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formal | single | null | homophobic | Pursuant to clause 7(c)(l) of rule XII and Section 3(c) of H. Res. 5 the following statements are submitted regarding (1) the specific powers granted to Congress in the Constitution to enact the accompanying bill or joint resolution and (2) the single subject of the bill or joint resolution. | 2020-01-06 | Unknown | House | CREC-2023-04-25-pt1-PgH1948 | null | 7,000 |
formal | single | null | homophobic | By Mr. NORMAN: H.J. Res. 59. Congress has the power to enact this legislation pursuant to the following: Article I Section 8 The single subject of this legislation is: Resolution of Disapproval under the Congressional Review Act (CRA) for the Department of Labor's Final Rule entitled, ``Adverse Effect Wage Rate Methodology for the Temporary Employment of H-2A Nonimmigrants in Non-Range Occupations in the United States.'' | 2020-01-06 | The RECORDER | House | CREC-2023-04-25-pt1-PgH1950-13 | null | 7,001 |
formal | single | null | homophobic | Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, if you thought the dangerous theatrics of the Trump years were behind us, I have some bad news. This week, Speaker McCarthy plans to gamble with the paychecks of millions of families, as well as the stability of our Nation's economy. Instead of accepting one of the most basic duties of government--avoid default--Speaker McCarthy is choosing high stakes risk. He is threatening to default on America's debt for the first time in history unless Democrats agree to slash funding for working families, veterans, law enforcement, and small businesses across the country. Now it goes without saying: This proposal is going nowhere in the Senate. And Kevin McCarthy knows that. So the fact that he is still moving forward with it shows that he does not know the damage he could inflict on the American people. He is willing to hold our entire economy--and the fate of millions of Americans--hostage because, as long as he keeps the most radical fringes of his party happy, Kevin McCarthy has nothing to worry about. But for everyone else, a Federal debt default would be disastrous. It would wipe out trillions of dollars in household savings; it would lead to millions of Americans losing their jobs and businesses grinding to a halt; and it would crater our economy, likely throwing us into a recession. Now all this chaos and destruction could be avoided today, if we wanted. Congress could pass a clean bill to pay our debts on time and uphold the full faith and credit of the United States. But of course, with the MAGA majority in the House, it is never that simple. Instead of sitting down with lawmakers across the aisle to find a sensible path forward, Speaker McCarthy is manufacturing a crisis. And really, he is giving the American people two unacceptable options: Either suffer the consequences of a disastrous debt default, or face devastating cuts to the services and programs millions of people rely on every day. Just look at the proposal House Republicans will vote on this week. It is nothing more than a MAGA wish list that leaves every American behind, except the top 1 percent. To start, Speaker McCarthy's proposal would decimate funding for our Nation's veterans. It would cut hundreds of millions of dollars for expanding veteran's care, right after we just passed the PACT Act. And it would threaten housing and food security for our Nation's heroes. And they are not alone because Speaker McCarthy's proposal would also gut funding for police officers and first responders. It would wipe out nearly 30,000 law enforcement jobs within the Justice Department alone. And it would require the government to furlough every single Border Patrol agent. Can you imagine that? For years, Republicans have been saying Democrats want to defund the police and open our borders. And yet, here they are, supporting a proposal to abandon law enforcement and weaken border security. Additionally, Speaker McCarthy's proposal would ship thousands of manufacturing jobs overseas, to countries like China. And perhaps worst of all, it would punish working families who are already struggling to get by. This Republican proposal would jeopardize healthcare coverage for 10 million Americans. And it could eliminate food assistance for more than 1 million families--including children--who are at risk of going hungry. Now, this MAGA wish list is not bad news for everyone. In fact, there is one group of people in particular who would benefit from it. Can you guess who it is? I will tell you: the ultrawealthy. Speaker McCarthy's proposal would actually increase our deficit by allowing billionaires to avoid paying their fair share in taxes. And it is not like they need any help. Today, there are a thousand billionaires in America who pay an average tax rate of 8 percent. Think about that. That is a lower tax rate than most school teachers and firefighters. Then again, it shouldn't be any surprise that Speaker McCarthy is siding with billionaires over working families. After all, where was he just over a week ago? Was he meeting with working families and small business owners on Main Street who are worried about keeping their doors open? No. He was on Wall Street, meeting with wealthy traders and executives of big banks. And he personally assured them that Republicans will do everything they can to cut funding for hard-working families trying to make ends meet. Now, here is the bottom line: We can--and should--have a debate on America's tax policy and Federal budget priorities. It is a debate Democrats win because we believe in investing in working families and ensuring the wealthy pay their fair share. Plain and simple. But now is not the time nor place for this debate because in the next several weeks, we have one responsibility: avoiding debt default--and the economic calamity that would follow. That is our obligation to the American people. And it is an obligation we have never once failed to meet in 230 years. But today, sadly, many Americans are concerned that Speaker McCarthy is in over his head. Frankly, I share those concerns. He is leading a caucus that traffics in chaos and brinksmanship. And it is not clear that he can control the chaos. So here is our promise, on behalf of congressional Democrats: We are ready to get to work. Let's avoid a disastrous debt default--as we always do. And then, let's engage in a fulsome debate on Federal spending priorities. The sooner we prevent a debt default, the sooner we can come together in good faith to work on behalf of the American people. | 2020-01-06 | Mr. DURBIN | Senate | CREC-2023-04-25-pt1-PgS1337 | null | 7,002 |
formal | MAGA | null | white supremacist | Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, if you thought the dangerous theatrics of the Trump years were behind us, I have some bad news. This week, Speaker McCarthy plans to gamble with the paychecks of millions of families, as well as the stability of our Nation's economy. Instead of accepting one of the most basic duties of government--avoid default--Speaker McCarthy is choosing high stakes risk. He is threatening to default on America's debt for the first time in history unless Democrats agree to slash funding for working families, veterans, law enforcement, and small businesses across the country. Now it goes without saying: This proposal is going nowhere in the Senate. And Kevin McCarthy knows that. So the fact that he is still moving forward with it shows that he does not know the damage he could inflict on the American people. He is willing to hold our entire economy--and the fate of millions of Americans--hostage because, as long as he keeps the most radical fringes of his party happy, Kevin McCarthy has nothing to worry about. But for everyone else, a Federal debt default would be disastrous. It would wipe out trillions of dollars in household savings; it would lead to millions of Americans losing their jobs and businesses grinding to a halt; and it would crater our economy, likely throwing us into a recession. Now all this chaos and destruction could be avoided today, if we wanted. Congress could pass a clean bill to pay our debts on time and uphold the full faith and credit of the United States. But of course, with the MAGA majority in the House, it is never that simple. Instead of sitting down with lawmakers across the aisle to find a sensible path forward, Speaker McCarthy is manufacturing a crisis. And really, he is giving the American people two unacceptable options: Either suffer the consequences of a disastrous debt default, or face devastating cuts to the services and programs millions of people rely on every day. Just look at the proposal House Republicans will vote on this week. It is nothing more than a MAGA wish list that leaves every American behind, except the top 1 percent. To start, Speaker McCarthy's proposal would decimate funding for our Nation's veterans. It would cut hundreds of millions of dollars for expanding veteran's care, right after we just passed the PACT Act. And it would threaten housing and food security for our Nation's heroes. And they are not alone because Speaker McCarthy's proposal would also gut funding for police officers and first responders. It would wipe out nearly 30,000 law enforcement jobs within the Justice Department alone. And it would require the government to furlough every single Border Patrol agent. Can you imagine that? For years, Republicans have been saying Democrats want to defund the police and open our borders. And yet, here they are, supporting a proposal to abandon law enforcement and weaken border security. Additionally, Speaker McCarthy's proposal would ship thousands of manufacturing jobs overseas, to countries like China. And perhaps worst of all, it would punish working families who are already struggling to get by. This Republican proposal would jeopardize healthcare coverage for 10 million Americans. And it could eliminate food assistance for more than 1 million families--including children--who are at risk of going hungry. Now, this MAGA wish list is not bad news for everyone. In fact, there is one group of people in particular who would benefit from it. Can you guess who it is? I will tell you: the ultrawealthy. Speaker McCarthy's proposal would actually increase our deficit by allowing billionaires to avoid paying their fair share in taxes. And it is not like they need any help. Today, there are a thousand billionaires in America who pay an average tax rate of 8 percent. Think about that. That is a lower tax rate than most school teachers and firefighters. Then again, it shouldn't be any surprise that Speaker McCarthy is siding with billionaires over working families. After all, where was he just over a week ago? Was he meeting with working families and small business owners on Main Street who are worried about keeping their doors open? No. He was on Wall Street, meeting with wealthy traders and executives of big banks. And he personally assured them that Republicans will do everything they can to cut funding for hard-working families trying to make ends meet. Now, here is the bottom line: We can--and should--have a debate on America's tax policy and Federal budget priorities. It is a debate Democrats win because we believe in investing in working families and ensuring the wealthy pay their fair share. Plain and simple. But now is not the time nor place for this debate because in the next several weeks, we have one responsibility: avoiding debt default--and the economic calamity that would follow. That is our obligation to the American people. And it is an obligation we have never once failed to meet in 230 years. But today, sadly, many Americans are concerned that Speaker McCarthy is in over his head. Frankly, I share those concerns. He is leading a caucus that traffics in chaos and brinksmanship. And it is not clear that he can control the chaos. So here is our promise, on behalf of congressional Democrats: We are ready to get to work. Let's avoid a disastrous debt default--as we always do. And then, let's engage in a fulsome debate on Federal spending priorities. The sooner we prevent a debt default, the sooner we can come together in good faith to work on behalf of the American people. | 2020-01-06 | Mr. DURBIN | Senate | CREC-2023-04-25-pt1-PgS1337 | null | 7,003 |
formal | working families | null | racist | Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, if you thought the dangerous theatrics of the Trump years were behind us, I have some bad news. This week, Speaker McCarthy plans to gamble with the paychecks of millions of families, as well as the stability of our Nation's economy. Instead of accepting one of the most basic duties of government--avoid default--Speaker McCarthy is choosing high stakes risk. He is threatening to default on America's debt for the first time in history unless Democrats agree to slash funding for working families, veterans, law enforcement, and small businesses across the country. Now it goes without saying: This proposal is going nowhere in the Senate. And Kevin McCarthy knows that. So the fact that he is still moving forward with it shows that he does not know the damage he could inflict on the American people. He is willing to hold our entire economy--and the fate of millions of Americans--hostage because, as long as he keeps the most radical fringes of his party happy, Kevin McCarthy has nothing to worry about. But for everyone else, a Federal debt default would be disastrous. It would wipe out trillions of dollars in household savings; it would lead to millions of Americans losing their jobs and businesses grinding to a halt; and it would crater our economy, likely throwing us into a recession. Now all this chaos and destruction could be avoided today, if we wanted. Congress could pass a clean bill to pay our debts on time and uphold the full faith and credit of the United States. But of course, with the MAGA majority in the House, it is never that simple. Instead of sitting down with lawmakers across the aisle to find a sensible path forward, Speaker McCarthy is manufacturing a crisis. And really, he is giving the American people two unacceptable options: Either suffer the consequences of a disastrous debt default, or face devastating cuts to the services and programs millions of people rely on every day. Just look at the proposal House Republicans will vote on this week. It is nothing more than a MAGA wish list that leaves every American behind, except the top 1 percent. To start, Speaker McCarthy's proposal would decimate funding for our Nation's veterans. It would cut hundreds of millions of dollars for expanding veteran's care, right after we just passed the PACT Act. And it would threaten housing and food security for our Nation's heroes. And they are not alone because Speaker McCarthy's proposal would also gut funding for police officers and first responders. It would wipe out nearly 30,000 law enforcement jobs within the Justice Department alone. And it would require the government to furlough every single Border Patrol agent. Can you imagine that? For years, Republicans have been saying Democrats