Thanks for human rights
【USA Mail
magazine from the White House 2018-03-21b 】
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Your
1600 Daily:
Fighting the
Crisis Next Door Two million Americans suffer from
addiction to prescription or illicit opioids. In 2017, opioids
killed more people than either car accidents or gun violence.
Americans cannot let
stigma, silence, or a lack of information prevent us from
confronting this crisis. The Trump Administration is committed
to leading that charge. Just as President Trump shared
his personal story last October about his brother’s
struggle with alcoholism, all Americans whose lives have been
touched by opioid addiction deserve a place to tell their
stories.
Now, they have one.
“We're announcing a new website, CrisisNextDoor.gov,
where Americans can share their stories about the danger of the
opioid addiction and addictions,” President Trump said
yesterday in Manchester, New Hampshire. “This epidemic can
affect anyone, and that's why we want to educate everyone.”
If you have an
experience to share, you can record your story directly from
your iPhone or upload a pre-recorded video. You may also watch
what others have to say about confronting opioid addiction.
Visit
‘The Crisis Next Door’ now to hear these voices—or to
lend your own.
Restoring order
to our immigration system This afternoon,
President Trump is hosting a roundtable discussion with law
enforcement about sanctuary cities in the Roosevelt Room of the
White House. During the past year, the President has made a
priority of protecting Americans no matter where they live.
>From the earliest
days of his Administration, President Trump made it clear he
would not stand for lawlessness in the country’s immigration
system. That attitude got results quickly: In February of last
year, Miami-Dade County reversed its years-long sanctuary city
policies. By August, the Administration determined that
Miami-Dade County—Florida’s biggest—was now in
compliance.
Furthermore, one of the
President’s first Executive Orders informed sanctuary cities
that failure to abide by Federal immigration laws would
jeopardize their access to certain Federal grant money.
Read more:
Facing
the facts about our broken immigration system
A President
that puts rural America front and center Each U.S.
farmer feeds more than 165 people—a dramatic increase from 25
people per farmer just a half-century ago, according to the
Agriculture Council of America. Today is National Agriculture
Day, or “Ag Day,” which offers an opportunity to reflect on
the essential role agriculture plays in American life.
Throughout the past
year, President Trump has made rural America a centerpiece of
his Administration. In the President’s proposal for
rebuilding America’s infrastructure, he has asked Congress to
invest $50 billion in Federal funds for rural infrastructure.
“No doubt, rural
America has struggled under burdensome regulations with no
voice in Washington,” Secretary Perdue writes in the task
force’s report. “Under President Trump’s leadership, and
with the work of this task force, we can turn that around.”
Read
the President’s Ag Day Proclamation here.
Photo of
the Day
President Trump
delivers remarks on the Opioid Crisis | March 19, 2018
(Official White House Photo by Andrea Hanks)
POTUS TODAY
Today, President Trump
will welcome Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman of the Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia to the White House. The two will meet before
having a working lunch along with Vice President Mike Pence.
This morning, the Vice
President will deliver remarks at the U.S. Department of
Agriculture commemorating the President’s National
Agriculture Day Proclamation
This afternoon, the
President and Vice President will host a law enforcement
roundtable on sanctuary cities before attending the National
Republican Congressional Committee March Dinner.
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