As part of its foreign policy on “advancing racial equity and
support of underserved communities,” the Biden administration is spending
a million dollars to eliminate racial and ethnic discrimination,
inequality, and systemic racism in South America.
|
|
Because no one is above the law! |
December 29, 2021 |
|
|
|
|
As part of its foreign
policy on “advancing racial equity and support of underserved
communities,” the Biden administration is spending a million dollars to
eliminate racial and ethnic discrimination, inequality, and systemic racism
in South America. Besides bolstering racial justice in the foreign nations,
the U.S. taxpayer dollars will encourage civil society organizations to
promote and protect the human rights of communities marginalized by
“intersectional discrimination,” according to the grant
announcement posted by the government this month. The administration
identifies intersectional discrimination as “multiple and overlapping
social identities, including communities experiencing disproportionate
injustices such as Afro-Latinas and African Descendant members of LGBTI+
communities.” |
Read More
|
|
|
|
|
Fight to
clean voter lists gains ground after 2020 election
The Washington Times
Tom
Fitton, president of Judicial Watch, another group that polices voter
rolls, said the key moment for election integrity came a few years back,
when the Supreme Court reaffirmed the requirement in federal law that
states do have to take steps to clean up their lists.
READ MORE
|
Joe
Biden’s Senate Records
Judicial Watch
Judicial
Watch is fighting to “force the release of Joe Biden’s Senate
records,” Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton states in the Weekly
Update. “Given the public interest in these records, the public financing
of the University of Delaware under Delaware law, we thought these records
should’ve been public,” Fitton adds.
READ MORE
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Keep our investigators on the job uncovering the truth:
|
|
|
|
|
|