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Tag: Farewell
Kelsey Plum Pens Heartfelt Farewell to Las Vegas After Trade to Sparks
As basketball fans wait for the NBA trade deadline to heat up, the deals in the WNBA have already been flying ahead of the start of their season.
Along with center Brittney Griner’s move from the Phoenix Mercury to the Atlanta Dream, the biggest move of the WNBA offseason was a three-team deal that sent guard Jewell Loyd to the Las Vegas Aces and guard Kelsey Plum to the Los Angeles Sparks.
Plum, who has been with the Aces since their relocation and rebranding from the San Antonio Stars, posted a heartfelt farewell message on Instagram—paying tribute to the time she spent with the franchise.
“It’s been an incredible journey to be a part of the Aces organization, and Vegas will always hold a special place in my heart,” Plum wrote.
“Vegas is much more than the strip. It is a community of incredible people that have a real zest for life, and it is a true basketball town. The support and loyalty the city has for the Aces is incredible, and I’m so grateful that I got the chance to experience that love.”
Plum and Las Vegas won back-to-back titles in 2022 and ‘23, with the franchise quickly establishing itself as one of the best in the WNBA.
Now in Los Angeles, Plum will have the chance to team up with up-and-coming star forward Cameron Brink as the Sparks look to make a run at the title for the first time since 2016.
Dear Las Vegas,As I sit down to write this, my heart is heavy with mixed emotions. Today, I officially say goodbye to the city that has become my home over the past few years. It is with a heavy heart that I announce my trade to the Los Angeles Sparks.
Las Vegas, you have been so much more than just a city to me. You have been my sanctuary, my refuge, my safe haven. You welcomed me with open arms and embraced me as one of your own. You have watched me grow and evolve, both as a player and as a person. You have been there for me through the highs and lows, the wins and losses, the triumphs and tribulations.
I will forever be grateful for the love and support you have shown me. From the fans who cheered for me on game days to the teammates and coaches who pushed me to be the best version of myself, I am eternally thankful for the memories we have shared together.
Leaving Las Vegas is not easy, but I know that this is the next chapter in my journey. I am excited for the new challenges and opportunities that await me in Los Angeles. But no matter where my career takes me, Las Vegas will always hold a special place in my heart.
Thank you, Las Vegas, for everything. I will never forget the time I spent here and the memories we created together. I will always be a part of this city, and this city will always be a part of me.
With love and gratitude,
Kelsey Plum
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#Kelsey #Plum #Pens #Heartfelt #Farewell #Las #Vegas #Trade #SparksTouching Tractor Tribute: Farmers Bid Farewell to Steve Hamm, a Loyal Lifeline in the Field
A love for tractors and an admiration for John Deere green. That’s how you’d describe Steve Hamm, a John Deere mobile technician for 30 years. A father and grandpa, he was loved by many, as many in the community will tell you he was truly dedicated to his craft.
“Steve was a pioneer for that kind of knowledge. We really depended on him,” says Chris Roberson, general manager of Ag-Power, the John Deere dealership in Richmond, Mo., where Steve worked.
“He was a man of integrity,” says Dennis Estes, who worked with Steve at Ag-Power, but was also Steve’s friend and the pastor at his church. “He had a passion for what he did, and he was a person who served a lot of people.”
As a technician, Steve’s career revolved around service, but even then, Steve went above and beyond time and again.
“He lived to serve,” Roberson says. “He put everyone else above him or before him, and he was on call all the time. Whether it involved work or even personal family matters. He was always able to be reached and counted on.”
“You look at the communities that Steve served, people from small towns and everywhere else who called Steve, if it was 10 at night, Steve took the call,” says Estes.
Estes says for area farmers, Steve was a loyal lifeline in the field, providing a service no matter the time and no matter how challenging the issue was that needed fixed.
“This equipment is so complicated these days. And Steve pursued the passion of always learning,” says Estes. “If there was anything he couldn’t fix, he found out how to fix it, and he wouldn’t quit. He had the passion that made him pursue that until he got it. And I think that’s what really sets him apart.”
Roberson says on paper, Steve was a master technician, which is the highest honor you can receive as a John Deere technician. But he was more than that. Steve had a wealth of knowledge he passed on to others.
A man who dedicated three decades of his life to helping others was remembered in a remarkable way this past week. On a crisp, sunny Tuesday morning, those same farmers who Steve served for all those years found a way to show just how grateful they were.
“I’ve never seen a tribute for somebody that was more compelling probably than that tribute,” Estes says.
Tractor after tractor, combines with their augers out, all lined the road next to the cemetery where Steve would be laid to rest.
