Serious question. When tRump is reelected and women can no longer vote or have bank accounts etc. will those women’s debts then all be forgiven? Asking for a friend.
#Project2025#VoteBlue2024ProtectDemocracy
Hitler did not operate the gas chambers himself. But he was responsible.
Bin Laden did not fly the planes himself. But he was responsible.
Trump did not storm the Capitol himself. But he was responsible.
Justice matters.
Wealth of Elon Musk
2012: $2,000,000,000
2023: $248,900,000,000
Wealth of Jeff Bezos
2012: $18,400,000,000
2023: $153,100,000,000
Wealth of Mark Zuckerberg
2012: $17,500,000,000
2023: $104,900,000,000
Federal Minimum Wage
2012: $7.25
2023: $7.25
Three words: tax the rich.
I have three grown sons now who are working in electrical engineering, teaching, and science.
I helped put all three of them through SUNY Universities. Not the same as those fancy ivy league colleges, but not cheap either.
It wasn't easy. I lived in a furnished room for years to be able to afford it. But I'm extremely proud of them.
That said, I bristle whenever I hear someone say "I had to pay my way through college, they should too."
There's so much wrong with that statement, but for starters, nobody was talking about footing the whole tuition, just a measly $10K. College kids are spending well over 10 years paying back their debt, it's ridiculous.
But you don't hear those same jerks complaining about rich people like Tom Brady or clowns like Marjorie Taylor Greene getting her $200K PPP loans forgiven.
I'd much rather my tax dollars go towards giving needy college kids a break than helping millionaires and billionaires finance a new yacht under that fucking GOP tax scam.
I definitely won't forget about how Republicans shafted the younger generation.
I hope they remember in 2024.
Dolly Parton has never been in a cage fight, but she *has* gifted over 200 million books to children through her Imagination Library. In a world full of Zuckerbergs and Musks, be a Dolly.
Affirmative action was never a complete answer in the drive towards a more just society. But for generations of students who had been systematically excluded from most of America’s key institutions—it gave us the chance to show we more than deserved a seat at the table.
In the wake of the Supreme Court’s recent decision, it’s time to redouble our efforts.