#cost of things or too healthcare or-
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It really sucks my coworker is an old white man with bad opinions cause he is one of the only people around me that is always down to let me enthusiastically ramble about dumb shit like minecraft or cute shit my dog has been doing
#we spent like an entire break once with Miranda and I showing him photos on our phone#of my nail art and her make up looks lmao#and hell like actually engage in the conversation with questions#real grandpa energy#little grandkids showing like scribbled photos and explaining all the details they drew to make it look just like a dragon and then it gets#put on the fridge lmao#i dont think hes super into it just judging by how hell talk and complain about like his wife and his actual grandkids but hell put up with#it at the least which is all i need at work#tag rambles#sucks you can not mention shit about gender or politics or too much about religion or anti american sounding statements or go on about the#cost of things or too healthcare or-#work tag#dont mind me
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saw a post about projecting your ethnicity onto a character and started missing vespa ilkay. so so bad
#pov u grow up in a 3rd world country(/planet) where healthcare workers are exported by the thousands like cheap produce to richer countries#it's your ticket out of poverty as long as you can deal with the loneliness the separation from everyone you know the discrimination etc#ive never talked about my hc that vespas mother was one of them sending money every month visiting every couple of years until it just stop#like why return to the swamps when youre doing fine working on a richer planet w much better living conditions#cost of living rises every year. sending home a % of your salary used to be enough to support your husband and daughter and then it isnt#you know how it goes#vespa is also dead set on this path until ranga realizes that hemorrhaging healthcare workers leaves them with little to none of their own#students on scholarships or in community/state universities are bound by return service agreements and are forbidden to leave the country#until theyve rendered a few years of work on ranga to pay back their tuition + as a really shitty solution to the brain drain problem#this is real in my country btw but my professors say a lot of ppl do break their rsa's and fucked off to work in other countries LOL#our state unis can barely afford decent facilities they do nottt have the budget to chase down their own alumni in other countries!#but the mental image is a bit funny#vespa ilkays first crime: tinakasan ang rsa#i do also think it lines up with her having a network of med friends everywhere in the galaxy (heart of it all) you kind of go into pre/med#expecting most of your classmates to leave to work in other countries eventually. mine are aiming for the usa / uae / europe / japan etc#anyway whether vespa breaks her rsa or not she leaves ranga asap decides to switch careers and the rest is history#i also deeply love the fact that she's superstitious i'm very sad it wasn't highlighted more (i've only heard s1-3)#as someone who did grow up in a rural area and went to more albularyos/folk healers than doctors in my childhood. (they never failed me)#lots of folk illnesses (ex. balis; pasma) local medical superstitions (dont eat noodles in hospital; youll have a really toxic shift) etcc#theres also a lot of potential in tying her past as a rangian + med student + assassin to me idk how to word this properly#being raised on cautionary tales of not to touch/disturb anything in the swamps then being given free reign to poke & prod at things in her#lab classes (now with the proper ppe)....she was having so much fun with the curemother prime too lmao#years of walking hanging bridges docks boathouses in ranga etc gave her great balance & stealth#cracking open alien shellfish in the swamps to cutting open bodies for studying then for assassination....#I MISS HER SO MUCH BALIK KN SAKEN 😭😭😭😭😭😭#i get why most people + the canon focuses on her being an assassin bc people find that cooler i guess#but vespa being a swamp girl > 3rd world med student > assassin is so personal To Me. the whole pipeline. eugh.#skl.txt
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I've legitimately been thinking a lot about trans women lately and like the women I know in my life and how complex and human and real they are. Specifically because I understand the world is not kind to trans women and likes to generalize them horribly.