“I couldn’t help but think as we were doing the graveside service the effort made by so many people to be there,” Estes says. “As I looked up on the hill at all of the farmers, it was almost as if it was a mist because you could see the moisture in the eyes of so many of these people, many hardened individuals. Farmers who are used to being out in nature and fighting it, whether flood or drought or whatever it is, and through that toughness, they still had those kind of feelings for Steve.”
Farmers who never had the chance to say thank you or goodbye, stepped up to the call this week with a touching tractor tribute.
“He deserved every bit of that tribute. He didn’t ever ask for it. I hope he’s smiling down on us,” Estes says.
The touching tractor tribute was a nod to something Steve loved so much, as he took his final ride.
Today, the farming community is mourning the loss of a beloved member, Steve Hamm, who was not just a farmer, but a loyal lifeline in the field. As a tribute to his memory, fellow farmers came together to bid farewell to Steve in a touching tractor procession.Steve Hamm was known for his dedication to his farm and his willingness to lend a helping hand to anyone in need. He was always ready to share his knowledge and expertise with others, making him a respected figure in the farming community.
In honor of Steve, farmers from all around gathered with their tractors to form a procession that traveled through the fields that Steve once worked. The sight of the tractors lined up in a row, each one bearing a sign or banner in tribute to Steve, was a powerful reminder of the impact he had on those around him.
As the procession made its way through the fields, the sound of the tractors filled the air, a fitting farewell to a man who had spent so much of his life working the land. The tribute was a touching reminder of the bonds that unite farmers and the deep sense of community that exists among those who work the land.
Steve Hamm may no longer be with us, but his legacy lives on in the fields he tended and the hearts of those who knew him. The touching tractor tribute was a fitting send-off for a man who will be dearly missed but never forgotten. Rest in peace, Steve Hamm.
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#Touching #Tractor #Tribute #Farmers #Bid #Farewell #Steve #Hamm #Loyal #Lifeline #FieldMilitary bids farewell to Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin, following release of critical OIG report
The Inspector General slammed Austin over secrecy surrounding his 2024 hospitalization.
ARLINGTON, Va. — To much fanfare, the U.S. military bid farewell to the nation’s 28th Secretary of Defense.
Lloyd Austin graduated from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point in 1975 and went on to a 41-year career in the Army.
Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman General C.Q. Brown said Austin was a mentor.
“From his early days as a lieutenant, Secretary Austin was a leader of the highest order,” he said.
Then came his second act, in 2021 becoming the nation’s first Black Secretary of Defense.
During his time Austin oversaw the chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan, led the more than 50-nation coalition supporting Ukraine in its war with Russia, and directed the most intense naval combat operation since World War II in the Red Sea, following the Hamas attack upon Israel.
Austin gave all credit to the 2.8 million men and women in the military.
“Ladies and gentlemen, I leave the Department of Defense with great pride and confidence. This final turn of duty has been a time of great pride because of the extraordinary Americans that I’ve had the great honor of leading and serving alongside,” he said.
But, along with Austin’s departure on Friday, this week also brought a scathing report from the Defense Department’s Office of Inspector General.
The document criticized Austin’s failure to alert the White House and his senior staff about his hospitalization in early 2024, noting that his actions risked national security “unnecessarily.”
Austin suffered from complications after surgery for prostate cancer.
He sought to keep his condition and the fact that he had been incapacitated while under general anesthesia secret from President Biden and Deputy Defense Secretary Kathleen Hicks.
The military community bids farewell to Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin after the release of a critical report by the Office of the Inspector General.Secretary Austin served as the head of the Department of Defense during a challenging time, facing numerous national security threats and internal challenges. However, the recently released OIG report highlighted issues with his leadership and decision-making that have raised concerns within the military community.
As Secretary Austin prepares to step down from his role, the men and women of the armed forces express their gratitude for his service and dedication to protecting the nation. Despite the criticisms raised in the OIG report, Secretary Austin’s commitment to the defense of the country is undeniable, and his departure marks the end of an era for the Department of Defense.
The military community will continue to honor Secretary Austin’s legacy while looking ahead to the future and the new leadership that will guide the Department of Defense through the complex and ever-changing landscape of national security.
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- OIG report
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#Military #bids #farewell #Secretary #Defense #Lloyd #Austin #release #critical #OIG #report
Trump inauguration live updates: Trumps bid farewell to Bidens at Capitol
In more off-the-cuff remarks inside the Capitol’s Emancipation Hall after his address, Trump spoke about people who have been convicted for their roles in the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol as “hostages.”
“I was going to talk about the J6 hostages,” Trump said. “But you’ll be happy because, you know, it’s action not words that count.”
Attendees pray inside Capital One arena on the day of Donald Trump’s presidential inauguration in Washington, DC, Jan. 20, 2025.
Amanda Perobelli/Reuters
Trump previously promised to pardon some Jan. 6 rioters on Day 1.
