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Autodesk Civil 3D 2022: Fundamentals – Part 1 (Imperial Units): Autodesk Au…
Autodesk Civil 3D 2022: Fundamentals – Part 1 (Imperial Units): Autodesk Au…
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Autodesk Civil 3D 2022: Fundamentals – Part 1 (Imperial Units)Are you looking to learn the basics of Autodesk Civil 3D 2022 using Imperial units? Look no further! In this first part of our series, we will cover the essential tools and functionalities of Autodesk Civil 3D 2022 in the Imperial unit system.
Join us as we dive into the world of Civil 3D and learn how to create and manage civil engineering projects with ease. From creating surfaces to designing alignments and profiles, this course will equip you with the necessary skills to excel in your civil engineering projects.
Stay tuned for more updates on Autodesk Civil 3D 2022: Fundamentals – Part 1 (Imperial Units) and take your civil engineering skills to the next level with Autodesk AutoCAD.
#Autodesk #Civil #Fundamentals #Part #Imperial #Units #Autodesk #Au..,autodesk civil 3d 2025 unleashed bookAutodesk Civil 3D 2025 Unleashed: Elevate your civil engineering designs and adv
Autodesk Civil 3D 2025 Unleashed: Elevate your civil engineering designs and adv
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ance your career with the latest version of Autodesk Civil 3D 2025!The new release of Civil 3D is packed with powerful features and enhancements that will take your civil engineering designs to the next level. From improved collaboration tools to enhanced design capabilities, this software is designed to streamline your workflow and boost your productivity.
With Civil 3D 2025, you can create stunning 3D models of your infrastructure projects, analyze and simulate different design scenarios, and generate accurate construction documentation with ease. The new and improved tools, such as the enhanced corridor design functionality and dynamic surface creation, make it easier than ever to design complex roadways, intersections, and grading projects.
Not only will Civil 3D 2025 help you elevate your designs, but it will also advance your career in the competitive field of civil engineering. By mastering this cutting-edge software, you will stand out from the crowd and become a valuable asset to any engineering firm or project team.
So why wait? Upgrade to Autodesk Civil 3D 2025 today and unleash your full potential as a civil engineer. Let this powerful software propel your designs to new heights and take your career to the next level. Don’t miss out on this opportunity to revolutionize your workflow and achieve success in the world of civil engineering. Get ready to elevate your designs and advance your career with Autodesk Civil 3D 2025! #CivilEngineering #AutodeskCivil3D2025 #ElevateYourDesigns #AdvanceYourCareer
#Autodesk #Civil #Unleashed #Elevate #civil #engineering #designs #adv,autodesk civil 3d 2025 unleashed bookAutodesk Civil 3D 2025 Unleashed: Elevate your civil engineering designs and ad,
Autodesk Civil 3D 2025 Unleashed: Elevate your civil engineering designs and ad,
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Are you ready to take your civil engineering designs to the next level? Look no further than Autodesk Civil 3D 2025 Unleashed! With its advanced features and tools, you can elevate your projects like never before.From creating accurate and detailed 3D models to streamlining your workflows, Civil 3D 2025 has everything you need to bring your designs to life. With its powerful design capabilities and comprehensive documentation tools, you can create stunning visuals and precise plans with ease.
Don’t settle for average designs – unleash the full potential of your civil engineering projects with Autodesk Civil 3D 2025. Upgrade now and see the difference for yourself!
#Autodesk #Civil #Unleashed #Elevate #civil #engineering #designs,autodesk civil 3d 2025 unleashed bookTrump Will Strip Protections from Career Civil Servants, Miller Says
President-elect Donald J. Trump is planning a string of executive orders during his first days in office, including one to strip job protections from career civil servants, his top policy adviser told Republican members of Congress on Sunday, according to two people briefed on the matter.