I know a woman who's an artist and spending her time dreaming about stars. I know another woman who's a terrible friend and manipulative as hell. I know one who's shy and sweet and so intelligent. Trans women can be so many things 💖
I really care deeply about trans women and I hope in my friend groups I'm a good ally to them and know to stand up vocally for them. Trans women deserve so much and they're given not enough. Everyone can do something to stop transphobia by speaking up when they hear it. Don't let your friends make transphobic jokes. Don't let your dad regurgitate trump's words. Protect the trans women in your life and everywhere else, they need to be loved and respected. Mwah! 🥰
#mine#💖🥰trans women🥰💖#all humans are complex and its a beautiful thing#*cough* and a small thought#if we deny healthcare to one prisoner. no matter how disgusting the crime. it sets a precedent to deny healthcare to any prisoner#for any reason#and denying a prisoner trans healthcare is denying a prisoner life saving medicine in my opinion#trans healthcare saves lives#its basic healthcare if you ask me not some sort of secret sect of magic healthcare that should cost more#so yeah. i think people who've done horrible things should have trans healthcare in prison#but thats not even getting into my opinions on prison abolishment. thats just talking about prison existing now#so idk if yall know what case im talking about? i could find it if anyones curious i didnt dig into it at allll#just some stoned opinions from a gender fucked bitch#ummm prisoners deserve healthcare?#duh#trans rights are human rights#pre school levels of basic respect#ive been thinking about this way too much lately since im all gender fucky and i feel like trans women are just .... intelligent about those#feelings. yk? and that's me generalizing but i mean all the Tumblr ladies i see on my dash talking about life and experiences#they are smart ladies#tumblr promotes terf content and deletes trans womens blogs and i try to follow trans women but tumblr still recommends terf blogs to me#i am angry bout it#i have a very complex and long standing relationship with gender identity and gender fuckery *pulls out my resumé*#idk thoughts#im stoned sorry yall#serious post but im not being unstupid#what#okay#bye
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i think taxes should be higher and it should all go towards helping people and none of it should go to the military
#in a world without taxes i would've been dead at 18#if not way earlier#i fucking love taxes#how people can think ''taxes are bad because it's a portion of my paycheck taken by force''#and then stop there. like just stop thinking at such an early stage of the thought process#and feel content that they've understood enough#you should already have an idea of what a world where you have to pay everything in full by yourself is#the us healthcare system is a prime example#i just can't fathom how people are so fundamentally incapable of connecting these dots in any reasonable way#''if they didn't take a cut out of my paycheck i'd have more money in my pocket''#is such a painfully juvenile thought. because you'll still have to use that money for things like healthcare#only now you have to pay it all yourself. and you can't afford the cost of an ambulance#let alone whatever procedure you might need#a reduction of taxes is a little chump change dropped in your pocket instead of being pooled with everyone else's#and then everything else gets too expensive because there's no collected pool of resources#you're in total paying more for the desire to have your entire paycheck in your pocket#because you are not a billionaire#you need the community to work with you#ranting in circles as usual but anyway
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reading the nearly unanimously approved WGA strike announcement + the proposals/counter proposals between them and Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP), knowing damn well I not only have friends who write for the major networks insulting them with this “gig economy” undermining their union, but that every single writer on the ST staff listed on the official WGA roster…and we sure as hell aren’t getting that season until 2025 now:
#like….dude I know writing for S5 started last august but we literally know they write scenes AS THEY FILM too which isn’t allowed now#they’re also EPs on that show and their whole writers room is now on strike#which means they’re honor bound to wait for the strike to be done to ask for anything incomplete as of this moment#and with a FINAL SEASON? ☠️☠️☠️#I will take a 2026 release even if it means we don’t get shit tv like the 2007 iteration of this oh my GOD#but also….pay your fucking writers dude. you make lucrative amounts of money#the added cost of meeting their demands is like. $450M total???#thats literally one blockbuster movie to keep the whole of your entertainment machine going like#PAY PEOPLE FOR THEIR WORK!#and stop acting like wanting healthcare and job security is ridiculous!#Anyway. a n y w a y lmao#the me tag#st crew#stranger things
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#this isn't at all surprising but it IS disgusting and enraging#'you're costing us too much money. we're going to lie and say that your doctor signed off on reducing your dosage.'#among many other things#anyway this is all extremely par for the course for people who've faced these kinds of issues or who've listened to others who have#but. even so.#if you want to be furious read this ig!#at the time of writing his costs HAVE at least been covered but like. it took a lawsuit.#the only thing that really surprised me here was the extent to which company employees said really damning shit on the record#but like. they know how much power they have and how little power patients typically have.#anyway health insurance is frankly disgusting. i was lucky enough we never had to worry abt it when i was a kid#and now that i'm grown up and don't have any and hear stories like this… how the fuck did we get here.#healthcare shouldn't be a for-profit business.#the medical establishment
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got a bill that charged 133% of my copay for something and tried calling my insurance on their "24/7 line" only to go through like 12 menu options to an automated "you're calling outside of our business hours (won't tell you what they are though). goodbye."