want to defund the police and open our borders. And yet, here they are, supporting a proposal to abandon law enforcement and weaken border security. Additionally, Speaker McCarthy's proposal would ship thousands of manufacturing jobs overseas, to countries like China. And perhaps worst of all, it would punish working families who are already struggling to get by. This Republican proposal would jeopardize healthcare coverage for 10 million Americans. And it could eliminate food assistance for more than 1 million families--including children--who are at risk of going hungry. Now, this MAGA wish list is not bad news for everyone. In fact, there is one group of people in particular who would benefit from it. Can you guess who it is? I will tell you: the ultrawealthy. Speaker McCarthy's proposal would actually increase our deficit by allowing billionaires to avoid paying their fair share in taxes. And it is not like they need any help. Today, there are a thousand billionaires in America who pay an average tax rate of 8 percent. Think about that. That is a lower tax rate than most school teachers and firefighters. Then again, it shouldn't be any surprise that Speaker McCarthy is siding with billionaires over working families. After all, where was he just over a week ago? Was he meeting with working families and small business owners on Main Street who are worried about keeping their doors open? No. He was on Wall Street, meeting with wealthy traders and executives of big banks. And he personally assured them that Republicans will do everything they can to cut funding for hard-working families trying to make ends meet. Now, here is the bottom line: We can--and should--have a debate on America's tax policy and Federal budget priorities. It is a debate Democrats win because we believe in investing in working families and ensuring the wealthy pay their fair share. Plain and simple. But now is not the time nor place for this debate because in the next several weeks, we have one responsibility: avoiding debt default--and the economic calamity that would follow. That is our obligation to the American people. And it is an obligation we have never once failed to meet in 230 years. But today, sadly, many Americans are concerned that Speaker McCarthy is in over his head. Frankly, I share those concerns. He is leading a caucus that traffics in chaos and brinksmanship. And it is not clear that he can control the chaos. So here is our promise, on behalf of congressional Democrats: We are ready to get to work. Let's avoid a disastrous debt default--as we always do. And then, let's engage in a fulsome debate on Federal spending priorities. The sooner we prevent a debt default, the sooner we can come together in good faith to work on behalf of the American people. | 2020-01-06 | Mr. DURBIN | Senate | CREC-2023-04-25-pt1-PgS1337 | null | 7,004 |
formal | blue | null | antisemitic | Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, we do a lot to protect our identity and financial security from scammers and thieves. We guard our PIN numbers and passwords. We shred bills and financial documents. We are on guard for phishing attacks and cyber scams. But there is another, growing threat to our financial safety that many Americans are unaware of. Across the country, we are seeing a surge in armed robberies of letter carriers. In many of the attacks, the robbers stealan ``arrow key.'' That is a master key that unlocks the blue collection boxes you drop your mail into, as well as cluster mailboxes in subdivisions and other multi-unit mailboxes. With an arrow key, a robber can open mailboxes and steal whatever is in there, including packages and prescription medications. And often, they steal checks. This can lead to identity theft, financial fraud, and other serious crimes. Here is how it works: The robbers use the dark web and messaging apps to sell the stolen checks. The cyber criminals who buy the stolen checks then use nail polish remover to wash and rewrite the checks for any amount they choose. A $15 check to your doctor can become a $15,000 check to someone you have never heard of. Listen to these figures from the U.S. Postal Inspection Service: Between 2018 and 2021, robberies of letter carriers more than tripled, and robberies involving a gun more than quadrupled. And between March 2020 and February 2021, the Postal Inspection Service received 299,000 reports of mail theft, a 161-percent increase in mail thefts in just 1 year. And the problem is getting worse. In Chicago, at least a dozen postal carriers were robbed at gunpoint between early March and early April this year. Police say the robbers were armed with semi-automatic handguns. I have met with letter carriers in Chicago. They tell me they are fearful about what is happening. They worry that they could be next. And the looming threat of armed robbery is making it even harder to fill letter carrier vacancies. And this is not just a Chicago problem. Last year in Orlando, FL, two men were caught on video approaching a letter carrier at a condo complex. The postal worker was found robbed and beaten with a severe head injury. In January of this year, a 66-year-old letter carrier was kidnapped and robbed in Charlotte, NC. The list goes on and includes nearly every State in the country. These are not simply random attacks. Police say organized crime groups and gangs appear to be driving the increase in letter carrier robberies. We have seen something like this before. In 2011, after a similarly disturbing trend, I urged the former Postmaster General to implement a rapid alert system to inform letter carriers of any crimes committed in their vicinity. The alerts were a warning to letter carriers to be vigilant, and they helped. But now, the alerts have stopped. Now, I have serious concerns about many decisions by the current Postmaster General, but this decision seems especially wrong-headed. Yesterday, I met in Chicago with members of the National Association of Letter Carriers' Illinois chapter. I told them that I was sending a letter to both Postmaster General Louis DeJoy and Attorney General Merrick Garland. I am asking the U.S. Postal Service and the Department of Justice to work together to prevent robberies of letter carriers--and punish those who commit the robberies. They also need to crack down on the cyber thieves who buy and sell checks, arrow keys, and other property stolen from the Postal Service. And the Postal Service can act right now to reduce this surge in robberies by making some simple changes on its own. They should restart crime alerts to letter carriers. USPS also can reduce the financial motivation driving many of these robberies by investing in new technology that would enable two-factor authentication for dropboxes and cluster mailboxes. Letter carriers are proud of their long tradition of braving rain, snow, and sleet to deliver the mail. But they cannot brave this threat on their own. USPS and DOJ must step up to better protect letter carriers and the tens of millions of American families and businesses that depend on the U.S. Postal Service. | 2020-01-06 | Mr. DURBIN | Senate | CREC-2023-04-25-pt1-PgS1337-2 | null | 7,005 |
formal | Chicago | null | racist | Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, we do a lot to protect our identity and financial security from scammers and thieves. We guard our PIN numbers and passwords. We shred bills and financial documents. We are on guard for phishing attacks and cyber scams. But there is another, growing threat to our financial safety that many Americans are unaware of. Across the country, we are seeing a surge in armed robberies of letter carriers. In many of the attacks, the robbers stealan ``arrow key.'' That is a master key that unlocks the blue collection boxes you drop your mail into, as well as cluster mailboxes in subdivisions and other multi-unit mailboxes. With an arrow key, a robber can open mailboxes and steal whatever is in there, including packages and prescription medications. And often, they steal checks. This can lead to identity theft, financial fraud, and other serious crimes. Here is how it works: The robbers use the dark web and messaging apps to sell the stolen checks. The cyber criminals who buy the stolen checks then use nail polish remover to wash and rewrite the checks for any amount they choose. A $15 check to your doctor can become a $15,000 check to someone you have never heard of. Listen to these figures from the U.S. Postal Inspection Service: Between 2018 and 2021, robberies of letter carriers more than tripled, and robberies involving a gun more than quadrupled. And between March 2020 and February 2021, the Postal Inspection Service received 299,000 reports of mail theft, a 161-percent increase in mail thefts in just 1 year. And the problem is getting worse. In Chicago, at least a dozen postal carriers were robbed at gunpoint between early March and early April this year. Police say the robbers were armed with semi-automatic handguns. I have met with letter carriers in Chicago. They tell me they are fearful about what is happening. They worry that they could be next. And the looming threat of armed robbery is making it even harder to fill letter carrier vacancies. And this is not just a Chicago problem. Last year in Orlando, FL, two men were caught on video approaching a letter carrier at a condo complex. The postal worker was found robbed and beaten with a severe head injury. In January of this year, a 66-year-old letter carrier was kidnapped and robbed in Charlotte, NC. The list goes on and includes nearly every State in the country. These are not simply random attacks. Police say organized crime groups and gangs appear to be driving the increase in letter carrier robberies. We have seen something like this before. In 2011, after a similarly disturbing trend, I urged the former Postmaster General to implement a rapid alert system to inform letter carriers of any crimes committed in their vicinity. The alerts were a warning to letter carriers to be vigilant, and they helped. But now, the alerts have stopped. Now, I have serious concerns about many decisions by the current Postmaster General, but this decision seems especially wrong-headed. Yesterday, I met in Chicago with members of the National Association of Letter Carriers' Illinois chapter. I told them that I was sending a letter to both Postmaster General Louis DeJoy and Attorney General Merrick Garland. I am asking the U.S. Postal Service and the Department of Justice to work together to prevent robberies of letter carriers--and punish those who commit the robberies. They also need to crack down on the cyber thieves who buy and sell checks, arrow keys, and other property stolen from the Postal Service. And the Postal Service can act right now to reduce this surge in robberies by making some simple changes on its own. They should restart crime alerts to letter carriers. USPS also can reduce the financial motivation driving many of these robberies by investing in new technology that would enable two-factor authentication for dropboxes and cluster mailboxes. Letter carriers are proud of their long tradition of braving rain, snow, and sleet to deliver the mail. But they cannot brave this threat on their own. USPS and DOJ must step up to better protect letter carriers and the tens of millions of American families and businesses that depend on the U.S. Postal Service. | 2020-01-06 | Mr. DURBIN | Senate | CREC-2023-04-25-pt1-PgS1337-2 | null | 7,006 |
formal | single | null | homophobic | Mr. SULLIVAN. Mr. President, I rise today, along with Senator Murkowski, to bring awareness to National Education and Sharing Day U.S.A., which we recognized on April 2, 2023. On this day, we acknowledged the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Schneerson's global campaign to educate youth about our responsibility to be a moral and compassionate society. Education and Sharing Day is observed each year on the Rebbe's birthday in recognition of his outstanding and lasting contributions toward the improvement of education, morality, and acts of charity around the world. It is a day to pause and reflect on our responsibility to ensure our youth have the foundation necessary to lead lives rich in purpose and fulfillment through service and good works. This year's National Education and Sharing Day coincided with the 121st birthday of the Rebbe, one of the most significant Jewish leaders of the 20th century. The Rebbe was a global spiritual leader and leading advocate for the advancement of education. He stressed that a moral and ethical education empowers every individual to develop their full potential in making the world a better place. This year's Education and Sharing Day has even greater significance as this year is also a year of ``Hakhel,'' a biblical event of unity, education, and spiritual growth emphasizing how every person is crucial to perfecting the world. The basis for the continuity of any society is education, and in the great State of Alaska, the education of our youth is a priority. We recognize that in order to achieve its highest goals, education must not only impart knowledge but also help our youth learn how to live meaningful lives by strengthening their moral character to make a better life for themselves as individuals and for society as a whole. Such education can nurture the unity of diverse peoples by encouraging increased acts of goodness and kindness, imbued with the awareness that even a single positive act of an individual can change the world. We strongly affirm the purposes of National Education and Sharing Day U.S.A. and encourage educational institutions, businesses, community and civic associations, and all people of the United States to celebrate and promote National Education and Sharing Day U.S.A. | 2020-01-06 | Mr. SULLIVAN | Senate | CREC-2023-04-25-pt1-PgS1338-2 | null | 7,007 |
formal | based | null | white supremacist | At 3:02 p.m., a message from the House of Representatives, delivered by Mrs. Cole, one of its reading clerks, announced that the House has passed the following bill, in which it requests the concurrence of the Senate: H.R. 734. An act to amend the Education Amendments of 1972 to provide that for purposes of determining compliance with title IX of such Act in athletics, sex shall be recognized based solely on a person's reproductive biology and genetics at birth. | 2020-01-06 | Unknown | Senate | CREC-2023-04-25-pt1-PgS1339-4 | null | 7,008 |