In a phone call with a few dozen Republicans on Sunday, Stephen Miller, Mr. Trump’s incoming homeland security adviser and deputy White House chief of staff overseeing policy, laid out the broad strokes of what Mr. Trump is planning on energy, immigration and federal workers. The call was reported earlier by the website Punchbowl and confirmed by two people briefed on the conversation.
A Trump spokesman did not respond to an email seeking comment.
Mr. Trump has indicated he plans to sign roughly 100 executive orders in the initial days of his presidency, with a number coming within hours of his being sworn in on Monday.
Among them are substantial actions to reshape the federal bureaucracy’s workplace rules, which are in line with various promises that Mr. Trump made on the campaign trail.
Mr. Miller described, while providing little detail, executive orders to undo actions taken by President Biden to institute “diversity, equity and inclusion” measures in federal agencies, and to roll back protections for transgender people receiving some government services.
Mr. Trump also plans to reinstate an order he issued during his first term to create a new category of federal workers, known as Schedule F, that would lack the same job protections enjoyed by career civil servants, who are supposed to be hired according to merit and cannot be arbitrarily fired. That would allow his administration to shift large numbers of federal workers into a new status over which it could keep a much tighter rein, including the ability to hire and fire them more easily. The order is significant as Mr. Trump and Mr. Miller have a deep hostility toward large portions of the federal bureaucracy, which the president-elect often derisively calls the “deep state.”
Mr. Trump is also planning a string of orders related to energy policy, much of which arise from pledges to encourage offshore drilling and end the electric vehicle tax credit, as well as stop spending on Mr. Biden’s climate policies.
And on immigration, as The New York Times has reported, Mr. Trump is planning to designate drug cartels as “foreign terrorist organizations”; declare a border emergency to allow him to go around Congress and surge money and potentially military resources to the border; and declare a public health emergency to essentially seal the border as the administration did during the coronavirus pandemic. He also is expected to curtail asylum grants and step up detentions and deportations.
Mr. Miller has been leading the executive order process throughout the transition, aiming for as much secrecy as possible and only opening the aperture internally as time went on so that various agency heads could see some of the work. He has been using a team of lawyers to vet them.
At his rally at the Capital One Arena on Sunday afternoon, Mr. Trump told the crowd that the executive orders would make them “extremely happy.”
He said he had beaten back efforts by some advisers to delay his Day 1 executive orders, saying he wants to give the country a massive first day and first week in office filled with activity.
Mr. Trump also said he plans to quickly release the classified files related to the assassinations of John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr.
And he previewed coming clemency grants for people convicted in connection with the attack on the Capitol by a pro-Trump mob on Jan. 6, 2021. He referred to them as “hostages,” as he has throughout the campaign.
In a recent statement, senior advisor to President Trump, Stephen Miller, announced plans to strip protections from career civil servants. This move is seen as a direct attack on the nonpartisan nature of the civil service and has raised concerns about the politicization of government agencies.The proposed changes would make it easier to fire federal employees and would limit their ability to appeal disciplinary actions. This could have far-reaching implications for the functioning of government agencies and the delivery of essential services to the American people.
Critics argue that this move is part of a broader effort by the Trump administration to undermine the independence of the civil service and consolidate power in the hands of political appointees. By stripping protections from career civil servants, the administration may be able to silence dissent and push through controversial policies without facing internal opposition.
It remains to be seen how Congress and the courts will respond to these proposed changes, but one thing is clear: the future of the civil service is at stake. Stay tuned for updates on this developing story.
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Remote Work for Civil Servants Faces a Challenge Under Trump
When the Social Security Administration agreed to a five-year extension of work-from-home arrangements for tens of thousands of employees in early December, many at the agency expressed relief.
But the reprieve may be short-lived. At a news conference two weeks later, President-elect Donald J. Trump railed against the deal and said he would go to court to undo it. “If people don’t come back to work, come back into the office,” he said, “they’re going to be dismissed.”
