American Rescue Plan, comes on top of $150 billion the federal government sent directly to states and local governments in 2020. This year s law cites infrastructure for water, sewer and broadband internet as a

Some states plan big spending with Biden s aid while others wait | News, Sports, Jobs

May 10, 2021 Though still awaiting money from the latest federal coronavirus relief act, some governors and state lawmakers already are making plans to add the multibillion-dollar boon to their budgets. Among their priorities: bailing out depleted unemployment accounts, expanding high-speed internet and providing additional aid to schools and businesses. The $1.9 trillion pandemic relief law signed by President Joe Biden earlier this year contains $350 billion of flexible aid for state and local governments, plus billions of dollars more for specific programs such as housing assistance. Unlike earlier coronavirus aid, states have broad leeway to use the money to plug budget holes, invest in certain infrastructure or address the “negative economic impacts” of the pandemic.

Some states plan big spending with Biden s aid, others wait | News, Sports, Jobs

DAVID A. LIEB Associated Press Curtis Compton/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via AP Gov. Brian Kemp speaks during a news conference on Feb. 8 about expanding rural internet access in the state, at the Georgia Capitol in Atlanta. Though still awaiting money from the latest federal coronavirus relief act, some governors and state lawmakers already are making plans to add the multibillion-dollar boon to their budgets. Among their priorities: bailing out depleted unemployment accounts, expanding high-speed internet and providing additional aid to schools and businesses. The $1.9 trillion pandemic relief law signed by President Joe Biden earlier this year contains $350 billion of flexible aid for state and local governments, plus billions of dollars more for specific programs such as housing assistance. Unlike earlier coronavirus aid, states have broad leeway to use the money to plug budget holes, invest in certain infrastructure or address the “negative economic impacts” of the

Republicans Tried to Overturn an Election Never Let Them Forget It

Republicans Tried to Overturn an Election. Never Let Them Forget It | Opinion Robert Reich , Newsweek Columnist and chancellor’s professor of public policy at the University of California, Berkeley On 5/10/21 at 9:46 AM EDT America prefers to look forward rather than back. We re a land of second acts. We move on. And this can be a strength: We don t get bogged down in outmoded traditions, old grudges, obsolete ways of thinking. We constantly reinvent. We love innovation and disruption. But there s a downside: a collective amnesia about what we ve been though, and a corresponding reluctance to do anything about it or hold anyone accountable.

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