He also went after former Reps. Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger, two Republican members of the House Jan. 6 Committee who are outspoken critics of Trump because of his actions after the 2020 election.
“And I was going to talk about the things that Joe did today with the pardons of people that were, very, very guilty of very bad crimes, like the Unselect Committee of political thugs,” Trump said.
As the nation prepares for the inauguration of President-elect Joe Biden, President Donald Trump bid farewell to the Bidens at the Capitol this morning. The outgoing President and First Lady Melania Trump greeted the incoming President and First Lady, exchanging pleasantries before departing for their new lives outside of the White House.Stay tuned for live updates on the historic transition of power as President-elect Biden takes the oath of office and becomes the 46th President of the United States. Follow along as we cover the inauguration ceremony and the events leading up to it. #InaugurationDay #Trump #Biden #Capitol
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Biden’s Farewell Address Leaves Late Night Befuddled
Welcome to Best of Late Night, a rundown of the previous night’s highlights that lets you sleep — and lets us get paid to watch comedy. Here are the 50 best movies on Netflix right now.
Parting Words
President Biden gave his farewell address on Wednesday, warning Americans of an oligarchy taking shape that “threatens our entire democracy, our basic rights and freedoms.”
On Thursday, Seth Meyers joked that Biden had waited until his “last day at work to start stuffing the suggestion box.”
“Now you warn us that America’s becoming an oligarchy?” — SETH MEYERS
“Powerful message, and I just hope that one day this enterprising young man runs for public office so he can do something about it.” — SETH MEYERS
“Turns out, you don’t need to Google ‘oligarchy’ to understand what it looks like — just tune in to the inauguration this Monday.” — JORDAN KLEPPER
The Bits Worth Watching
Kate Winslet revealed her fear of cows during The Colbert Questionert on Thursday’s “Late Show.”
Last night, President Joe Biden delivered his farewell address to the nation, marking the end of his presidency. While many Americans tuned in to hear his final words, late-night hosts were left scratching their heads after the speech.On “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon,” Fallon joked, “I thought he was going to drop the mic, but instead he just dropped some confusing metaphors about unity and hope. I guess we’ll have to wait for the fact-checkers to decipher that one.”
Over on “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert,” Colbert quipped, “I don’t know about you, but I feel like I just watched a TED Talk on string theory. Biden really went deep with that one. I’ll need a translator to make sense of it all.”
Even “The Daily Show with Trevor Noah” chimed in, with Noah saying, “I appreciate Biden’s attempt at poetic language, but I think he lost us all somewhere between ‘the arc of history bending towards justice’ and ‘we must never forget the power of our shared values.’ It’s like he was trying to write a Shakespearean sonnet on the fly.”
Overall, it seems that Biden’s farewell address left late-night hosts and viewers alike befuddled. While his words may have been heartfelt and well-intentioned, the complexity of his language left many scratching their heads. As one viewer put it, “I think I need a dictionary and a thesaurus to fully understand what he was trying to say.”
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Biden’s poignant farewell dwells on his fears for the country he loves
CNN
—
President Joe Biden said his presidency would be a bridge — and it was.
But he didn’t build it to a promised new Democratic generation.
Instead, he’s the president who stayed too long and whose administration thus arched between two terms of a nemesis he once defeated and then let back into power: Donald Trump.
To call this Biden’s political tragedy would be crass. This, after all, is a man who lived unending personal anguish after burying his first wife and two of his children. But it’s the fate he’s been handed by history — and his own grave electoral miscalculation.
This dark reality shadowed Biden’s farewell address on Wednesday night — his latest attempt to write a first draft of history about a presidency he insists is worth far more than the ignominy of a single term.
“My eternal thanks to you, the American people,” the president said from the Oval Office at just after 8 p.m. on the East Coast. “After 50 years of public service, I give you my word I still believe in the idea for which this nation stands, a nation where the strengths of our institutions and the character of our people matter and must endure.”
But by Monday afternoon, the foe who Biden warned in 2020 represented a mortal threat to America’s soul will be back behind the Oval Office desk, with Biden headed into a Delaware retirement and leaving the country to face whatever happens next.
With this in mind, Biden used his address to warn of the threat he thinks Trump’s second term — and what he styled as his successor’s band of “robber barons” — represents. If anything, he appears to believe the existential peril is greater now that it was when he launched his 2020 campaign.
“Tonight, I want to warn the country of some things that give me great concern,” Biden said. He cited “a dangerous concentration of power in the hands of a very few ultra wealthy people” and sounded an alarm about “dangerous consequences if their abuse of power is left unchecked.”
Like President George Washington in his farewell address, Biden warned of storms gathering around democracy.