The back-and-forth previewed what is likely to be one of the earliest points of contention of Mr. Trump’s second administration. Over the past few years, many federal workers have organized their lives around hybrid arrangements that help them juggle work and family responsibilities, and have gone so far as to demand that the Biden administration preserve the status quo. Some have rushed to join the roughly one-quarter to one-third of federal workers who are unionized, so that telework policies will be negotiable.
But to the president-elect and his allies, the work-from-home arrangements are not only a glaring example of liberal permissiveness run amok — “a gift to a union,” Mr. Trump said — but also a tantalizing opportunity to clear the federal government of obstructionist workers and to vastly shrink its reach.
In a Wall Street Journal column in November, Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, the businessmen tapped to lead Mr. Trump’s government efficiency commission, said they would welcome “a wave of voluntary terminations” triggered by forcing federal employees to work from an office five days a week.
Many private-sector employers have recently announced such policies, arguing that in-person work improves communication, mentoring and collaboration.
The looming collision has heightened the tension across Washington as Mr. Trump heads into his second term. One government employee involved in a union campaign seeking to preserve work-from-home arrangements said union officials worried that, as with the Social Security Administration, press coverage of the effort would put a target on the agency involved and inspire the Trump administration to crack down.
“We are not ready to discuss all of this publicly just yet,” said a representative of the union, the National Treasury Employees Union.
Mr. Trump will not be the first president to chafe at his employees’ attachment to working from home. The Obama administration adopted a policy making it easier for federal employees to work remotely, but it could not envision the scale that would become common during the pandemic. By 2022, President Biden was seeking to dial it back.
Mr. Biden proclaimed in that year’s State of the Union address that “the vast majority of federal workers will once again work in person,” and his administration issued memos laying out a new approach in 2023. Whatever the substantive merits, it surely wasn’t lost on Mr. Biden that Republicans had made a political issue out of “bubble bath bureaucrats” who lounged around their homes at taxpayer expense, as a news release from Senator Joni Ernst, an Iowa Republican, put it.
But change was slow to come. A study of federal buildings found that they were typically under one-third of their prepandemic occupancy in 2023. The White House chief of staff, Jeffrey D. Zients, repeatedly grumbled that “we don’t yet have the return-to-work levels that we should have,” as he said in an April 2024 interview. About 15 to 20 percent of civilian federal workers are based in the Washington area.
Overall, Washington’s weekly occupancy rates were below average for 10 large metro areas last year, outpaced by places including New York and Chicago, according to data from Kastle, the building security firm. (Average occupancy across the 10 areas is still about half the prepandemic level, according to Kastle.)
Part of the explanation may be that Washington is politically liberal, even by the standards of a major American city — Vice President Kamala Harris won more than 90 percent of the vote there against Mr. Trump in November, versus about 82 percent in Manhattan and 77 percent in Chicago. It also skews somewhat young. Polls suggest both characteristics correlate with a preference for working from home.
When the president of the Brookings Institution announced in late October that the Washington-based think tank would require most employees to work from the office at least three days a week beginning in March, younger employees expressed concern that the burden would fall disproportionately on them, since commuting and child care costs could eat up a higher portion of their relatively low salaries.
The consequences will be “felt differently across the employee base,” one research fellow warned the Brookings president, Cecilia Rouse, at a meeting with employees to discuss the change.
“We have four months,” said Dr. Rouse, a former top White House economist under Mr. Biden. “And I sincerely hope that that gives enough time for people to find a way to make that work.” Dr. Rouse noted later in the meeting that employees at the conservative American Enterprise Institute were already expected to go to the office five days a week.
Beyond age and political orientation, the attachment to working from home may reflect the unique sociology of the capital, which is filled with earnest grinders who are passionate about their work and, all things equal, prefer to spend more time on it, not less.
“If I’m mission-driven, why would I want to waste two hours in the car?” said Kenneth Baer, who was a senior official at the Office of Management and Budget under President Barack Obama.
In 2023, after the Justice Department indicated that it would soon require employees to spend two or three days in the office a week on average, up from one, a group of department lawyers wrote to their leadership saying the shift would be self-defeating.