formal | single | null | homophobic | Mr. CASSIDY (for himself and Mr. Kennedy) submitted the following resolution; which was referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation: S. Res. 171 Whereas, on Sunday, April 2, 2023, the Louisiana State University (referred to in this preamble as ``LSU'') Fighting Tigers women's basketball team won the 2023 National Collegiate Athletic Association (referred to in this preamble as ``NCAA'') National Championship, defeating the University of Iowa Hawkeyes by a score of 102 to 85; Whereas the LSU Fighting Tigers won their first NCAA Division I Women's Basketball National Championship in LSU history; Whereas during the NCAA Championship game-- (1) the LSU Fighting Tigers scored 102 points, becoming the first team to score more than 100 points in a NCAA Division I women's college basketball championship game; (2) Jasmine Carson scored 21 points in the first 20 minutes to open up a 17 point lead; (3) Alexis Morris, the only starter for the LSU Fighting Tigers returning from the 2021-2022 season, scored 21 points and a game-high 9 assists; and (4) LaDazhia Williams scored 20 points, along with 5 rebounds and 3 steals; Whereas head coach Kim Mulkey became the third coach with 4 or more national championships in NCAA Division I women's college basketball history, and the first to win a championship as a head coach of multiple programs; Whereas the LSU Fighting Tigers finished the season with 34 wins and only 2 losses, including 15 wins and 1 loss in the Southeastern Conference (referred to in this preamble as ``SEC''); Whereas 4 LSU Fighting Tigers players earned All-SEC Season Awards, awarded only to the premier players in the SEC, including-- (1) Angel Reese, who earned First Team All-SEC and SEC All- Defensive Team honors; (2) Alexis Morris, who earned First Team All-SEC honors; (3) Flau'Jae Johnson, who earned SEC All-Freshman Team honors; and (4) Sa'Myah Smith, who earned SEC All-Freshman Team honors; Whereas Angel Reese was named most outstanding player of the NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament Final Four; Whereas Angel Reese set an NCAA record for most double- doubles in a single season, with 34; Whereas Flau'Jae Johnson was named SEC Freshman of the Year, becoming the fourth in school history to achieve that recognition; Whereas the LSU Fighting Tigers demonstrated incredible teamwork and tenacity, with 9 freshman or transfer players playing in their first season for the LSU Fighting Tigers; Whereas the LSU Fighting Tigers showed incredible sportsmanship and teamwork throughout the entire season; and Whereas the LSU Fighting Tigers have made the entire State of Louisiana proud: Now, therefore, be it Resolved, That the Senate-- (1) congratulates the Louisiana State University Fighting Tigers for winning the 2023 National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I Women's Basketball Tournament Championship; (2) recognizes the many achievements of the coaches, players, and staff of the Louisiana State University women's basketball team; (3) recognizes the fans and the entire State of Louisiana for their dedication and support; and (4) respectfully requests that the Secretary of the Senate transmit an enrolled copy of this resolution to-- (A) the head coach of the Louisiana State University women's basketball team, Kim Mulkey; (B) the associate head coach, Bob Starkey; (C) assistant coach, Daphne Mitchell; (D) assistant coach, Gary Redus II; (E) the president of Louisiana State University, William F. Tate IV; and (F) the athletic director of Louisiana State University, Scott Woodward. | 2020-01-06 | Unknown | Senate | CREC-2023-04-25-pt1-PgS1348-2 | null | 7,009 |
formal | XX | null | transphobic | The SPEAKER pro tempore. Proceedings will resume on questions previously postponed. Votes will be taken in the following order: Ordering the previous question on House Resolution 327; Adoption of House Resolution 327, if ordered; and The motion to suspend the rules and pass H.R. 1353. The first electronic vote will be conducted as a 15-minute vote. Pursuant to clause 9 of rule XX, remaining electronic votes will be conducted as 5-minute votes. | 2020-01-06 | The SPEAKER pro tempore | House | CREC-2023-04-26-pt1-PgH1977-3 | null | 7,010 |
formal | the Fed | null | antisemitic | The SPEAKER pro tempore. Pursuant to clause 8 of rule XX, the unfinished business is the vote on the motion to suspend the rules and pass the bill (H.R. 1353) to direct the Federal Communications Commission to issuerules for the provision of emergency connectivity service, and for other purposes, as amended, on which the yeas and nays were ordered. | 2020-01-06 | The SPEAKER pro tempore | House | CREC-2023-04-26-pt1-PgH1978 | null | 7,011 |
formal | XX | null | transphobic | The SPEAKER pro tempore. Pursuant to clause 8 of rule XX, the unfinished business is the vote on the motion to suspend the rules and pass the bill (H.R. 1353) to direct the Federal Communications Commission to issuerules for the provision of emergency connectivity service, and for other purposes, as amended, on which the yeas and nays were ordered. | 2020-01-06 | The SPEAKER pro tempore | House | CREC-2023-04-26-pt1-PgH1978 | null | 7,012 |
formal | the Fed | null | antisemitic | The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Moran). Pursuant to clause 8 of rule XX, the unfinished business is the vote on the motion to suspend the rules and pass the bill (H.R. 1339) to require the Federal Communications Commission to review certain rules of the Commission and develop recommendations for rule changes to promote precision agriculture, and for other purposes, on which the yeas and nays were ordered. | 2020-01-06 | The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Moran) | House | CREC-2023-04-26-pt1-PgH2039 | null | 7,013 |
formal | XX | null | transphobic | The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Moran). Pursuant to clause 8 of rule XX, the unfinished business is the vote on the motion to suspend the rules and pass the bill (H.R. 1339) to require the Federal Communications Commission to review certain rules of the Commission and develop recommendations for rule changes to promote precision agriculture, and for other purposes, on which the yeas and nays were ordered. | 2020-01-06 | The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Moran) | House | CREC-2023-04-26-pt1-PgH2039 | null | 7,014 |
formal | single | null | homophobic | Pursuant to clause 7(c)(1) of rule XII and Section 3(c) of H. Res. 5 the following statements are submitted regarding (1) the specific powers granted to Congress in the Constitution to enact the accompanying bill or joint resolution and (2) the single subject of the bill or joint resolution. | 2020-01-06 | Unknown | House | CREC-2023-04-26-pt1-PgH2049 | null | 7,015 |
formal | based | null | white supremacist | Elizabeth Dole Veterans Program Improvement Act Mr. President, finally, the Senate will take the first procedural vote on legislation to care for our Nation's veterans, spearheaded by my good friend Senator Tester, head of the Veterans' Affairs Committee. The Elizabeth Dole Veterans Program Improvement Act of 2023 is the union of a number of important and impactful bills that will strengthen the VA, improve its caregiver program, expand home- and community-based services for vets, and ultimately bestow greater dignity on those who defended our Nation. The bipartisan veterans bill is precisely the sort of legislation the Senate should be working on to build on our success on the PACT Act last year. This is bipartisan, far-reaching, and will make an enormous difference in the lives of our veterans across the country. I want to thank Senator Tester, Senator Moran, and Members from both sides of the aisle for working on this important veterans package. I yield the floor. | 2020-01-06 | Unknown | Senate | CREC-2023-04-26-pt1-PgS1354-2 | null | 7,016 |
formal | MAGA | null | white supremacist | Equal Rights Amendment Mr. President, on the ERA, tomorrow, the Senate will have a chance to take the next major step on an effort a century in the making: ratifying the Equal Rights Amendment under the Constitution. The story of American democracy has been an uneven but inexorable march toward greater equality for all people. America's foundation contains a simple premise: No matter who you are, where you come from, you too deserve equal treatment under the law. The Senate will have a chance tomorrow to bring our country one step closer toward greater equity by voting on a bipartisan resolution regarding the Equal Rights Amendment. The measure is simple. It will recognize that 38 States have now legitimately ratified the Equal Rights Amendment, meeting the threshold required under the Constitution. It would remove an arbitrary deadline set decades ago that invalidated the ratification that occurred in a few States. The States did the work, just not in the required time that was imposed on them a very long time ago. I believe the Senate should now remove that obstacle. And we must act now because the Equal Rights Amendment has never been more necessary than today. To the horror of hundreds of millions of people, women in America have fewer rights today than they did even a year ago. The protections of Roe v. Wade are gone thanks to the MAGA majority on the Supreme Court. Over a dozen States have near-total abortion bans, and tens of millions of people have to travel hundreds of miles just to access reproductive care. That is sickening. We cannot claim that America is a nation of equal justice when half of its citizenry languishes on with fewer rights, less dignity, and limited recourse under the Constitution. That is why the Senate must vote in favor of advancing this ERA resolution tomorrow, so we can bring our Nation one step closer to greater justice, greater equality, and equal rights for all people, regardless of gender. Thank you to Senators Cardin and Murkowski for championing this resolution. I look forward to voting in its favor tomorrow. | 2020-01-06 | Unknown | Senate | CREC-2023-04-26-pt1-PgS1354 | null | 7,017 |
formal | secure the border | null | anti-Latino | Vehicle Emissions Mr. President, now on another matter, today, the senior Senator from Nebraska will advance a resolution to push back on the Biden administration's war against American energy and American industry. Senator Fischer's resolution responds to the Biden administration's new plan to hike already stringent vehicle emission standards even higher. This latest rule on nitrogen oxide emissions takes direct aim at the sort of trucks and heavy equipment that literally drive our entire economy. Back in 2021, climate activists got the President to invoke ``environmental justice'' in an Executive order rolling out its so-called Clean Trucks Plan. The same bureaucrats who can't control inflation or secure the border want to even more closely micromanage the heavy vehicles allowed on our roads. Never mind that the nitrogen oxide emissions of new trucks on the market are already--listen to this--already 98 to 99 percent lower than they were as recently as the late 1990s. By the EPA's own estimates, the new technology required to meet the latest arbitrary benchmarks could jack up truck prices by as much as $8,304 each--each. Listen to what the truckers themselves have to say: If small business owners can't afford the new, compliant trucks, they're going to stay with older, less-efficient trucks, or leave the industry entirely. Leave the industry entirely? Higher priced trucks, fewer drivers, higher costs for consumer goods--that is an outcome working families and supply chains simply can't stomach. So I want to express my gratitude to Senator Fischer for bringing this resolution forward. I would urge each of our colleagues to support it. I suggest the absence of a quorum. | 2020-01-06 | Unknown | Senate | CREC-2023-04-26-pt1-PgS1355 | null | 7,018 |
formal | working families | null | racist | Vehicle Emissions Mr. President, now on another matter, today, the senior Senator from Nebraska will advance a resolution to push back on the Biden administration's war against American energy and American industry. Senator Fischer's resolution responds to the Biden administration's new plan to hike already stringent vehicle emission standards even higher. This latest rule on nitrogen oxide emissions takes direct aim at the sort of trucks and heavy equipment that literally drive our entire economy. Back in 2021, climate activists got the President to invoke ``environmental justice'' in an Executive order rolling out its so-called Clean Trucks Plan. The same bureaucrats who can't control inflation or secure the border want to even more closely micromanage the heavy vehicles allowed on our roads. Never mind that the nitrogen oxide emissions of new trucks on the market are already--listen to this--already 98 to 99 percent lower than they were as recently as the late 1990s. By the EPA's own estimates, the new technology required to meet the latest arbitrary benchmarks could jack up truck prices by as much as $8,304 each--each. Listen to what the truckers themselves have to say: If small business owners can't afford the new, compliant trucks, they're going to stay with older, less-efficient trucks, or leave the industry entirely. Leave the industry entirely? Higher priced trucks, fewer drivers, higher costs for consumer goods--that is an outcome working families and supply chains simply can't stomach. So I want to express my gratitude to Senator Fischer for bringing this resolution forward. I would urge each of our colleagues to support it. I suggest the absence of a quorum. | 2020-01-06 | Unknown | Senate | CREC-2023-04-26-pt1-PgS1355 | null | 7,019 |