“Today, an oligarchy is taking shape in America of extreme wealth, power and influence that literally threatens our entire democracy, our basic rights and freedoms and a fair shot for everyone to get ahead,” he said.
And echoing President Dwight Eisenhower, who conjured the threat posed by the military industrial complex as he exited the White House, Biden spoke of a new age of danger posed by social media and artificial intelligence and the tech bro billionaires and millionaires who are packing Trump’s incoming administration.
“I’m equally concerned about the potential rise of a tech industrial complex that can pose real dangers for our country as well,” Biden said. “Americans are being buried under an avalanche of misinformation and disinformation, enabling the abuse of power. The free press is crumbling … social media is giving up on fact checking. The truth is smothered by lies told for power and for profit.”
Biden was resolute and collected as he spoke, with a photo of his late son Beau, who died of brain cancer, on the table over his left shoulder. The burden of a grueling four-year presidency that is ending in his ninth decade was poignantly evident, however, in his reedy voice and the slurring of his words. If Biden is still up to the act of being president, age robbed him of the power to sell his ideas and to paint the national narrative months ago.
Viewers were left to wonder how Biden had ever concluded he’d be fit to serve out a full second term that would have taken him to the age of 86.
The end of a career and a political era
Biden was not just saying goodbye to the country Wednesday evening.
He drew down the blinds on the only adult life he’s ever known — his decades as a senator, vice president and president and the unslaked ambition that sustained him through rounds of personal torment. He arrived in Washington as a young senator, already tipped as a future commander in chief, half a century ago.
Back then, Mao Zedong led China, Leonid Brezhnev ruled the Soviet Union with an iron fist and Richard Nixon worked in the office from where Biden spoke on Wednesday.
So, the 82-year-old president was closing a political era — and a link with the 20th century and a worldview that he shared with all of his modern predecessors, but one, that was built around the system of American alliances that won the Cold War.
Biden was born in 1942, when Franklin Roosevelt was in the White House, but will cede power at noon on Monday to a successor who seems bent on tearing down the West’s geopolitical infrastructure first envisioned by FDR.
One of the ironies of Biden’s long, excruciating goodbye that has unfolded since Vice President Kamala Harris lost the November election was that, on paper at least, he can lay claim to one of the more successful one-term presidencies.
Biden brought the US economy back from the Covid-19 pandemic so badly managed by Trump with greater growth and job creation than all of America’s top competitors. His legislative haul is more impressive than Trump’s first term and the two terms of both Barack Obama and George W. Bush. Some would say he’s the most prolific signer of consequential laws since Lyndon Johnson in the 1960s after passing big pandemic recovery bills, a rare bipartisan infrastructure measure and new laws to revive manufacturing and to create a new American semi-conductor industry. He cut the price of some prescription drugs, an achievement that was overshadowed by Trump’s return when it recently went into force.
He pointed out that these bills may have significant long-term impacts that long outlast his presidency. They are the key to any potential reassessment of the Biden legacy in decades to come. All were designed by working-class Joe Biden from Scranton, Pennsylvania, to uplift the working class, which was spurned in an age of globalization and got less than most in Trump’s huge first-term tax cut. The irony, however, is that the Democratic blue-collar base fell on his watch, completing Trump’s transformation of the GOP and paving his way back to power.
Abroad, Biden stepped into the vacuum left by Trump’s first-term contempt for America’s allies. He managed to save Ukraine from Russia’s illegal and cruel invasion while avoiding tipping the United States into a war with a nuclear-armed rival. Presidents don’t get credit in their time for catastrophes that are avoided. But this critical achievement is often ignored by hawks who complain that Biden gave Ukraine sufficient weapons to survive but not to win.
In Asia, Biden tightened US alliances and largely adopted Trump’s confrontational turn toward China. But his crowing that “America is back” after he ejected his predecessor from the White House now rings hollow among world leaders under siege from global populism who must now deal with Trump’s return.
Biden will leave office at a point when an overwhelming majority of Americans have turned their back on his presidency.
His approval rating is matching its lowest-ever ebb, according to a new CNN/SSRS poll published Wednesday. Even fewer rate his performance positively on immigration (31%), foreign affairs (32%) or the economy (33%).
In retrospect, Biden’s term foundered on four historic errors, which involved the White House telling Americans that events they could see unfolding with their own eyes were not in fact happening.
- The administration never really understood the gut punch inflation inflicted upon Americans — as evidenced by the president’s off-key “Bidenomics” victory lap. The insistence that high prices were “transitory” set off a slow-motion political disaster.
- Officials’ months of insisting there was no “crisis” at the southern border also misjudged the country’s mood and concern about undocumented migration, which intersected with feelings of widespread insecurity encompassing fear of crime and families’ economic struggles — all of which Trump exploited.
