Trump's Uplifting Easter Message

Why is it you people always try to pull the wool over everyone.

I just did a search.

Transgender Visibility Day never existed before.

Matter of fact if you had mentioned this back in 2009 even Gays would have told you to fuck off.

Most Gays don't like cross-dressers. They think they're too weird to associate with.







Seems like your search was woefully short of accurate sites.
 
Easter is a wonderful Christian holiday. If only we had remained the white Christian country we were founded as.
What does being white, have to do with being a Christian?
youre to braindead to realize most of that kind of stuff is for you,,

we like watching you lose your collective minds,,
Does Jesus approve?
 
Says the guy who supports *

Blindly taking covid jabs
Trans genital mutilation
Original sin (being white)
Atonement (being an BiPOC/LGBT ally)
Reparations

Yeah who's the cultist again?
You. Here are some of the reparations given in your lifetime.

1970: Richard Nixon signed into law House Resolution 471 restoring Blue Lake and surrounding area to the Taos Pueblo (New Mexico). The land had been taken by presidential order in 1906. (A History of the Indians in the United States by Angie Debo (Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1984, p. 422); see also "Taos Pueblo celebrates 40th anniversary of Blue Lake's return" by Matthew van Buren, Santa Fe New Mexican, September 18, 2010.)

The payments from 1971-1988 are taken from the booklet Black Reparations Now! 40 Acres, $50 Dollars, and a Mule, + Interest by Dorothy Benton-Lewis; and borrowed from N’COBRA (National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America).

1971: Around $1 billion + 44 million acres of land: Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act.

1974: A $10 million out-of-court settlement was reached between the U.S. government and Tuskegee victims, black men who had been unwitting subjects of a study of untreated syphilis, and who did not receive available treatments. (“The Tuskegee Timeline”, CDC, updated March 2, 2020.)

1980: $81 million: Klamaths of Oregon. ("Spending Spree" by Dylan Darling, Herald and News (Klamath Falls, OR), June 21, 2005.)

1980: $105 million: Sioux of South Dakota for seizure of their land. (United States v. Sioux Nation of Indians, 448 U.S. 371 (1980).)

1985: $12.3 million: Seminoles of Florida. (see Racial Justice in America: A Reference Handbook by David B. Mustard, 2002, ABC-CLIO, p. 81.)

1985: $31 million: Chippewas of Wisconsin. (see Racial Justice in America: A Reference Handbook by David B. Mustard, 2002, ABC-CLIO, p. 81.)

1986: $32 million per 1836 Treaty: Ottawas of Michigan. (see Racial Justice in America: A Reference Handbook by David B. Mustard, 2002, ABC-CLIO, p. 81.)

2016: The U.S. government reached a settlement of $492 million with 17 Native American tribes to resolve lawsuits alleging the federal government mismanaged tribal land, resources, and money. (“U.S. Government To Pay $492 Million To 17 American Indian Tribes” by Rebecca Hersher, NPR, September 27, 2016.)

2018: The Supreme Court, in a 4-4 deadlock, let stand a lower court's order to the state of Washington to make billions of dollars worth of repairs to roads, where the state had built culverts below road channels and structures in a way that prevented salmon from swimming through and reaching their spawning grounds, that had damaged the state’s salmon habitats and contributed to population loss. The case involved the Stevens Treaties, a series of agreements in 1854-55, in which tribes in Washington State gave up millions of acres of land in exchange for "the right to take fish." Implicit in the treaties, courts would later rule, was a guarantee that there would be enough fish for the tribes to harvest. Destroying the habitat reduces the population and thus violates these treaties. This decision directly affects the Swinomish Tribe. ("A Victory For A Tribe That’s Lost Its Salmon" by John Eligon, The New York Times, June 12, 2018.)
 
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Seems like your search was woefully short of accurate sites.
Nothing I see here says it was a Nationally observed day.......and no president has the authority to make it a national holiday.

Only congress can do that.
 
Another delusion.
The reality of the world is of constant pain and suffering with periods of happiness. I do not know the personal ambitions of that other era. I do know that the Western Hemisphere has had no major wars with a huge population reduction for that amount of time. Many nations do not want to bite the bullet and do the hard work necessary to grow their economies. They want the fast way. And they became skitterish with different economic programs. Now we are doing that. Some have lived for the day, endlessly like Haiti.
 

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