formal | the Fed | null | antisemitic | Mr. HAWLEY. Mr. President, in October of this past year, the parents and students of Jana Elementary School in Florissant, MO--that is in the greater St. Louis area--woke to find news of an independent study that had found nuclear radioactive contamination inside the school building at Jana Elementary. Now, sadly, this probably didn't come as a total shock to those residents who have lived in Florissant and in the surrounding area because foryears now--for years--this community has had to deal with the fallout of the Federal Government's own nuclear program and the waste left over from it dating back to the 1940s, which was then effectively dumped in St. Louis, made its way into the water, into the soil, and now into a stream that runs right by this elementary school. So the school board wisely said: We should do a study. Let's find out if it is in the school. Independent results came back and said it was in the dust, on the windowsills of the school--radioactive material. The school board met. They shut down the school. Parents had kids at home for months. Then comes the first of this year. The school board said: We can't in good conscience reopen it. Now what is happening? The school is closed. The kids are having to be bused to other locations, driven to schools outside of their neighborhood. This a working-class community. These are hard-working folks. They don't have the resources lying around to send their kids to other schools or to pay to move. If they did, they would. They don't. They are just trying to live their lives, work a job, get their kids a decent education. And, instead, they have had to deal with this. The worst part about it is the Federal Government refused to clean it up. When this news broke, the Army Corps of Engineers said: Oh, there is nothing wrong with the school. We have tested it a million times. It is fine. In fact, they held a press conference today in which they said the same thing: Trust us. It is fine. It is fine. I don't think any of them are sending their kids there. But trust us, they say; it is fine. When I and the school board and the parents said to the Army Corps of Engineers: You need to retest; you need to test the entire school district--then they pointed fingers and said: Oh, no, it is the Department of Energy; it is their problem. So then, when we went to the Department of Energy, they said: Oh, no, we can't do anything. It is the Army Corps' problem. The Biden administration has spent the last 8 months now pointing fingers at each other, saying why they can't do this; they can't do that. The kids are just out of luck. I just notice this. When that bank in California full of billionaires--who are also, not incidentally, major political contributors--had a problem, boy, this government moved lickety-split to bail them out. How many billions did this government spend to bail out the SVB shareholders and stakeholders and depositors? They got their bailout in no time flat. These kids? Nothing. Can't even get a response. Do you know the Biden administration won't even respond to me? So fine. We will do it ourselves. I have introduced legislation that will order testing in the entire school district, that will mandate a cleanup of the school, and, if necessary, build these kids a new school. The Federal Government caused this problem. The Federal Government should fix this problem. And just because these kids aren't billionaires or big-time political contributors or connected politically doesn't mean that they can be ignored. It doesn't mean that their lives don't matter. I would just note this. Last week, the Secretary of Energy, Jennifer Granholm, when I talked to her about this bill in a public forum--I asked her in the hearing--she said that she would support the legislation. And who couldn't, Mr. President? Who couldn't support having the Federal Government clean up its own mess and getting some justice for these kids at Jana Elementary? And I will just say this. This community in St. Louis has been asked to live with the fallout of the Federal Government's actions for decades--this is just the latest instance--for decades. The cancer rates, the rates of disease, autoimmune disorders, they are off the charts in this community, and for years these folks have been told: Just shut up, and it will be fine. Well, it is not fine, and today we are going to get some justice for these kids. Today we are going to start the cleanup process that should have happened decades ago. So I ask unanimous consent that the Committee on Environment and Public Works be discharged from further consideration of S. 418 and the Senate proceed to its immediate consideration. | 2020-01-06 | Mr. HAWLEY | Senate | CREC-2023-04-26-pt1-PgS1360-4 | null | 7,020 |
formal | Federal Reserve | null | antisemitic | Mr. BLUMENTHAL. Madam President, I rise today to recognize the accomplishments of Chief Mutawi Mutahash (Many Hearts) Marilynn ``Lynn'' Malerba, who was recently named the Chamber of Commerce of Eastern Connecticut's 2023 Citizen of the Year. Chief Malerba has an impressive list of accomplishments. In 2010, she became Chief of the Mohegan Tribe in Connecticut, the first female Chief in the Tribe's modern history. Before her current role, Chief Malerba held many leadership positions, including chairwoman of the Tribal council and executive director of health and human services for the Mohegan Tribe. Before her work in Tribal government, Chief Malerba also had a long career as registered nurse, earning a doctor of nursing practice at Yale University and eventually serving as the director of cardiology and pulmonary services at Lawrence and Memorial Hospital in New London, CT. Currently, Chief Malerba serves as the 45th Treasurer of the United States, the first Native American to hold this office. As Treasurer, Chief Malerba has direct oversight over the U.S. Mint and Fort Knox and is a key liaison with the Federal Reserve. She also oversees the Office of Consumer Policy at the Department of Treasury and serves as a senior adviser to the Secretary of Treasury on community development and engagement. From her long career as a healthcare professional, to her leadership of the Mohegan Tribe, and now her national role as U.S. Treasurer, Chief Malerba has made Connecticut immensely proud. I applaud her selection as the Chamber of Commerce of Eastern Connecticut's 2023 Citizen of the Year, and I hope my colleagues will join me in celebrating Chief Malerba's remarkable achievements. | 2020-01-06 | Mr. BLUMENTHAL | Senate | CREC-2023-04-26-pt1-PgS1378 | null | 7,021 |
formal | the Fed | null | antisemitic | Mr. BLUMENTHAL. Madam President, I rise today to recognize the accomplishments of Chief Mutawi Mutahash (Many Hearts) Marilynn ``Lynn'' Malerba, who was recently named the Chamber of Commerce of Eastern Connecticut's 2023 Citizen of the Year. Chief Malerba has an impressive list of accomplishments. In 2010, she became Chief of the Mohegan Tribe in Connecticut, the first female Chief in the Tribe's modern history. Before her current role, Chief Malerba held many leadership positions, including chairwoman of the Tribal council and executive director of health and human services for the Mohegan Tribe. Before her work in Tribal government, Chief Malerba also had a long career as registered nurse, earning a doctor of nursing practice at Yale University and eventually serving as the director of cardiology and pulmonary services at Lawrence and Memorial Hospital in New London, CT. Currently, Chief Malerba serves as the 45th Treasurer of the United States, the first Native American to hold this office. As Treasurer, Chief Malerba has direct oversight over the U.S. Mint and Fort Knox and is a key liaison with the Federal Reserve. She also oversees the Office of Consumer Policy at the Department of Treasury and serves as a senior adviser to the Secretary of Treasury on community development and engagement. From her long career as a healthcare professional, to her leadership of the Mohegan Tribe, and now her national role as U.S. Treasurer, Chief Malerba has made Connecticut immensely proud. I applaud her selection as the Chamber of Commerce of Eastern Connecticut's 2023 Citizen of the Year, and I hope my colleagues will join me in celebrating Chief Malerba's remarkable achievements. | 2020-01-06 | Mr. BLUMENTHAL | Senate | CREC-2023-04-26-pt1-PgS1378 | null | 7,022 |
formal | based | null | white supremacist | Mr. PADILLA. Madam President, I rise today to celebrate the life of Richard Joseph Riordan, a veteran, businessman, father, proud Californian, and the 39th mayor of the city of Los Angeles. Born in Flushing, Queens, in New York City, and the youngest of eight siblings, Mayor Riordan's intellect and work ethic earned him a degree in philosophy from Princeton University, before he went on to serve our Nation in the U.S. Army during the Korean war. His keen mind for business and legal matters brought him to the University of Michigan Law School and later to a career in legal practice and private equity in Los Angeles, where he made his home. But to many Angelenos, we know him best for his time as mayor of Los Angeles from 1993 to 2001. I had the privilege of serving alongside Mayor Riordan during my first 2 years on the Los Angeles City Council,and I am proud of the work we did together on behalf of Los Angeles families. Mayor Riordan cared deeply about the city's children and prioritized the modernization of parks, libraries, and recreational, and cultural opportunities for children. He was instrumental in bringing the Children's Museum of Los Angeles, now known as the Discovery Cube Los Angeles, to the San Fernando Valley. His response to crisis earned Los Angeles national recognition, both in rebuilding after the devastating Northridge earthquake in 1994 and working with the U.S. Department of Justice to reform the Los Angeles Police Department and advance community-based policing efforts. And he was instrumental in bringing the Democratic Convention to Los Angeles in 2000, showcasing the City of Angels to a national audience. Angela and I offer our deepest condolences and appreciation to Mayor Riordan's family and loved ones. His legacy has left a lasting mark on our city, and his loss will be deeply felt by all Angelenos. | 2020-01-06 | Mr. PADILLA | Senate | CREC-2023-04-26-pt1-PgS1379-4 | null | 7,023 |
formal | based | null | white supremacist | Mr. MENENDEZ (for himself, Mr. Risch, Mr. Van Hollen, Mr. Romney, Mr. Kaine, Mr. Hagerty, Mr. Ossoff, Mr. Sullivan, Mr. Schatz, Ms. Hirono, and Mr. Hoeven) submitted the following resolution; which was considered and agreed to: S. Res. 175 Whereas, on October 1, 1953, the Mutual Defense Treaty Between the United States and the Republic of Korea (5 U.S.T. 2368) was signed in Washington, D.C., to which the Senate provided its advice and consent to ratification on January 26, 1954; Whereas the shared commitment to recognize an armed attack on either of the Parties as dangerous to the peace and security of the other and to ``act to meet the common danger in accordance with [each party's] constitutional processes'' remains in place today; Whereas the United States and Korea established diplomatic relations on May 22, 1882, with the signing of the Treaty of Peace, Amity, Commerce and Navigation, and the United States reestablished its diplomatic relationship with the ``Republic of Korea'' on March 25, 1949; Whereas, in 2023, the United States-Republic of Korea alliance marks 70 years since the cessation of hostilities in the Korean War and the signing of the Armistice Agreement on July 27, 1953, which remains in place today and neither formally ended the Korean War nor constituted a permanent settlement of peace on the Korean Peninsula; Whereas the United States-Republic of Korea alliance is the linchpin of peace, security, and stability on the Korean Peninsula and in the Indo-Pacific region and is essential to confronting the threat posed by the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK); Whereas the United States-Republic of Korea alliance is rooted in mutual trust, shared sacrifice, common values, economic interests, and generations of people-to-people ties that provide a foundation for one of the strongest, most interoperable, and enduring bilateral alliances in the world; Whereas the United States assures its ironclad security commitment to the Republic of Korea, including the United States extended deterrent underpinned by the full range of United States capabilities, including nuclear capabilities; Whereas the United States-Republic of Korea alliance was forged in shared sacrifice, with 1,789,000 United States soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines serving during the Korean War, of whom 36,574 paid the ultimate sacrifice with their lives in defense of the Republic of Korea, including 7,174 Korean Augmentation to the United States Army (KATUSA) soldiers, and the over 7,500 members of the United States Armed Forces that remain classified by the Department of Defense as missing in action; Whereas casualties of the Republic of Korea were more than 217,000 soldiers killed, more than 291,000 wounded, and over 1,000,000 civilians killed or missing; Whereas the Republic of Korea has since its founding become a thriving democracy with a vibrant press and commitment to the rule of law and a free market economy; Whereas the United States-Republic of Korea Security Consultative Meeting met on November 3, 2022, in Washington, D.C. and ``shared their common understanding that the U.S.- ROK Alliance is based on the same principles and shared values including: mutual trust, freedom, democracy, human rights, and the rule of law''; Whereas the United States and the Republic of Korea are committed to pursuing closely coordinated diplomatic efforts through a shared strategy to achieve the complete, verifiable, and irreversible denuclearization of North Korea and establishing peace on the Korean Peninsula; Whereas the Republic of Korea's 2022 Strategy for a Free, Peaceful, and Prosperous Indo-Pacific Region emphasizes its desire to be a global pivotal state that commits ``to working with other key nations both within and beyond the region to foster a free and peaceful region . . . while strengthening the rules-based international order''; Whereas President Yoon Suk Yeol took the courageous and bold step of announcing that the Government of the Republic of Korea would compensate Korean victims of Japanese wartime labor in order to facilitate the resolution of an issue that has hampered cooperation with Japan; Whereas a robust and effective trilateral relationship between and among the United States, the Republic of Korea, and Japan is critical for joint security and interests in defending freedom and democracy, upholding human rights, promoting peace, security, and the rule of law in the Indo- Pacific and across the globe, championing women's empowerment, and combating and adapting to complex environmental challenges; Whereas the American and Korean people share deeply rooted values of defending freedom, championing economic development, upholding human rights, and respecting the rule of law; Whereas the United States, the Republic of Korea, and Japan have held a series of trilateral meetings, including a trilateral leaders' summit on November 13, 2022, a Foreign Ministers' meeting on September 23, 2022, and a vice ministerial meeting on February 13, 2023, at which the three countries committed to continuing trilateral exercises on ballistic missile defense and anti-submarine warfare, and further determined to explore new areas of security cooperation, including sharing DPRK missile warning data in real time; Whereas the Republic of Korea is the United States' seventh largest goods trading partner with $162,900,000,000 in total (two-way) goods trade and $31,500,000,000 in total services trade for a combined $194,400,000,000 in 2021, and is one of the United States top sources of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), which totaled $110,600,000,000 in 2021 and, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis, South Korea multinational enterprises (MNEs) in the United States employed almost 84,000 employees in 2020; Whereas the strength of the United States-Republic of Korea relationship is due in large part to the approximately 2,500,000 Korean Americans that have made significant contributions to every facet of American society and leadership to now include four members of the House of Representatives: Andy Kim of New Jersey, Young Kim of California, Marilyn Strickland of Washington, and Michelle Steel of California; and Whereas, in April 2023, President Yoon Suk Yeol will visit the United States at the invitation of President Joseph R. Biden: Now, therefore, be it Resolved, That the Senate-- (1) welcomes President Yoon Suk Yeol to the United States and urges both sides to use the occasion of this state visit to further deepen the close security, economic, and people- to-people ties between our nations; (2) reaffirms the importance of the United States-Republic of Korea alliance as the linchpin to safeguarding peace, security, and prosperity on the Korean Peninsula and a critical component of peace in the Indo-Pacific region; (3) reaffirms the United States' extended deterrence commitments to the Republic of Korea and that the United States will continue to ensure that its policy and posture reflects the requirements of extended deterrence; (4) supports ongoing efforts to further strengthen, broaden, and deepen the ironclad United States-Republic of Korea alliance, including the United States-Republic of Korea Foreign and Defense Ministerial Meeting (2+2), the Security Consultative Meeting, and the Extended Deterrence Strategy and Consultation Group, to confront threats to the peace and safety of both nations, and to stand together for the common values and shared interests that unite us; (5) calls for continued cooperation between the Governments of the United States and the Republic of Korea in the promotion of human rights; (6) supports the Republic of Korea's engagement in regional diplomacy, including the launching of the ROK-ASEAN Solidarity Initiative, the Republic of Korea's participation in the Minerals Security Partnership, its joining of the Partners in the Blue Pacific, and its hosting of a summit with Pacific Island nations; (7) endorses further Republic of Korea engagement with Quad initiatives; (8) calls for close coordination to achieve the denuclearization of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea and the establishment of a permanent and lasting peace on the Korean Peninsula; (9) encourages close cooperation among the United States, the Republic of Korea, and Japan to address shared challenges; and (10) recognizes the deep partnership forged over 70 years since the signing of the Mutual Defense Treaty that has underpinned security for both countries, established a durable trust, undergirded the free and open order in the Indo-Pacific, and demonstrated the benefits of robust democracies on both sides of the Pacific. | 2020-01-06 | Unknown | Senate | CREC-2023-04-26-pt1-PgS1391 | null | 7,024 |