- Biden insists to this day that he was right to end America’s longest war in Afghanistan. But his claim to be a foreign policy expert was shattered by haunting images of refugees clinging to US planes taking off from Kabul amid the Taliban’s advance and the deaths of 13 US service personal in a suicide bombing during a chaotic evacuation.
- But it was Biden’s insistence that he could beat Trump again that led to the painful eclipse culminating in Wednesday’s farewell address. He made the decision to run despite polls that showed Americans believed he was too old and testimony of voters who consistently gave the same message.
In truth, Biden’s presidency effectively ended in 10 excruciating minutes in Atlanta in June, when his advanced age and blurred mental capacity were laid bare in a CNN debate with Trump. With one devastating jab, after an incomprehensible Biden statement, the Republican nominee said what millions at home were thinking: “I really don’t know what he said at the end of that sentence. I don’t think he knows what he said, either.”
Clips of that encounter will be played — likely alongside a younger Ronald Reagan’s dismissal of the age question — as long as televised debates take place.
Future generations won’t remember the younger Biden — the wisecracking, handsome senator and politician who kept getting knocked down by life but who always got up, or the grandpa with a twinkle in his eye and an ocean of empathy in his heart whom voters chose in 2020 to restore some semblance of normality amid the pandemic. They’ll see him at his most frail and ineffective. And unlike Jimmy Carter, whom Biden eulogized in one of his last acts as president, the outgoing commander in chief will not get decades to refashion the reputation of his single term.
As he closed his address, with his political energy all but exhausted, Biden was like the aged magician Prospero in Shakespeare’s “The Tempest,” alone on the stage when his “charms are all o’erthrown.”
“Now it’s your turn to stand guard. May you all be the keeper of the flame, may you keep the faith,” Biden told the country.
“I love America. You love it too. God bless you all.”
As President-elect Joe Biden prepares to take office, he recently delivered a heartfelt farewell speech that echoed his deepest fears for the country he loves. In a poignant moment, Biden reflected on the challenges facing America and the urgent need for unity in the face of division.During his farewell address, Biden spoke passionately about his concerns for the nation’s future, expressing his worries about the ongoing political turmoil, social unrest, and economic hardships. He emphasized the importance of coming together as a nation to overcome these obstacles and build a brighter future for all Americans.
Biden’s words struck a chord with many who have been grappling with uncertainty and fear in recent months. As he prepares to assume the presidency, his message of hope and unity serves as a reminder that, despite the challenges ahead, there is always room for optimism and progress.
As we look towards the future, let us heed Biden’s call for unity and work together to build a better, stronger America for generations to come.
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#Bidens #poignant #farewell #dwells #fears #country #loves
Merrick Garland rebukes ‘unfounded attacks’ on Justice Department officials in farewell speech
In a farewell speech to Justice Department staffers, outgoing Attorney General Merrick Garland on Thursday appeared to rebuke attacks from President-elect Donald Trump and his allies who have “wrongly criticized” the department as politically motivated.
“The story that has been told by some outside of this building about what has happened inside of it is wrong. You have worked to pursue justice, not politics. That is the truth and nothing can change it,” Garland said.
The outgoing attorney general also emphasized the importance of the independence of his agency, amid fear from some Senate Democrats this week that Trump’s pick to lead the department, Pam Bondi, will take marching orders from the next president.
Trump has repeatedly attacked the justice system as politicized and corrupt, taking aim especially at the prosecutors, Department of Justice officials and the judges presiding over criminal cases against him.
The norms of the Justice Department, Garland said Thursday, “include our commitment to guaranteeing the independence of the Justice Department from both the White House and the Congress concerning law enforcement investigations and prosecutions.”
He added, “We make that commitment not because independence is necessarily constitutionally required, but because it is the only way to ensure that our law enforcement decisions are free from partisan influence.”
As is typical for him, Garland grew emotional at times during the standing-room-only speech, and several people in the audience did as well.
Garland’s remarks came a day after senators questioned Pam Bondi, President-elect Donald Trump’s pick to be the next attorney general, on whether she could maintain a Justice Department independent from the White House. Noting that Trump had fired both of the attorneys general he appointed during his first administration, Democrats pressed Bondi by asking if her client would be the American people — or Trump.
Republican and Democratic senators also sparred over what they labeled as the “weaponization” of the Justice Department, with Democrats asking whether Trump and Bondi would prosecute the president-elect’s political enemies and Republicans slamming President Joe Biden and Garland as already having weaponized the department.
In response to questions from Sen. Peter Welch, D-Vt., Bondi said: “No one will be prosecuted, investigated because they are a political opponent. That’s what we’ve seen for the last four years in this administration.”
Garland in his speech appeared to nod at these types of criticisms, which Trump and his allies have repeated over the years. President Joe Biden, in his statement pardoning his son, also alleged that the federal prosecution against Hunter Biden was “infected” by “raw politics.”