#like i need to specify this bill was already going to be too much for me to comfortably pay but it was a legit life or death thing#i can technically afford it. kind of. but i will be screwed for several months.#ill try calling them again monday after 9am but dont list it as a damn 24/7 line if it's not!#i hate medical bills so fucking much i hope everyone who decided that $10k is a reasonable charge for a few hours in a bed a very pay me 10k#i know you have to pay for the equipment and everyone working. i know it doesnt cost that fucking much. healthcare for profit is evil
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I really fucking hate how expensive it is man. Like almost $200 at Target for like basics for self care and the house. Nothing fun except some dog treats. Like I’m sorry I don’t want to but the cheapest shit that is loaded with chemicals and bad ingredients. Like why is it a premium to buy products that are just natural ingredients? Jesus.
Oh and what’s the point of coupons sometimes??? Like target had a circle coupon for Zyrtec 90 count ($42 reg) for $10 off so it would have been $32 and I got the store brand 180 count for like $20??
Also don’t get me started on how fucking annoying it is to try to buy treats for my dog who happens to have an allergy to chicken… Did you know that that is the number one allergen for dogs? Fucking chicken. And do you know how many fucking treats out there are supposedly like fruity flavored or just peanut butter that have chicken in them?? Most of them.
These are like separate gripes but like at the same time it’s a fucking pain man.
Oh and my insurance doesn’t want to cover my acid reflux prescription apparently because I need prescription strength instead of just nexium anymore. Luckily they gave a coupon for me so I got 2 months for $17 so 🤷🏼♀️. My doctor is fighting them on it at least but still.
#these tags are gonna be weird.#I says things#late stage capitalism#capitalism#it just costs too much.#dog problems#pet problems#dogs with allergies#American healthcare is a joke and a rip off#american healthcare
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it's so expensive to be able to see
#i'm buying contacts#did you know the american healthcare system is bad and stupid#being able to see things makes me able to live independently and you'd think that would be good for everyone#but no it costs me so much money#if you need glasses you should support free healthcare#this too is a disability#squeepost
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Summary of the achievements by week. More info can be found in each week’s post and by following the links there.
(when it says $ was announced for a project, that is the relevant agency’s plan to distribute that money in a program- the agencies are of course funded by Congress and do not just decide unilaterally how to spend taxes)
Week 1
Limit bank overdraft fees proposal-
effective October 2025 if approved
Fine oil/gas companies for emitting methane proposal
Fully effective 2026 if approved
$104 million in grants to support clean energy projects
$5 billion student loans canceled for income driven repayment and public service loan forgiveness plans
Launched program to fight lead exposure in developing countries
Deal reached to revive the expanded child tax credit projected to lift 400,000 kids out of poverty in first year
Week 2
Paused all new natural gas export facilities
$5 billion for infrastructure projects like fixing bridges, interstates, and offshore wind terminals.
New guidance requires insurance companies to cover contraceptive medicine under Affordable Care Act
Medicaid, Medicare, CHIP, and Federal Employee Health Benefits Program also must cover it
Federal agencies reported on progress implementing the order to protect medication abortion signed 1 year ago
Expanded child tax credit deal made it out of committee in The House
Senate foreign relations committee passed a bill to distribute $5 billion in seized Russian assets to Ukraine
Senate passed Train More Nurses Act
3 more Biden judges confirmed
Week 3
House overwhelmingly passed expanded child tax credit deal
Began negotiations on drug prices for Medicare
$240 million to modernize/refurbish airports across the country
Announced the 10 sites across US that will receive innovation investment for clean energy, sustainable textiles, semiconductor manufacturing, etc
State dept. reviews options for recognizing Palestinian statehood
Imposed sanctions on Israeli settlers who have engaged in violence against Palestinians and peace activists
Loan to help reopen a Michigan nuclear power plant as part of goal to decarbonize the electric grid
IRS launched program to let people file taxes for free with them instead of paying for programs like TurboTax
$28 million in grants for help with treatment of substance use disorders.
$72 million for 46 hydroelectric projects
Senate confirmed Biden's 175th federal judge.