In anonymous testimonials, more than two dozen lawyers expressed enthusiasm for their work — “I love my job” was a common sentiment — and went into exquisite detail about the productivity gains that telework had brought by sparing them long commutes and office banter.
“I can write briefs in approximately 60 percent as much time as when I am in the office,” one lawyer wrote. “The first year of maximum telework was one of the two most productive of my 12 years in the department — and that’s even though I had two children under 4 at home with no reliable child care.”
Several said they had effectively split the work-from-home dividend between themselves and the government: They did more work, but also spent more time tending to children and their mental health. The testimonials align with a survey in mid-2020 by the Stanford economist Nicholas Bloom and two colleagues, who found that the typical office worker saved about 80 minutes a day when working from home, about 40 percent of which was used to do more work. A recent Labor Department study found that industries with higher rates of remote work had larger increases in productivity.
The determination to protect these work-from-home prerogatives has led to a series of standoffs between federal employees and their overseers during the final months of the Biden administration.
Lawyers in the Justice Department divisions that focus on civil rights and the environment sought to unionize last year to help preserve their remote-work arrangements and to protect themselves in case Mr. Trump follows through on his declared intention to revive an executive order that would make it easier to fire civil servants.
The civil rights lawyers had to overcome opposition from their leadership, which initially argued that department lawyers were unable to form a union because of restrictions on workers involved in national security matters, according to Bloomberg Law. They voted last week to unionize.
The Justice Department declined to comment.
Hundreds of employees at the Federal Trade Commission voted in September to unionize, partly because they hoped to protect their work-from-home arrangements under future administrations. But after quickly recognizing the union, the agency’s chair, Lina Khan, let months pass before engaging with it, according to a labor source familiar with the negotiation. Contract negotiations began in earnest only this week, according to the source, amid pressure from labor leaders and friendly politicians.
A person briefed on Ms. Khan’s thinking said that the agency received a concrete contract proposal only in mid-December and that it had to digest the details while filing cases and making orders final before the administration ended.
Still, it is unclear how much the push by employees will help them. Mr. Trump’s choice to lead the Office of Management and Budget has said allies of the new administration hope that bureaucrats will “not want to go to work because they are increasingly viewed as the villains” and that they will be “traumatically affected.”
Donald Kettl, an emeritus professor at the University of Maryland who is an expert on the civil service, said that while federal employees’ efforts to retain their working conditions through unionizing and negotiating new contracts carried some weight in principle, he expected the Trump administration to disregard them in many cases.
“Anything that’s not enshrined in the law, I think they’ll want to challenge,” Dr. Kettl said, referring to civil service protections. “And if it is enshrined in the law, I think they’ll go after that as well.”
With the recent changes in leadership at the federal level, remote work for civil servants is facing a new challenge under the Trump administration. As the new administration takes office, there has been a push to bring more federal employees back into the office and away from remote work arrangements.This shift in policy has raised concerns among civil servants who have been working remotely for various reasons, such as health concerns, family obligations, or the need for a flexible work schedule. Many employees have found remote work to be a successful and productive arrangement, allowing them to balance their work and personal lives effectively.
However, with the new administration’s push to bring employees back into the office, many civil servants are now grappling with the uncertainty of their remote work arrangements. This has created a sense of unease and anxiety among employees who rely on remote work for various reasons.
As the debate over remote work continues, it is important for the new administration to consider the needs and preferences of civil servants who have found remote work to be a successful and beneficial arrangement. Finding a balance between the needs of the government and the preferences of employees will be key in ensuring a smooth transition for civil servants as they navigate this new challenge under the Trump administration.