“I know that, over the years, some have wrongly criticized you, saying that you have allowed politics to influence your decision-making,” Garland told DOJ staffers. “That criticism often came from people with political views opposite from one another, each making the exact opposite points about the same set of facts.”
Garland also nodded to the threats that public servants have faced in recent years. Law enforcement officers, for example, saw a spike in threats following the FBI search of Trump’s Florida home.
“I know that you have faced unfounded attacks simply for doing your jobs, at the very same time you have risked your lives to protect our country from a range of foreign and domestic threats,” Garland said.
He also encouraged future attorneys general to respect the roles of career officers in the department.
Justice Department norms, Garland said, call for political appointees to “ensure respect for the integrity of our career agents, lawyers and staff, who are the institutional backbone and historical memory of this Department.”
Those norms also include “a promise to ensure protections for journalists in law enforcement investigations, because a free press is essential to our democracy.”
“It is the obligation of the Attorney General to make clear that the only way for the Justice Department to do the right thing is to do it the right way. That unjust means cannot achieve just ends,” Garland said.
Ahead of Garland’s speech, he was lauded by outgoing FBI Director Christopher Wray, a Trump appointee who said he would resign before Trump’s inauguration. Trump has said he intends to nominate Kash Patel, a loyalist with a history of espousing conspiracy theories, to be the next FBI director.
“It’s not a doubt in my mind the American people are safer and better because of your time in public service,” Wray told Garland.
“Last September, you addressed the entire Justice Department and told us something that you said we don’t hear enough — you thanked all of us for all we do to uphold one rule of law for all Americans and today, I’m honored to say the same thing to you,” he added.
Others who spoke in thanks ahead of Garland’s speech included Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco, Solicitor General Elizabeth B. Prelogar and former Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta.
And in a video collage, multiple other officials — including Drug Enforcement Administration Administrator Anne Milgram, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms Director Steven M. Dettelbach, National Fraternal Order of Police Executive Director Jim Pasco, Federal Bureau of Prisons Director Colette S. Peters and multiple assistant attorneys general — gave thanks to Garland.
In his farewell speech as Attorney General, Merrick Garland addressed the recent “unfounded attacks” on Justice Department officials. He spoke out against the politicization of the department and reaffirmed his commitment to upholding the rule of law. Garland emphasized the importance of independence and integrity within the DOJ, urging the public to trust in the institution and its dedicated staff. As he bids farewell, Garland leaves a message of unity and resilience in the face of adversity.
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#Merrick #Garland #rebukes #unfounded #attacks #Justice #Department #officials #farewell #speechJoe Biden’s Farewell Speech: “An Oligarchy Is Taking Shape”
George Washington’s farewell address, a long valedictory letter written largely by Alexander Hamilton, and published in Claypoole’s Daily Advertiser, in September, 1796, was an eloquent rationale for his departure from public life and for the need for peaceful transitions of power. Washington’s centrality as a leader of the Revolution and as the first President had the effect of making him seem irreplaceable, kingly. In the spirit of a “parting friend,” he warned against such regard for a leader and the factional and institutional threats that might undermine a fledgling democracy.
In modern times, most Presidents use the occasion of a farewell for rote self-justification, a summary of accomplishments, gestures of gratitude. It is, in other words, almost uniformly dull. The exceptions—from Dwight D. Eisenhower’s caution against a growing “military-industrial complex,” in 1961, to Richard Nixon’s rhetoric of self-pity in the face of his resignation and disgrace, in 1974—are rare.
On Wednesday night, Joe Biden delivered his last address from the Oval Office. Much of the speech was hackneyed in its rhetoric and weary in its delivery. Biden is leaving office not merely with understandable exhaustion but with pangs of barely concealed bitterness. He continues to believe that, were it not for the betrayals in his own party, he could have won reëlection, but no one could watch his final performance at the Resolute desk and think that he could go on in the job, no matter how much one dreads the dreadful alternative. In a low and papery voice, Biden shifted from one subject to the next—from the perils and the prospects of artificial intelligence to the persistence of freedom in Ukraine—giving each subject a flat sentence or two. As Los Angeles burns, climate change warranted little more than a couple of lines.
And yet one passage in Biden’s remarks stood out and should echo with the same lasting resonance as Eisenhower’s prescient admonition more than half a century ago. What Biden was intent on describing was quite real, even self-evident by now, but to hear it from a President was startling.
“I want to warn the country of some things that give me great concern. And this is a dangerous concern. And that’s the dangerous concentration of power in the hands of a very few ultra-wealthy people,” Biden said. “Today, an oligarchy is taking shape in America of extreme wealth, power, and influence that literally threatens our entire democracy, our basic rights and freedoms, and a fair shot for everyone to get ahead.”