formal | safeguarding | null | transphobic | Mr. MENENDEZ (for himself, Mr. Risch, Mr. Van Hollen, Mr. Romney, Mr. Kaine, Mr. Hagerty, Mr. Ossoff, Mr. Sullivan, Mr. Schatz, Ms. Hirono, and Mr. Hoeven) submitted the following resolution; which was considered and agreed to: S. Res. 175 Whereas, on October 1, 1953, the Mutual Defense Treaty Between the United States and the Republic of Korea (5 U.S.T. 2368) was signed in Washington, D.C., to which the Senate provided its advice and consent to ratification on January 26, 1954; Whereas the shared commitment to recognize an armed attack on either of the Parties as dangerous to the peace and security of the other and to ``act to meet the common danger in accordance with [each party's] constitutional processes'' remains in place today; Whereas the United States and Korea established diplomatic relations on May 22, 1882, with the signing of the Treaty of Peace, Amity, Commerce and Navigation, and the United States reestablished its diplomatic relationship with the ``Republic of Korea'' on March 25, 1949; Whereas, in 2023, the United States-Republic of Korea alliance marks 70 years since the cessation of hostilities in the Korean War and the signing of the Armistice Agreement on July 27, 1953, which remains in place today and neither formally ended the Korean War nor constituted a permanent settlement of peace on the Korean Peninsula; Whereas the United States-Republic of Korea alliance is the linchpin of peace, security, and stability on the Korean Peninsula and in the Indo-Pacific region and is essential to confronting the threat posed by the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK); Whereas the United States-Republic of Korea alliance is rooted in mutual trust, shared sacrifice, common values, economic interests, and generations of people-to-people ties that provide a foundation for one of the strongest, most interoperable, and enduring bilateral alliances in the world; Whereas the United States assures its ironclad security commitment to the Republic of Korea, including the United States extended deterrent underpinned by the full range of United States capabilities, including nuclear capabilities; Whereas the United States-Republic of Korea alliance was forged in shared sacrifice, with 1,789,000 United States soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines serving during the Korean War, of whom 36,574 paid the ultimate sacrifice with their lives in defense of the Republic of Korea, including 7,174 Korean Augmentation to the United States Army (KATUSA) soldiers, and the over 7,500 members of the United States Armed Forces that remain classified by the Department of Defense as missing in action; Whereas casualties of the Republic of Korea were more than 217,000 soldiers killed, more than 291,000 wounded, and over 1,000,000 civilians killed or missing; Whereas the Republic of Korea has since its founding become a thriving democracy with a vibrant press and commitment to the rule of law and a free market economy; Whereas the United States-Republic of Korea Security Consultative Meeting met on November 3, 2022, in Washington, D.C. and ``shared their common understanding that the U.S.- ROK Alliance is based on the same principles and shared values including: mutual trust, freedom, democracy, human rights, and the rule of law''; Whereas the United States and the Republic of Korea are committed to pursuing closely coordinated diplomatic efforts through a shared strategy to achieve the complete, verifiable, and irreversible denuclearization of North Korea and establishing peace on the Korean Peninsula; Whereas the Republic of Korea's 2022 Strategy for a Free, Peaceful, and Prosperous Indo-Pacific Region emphasizes its desire to be a global pivotal state that commits ``to working with other key nations both within and beyond the region to foster a free and peaceful region . . . while strengthening the rules-based international order''; Whereas President Yoon Suk Yeol took the courageous and bold step of announcing that the Government of the Republic of Korea would compensate Korean victims of Japanese wartime labor in order to facilitate the resolution of an issue that has hampered cooperation with Japan; Whereas a robust and effective trilateral relationship between and among the United States, the Republic of Korea, and Japan is critical for joint security and interests in defending freedom and democracy, upholding human rights, promoting peace, security, and the rule of law in the Indo- Pacific and across the globe, championing women's empowerment, and combating and adapting to complex environmental challenges; Whereas the American and Korean people share deeply rooted values of defending freedom, championing economic development, upholding human rights, and respecting the rule of law; Whereas the United States, the Republic of Korea, and Japan have held a series of trilateral meetings, including a trilateral leaders' summit on November 13, 2022, a Foreign Ministers' meeting on September 23, 2022, and a vice ministerial meeting on February 13, 2023, at which the three countries committed to continuing trilateral exercises on ballistic missile defense and anti-submarine warfare, and further determined to explore new areas of security cooperation, including sharing DPRK missile warning data in real time; Whereas the Republic of Korea is the United States' seventh largest goods trading partner with $162,900,000,000 in total (two-way) goods trade and $31,500,000,000 in total services trade for a combined $194,400,000,000 in 2021, and is one of the United States top sources of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), which totaled $110,600,000,000 in 2021 and, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis, South Korea multinational enterprises (MNEs) in the United States employed almost 84,000 employees in 2020; Whereas the strength of the United States-Republic of Korea relationship is due in large part to the approximately 2,500,000 Korean Americans that have made significant contributions to every facet of American society and leadership to now include four members of the House of Representatives: Andy Kim of New Jersey, Young Kim of California, Marilyn Strickland of Washington, and Michelle Steel of California; and Whereas, in April 2023, President Yoon Suk Yeol will visit the United States at the invitation of President Joseph R. Biden: Now, therefore, be it Resolved, That the Senate-- (1) welcomes President Yoon Suk Yeol to the United States and urges both sides to use the occasion of this state visit to further deepen the close security, economic, and people- to-people ties between our nations; (2) reaffirms the importance of the United States-Republic of Korea alliance as the linchpin to safeguarding peace, security, and prosperity on the Korean Peninsula and a critical component of peace in the Indo-Pacific region; (3) reaffirms the United States' extended deterrence commitments to the Republic of Korea and that the United States will continue to ensure that its policy and posture reflects the requirements of extended deterrence; (4) supports ongoing efforts to further strengthen, broaden, and deepen the ironclad United States-Republic of Korea alliance, including the United States-Republic of Korea Foreign and Defense Ministerial Meeting (2+2), the Security Consultative Meeting, and the Extended Deterrence Strategy and Consultation Group, to confront threats to the peace and safety of both nations, and to stand together for the common values and shared interests that unite us; (5) calls for continued cooperation between the Governments of the United States and the Republic of Korea in the promotion of human rights; (6) supports the Republic of Korea's engagement in regional diplomacy, including the launching of the ROK-ASEAN Solidarity Initiative, the Republic of Korea's participation in the Minerals Security Partnership, its joining of the Partners in the Blue Pacific, and its hosting of a summit with Pacific Island nations; (7) endorses further Republic of Korea engagement with Quad initiatives; (8) calls for close coordination to achieve the denuclearization of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea and the establishment of a permanent and lasting peace on the Korean Peninsula; (9) encourages close cooperation among the United States, the Republic of Korea, and Japan to address shared challenges; and (10) recognizes the deep partnership forged over 70 years since the signing of the Mutual Defense Treaty that has underpinned security for both countries, established a durable trust, undergirded the free and open order in the Indo-Pacific, and demonstrated the benefits of robust democracies on both sides of the Pacific. | 2020-01-06 | Unknown | Senate | CREC-2023-04-26-pt1-PgS1391 | null | 7,025 |
formal | single | null | homophobic | Pursuant to clause 7(c)(1) of rule XII and Section 3(c) of H. Res. 5 the following statements are submitted regarding (1) the specific powers granted to Congress in the Constitution to enact the accompanying bill or joint resolution and (2) the single subject of the bill or joint resolution. | 2020-01-06 | Unknown | House | CREC-2023-04-27-pt1-PgH2085 | null | 7,026 |
formal | single | null | homophobic | By Mr. DeSAULNIER: H.J. Res. 60. Congress has the power to enact this legislation pursuant to the following: Article 1, Section 8. The single subject of this legislation is: Education | 2020-01-06 | The RECORDER | House | CREC-2023-04-27-pt1-PgH2088-17 | null | 7,027 |
formal | the Fed | null | antisemitic | Mr. DURBIN. Madam President, the decision last year by the Supreme Court's conservative majority overruling Roe v. Wade and the right to abortion marks the first time in our Nation's history that the Supreme Court has ever repealed a constitutional right. One of the most striking features of the Dobbs decision was the almost complete absence of any serious discussion about the impact the ruling might have on the lives and health of women. In a 79-page ruling, women receive only a few paragraphs. Justice Alito, the author of the majority opinion, defended this disregard for women's lives and health by arguing that it is ``hard for anyone--and in particular, for a court--to assess . . . the effect of the abortion right on society and in particular on the lives of women.'' Perhaps the Court's conservative majority should have paid closer attention to amicus briefs filed by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the American Medical Association, who warned that overruling Roe would unleash an immediate healthcare crisis across America. Ten months later, it is clear for anyone to see that the consequences of the Dobbs ruling are devastating. Instead of settling old controversies, the Dobbs decision has unleashed chaos for women and doctors. We are seeing a torrent of new State laws that aim to reduce abortion access by threatening to punish or criminalize those who provide abortions and, in some cases, those who help someone to obtain an abortion. Nearly half of all States now impose severe restrictions on abortion--and at least a dozen States have enacted near-total bans. The laws surrounding abortion--and miscarriage management--seem to be changing by the week. A few weeks ago, a Federal judge in Texas issued a ruling that would ban the sale of mifepristone, one of the safest forms of reproductive care, nationwide--even in States where abortion remains legal. Mifepristone was approved more than 20 years ago by the Food and Drug Administration as safe and effective. It is used in more than half of all abortions in the country. And it is used to help women suffering from a miscarriage. It has a better safety profile than penicillin, Tylenol, or Viagra. Thankfully, the Supreme Court issued a temporary reprieve by staying the decision. So, for the moment, mifepristone remains on the market while the case works its way through the legal system. But the initial ruling by the Federal judge in Texas marked the first time that a judge has ever overruled the FDA to ban a medication deemed safe and effective by medical and scientific experts. And it is troubling confirmation that instead of ending the debate on abortion, Dobbs was actually the beginning of a different debate: How far will the war on women's healthcare go before we say enough is enough? The number of horror stories that have emerged over the past year is staggering: stories of rape victims--as young as 10 years old--being denied healthcare because of laws outlawing abortion; an 11-year-old victim of sex trafficking--also denied a medically necessary abortion; stories of women being forced to flee their home States to access basic, reproductive care services; stories of pregnant women suffering miscarriages being turned away by doctors, until their lives are at risk, because healthcare providers are understandably afraid of facing criminal penalties and other serious punishments if their patient is not sick enough to receive abortion care. Yesterday, the Senate Judiciary Committee, which I chair, held a hearing in which we heard more about the horrific consequences of the Dobbs decision on pregnant women and the doctors who care for them. Let me tell you