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Grant Unleashed: A Biography of Ulysses S. Grant—The Union General and U.S. President Who Won the American Civil War and Saved the United States
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A history of the revolutionary, emperor, and military genius who reshaped Europe and defined modern leadership. The people who wrestled with god, ghettos, and genocide to achieve modern statehood. An introductory history of Rome from the rise of the monarchy to the fall of the Western Empire. A concise survey of Greek history from the Bronze Age to the end of the Hellenistic Period. Greek and Roman history from the Bronze Age to the fall of the Western Roman Empire.ASIN : B0D5ZBPQJQ
Publisher : Independently published (June 2, 2024)
Language : English
Hardcover : 173 pages
ISBN-13 : 979-8327407275
Item Weight : 10.1 ounces
Dimensions : 5.5 x 0.58 x 8.5 inchesCustomers say
Customers find the book informative and interesting. They appreciate the thorough biography that covers Grant’s early life, family and personal influences, military achievements, and personal life. The writing style is described as concise and easy to read. Readers appreciate the balanced depiction of Grant, capturing both his strengths and weaknesses. They value the thoughtful presentation of the gritty details of his military strategies. Overall, customers find the information quality relevant and meaningful.
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Grant Unleashed: A Biography of Ulysses S. Grant—The Union General and U.S. President Who Won the American Civil War and Saved the United StatesUlysses S. Grant, a name synonymous with victory and leadership during one of the most tumultuous periods in American history—the Civil War. From humble beginnings as a West Point graduate to the highest office in the land, Grant’s rise to prominence is a story of perseverance, determination, and unwavering dedication to his country.
As a Union general, Grant’s military prowess and strategic brilliance played a crucial role in securing victory for the North over the Confederacy. His relentless pursuit of the enemy and bold tactics earned him the nickname “Unconditional Surrender” Grant, solidifying his reputation as a fierce and determined leader.
After the war, Grant transitioned into politics and was elected as the 18th President of the United States. During his presidency, Grant worked tirelessly to heal the wounds of the nation and promote civil rights for all citizens. Despite facing numerous challenges and controversies during his time in office, Grant remained steadfast in his commitment to preserving the Union and upholding the principles of democracy.
Grant’s legacy as a military hero and statesman continues to endure, serving as a testament to the strength and resilience of the American spirit. In “Grant Unleashed: A Biography of Ulysses S. Grant,” readers will delve deep into the life and times of this remarkable figure, exploring the triumphs and tribulations that defined his legacy and shaped the course of American history.
Join us on a journey through the life of Ulysses S. Grant, as we uncover the man behind the myth and celebrate the enduring legacy of a true American hero. Grant Unleashed is a must-read for history buffs, Civil War enthusiasts, and anyone interested in the remarkable story of one of America’s greatest leaders.
#Grant #Unleashed #Biography #Ulysses #GrantThe #Union #General #U.S #President #Won #American #Civil #War #Saved #United #States,autodesk civil 3d 2025 unleashedCivil rights leaders and King family mark MLK Day as a special call to action as Trump takes office
WASHINGTON (AP) — When President-elect Donald Trump is sworn in as president of the United States inside the Capitol’s rotunda, he will do so facing a bust of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. on the federal holiday commemorating King’s legacy.
It’s a disquieting contrast for some civil rights advocates who wish to fulfill the late reverend’s dream of non-violent social revolution.
Events honoring King and advocating for his vision of a just society will occur across the nation as many in the U.S. observe the peaceful transfer of power in the capital. The concurrent events have been met with mixed feelings by civil rights leaders, who broadly reviled Trump’s rhetoric and stances on race and civil rights during his third presidential campaign.
But many leaders, including King’s own family, see the juxtaposition as a poignant contrast and a chance to refocus the work of advancing civil rights in a new political era.
“I’m glad it occurred on that day because it gives the United States of America and the world the contrast in pictures. Is this the way you want to go — or is this the way you want to go?” said the Rev. Bernice King, the late King’s youngest daughter and CEO of the King Center.
“It’s not a day that he can be the star, which he loves to be,” King’s daughter said of Trump. “He has to contend with that legacy on that day, regardless of how he manages it and handles it in his presentation. I hope those around him are advising him well to honor the day appropriately in his speech.”