Watching Biden, I was reminded of a moment, in December, 1990, when the Soviet Foreign Minister, Eduard Shevardnadze, stood before the assembled grandees of the government, the Communist Party, the military, and the K.G.B., and said, “Dictatorship is coming. I tell you that with full responsibility. No one knows what this dictatorship will be like, what kind of dictator will come to power, and what order will be established.” A few sentences later, Shevardnadze announced his resignation, and let his words linger in the hall. In less than a year, those forces, led by the K.G.B., put President Mikhail Gorbachev under house arrest, sent tanks into Moscow, and seized power—until it was seized back, three days later. (Dictatorship, of course, eventually arrived, hand in hand with oligarchy, in post-Soviet Russia.)
Biden, in delivering his stark warning about the course of power in the United States, was reserved, unspecific. He made no direct mention of Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, or other tech billionaires who have sought the favor of the incoming President. He offered no dissection of the pro-Trump libertarianism that has become the prevailing ideology of so much of Silicon Valley. There was no detailed description of the way that the nascent American oligarchy differs from the more developed, more unchallenged forms of oligarchy in Russia or China. But to hear Biden, who ran for the Presidency not as a democratic socialist or a social democrat but as a centrist in the party, speak out against the gathering signs of oligarchy has meaning. Immense dark-money contributions already infect both major parties. Thirteen of Donald Trump’s key Administration appointees are billionaires. Two of them, Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, are entering the Administration promising to cut trillions of dollars in “inefficiencies.”
This sombre week has also made it plain that Trump has bolstered his Administration of fat cats with gaudy and alarmingly under-equipped mediocrities. Of Pete Hegseth’s alleged behavior with women and in proximity to a bottle, much has been published. Hegseth’s lame denials (“Anonymous smears!”) in that regard were as expected as they were galling. Even more spectacular was his lack of competence, capacity, or knowledge. When Senator Tammy Duckworth asked Hegseth about ongoing international negotiations, he was clueless: she asked him to name which countries are in ASEAN, the union of countries in Southeast Asia with which the U.S. has crucial business, and he was forced to plead ignorance. He hadn’t done the reading before class—which is fine for a weekend host on Fox News, but less desirable for a candidate to be the day-to-day leader of the most powerful military in the world at a moment of extraordinary tension and transformation.
Biden is leaving office with a considerable policy legacy that is badly marred by his failure to limit himself to one term. The cost is apparent: a second Trump Administration that is quickly making itself clear in character and in policy. It is to Biden’s credit, though, that in his farewell address he was at pains to warn against what is “taking shape,” a uniquely American form of oligarchy that threatens the democratic spirit that runs through the valedictory of his most distant predecessor.
In his farewell speech as President of the United States, Joe Biden delivered a stark warning to the American people: “An oligarchy is taking shape.”Biden, who served as the 46th President of the United States, expressed his concerns about the growing influence of powerful corporations and wealthy individuals in shaping government policies and decision-making.
“Over the course of my time in office, I have witnessed firsthand the erosion of our democracy as big money and special interests continue to exert undue influence over our political system,” Biden said.
He emphasized the importance of protecting democracy and ensuring that all voices are heard, not just those with deep pockets. Biden urged Americans to remain vigilant and hold their elected officials accountable for their actions.
“As I pass the torch to the next administration, I implore you to stay engaged, stay informed, and continue fighting for a government that truly represents the will of the people,” Biden concluded.
His farewell speech served as a powerful reminder of the ongoing struggle to preserve democracy in the face of growing inequality and corporate power. As Biden warned, the time to act is now before it’s too late.
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#Joe #Bidens #Farewell #Speech #Oligarchy #ShapeBiden delivers farewell address, warns of ‘oligarchy’ taking shape in America
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden used his farewell address to the nation Wednesday to deliver stark warnings about an “oligarchy” of the ultra-wealthy taking root in the country and a “tech-industrial complex” that is infringing on Americans’ rights and the future of democracy.
Speaking from the Oval Office as he prepares to hand over power Monday to President-elect Donald Trump, Biden seized what is likely to be his final opportunity to address the country before he departs the White House to spotlight the accumulation of power and wealth in the U.S. among just a small few.
“Today, an oligarchy is taking shape in America of extreme wealth, power and influence that literally threatens our entire democracy, our basic rights and freedoms, and a fair shot for everyone to get ahead,” Biden said, drawing attention to “a dangerous concentration of power in the hands of a few ultra-wealthy people and the dangerous consequences if their abuse of power is left unchecked.”
Invoking President Dwight Eisenhower’s warnings about the rise of a military-industrial complex when he left office in 1961, Biden added, “I’m equally concerned about the potential rise of a tech-industrial complex that could pose real dangers to our country as well.”