about one of our witnesses. Her name is Amanda Zurawski. She was one of the most profound and heartbreaking witnesses I have heard during my time in Congress. Amanda lives in Texas, one of the first States in which a near-total ban on abortion took effect after Dobbs. Amanda endured 18 months of fertility treatments to get pregnant. When she finally did, she and her husband were over the moon. They named their soon-to-be little girl Willow. Last August, in the second trimester of her pregnancy, Amanda felt something unusual. She called her doctor, who told her to come in as quickly as possible. After an examination, Amanda and her husband received a heartbreaking diagnosis: Her cervix had dilated prematurely. The loss of her baby was inevitable. Amanda asked what could be done to assure what she called ``the respectful passing'' of her baby and to protect Amanda from a possibly deadly infection. To her shock, her doctors told her there was nothing they could do because of Texas's new anti-abortion laws--laws that threaten doctors with fines of up to $100,000, up to 99 years in prison, and loss of their medical license. Amanda's doctors tried to find another hospital nearby that could possibly help her--but those hospitals all had the same response: Because of Texas's new laws, they couldn't do anything. Amanda told our committee: ``People have asked why we didn't get on a plane or in our car to go to a state where the laws aren't so restrictive. But we live in the middle of Texas, and the nearest `sanctuary' state is at least an eight-hour drive. Developing sepsis--which can kill quickly--in a car in the middle of the West Texas desert, or 30,000 feet above the ground, is a death sentence, and it's not a choice we should have had to even consider. So all we could do was wait.'' After 3 agonizing days, Amanda developed a raging fever and dangerously low blood pressure. Sepsis had set in. Her husband rushed her to the hospital. Several hours later, her daughter arrived, stillborn. Amanda spent the next 3 days in the I.C.U. fighting for her own life. She has spent the last 8 months battling trauma and depression, as well as the medical fallout from her delayed treatment, including complications that may make it difficult to ever have children. We also heard from an OB/GYN, Dr. Nisha Verma, who has chosen to stay and practice in Georgia despite knowing that, in her words, ``Georgia's law threatened to make [her] a criminal for providing life-saving care to [her] patients.'' Dr. Verma told our committee : ``Imagine looking someone in the eye and saying: `I have all the skills and the tools to care for you, but our state's politicians have told me I can't.''' She reminded us that the U.S. already has the highest maternal mortality rate of any wealthy nation. Restrictive abortion laws, she said, are making pregnancy even more dangerous for women. Regrettably, some of our Republican colleagues on the committee tried to make the hearing about what they called late-term abortions and other abortion foes call ``partial birth'' abortions--both medically inaccurate terms. They neglected to note that abortions after 21 weeks account for less than 1 percent of abortions in this country, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. They also failed to acknowledge that in the very rare instances when an abortion happens later in a pregnancy, it is generally because the woman's life is in danger; a fatal fetal anomaly has been discovered, as in Amanda's case; or because a woman wasn't able to get an abortion earlier due to restrictive laws. For nearly 50 years, abortion opponents said their only goal was to return the right to decide abortion laws to the State. It is now clear that was a trojan horse. Dismantling Roe was the first step. The real goal is to systemically strip away access to abortion nationwide. And that is exactly what they are doing. Last year, dozens of congressional Republicans proposed a bill that would ban abortion nationwide at 15 weeks--even in States that have chosen to protect access to abortion later in pregnancy. And one member of our committee noted yesterday: ``We're not going to back off.'' In addition, nearly 150 congressional Republicans joined an amicus brief to the Supreme Court in the mifepristone case, arguing for the Court to keep in place the Fifth Circuit's stay that limited mifepristone access nationwide--even in States where abortion remains legal. Congress needs to stop this chaos and needless, avoidable suffering by passing the Women's Health Protection Act to restore abortion access across the country. | 2020-01-06 | Mr. DURBIN | Senate | CREC-2023-04-27-pt1-PgS1410 | null | 7,028 |
formal | Chicago | null | racist | Mr. DURBIN. Madam President, earlier this year, Chicago--and the entire legal world--lost a giant. John Devitt Cooney, Sr., a titan of trial law, passed away at the age of 68. He was a skilled litigator who used his brilliant legal mind, charm, quick wit, and sense of humor to help everyday ``Davids'' in the never-ending battle against corporate ``Goliaths.'' John may have been born for the role. His father, Robert Cooney, Sr., served in World War II, returned home--GI benefits in hand--and attended Loyola University School of Law in Chicago. When he graduated from law school, Robert worked in the Cook County State's Attorney's Office before setting up a successful personal injury firm. John followed suit. Born and raised in Oak Park, IL, John graduated from Fenwick High School and went on to attend Georgetown University for his undergraduate studies. During his years at Georgetown, he briefly worked on Capitol Hill. It was the 1970s: an era of disco, tie-dye, and Watergate. While John may not have been all that interested in politics at the time, his experience on Capitol Hill enhanced his interest in the law. John finished his studies at Georgetown and moved back to Illinois to attend Loyola University School of Law in Chicago. His first job out of law school was as a Cook County Assistant State's Attorney, just like his father, where he worked within the Felony Trial Division. It was a formative experience for John. As a young lawyer, he developed a deep empathy for how wrongful acts hurt victims and their families. It was there where he honed his craft, spending invaluable time in the courtroom, selecting juries, developing trial strategies, and presenting cases to juries. After 5 years, in 1985, John joined his father, his brother Robert, Jr., and his future partner Kevin Conway, at the Chicago personal injury firm, Cooney & Stenn. John made partner in just five years at the firm that would become Cooney & Conway, one of the leading personal injury and wrongful death firms in the United States. John excelled in cases related to construction accidents and product liability, and he had a strong commitment to helping individuals in asbestos exposure cases. Some may have only heard of ``asbestos'' or ``mesothelioma'' through late-night television commercials or radio ads. If that is the case, they are fortunate. Asbestos is a strong, heat resistant fiber that can be found in many building materials, such as insulation, roofing shingles, and pipe coverings. Inhaling these fibers can have devastating health consequences. As early as the 1930s, public health professionals were sounding the alarm about the dangers of exposure to asbestos. Yet, for decades, some companies ignored the risks, putting profits above the health and well-being of employees and consumers. Between 1940 and 1979, nearly 30 million workers were exposed to asbestos, and around one-third of those workers were veterans. To this day, exposure to asbestos is the only known cause of mesothelioma, an aggressive and incurable form of cancer in which a tumor develops in the protective lining of lungs, and slowly compresses until the victim suffocates. It can take years to discover mesothelioma, and by the time it is discovered, the victim often only has several months to live. John and his team at Cooney & Conway focused on holding the companies that put profits over people accountable and doing right by victims and their families. And they were successful, obtaining more than $20 billion for victims and their families, including a $200 million asbestos exposure settlement that was the largest personal injury settlement in the history of Illinois. While compensation does little to ease the pain or the loss of a loved one to this devastating disease, John's efforts protected victims' rights to justice and gave them a voice against powerful corporations. John's legacy goes well beyond the courtroom. In 2014, John became president of the Illinois Trial Lawyers Association, an organization of more than 2,000 members that has served the interests of plaintiffs' attorneys and consumers since 1952. He also was the founding chairman of the mass torts litigation committee for the American Bar Association, and he served as an elected governor of the American Association for Justice, the leading voice for trial lawyers at the national level. John and his firm also gave back. Cooney & Conway provided more than $1 million to support the work of Dr. Hedy Lee Kindler, one of the Nation's leading mesothelioma researchers at the University of Chicago Medicine Comprehensive Cancer Center, a leading mesothelioma research and treatment center. John also served on the boards of the University of Chicago Medical Center and Lurie Children's Hospital. Holding large manufacturers and the wealthiest corporations accountable was not just a professional endeavor. For John, it was personal. Everyday folks--pipefitters, laborers, construction workers, members of ``The Greatest Generation''--those are the people for whom John gladly went to bat. He knew these were people whose only error was venturing into a hazardous workplace, putting in a hard day's work, and daring to breathe, to try to make a good life for themselves and their families. Earlier this year, Loretta and I gathered with John's family and friends at Old St. Pat's Church in Chicago, to say farewell to John and celebrate the light that he brought into this world. John's many friends filled every pew. Loretta and I extend our sincerest condolences to Barbara, his loving wife of 35 years; his daughter Elizabeth (Matt); his sons Devitt (Bess); and Bobby (Hutton); his brother Robert, Jr., (Loretta); his entire family; and his many friends and colleagues. John's legacy and contributions to the law, to Chicago, and to our Nation will not be forgotten. | 2020-01-06 | Mr. DURBIN | Senate | CREC-2023-04-27-pt1-PgS1411 | null | 7,029 |
formal | single | null | homophobic | Ms. HASSAN. Madam President, I am honored to recognize Robert and Linda Burlock of Berlin as April's Granite Staters of the Month. For half a century, the couple has shown tremendous dedication to their community by continually welcoming new families and residents moving into the East Side of Berlin. Throughout the time that Robert--``Bobby''--and Linda have lived on Grafton Street in Berlin, every time newcomers have arrived, they have made it their personal mission to welcome them. They are the unofficial ambassadors for the neighborhood. One time, when Bobby saw from across the street two newcomers struggling to move their furniture, he sprung up to help. He originally had taken days off of work to relax and lay back, but instead, he spent the next few days helping the newcomers settle in. Another time, when a neighbor's father passed away, Bobby helped her clean out her father's garage, a task that would have been daunting if done alone. When heavy snow covered Grafton Street, Bobby would send over a buddy with a snow plow to his neighbors' yards, and when their front yards were overgrown with grass, he would offer to mow their lawns. Linda worked in lockstep with her husband to welcome the newcomers, always inviting them over for drinks and quickly forging strong friendships. For every new neighbor, she would always make a dish to send over as a welcome gesture. Beyond any single act of assistance, Bobby and Linda have developed a sense of community in Berlin that is truly special. When their longtime neighbor and good friend passed away a few years ago, a newcomer moved in from New Jersey. Although he kept to himself at first, Bobby and Linda were determined to get to know him, and soon enough they were good friends. Bobby says that he now sees his new neighbor as another son. Bobby and Linda's generosity leaves a lasting impact on the people that they assist, showing neighbors, new and old, that everybody counts. And they set an example for all Granite Staters by showing that each and every one of us can make a difference in our own community. I hope that all Granite Staters are inspired by Bobby and Linda's story and follow their example of extending kindness to strangers, since our communities are only as strong as their individual members. Bobby and Linda are a shining example of the Granite State spirit of kindness and generosity, and I am glad to honor the neighborhood spirit that they have created on the East Side of Berlin. | 2020-01-06 | Ms. HASSAN | Senate | CREC-2023-04-27-pt1-PgS1415-4 | null | 7,030 |
formal | the Fed | null | antisemitic | At 1:02 p.m., a message from the House of Representatives, delivered by Mrs. Cole, one of its reading clerks, announced that the House has passed the following bill, in which it requests the concurrence of the Senate: H.R. 1353. An act to direct the Federal Communications Commission to issue rules for the provision of emergency connectivity service, and for other purposes. | 2020-01-06 | Unknown | Senate | CREC-2023-04-27-pt1-PgS1416-3 | null | 7,031 |
formal | the Fed | null | antisemitic | The following bill was read the first and the second times by unanimous consent, and referred as indicated: H.R. 1353. An act to direct the Federal Communications Commission to issue rules for the provision of emergency connectivity service, and for other purposes; to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation. | 2020-01-06 | Unknown | Senate | CREC-2023-04-27-pt1-PgS1416-4 | null | 7,032 |