This is the third time in the nearly 40 years since the federal King holiday became law that it coincides with a presidential inauguration. Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama also were sworn in for their second terms on the holiday. Both praised King in their remarks; it is yet to be seen if and how Trump — who falsely claimed his first inauguration had larger crowds than King’s March on Washington — will acknowledge the day.
“Will he sound a message of unity and a presidency for all, or will he continue to focus on his base and some of the divisive policies he’s championed, like an anti-DEI stance, rounding up immigrants and cutting important parts of the social safety net through this DOGE (Department of Government Efficiency) process?” asked Marc Morial, president of the National Urban League civil rights group.
Morial added that Trump’s inauguration landing on MLK Day represented “a contradiction of values.”
Many civil rights leaders will spend the day commemorating King’s legacy after a week of public and private organizing, giving speeches and strategizing how to respond to the incoming administration’s agenda.
“It’s the best of times and the worst of times,” said Derrick Johnson, president of the NAACP, an organization whose members mentored, collaborated and clashed with King throughout the Civil Rights Movement.
“Our mission doesn’t change. Our job is to make democracy work for all, to make sure that equal protection is ensured under the law,” Johnson said. He added that the group “doesn’t want to assume” the Trump administration can’t be a partner on advancing civil rights or racial justice.
On Wednesday, Johnson and other civil rights leaders met with Congressional Black Caucus members on Capitol Hill to discuss how to work with and to oppose the Trump administration. That same day, the National Action Network, a civil rights group founded by the Rev. Al Sharpton, hosted a breakfast at which Vice President Kamala Harris urged attendees to stay motivated.
“Ours is a journey,” she said. “Whatever the outcome of any particular moment, we can never be defeated. Our spirit can never be defeated, because when that happens, we won’t win.”
Martin Luther King III, the late King’s eldest son, prayed with Harris on stage. King had campaigned for Harris in the fall and called her an advocate who “speaks to our better angels” and “embodies Dr. King’s legacy.”
Many racial justice advocates are set to organize demonstrations, vigils and community service events to mark the holiday and prepare for what they consider an adversarial administration.
Some groups are reflecting on parallels and differences with how King organized in the face of explicitly white supremacist state and local governments and geopolitical tumult.
“The hostility is similar, particularly in that there is a mobilized, active and aggressive extremist-right hell bent on unraveling rights and any sense of shared purpose, shared problems or shared solutions,” said Maya Wiley, CEO of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights. What differs, Wiley said, is the understanding “there has to be opportunity for everyone.”
King himself worried the legal protections he dedicated his life to realizing would not be followed by greater anti-discrimination efforts or social programs. He proposed it would take white Americans embracing a deeper kinship with Black Americans and engaging in economic and social solidarity to see change.
A year before his 1968 assassination, King wrote in his final book that giving a Black person their “due” often required “special treatment.”
“I am aware of the fact that this has been a troublesome concept for many liberals, since it conflicts with their traditional ideal of equal opportunity and equal treatment of people according to their individual merits,” King wrote in the 1967 book, “Where Do We Go From Here: Chaos or Community.” “But this is a day which demands new thinking and the reevaluation of old concepts.”
King’s advocacy for “new concepts” found an heir in the enactment of affirmative action policies in workplaces and schools. Many advocates of diversity, equity and inclusion policies see such programs as realizing his vision, though that argument has come under withering scrutiny from conservative activists.
Trump’s views on race have been criticized for decades. He was found liable for discriminating against Black tenants as a New York realtor in the 1980s. He was instrumental in promoting the “birther” conspiracy theory that Obama was not born in the U.S. And his campaign rhetoric about immigrants and urban communities since 2015 up to November’s election has been derided as prejudiced.
As president, Trump enacted some criminal justice reform laws that civil rights advocates praised but then proposed harsh crackdowns on 2020 racial reckoning protests.
In April, Trump did not dispute the notion that “anti-white racism” now represents a greater problem in the U.S. than systemic racism against Black Americans.
“I think there is a definite anti-white feeling in this country and that can’t be allowed either,” Trump said during an interview with Time magazine.
