Thanks for human rights
【USA Mail
magazine from the White House 2018-04-05a 】
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Your
1600 Daily:
Dr. King’s
legacy, 50 years later April 4 marks the kind of
anniversary America wishes it never had to endure. Fifty years
ago today, the life of our Nation’s greatest civil rights
icon was cut short by an assassin’s bullet at the Lorraine
Motel in Memphis, Tennessee.
Martin
Luther King, Jr., understood that for people to see one another
as equals, they had to feel the tugs of a bond stronger than
race. For King, that bond was America. He knew that the
struggle for civil rights was not about rejecting America’s
Founding ideals. On the contrary, it was about living up to our
shared values.
“The
Reverend’s devotion to fighting the injustice of segregation
and discrimination ignited the American spirit of fraternity
and reminded us of our higher purpose,” President Donald J.
Trump wrote in his 2018 Proclamation celebrating Martin Luther
King, Jr., Day earlier this year.
Read
more about why Martin Luther King, Jr., is the true model of an
American patriot.
More:
President
Trump proclaims the 50th anniversary of Dr. King’s
assassination
A missed
opportunity on immigration President Trump made it
clear this week that Congressional Democrats have been missing
in action when it comes to striking an immigration deal on
Capitol Hill. As a result, there is no fix in sight for the
troubled DACA program.
That
outcome is disappointing given clear public support for
President Trump’s proposed immigration compromise. The
President’s plan has four pillars, each endorsed by a
majority of voters:
63
percent of voters favor a deal that gives DACA
immigrants a path to citizenship in exchange for comprehensive
reforms to America’s immigration system and border security
84
percent think immigration priority should be based on
a person’s ability to contribute to the United States, not
based on having relatives here
70
percent oppose the Visa lottery system that randomly
picks 50,000 people to enter the U.S. each year
- 62 percent
believe current border security is inadequate—including 55
percent of Hispanic voters
Learn
more about why Democrats have missed a major opportunity on
comprehensive immigration reform.
America’s
Baltic friends America’s Baltic allies are
crucial strategic partners. Yesterday, President Trump welcomed
leaders from NATO members Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania to the
White House, congratulating the three countries on the 100th
anniversary of their declared independence from Russia.
From the
very beginning of Baltic independence, President Trump noted,
the United States never ceased to recognize the sovereignty of
these three nations. That remained true even through decades of
Soviet occupation in Eastern Europe during the Cold War.
The United
States continues to stand by its Baltic NATO allies under the
Trump Administration. America has boosted defense and security
cooperation in the region, helped advanced Baltic energy
security, and enriched cultural ties through exchanges and
other programs.
Read
more about the 3 key ways President Trump is supporting our
Baltic NATO allies.
Photo
of the Day
President Donald
J. Trump and the Baltic States Heads of Government |
April 3, 2018 (Official White House Photo by Joyce N.
Boghosian)
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