formal | Federal Reserve | null | antisemitic | Mr. REED (for himself, Mr. Scott of South Carolina, Mr. Braun, Mrs. Britt, Mrs. Capito, Mr. Cardin, Mr. Casey, Ms. Collins, Ms. Cortez Masto, Mr. Crapo, Mr. Cruz, Mr. Daines, Mr. Durbin, Mrs. Feinstein, Ms. Hassan, Mr. Kennedy, Ms. Klobuchar, Mr. Lujan, Ms. Lummis, Mr. Manchin, Mr. Risch, Ms. Rosen, Mr. Rounds, Mr. Rubio, Mr. Whitehouse, Mr. Wicker, Mr. Young, Mr. Cassidy, and Mrs. Blackburn) submitted the following resolution; which was referred to the Committee on the Judiciary: S. Res. 185 Whereas, according to the report entitled ``Economic Well- Being of U.S. Households in 2021'' by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, a noted increase in financial well-being occurred broadly as the United States recovered from the COVID-19 pandemic, but existing gaps in education, ethnicity, and disability persisted; Whereas, according to the 2021 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation National Survey of Unbanked and Underbanked Households-- (1) approximately 4.5 percent of households, representing 5,900,000 households in the United States, are unbanked and, therefore, have limited or no access to savings, lending, and other basic financial services; and (2) an estimated 14.1 percent of households, representing 18,700,000 million households in the United States, are underbanked; Whereas, according to the 2021 Consumer Financial Literacy and Preparedness Survey of the National Foundation for Credit Counseling and Wells Fargo-- (1) 47 percent of the general population in the United States report having credit card debt; (2) 38 percent of adults in the United States report carrying credit card balances from month-to-month; and (3) 44 percent of the general population in the United States have a budget and keep close track of expenses, such as food, housing, and entertainment; Whereas, according to a report entitled ``Financial Capability of Adults with Disabilities'' by the National Disability Institute and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, people with disabilities were more likely to struggle with the key components of financial capability, which are making ends meet, planning ahead, managing financial products, and financial knowledge and decision- making, and could benefit from targeted financial education; Whereas, according to the statistical release of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System for the fourth quarter of 2022 entitled ``Household Debt and Credit''-- (1) outstanding household debt in the United States has increased by $2,750,000,000,000 since the end of 2019; (2) outstanding student loan balances have more than doubled in the last decade to nearly $1,600,000,000,000; and (3) the share of debt newly transitioning into delinquency increased for nearly all debt types, following 2 years of historically low delinquency transitions; Whereas, according to the 2022 report entitled ``Survey of the States: Economic and Personal Finance Education in Our Nation's Schools'' by the Council for Economic Education-- (1) only 25 States require students to take an economics course as a high school graduation requirement; and (2) only 23 States require students to take a personal finance course as a high school graduation requirement, either independently or as part of an economics course; Whereas expanding access to the safe, mainstream financial system will provide individuals with less expensive and more secure options for managing finances and building wealth; Whereas quality personal financial education is essential to ensure that individuals are prepared-- (1) to make sound money management decisions about credit, debt, insurance, financial transactions, and planning for the future; and (2) to become responsible workers, heads of household, investors, entrepreneurs, business leaders, and citizens; Whereas financial education in schools in the United States is critical to a long-term financial inclusion strategy to reach students who are not able to get sufficient personal finance guidance at home; Whereas, according to the 2021 report entitled ``Game Changer: The Evaluation of the Jump$tart Financial Foundations for Educators Professional Development Program'' by the Financial Literacy Group, teacher training regarding financial education improves student outcomes significantly, especially among historically underserved students; Whereas increased financial literacy-- (1) empowers individuals to make wise financial decisions; and (2) reduces the confusion caused by an increasingly complex economy; Whereas a greater understanding of, and familiarity with, financial markets and institutions will lead to increased economic activity and growth; and Whereas, in 2003, Congress-- (1) determined that coordinating Federal financial literacy efforts and formulating a national strategy is important; and (2) in light of that determination, passed the Financial Literacy and Education Improvement Act (20 U.S.C. 9701 et seq.), establishing the Financial Literacy and Education Commission: Now, therefore, be it Resolved, That the Senate-- (1) designates April 2023 as ``Financial Literacy Month'' to raise public awareness about-- (A) the importance of personal financial education in the United States; and (B) the serious consequences that may result from a lack of understanding about personal finances; and (2) calls on the Federal Government, States, localities, schools, nonprofit organizations, businesses, and the people of the United States to observe Financial Literacy Month with appropriate programs and activities. | 2020-01-06 | Unknown | Senate | CREC-2023-04-27-pt1-PgS1424-3 | null | 7,033 |
formal | the Fed | null | antisemitic | Mr. REED (for himself, Mr. Scott of South Carolina, Mr. Braun, Mrs. Britt, Mrs. Capito, Mr. Cardin, Mr. Casey, Ms. Collins, Ms. Cortez Masto, Mr. Crapo, Mr. Cruz, Mr. Daines, Mr. Durbin, Mrs. Feinstein, Ms. Hassan, Mr. Kennedy, Ms. Klobuchar, Mr. Lujan, Ms. Lummis, Mr. Manchin, Mr. Risch, Ms. Rosen, Mr. Rounds, Mr. Rubio, Mr. Whitehouse, Mr. Wicker, Mr. Young, Mr. Cassidy, and Mrs. Blackburn) submitted the following resolution; which was referred to the Committee on the Judiciary: S. Res. 185 Whereas, according to the report entitled ``Economic Well- Being of U.S. Households in 2021'' by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, a noted increase in financial well-being occurred broadly as the United States recovered from the COVID-19 pandemic, but existing gaps in education, ethnicity, and disability persisted; Whereas, according to the 2021 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation National Survey of Unbanked and Underbanked Households-- (1) approximately 4.5 percent of households, representing 5,900,000 households in the United States, are unbanked and, therefore, have limited or no access to savings, lending, and other basic financial services; and (2) an estimated 14.1 percent of households, representing 18,700,000 million households in the United States, are underbanked; Whereas, according to the 2021 Consumer Financial Literacy and Preparedness Survey of the National Foundation for Credit Counseling and Wells Fargo-- (1) 47 percent of the general population in the United States report having credit card debt; (2) 38 percent of adults in the United States report carrying credit card balances from month-to-month; and (3) 44 percent of the general population in the United States have a budget and keep close track of expenses, such as food, housing, and entertainment; Whereas, according to a report entitled ``Financial Capability of Adults with Disabilities'' by the National Disability Institute and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, people with disabilities were more likely to struggle with the key components of financial capability, which are making ends meet, planning ahead, managing financial products, and financial knowledge and decision- making, and could benefit from targeted financial education; Whereas, according to the statistical release of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System for the fourth quarter of 2022 entitled ``Household Debt and Credit''-- (1) outstanding household debt in the United States has increased by $2,750,000,000,000 since the end of 2019; (2) outstanding student loan balances have more than doubled in the last decade to nearly $1,600,000,000,000; and (3) the share of debt newly transitioning into delinquency increased for nearly all debt types, following 2 years of historically low delinquency transitions; Whereas, according to the 2022 report entitled ``Survey of the States: Economic and Personal Finance Education in Our Nation's Schools'' by the Council for Economic Education-- (1) only 25 States require students to take an economics course as a high school graduation requirement; and (2) only 23 States require students to take a personal finance course as a high school graduation requirement, either independently or as part of an economics course; Whereas expanding access to the safe, mainstream financial system will provide individuals with less expensive and more secure options for managing finances and building wealth; Whereas quality personal financial education is essential to ensure that individuals are prepared-- (1) to make sound money management decisions about credit, debt, insurance, financial transactions, and planning for the future; and (2) to become responsible workers, heads of household, investors, entrepreneurs, business leaders, and citizens; Whereas financial education in schools in the United States is critical to a long-term financial inclusion strategy to reach students who are not able to get sufficient personal finance guidance at home; Whereas, according to the 2021 report entitled ``Game Changer: The Evaluation of the Jump$tart Financial Foundations for Educators Professional Development Program'' by the Financial Literacy Group, teacher training regarding financial education improves student outcomes significantly, especially among historically underserved students; Whereas increased financial literacy-- (1) empowers individuals to make wise financial decisions; and (2) reduces the confusion caused by an increasingly complex economy; Whereas a greater understanding of, and familiarity with, financial markets and institutions will lead to increased economic activity and growth; and Whereas, in 2003, Congress-- (1) determined that coordinating Federal financial literacy efforts and formulating a national strategy is important; and (2) in light of that determination, passed the Financial Literacy and Education Improvement Act (20 U.S.C. 9701 et seq.), establishing the Financial Literacy and Education Commission: Now, therefore, be it Resolved, That the Senate-- (1) designates April 2023 as ``Financial Literacy Month'' to raise public awareness about-- (A) the importance of personal financial education in the United States; and (B) the serious consequences that may result from a lack of understanding about personal finances; and (2) calls on the Federal Government, States, localities, schools, nonprofit organizations, businesses, and the people of the United States to observe Financial Literacy Month with appropriate programs and activities. | 2020-01-06 | Unknown | Senate | CREC-2023-04-27-pt1-PgS1424-3 | null | 7,034 |
formal | based | null | white supremacist | Mr. KING (for himself, Mr. Risch, Mr. Brown, Ms. Collins, Ms. Baldwin, Mr. Boozman, Mr. Manchin, Mr. Crapo, Mrs. Shaheen, Mrs. Hyde-Smith, Mr. Wicker, and Mr. Murphy) submitted the following resolution; which was considered and agreed to: S. Res. 183 Whereas Arbor Day was founded on April 10, 1872, to recognize the importance of planting trees; Whereas Arbor Day is a time to recognize the importance of trees and an opportunity for communities to gather and plant for a greener future; Whereas Arbor Day is observed in all 50 States and across the world; Whereas participating in Arbor Day activities promotes civic participation and highlights the importance of planting and caring for trees and vegetation; Whereas such activities provide an opportunity to convey to future generations the value of land and stewardship; Whereas working forests have contributed to an increase in the number of trees planted in the United States and are sustainably managed, with less than 2 percent of working forests nationally harvested each year; Whereas a key factor in preventing forest conversion and deforestation is keeping forests productive; Whereas working forests are a critical part of a nature- based solution to climate change, and by providing a continuous cycle of growing, harvesting, and replanting, active forest management maximizes the ability to sequester and store carbon and improves forest resilience; Whereas private forests play an important role in conserving at-risk and declining species, and collaborative conservation efforts can benefit species while also helping to keep forests as forests; Whereas sustainably grown wood can be used in a wide variety of resilient infrastructure and building applications--from traditional timber framing to high-tech mass timber--and as a natural, renewable, and biodegradable material, the significant use of wood building materials in buildings and bridges helps decrease global carbon emissions; Whereas the Arbor Day Foundation and the Tree City USA program have been committed to greening cities and towns across the country since 1976, and, in that time, more than 3,600 communities have made the commitment to becoming Tree City USA communities; Whereas Tree City USA communities are home to more than 153,000,000 individuals in the United States who are dedicated to core standards of sound urban forestry management and who dedicate resources and time to urban forestry initiatives, which helps make their communities and our country a better place to live; Whereas National Arbor Day is observed on the last Friday of April each year; and Whereas April 28, 2023, marks the 151st anniversary of Arbor Day: Now, therefore, be it Resolved, That the Senate-- (1) recognizes April 28, 2023, as ``National Arbor Day''; (2) celebrates the 151st anniversary of Arbor Day; (3) supports the goals and ideals of National Arbor Day; and (4) encourages the people of the United States to participate in National Arbor Day activities. | 2020-01-06 | Unknown | Senate | CREC-2023-04-27-pt1-PgS1424 | null | 7,035 |
formal | urban | null | racist | Mr. KING (for himself, Mr. Risch, Mr. Brown, Ms. Collins, Ms. Baldwin, Mr. Boozman, Mr. Manchin, Mr. Crapo, Mrs. Shaheen, Mrs. Hyde-Smith, Mr. Wicker, and Mr. Murphy) submitted the following resolution; which was considered and agreed to: S. Res. 183 Whereas Arbor Day was founded on April 10, 1872, to recognize the importance of planting trees; Whereas Arbor Day is a time to recognize the importance of trees and an opportunity for communities to gather and plant for a greener future; Whereas Arbor Day is observed in all 50 States and across the world; Whereas participating in Arbor Day activities promotes civic participation and highlights the importance of planting and caring for trees and vegetation; Whereas such activities provide an opportunity to convey to future generations the value of land and stewardship; Whereas working forests have contributed to an increase in the number of trees planted in the United States and are sustainably managed, with less than 2 percent of working forests nationally harvested each year; Whereas a key factor in preventing forest conversion and deforestation is keeping forests productive; Whereas working forests are a critical part of a nature- based solution to climate change, and by providing a continuous cycle of growing, harvesting, and replanting, active forest management maximizes the ability to sequester and store carbon and improves forest resilience; Whereas private forests play an important role in conserving at-risk and declining species, and collaborative conservation efforts can benefit species while also helping to keep forests as forests; Whereas sustainably grown wood can be used in a wide variety of resilient infrastructure and building applications--from traditional timber framing to high-tech mass timber--and as a natural, renewable, and biodegradable material, the significant use of wood building materials in buildings and bridges helps decrease global carbon emissions; Whereas the Arbor Day Foundation and the Tree City USA program have been committed to greening cities and towns across the country since 1976, and, in that time, more than 3,600 communities have made the commitment to becoming Tree City USA communities; Whereas Tree City USA communities are home to more than 153,000,000 individuals in the United States who are dedicated to core standards of sound urban forestry management and who dedicate resources and time to urban forestry initiatives, which helps make their communities and our country a better place to live; Whereas National Arbor Day is observed on the last Friday of April each year; and Whereas April 28, 2023, marks the 151st anniversary of Arbor Day: Now, therefore, be it Resolved, That the Senate-- (1) recognizes April 28, 2023, as ``National Arbor Day''; (2) celebrates the 151st anniversary of Arbor Day; (3) supports the goals and ideals of National Arbor Day; and (4) encourages the people of the United States to participate in National Arbor Day activities. | 2020-01-06 | Unknown | Senate | CREC-2023-04-27-pt1-PgS1424 | null | 7,036 |