For first time in history a majority of a president’s nominees are not white men
Week 4
Announcement that 23 million Americans have been connected to high speed internet through the Affordable Connectivity Program. Sadly, the program will be forced to end if Republicans in Congress continue to block new funding
$5 billion for a National Semiconductor Technology Center
Finalized rules that will strengthen air quality standards around soot. Projected to prevent 4,200 premature deaths and save Americans $46 billion in health costs
$1.5 Billion investment in America's bus systems
Memorandum directing a strengthening of human rights safeguards around weapons transferred from US stockpiles to allied nations
Announced joint program to streamline Gov response to homelessness between HHS, HUD, 8 states and DC
Released study projecting Puerto Rico will be able to be 100% renewable energy by 2050
Low income Puerto Ricans will soon be able to apply for a solar power program, the first investments in a billion dollar DoE program for the island's renewable energy future
$417 million dollar loan to the North Carolina Turnpike Authority to complete a major transportation overhaul in the greater Raleigh area
Announced plan to invest federal funds to help measure and reduce methane emissions from the oil and gas production
Senate confirmed 2 more Biden nominated federal judges
Week 5
Released first draft for a new student loan forgiveness plan that will hopefully hold up in court
1.2 Billion Dollars to combat human trafficking, including $175 million in housing assistance to human trafficking victims
$970 Million for improvements at 114 airports across 44 states and 3 territories
Medicare & Medicaid released new guidelines to allow people to pay out of pocket prescription drug costs in monthly installments rather than as a lump sum
Added 150 more communities to EPA’s Closing America's Wastewater Access Gap Community Initiative to ensure people have basic running water and indoor plumbing
Announced deferred action for Palestinians in the US. This means any Palestinian living in the United States, no matter their legal status, can not be deported for any reason for the next 18 months
This will need to be renewed next year. A Harris administration almost certainly will. A Trump administration likely won’t.
$60 million in investment into clean geothermal energy
$83 million to help improve air quality monitoring across America
$63 million in investments in domestic heat-pump water-heater manufacturing. Which reduce greenhouse gasses by 50% over the most efficient condensing gas boilers\
$5.1 million to organizations working on preventing homelessness, fighting depression and suicide, drug use and HIV prevention and treatment, family counseling, etc for LGBTQI+ Youth and their Families
In support of the oppressed Uyghur minority in China, the House passed 2 bill that would prohibit US Gov from spending money on projects that source materials from Xinjiang and create a permanent post at the State Dept. to coordinate policy on Uyghur Issues
Week 6
$5.8 billion in funding upgrade America's water systems
Canceled $1.2 billion in student loan debt for 153,000 borrowers through the SAVE Plan which erases federal student loan balances for those who originally borrowed $12,000 or less and have been making payments for at least 10 years
$100 million in federal funding for women’s health research
500 new sanctions against Russian targets in response to the murder of Russian dissident Alexei Navalny
$700 Million in new investments to benefit people in rural America for high speed internet, clean drinking water, sanitary wastewater, and more
$1.5 billion in upgrades to expand chip factories to boost American semiconductor manufacturing
$1.25 billion in funding for local projects that improve roadway safety
The 2022 Safe Streets and Roads for All program has spent $1.7 billion in 1,000 communities impacting 70% of America's population
$19 million to help New Jersey buy electric school buses
Bonus: NASA landed spacecraft, Odysseus, on the moon, the 1st time in 50 years America has gone to the moon.
Week 7
$1.7 Billion in new commitments from local governments, health care systems, charities, business and nonprofits towards ending hunger in America
The White House Challenge to End Hunger and Build Healthy Communities has also led to the USDA’s program which feeds children over the summer in 37 partnering states
House passed a bill on Nuclear energy expanding the Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Capping copays that families pay to no more than 7% of income for the CCDBG grants for childcare and streamlining payments to childcare providers, ensuring prompt payment
House passed a bill improving the Small Business Administration’s 8(a) program which offers wide ranging training and support to small business owners who are socially and economically disadvantaged, predominantly native owned businesses
Announced steps to boost housing supply and lower home costs through a program which has created 12,000 affordable housing units since 2021 with $2 billion, and a program which has spent $4.35 billion since 2021 to build affordable rental homes and make home ownership a reality for Americans.