Biden used his 15-minute address to offer a model for a peaceful transfer of power and — without mentioning Trump by name — raise concerns about his successor.
It marked a striking admonition by Biden, who is departing the national stage after more than 50 years in public life, as he has struggled to define his legacy and to steel the country against the return of Trump to the Oval Office. This time, the president, who has repeatedly called Trump a threat to the nation’s system of governance, went even further, warning Americans to be on guard for their freedoms and their institutions during a turbulent era of rapid technological and economic change.
Biden sounded the alarm about oligarchy as some of the world’s richest individuals and titans of its technology industry have flocked to Trump’s side in recent months, particularly after his November victory. Billionaire Elon Musk spent more than $100 million helping Trump get elected, and executives like Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg and Amazon’s Jeff Bezos have donated to Trump’s inaugural committee and made pilgrimages to Trump’s private club in Florida for audiences with the president-elect as they seek to ingratiate themselves with his administration and shape its policies.
While President Joe Biden saw through legislative successes while in office, his presidency was marked by inflation, war and a consequential bid for reelection. (AP Video by Mike Pesoli)
Biden’s speech in the Oval Office is the latest in a series of remarks on domestic policy and foreign relations he has delivered that are intended to cement his legacy and reshape Americans’ grim views on his term. Earlier in the day, he heralded a long awaited ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas, which could end more than a year of bloodshed in the Middle East.
“It’ll take time to feel the full impact of what we’ve done together but the seeds are planted and they’ll grow and they’ll bloom for decades to come,” Biden said. It was a tacit acknowledgement that many Americans say they have yet to feel the impact of his trillions of dollars spent on domestic initiatives.
At the same time that Biden was criticizing social media companies for retreating from fact-checking on their platforms, Trump’s incoming communications director and press secretary were sharing posts on X that falsely claimed the president had delivered a prerecorded speech. Biden has blamed his poor standing with the public on misinformation on social media and the challenges he has faced reaching voters in the disaggregated modern media ecosystem.
Biden offered his own set of solutions for the problems that he laid out: change the tax code to ensure billionaires “pay their fair share,” eliminate the flow of hidden sources of money into political campaigns, establish 18-year term limits for members of the Supreme Court and ban members of Congress from trading stocks. His policy prescriptions come as his political capital is at its nadir as Biden prepares to exit the national stage, and after he has done little to advance those causes during his four years in power at the White House.
Federal Reserve data shows the wealthiest 0.1% of the country combined holds more than five times the wealth of the bottom 50% combined.
Biden isn’t leaving the White House in the way that he hoped. He tried to run for reelection, brushing aside voters’ concerns that he would be 86 years old at the end of a second term. After stumbling in a debate with Trump, Biden dropped out of the race under pressure from his own party, and Vice President Kamala Harris became the Democratic nominee.
The speech Wednesday night capped not just Biden’s presidency but his five decades in politics. He was once the country’s youngest senator at 30 years old after being elected to represent his home state of Delaware in 1972.
Biden pursued the presidency in 1988 and 2008 before becoming Barack Obama’s vice president. After serving two terms, Biden was considered to be retired from politics. But he returned to center stage as the unlikely Democratic nominee in 2020, successfully ousting Trump from the White House.
As he highlighted his own commitment to ensuring a peaceful transition of power, including holding briefings with Trump’s team and coordinating with the incoming administration on the Middle East negotiations, Biden also called for a constitutional amendment to end immunity for sitting presidents. That came in response to a Supreme Court ruling last year that granted Trump sweeping protections from criminal liability over his role in trying to overturn his 2020 defeat to Biden.
Biden spoke from the Resolute desk, photos of his family visible behind him in the Oval Office. First lady Jill Biden, his son Hunter, some of his grandchildren, Harris and her husband, Doug Emhoff, sat watching.
As Biden spoke about Harris, saying she’d become like family, the first lady reached over and grabbed her hand.
In a poignant farewell address, President Joe Biden warned of the dangers of an “oligarchy” taking shape in America. As his time in office comes to an end, Biden expressed his concerns about the growing influence of wealthy elites in shaping the country’s policies and priorities.Throughout his presidency, Biden has been a vocal advocate for policies that benefit working-class Americans and combat income inequality. In his farewell address, he urged the American people to remain vigilant against the encroachment of oligarchical power and to continue fighting for a more equitable and just society.
Biden’s words serve as a stark reminder of the challenges facing our democracy and the importance of maintaining a government that is truly of the people, by the people, and for the people. As he prepares to pass the torch to his successor, Biden’s message serves as a rallying cry for all Americans to work together to ensure that our democracy remains strong and vibrant in the face of growing threats from powerful interests.
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