formal | urban | null | racist | Mr. SCHATZ. Madam President, I have four requests for committees to meet during today's session of the Senate. They have the approval of the Majority and Minority Leaders. Pursuant to rule XXVI, paragraph 5(a), of the Standing Rules of the Senate, the following committees are authorized to meet during today's session of the Senate: committee on armed services The Committee on Armed Services is authorized to meet during the session of the Senate on Thursday, April 27, 2023, at 8 a.m., to conduct a hearing. committee on banking, housing, and urban affairs The Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs is authorized to meet during the session of the Senate on Thursday, April 27, 2023, at 10 a.m., to conduct a hearing. committee on foreign relations The Committee on Foreign Relations is authorized to meet during the session of the Senate on Thursday, April 27, 2023, at 10 a.m., to conduct a business meeting. committee on the judiciary The Committee on the Judiciary is authorized to meet during the session of the Senate on Thursday, April 27, 2023, at a.m., to conduct an executive business meeting. | 2020-01-06 | Mr. SCHATZ | Senate | CREC-2023-04-27-pt1-PgS1426 | null | 7,037 |
formal | single | null | homophobic | Pursuant to clause 7(c)(1) of rule XII and Section 3(c) of H. Res. 5 the following statements are submitted regarding (1) the specific powers granted to Congress in the Constitution to enact the accompanying bill or joint resolution and (2) the single subject of the bill or joint resolution. | 2020-01-06 | Unknown | House | CREC-2023-04-28-pt1-PgH2119 | null | 7,038 |
colloquial | blue | blueish | antisemitic | Biden’s plan to turn Texas blue | 2023-09-08 | null | null | null | walkaway | 0 |
colloquial | single | lifelong bachelor | homophobic | Lies and revise: Every single jobs report this year has been retroactively revised down. #Bidenomics | 2023-09-06 | null | null | null | walkaway | 1 |
colloquial | terrorism | Islamic terrorism | Islamophobic | Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. 'The Gulag Archipelago': Your punishment for having a knife when they searched you would be very different from the thief's. For him to have a knife was mere misbehavior, tradition, he didn't know any better. But for you to have one was terrorism"... | 2023-09-06 | null | null | null | walkaway | 2 |
colloquial | echo | triple parentheses | antisemitic | Reddit echo chamber | 2023-09-04 | null | null | null | walkaway | 3 |
colloquial | Chicago | references to cities with large racial minority populations being overrun by crime, drugs, rodents | racist | Mayor Brandon Johnson's Chicago: At Least 15 Shot Friday into Saturday Night | 2023-09-04 | null | null | null | walkaway | 4 |
colloquial | illegal immigrant | illegal immigrant | anti-Latino | Under Biden, enough illegal immigrants have come in to form our 11th largest state. Remember, these migrants will count towards the census for future elections. | 2023-08-31 | null | null | null | walkaway | 5 |
colloquial | illegal immigrants | illegal immigrant | anti-Latino | Under Biden, enough illegal immigrants have come in to form our 11th largest state. Remember, these migrants will count towards the census for future elections. | 2023-08-31 | null | null | null | walkaway | 6 |
colloquial | thug | thug | racist | San Francisco store clerk attacked by robber trying to steal beer has died after sustaining brain injury and going into coma trying to stop the thug | 2023-08-30 | null | null | null | walkaway | 7 |
colloquial | Chicago | references to cities with large racial minority populations being overrun by crime, drugs, rodents | racist | Univision TV news crew is robbed at GUNPOINT in Chicago while filming stories about spike in robberies | 2023-08-30 | null | null | null | walkaway | 8 |
colloquial | Google | Google | racist | The guys behind Google - CIA, NSA BlackRock and Vanguard | 2023-08-28 | null | null | null | walkaway | 9 |
colloquial | Federal Reserve | Federal Reserve | antisemitic | "The Federal Reserve is as 'federal' as Federal Express"... | 2023-08-27 | null | null | null | walkaway | 10 |
colloquial | Google | Google | racist | Judge Rejects RFK Jr's Request for Order Blocking Google From Censoring Him | 2023-08-25 | null | null | null | walkaway | 11 |
colloquial | SJW | social justice warrior | anti-liberal | How to become an SJW | 2023-08-25 | null | null | null | walkaway | 12 |
colloquial | illegals | illegal immigrant | anti-Latino | Kathy Hochul blames Joe Biden for NY migrant crisis, wants woek authorization for illegals, federal funding | 2023-08-24 | null | null | null | walkaway | 13 |
colloquial | illegals | illegal immigrant | anti-Latino | Sanctuary City Los Angeles doesn’t want illegals? | 2023-08-23 | null | null | null | walkaway | 14 |
colloquial | Chicago | references to cities with large racial minority populations being overrun by crime, drugs, rodents | racist | Nearly 40 Shot During Weekend in Mayor Brandon Johnson's Chicago | 2023-08-23 | null | null | null | walkaway | 15 |
colloquial | illegal immigrant | illegal immigrant | anti-Latino | States look to hire illegal immigrants to fatten struggling police departments | 2023-08-22 | null | null | null | walkaway | 16 |
colloquial | illegal immigrants | illegal immigrant | anti-Latino | States look to hire illegal immigrants to fatten struggling police departments | 2023-08-22 | null | null | null | walkaway | 17 |
colloquial | Google | Google | racist | Google Bans Independent News Media from Search Results Worldwide | 2023-08-19 | null | null | null | walkaway | 18 |
colloquial | terrorism | Islamic terrorism | Islamophobic | Watch us talk about how Biden gave up 6 Billion dollars to our enemies Iran. This will lead Iran to finance their nuclear program and terrorism against the United States. In addition, we talk about the absurdity of Trumps fourth indictment. Support us by liking and subscribing. | 2023-08-18 | null | null | null | walkaway | 19 |
colloquial | handout | government handout | racist | Our current handout system is not working. | 2023-08-18 | null | null | null | walkaway | 20 |
colloquial | Soros | George Soros | antisemitic | Russia has publicly accused Big Pharma, and Deep State of manufacturing covid pandemic to take over the world. Some mentions are Clinton, Obama, Biden, and Soros | 2023-08-17 | null | null | null | walkaway | 21 |
colloquial | extremists | Islamic extremists | Islamophobic | Gov. Gavin Newsom wants to talk about empowering parents after calling them extremists - Newsom’s actions don’t back up his words. | 2023-08-17 | null | null | null | walkaway | 22 |
colloquial | George Soros | George Soros | antisemitic | George Soros Funded Fusion GPS, His Spokesman Confirms | 2023-08-16 | null | null | null | walkaway | 23 |
colloquial | Soros | George Soros | antisemitic | George Soros Funded Fusion GPS, His Spokesman Confirms | 2023-08-16 | null | null | null | walkaway | 24 |
colloquial | terrorist | Islamic terrorists | Islamophobic | Among 35 to 44 years olds, 34% more died than expected.. This unnatural loss of life is on the scale of a war or terrorist event | 2023-08-13 | null | null | null | walkaway | 25 |
colloquial | Hollywood | Hollywood elite | antisemitic | California- SMH. Squatters trash Hollywood Hills mansion with feces, ‘f–k rich people’ graffiti | 2023-08-13 | null | null | null | walkaway | 26 |
colloquial | globalist | globalist | antisemitic | Another WEF globalist shill | 2023-08-11 | null | null | null | walkaway | 27 |
colloquial | voter fraud | voter fraud | racist | Not only is Joe Biden using the DOJ to indict his lead political opponent. They also want a gag order, so his main opponent will be the only candidate not allowed to talk about voter fraud during the entire election. The process IS the punishment. | 2023-08-08 | null | null | null | walkaway | 28 |
colloquial | coincidences | coincidence | antisemitic | Lots of countries that were clamoring to take other refugees don’t seem as keen to take these refugees….. it must just be one of those “coincidences” we keep hearing about. | 2023-08-04 | null | null | null | walkaway | 29 |
colloquial | blue | blueish | antisemitic | Every state is a red state with a blue dot that controls it. | 2023-08-03 | null | null | null | walkaway | 30 |
colloquial | coincidences | coincidence | antisemitic | So many coincidences going on at the DOJ. | 2023-08-03 | null | null | null | walkaway | 31 |
colloquial | extremists | Islamic extremists | Islamophobic | Kamala can’t stop saying ‘extremists’ #kamalaharris. Yup, and she is going to go down in history as the first women VP. Let that sink in 🤣🤣🤣 | 2023-07-31 | null | null | null | walkaway | 32 |
colloquial | MAGA | MAGA | white supremacist | Nord Stream pipeline leaks are ‘catastrophic for the climate’, but hillary wants you to thank a MAGA Republican, lol | 2023-07-26 | null | null | null | walkaway | 33 |
colloquial | MAGA | MAGA | white supremacist | Hillary Clinton blames MAGA Republicans for the hot weather | 2023-07-25 | null | null | null | walkaway | 34 |
colloquial | single | lifelong bachelor | homophobic | I love AC but paying $30 for a cosmetic in a single player game is embarrassing | 2023-09-06 | null | null | null | consoom | 35 |
colloquial | blue | blueish | antisemitic | Yes buy the shirt blue dog | 2023-07-22 | null | null | null | consoom | 36 |
colloquial | blue | blueish | antisemitic | I just like blue robot boy a bit too much. | 2023-05-08 | null | null | null | consoom | 37 |
colloquial | Hollywood | Hollywood elite | antisemitic | Reject learning languages connected to rich cultures and history, Instead consoom fake language made by Hollywood writers. | 2023-05-04 | null | null | null | consoom | 38 |
colloquial | based | based | white supremacist | Ok let's do something different once, can you imagine how cool most of these CONSOOM dens would look like if their owners based them on an actual hobby like history or something instead of capeshit? | 2023-04-30 | null | null | null | consoom | 39 |
colloquial | cuck | cuck | white supremacist | Consoom soytuber cuck "Fidget Toy" | 2023-03-22 | null | null | null | consoom | 40 |
colloquial | cuck | cuck | white supremacist | Consoom being a literal soytuber cuck. | 2023-03-12 | null | null | null | consoom | 41 |
colloquial | cuck | cuck | white supremacist | Consoom soytuber cuck plushie. | 2023-03-06 | null | null | null | consoom | 42 |
colloquial | Amerimutt | Amerimutt | white supremacist | Median Amerimutt. | 2023-02-27 | null | null | null | consoom | 43 |
colloquial | soy | soy boy | anti-liberal | some eceleb makes the soy consoomer face while hugging another eceleb | 2023-01-22 | null | null | null | consoom | 44 |
colloquial | blue | blueish | antisemitic | consoom the blue jooce | 2023-01-19 | null | null | null | consoom | 45 |
colloquial | soy | soy boy | anti-liberal | Consoom soy 🤩 | 2023-01-17 | null | null | null | consoom | 46 |
colloquial | soy | soy boy | anti-liberal | Ol' reliable: The evergreen soy pop. | 2023-01-13 | null | null | null | consoom | 47 |
colloquial | soy | soy boy | anti-liberal | One percent rise? Time to consoom influencer soy | 2023-01-11 | null | null | null | consoom | 48 |
colloquial | blue | blueish | antisemitic | Consoom blue liquid! | 2022-12-22 | null | null | null | consoom | 49 |
colloquial | soy | soy boy | anti-liberal | Would my brother be a consoomer? He used to collect a fuckton of bottles and cans from parties and in general, alongside rare alcohol gifted to him. Am I cringe and soy aswell since I also gave him some pineapple tequila for his Birthday which I brought from my vacation. | 2022-11-25 | null | null | null | consoom | 50 |
colloquial | soy | soy boy | anti-liberal | Typical bug catching soy consoomer | 2022-10-09 | null | null | null | consoom | 51 |
colloquial | NPC | NPC | anti-liberal | Consoom NTFs become a real NPC. | 2022-09-07 | null | null | null | consoom | 52 |
colloquial | Hollywood | Hollywood elite | antisemitic | ‘Twisted, Woke’ Racism – Facebook & Hollywood Face New Suit For Race Based Hiring | 2023-09-08 | null | null | null | conservatives | 53 |
colloquial | the Fed | Federal Reserve | antisemitic | Whistleblowers in the Banking Industry Warned the Federal Government About the Bidens Hoovering Up Suspicious Truckloads of Foreign Money in 2015 | 2023-09-07 | null | null | null | conservatives | 54 |
colloquial | illegals | illegal immigrant | anti-Latino | A Strange Solution - Pave over the countryside to house illegals. | 2023-09-07 | null | null | null | conservatives | 55 |
colloquial | Baltimore | references to cities with large racial minority populations being overrun by crime, drugs, rodents | racist | Former Baltimore Mayor Running For Her Old Job 13 Years After Resigning In Scandal | 2023-09-07 | null | null | null | conservatives | 56 |
colloquial | terrorism | Islamic terrorism | Islamophobic | Over 60 Atlanta ‘Stop Cop City’ Activists Indicted on RICO Charges - Other charges include domestic terrorism, arson in the first degree, and money laundering. | 2023-09-06 | null | null | null | conservatives | 57 |
colloquial | Soros | George Soros | antisemitic | Anti-American Soros Praises EU as ‘Beacon,’ Warns Against Make America Great Again GOP | 2023-09-06 | null | null | null | conservatives | 58 |
colloquial | Make America Great Again | MAGA | white supremacist | Anti-American Soros Praises EU as ‘Beacon,’ Warns Against Make America Great Again GOP | 2023-09-06 | null | null | null | conservatives | 59 |
colloquial | entitlements | entitlement programs | racist | Interest on national debt on pace to eclipse entitlements, defense spending amid funding battles | Just The News | 2023-09-06 | null | null | null | conservatives | 60 |
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