Thanks for human rights
【USA Mail
magazine from the White House 2018-03-13a 】
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Your
1600 Daily:
How to secure
our schools After the horrific shooting at a
Parkland, Florida, high school last month, President Donald J.
Trump met with students, teachers, lawmakers, and local
officials to hear every idea they had about how to keep
violence out of America’s schools.
Every child in our
Nation has a right to feel safe. To achieve that goal, the
President will announce a series of actions to protect our
children and their communities:
Hardening
our schools: The Administration will make sure our
schools are safe and secure—just like our airports,
stadiums, and government buildings—with better training and
preparedness.
Strengthening
background checks and prevention: President Trump is
supporting legislation and reforms to strengthen the
background checks system and law enforcement operations.
Reforming
mental health programs: The President is proposing an
expansion and reform of mental health programs, including
those that help identify and treat individuals who may be a
threat to themselves or others.
- Keeping the
conversation going: In addition to these immediate
actions, President Trump is establishing a Federal Commission
on School Safety, chaired by Secretary of Education Betsy
DeVos, to recommend policy and funding proposals for school
violence prevention.
Watch
First Lady Melania Trump meeting with Parkland student Kyle
Kashuv.
California’s
resistance This week, the Department of Justice
filed a lawsuit against the State of California to save lives
and keep dangerous criminals off our streets. For far too long,
California has obstructed Federal law and put the interests of
criminals who are in United States illegally ahead of the
well-being of American citizens.
Below is just one
example of a dangerous criminal that California set
free—despite the lawful request of U.S. Immigrations and
Customs Enforcement (ICE) to hold him until Federal authorities
could arrive:
On Aug. 2, 2017, the
Santa Rosa Police Department arrested a citizen of Guatemala on
charges of inflicting corporal injury to a spouse/cohabitant.
That same day, ICE lodged a “detainer,” which includes a
request to the local jail to notify ICE before the inmate is
released.
The next day, the Sonoma
County Jail provided ICE with only 24 minutes notice
before it released the suspect—despite the fact that the jail
is about 65 miles from the nearest ICE field office. On Aug.
18, 2017, the Santa Rosa Police Department arrested the same
individual as a suspect in the murder of his alleged
girlfriend.
See
more stories of the life-and-death consequences of California’s
resistance to Federal law.
The
best jobs news in 2 decades The opening months of
2018 has marked the strongest average monthly job growth in
more than two decades, the Council of Economic Advisers wrote
last week following the release of February employment data
from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Nonfarm
payroll employment rose by 313,000 last month, and average
hourly earnings increased 2.6 percent since the same period
last year. Since January 2017, 2.5 million jobs have been added
to the economy.
“I
mean, the only sector of the economy that got smaller in
February was the Federal government,” Vice President Mike
Pence joked in Cleveland, Ohio, on Friday.
Learn
more about the best news on jobs in more than 2 decades.
Photo of
the Day
First Lady
Melania Trump and Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School student
Kyle Kashuv | March 8, 2018 (Official White House
Photo by Andrea Hanks)
POTUS TODAY
Today, President Trump
will host the 2017 World Series Champion Houston Astros. The
President will then have lunch with Secretary of Energy Rick
Perry.
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