At the end of his life, King reflected on the early backlash to civil rights, especially with integrated housing developments, interracial marriage and necessary economic and social programs. He expressed frustration with then-President Lyndon B. Johnson for prolonging the Vietnam War rather than making a greater investment in anti-poverty efforts.
“This is where the civil rights movement stands today. We will err and falter as we climb the unfamiliar slopes of steep mountains, but there is no alternative, well-trod, level path,” King wrote. “There will be agonizing setbacks along with creative advances. Our consolation is that no one can know the true taste of victory if he has never swallowed defeat.”
___
Associated Press reporter Kate Brumback in Atlanta contributed to this report.
Today, civil rights leaders and members of the King family are coming together to mark Martin Luther King Jr. Day as a special call to action, particularly as Donald Trump takes office as the 45th President of the United States.On this day, we remember the legacy of Dr. King and the tireless fight for equality and justice that he championed. As we face a new administration, it is more important than ever to uphold the values of tolerance, diversity, and compassion that Dr. King stood for.
In the face of rising tensions and division in our country, we must remember Dr. King’s message of love and unity. We must continue to speak out against injustice and discrimination, and work towards a more inclusive society for all.
As we honor Dr. King’s memory today, let us recommit ourselves to the ongoing struggle for civil rights and social justice. Let us stand together in solidarity, and continue the fight for equality and freedom for all. #MLKDay #CivilRights #Justice #Equality
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#Civil #rights #leaders #King #family #mark #MLK #Day #special #call #action #Trump #takes #officeBiden pardons five people including late civil rights leader Marcus Garvey
Generate Key TakeawaysWASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. President Joe Biden pardoned five people on Sunday, including the late civil rights leader Marcus Garvey, and commuted the sentences of two, the White House said in a statement.
Garvey, who died in 1940, was a civil rights leader who was convicted of mail fraud in 1923 and sentenced to five years’ imprisonment, a sentence that was commuted by President Calvin Coolidge in 1927.
Human rights organizations credit Garvey as the first man to organize a mass movement among African-Americans. The White House said he created Black Star Line shipping company and founded the Universal Negro Improvement Association, which celebrated African history and culture.
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The other people pardoned include Darryl Chambers, a gun violence prevention advocate who was convicted of a non-violent drug offense, immigration advocate Ravidath “Ravi” Ragbir, who was convicted of a non-violent offense in 2001, the White House said in a statement.
Biden also pardoned Don Leonard Scott, who was convicted of a non-violent drug offense in 1994 and sentenced to 10 years in prison. Scott was elected to the Virginia state legislature in 2019 and became its first Black speaker last year, the White House said.
Kemba Smith Pradia, a criminal justice advocate who was previously convicted of a non-violent drug offense in 1994, also was pardoned.
Biden commuted the sentences of two others who were sentenced in the 1990s and whom he credited with remarkable rehabilitation: Robin Peoples and Michelle West.
(Reporting by Doina Chiacu; Editing by Scott Malone)
In a historic move, President Joe Biden has granted pardons to five individuals, including the late civil rights leader Marcus Garvey. Garvey, a Jamaican-born activist and founder of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, was convicted of mail fraud in 1923 and deported from the United States.This pardon comes as a symbolic gesture to acknowledge Garvey’s contributions to the civil rights movement and his efforts to uplift and empower Black communities. Biden’s decision to pardon Garvey is seen as a step towards rectifying past injustices and honoring the legacy of a visionary leader.
In addition to Garvey, the four other individuals who received pardons from President Biden have not been publicly named. The White House has stated that these pardons are part of a broader effort to address systemic injustices and promote equality and justice for all Americans.
This historic gesture has been met with praise from civil rights activists and advocates, who see it as a meaningful step towards recognizing and honoring the contributions of those who have fought for justice and equality. As we continue to strive towards a more just and equitable society, gestures like these serve as a reminder of the importance of acknowledging and learning from our past.
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