Also funding for manufactured housing, the first administration to do so
$336 million in investments in rural, remote, and tribal communities to lower energy costs and improve reliability
Proposed new rules to ensure airline passengers who use wheelchairs can travel safely and with dignity
$3 Billion dollar program to help ports become zero-emission
$1 Billion dollars to help clean up toxic Superfund sites
Bonus: Sweden cleared the final major barrier to become NATO's 32nd member
Week 8
Finalized a rule capping credit card late fees at $8
Announced a new Strike Force on Unfair and Illegal Pricing (especially targeting shrinkflation)
Proposed a new rule banning bulk billing, where in landlords charge tenants of apartment buildings for internet, cable, or satellite services, even if they do not use it or opt into being billed
Announced actions that have prevented the collapse of the Colorado River system which provides drinking water and electricity for 40 million Americans in the Southwest.
Executive Order to expand apprenticeships and reestablish direct communication between unions and management in federal agencies (a program allowed to lapse under Trump)
Actions to lower price of health care
Medicare negotiating prices for 10 drugs, first time in history they are allowed to negotiate prices
Proposal that medicare should be able to negotiate 50 such drug prices a year
Medicare Part-D capped the yearly price of ALL medications at $2,000
The President wants to expand this cap to all Americans
President called on congress to make permanent the tax credits for insurance premiums that saved Americans an average of $800/year
President called for $12 billion in Women's Health Research to help close the historic research gap
President called for surprise billing protections to apply to ambulance providers, meaning people won't have to worry about an outrageous bill for an ambulance ride
Announced the first over-the-counter birth control pill will be available on pharmacy and store shelves nationwide and online later this month, and major pharmacies CVS and Walgreens will now offer the abortion pill Mifepristone
In the State of the Union, Biden called for a ceasefire in Gaza to release the hostages and bring in wide-ranging humanitarian aid.
Added over 100,000 more additional households to rental assistance
Called on Congress to expand it by more than half a million and to pass a bill giving $25,000 in down payment assistance to first-generation homebuyers
President wants to expand the Affordable Housing Program and the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit. Also seeks tax credits for 1st time buyers and those selling their starter homes at under market value to owner-occupant
Bonus: March 7th 2024, Sweden formally joined NATO
Week 9
IRS launched direct file pilot program
Biden expressed support for trans and non-binary youth in the aftermath of the suicide of Nex Benedict, and Dept. of Ed.’s Office of Civil Rights opened an investigation into his school district
Vice President Kamala Harris became the first sitting Vice-President (or President) to visit an abortion provider as part of her Reproductive Rights Tour
$3.3 billion worth of infrastructure projects across 40 states designed to reconnect communities divided by transportation infrastructure
Taking steps to eliminate junk fees for college students, plan to ban schools from automatically billing for textbooks and pocketing leftover money on student meal plans
$120 million in investments to help boost Climate Resilience in Tribal Communities
$750 million dollars in investment in clean hydrogen power
$2.3 billion loan to build a lithium processing plant in Nevada (a key component in rechargeable batteries used it electric vehicles)
$1.2 billion in funds to reduce pollution in public transportation
Geothermal Energy Optimization Act introduced in the Senate, which would help expand geothermal projects on public lands.
The Justice for Breonna Taylor Act was introduced in the Senate banning No Knock Warrants nationwide
Bill was introduced in the House requiring the US Postal Service to cover the costs of any late fees on bills that USPS failed to deliver on time
Senate Confirmed 3 more Biden nominees to be lifetime federal judges: Jasmine Yoon the first Asian-America federal judge in Virginia, Sunil Harjani in Illinois, and Melissa DuBose the first LGBTQ and first person of color to serve as a federal judge in Rhode Island. Brings total # of Biden judges to 185
Week 10
Announced new emission standards with the goal of having more than half of new cars and light trucks sold in the US be low/zero emission by 2032
Canceled nearly $6 Billion dollars in student loan debt for 78,000 borrowers who work in public sector jobs like teachers, nurses, social workers, firefighters, etc
Under Pressure from the administration and Democrats in Congress, Drugmaker AstraZeneca joins rival Boehringer Ingelheim in capping the price of inhalers at $35, the same price the Biden Admin capped the price of insulin for seniors
The Dept. of Justice sued Apple for being an illegal monopoly in smartphones
EPA passed a rule banning the final type of asbestos still used in the United States
$8.5 billion to help build advanced computer chips in America
Executive Order prioritizing research into women's health and directing $200 million into it
Democratic Senators introduced the "Shrinkflation Prevention Act"
$45 million in projects that improve Bicyclist and Pedestrian Connectivity and Safety
$77 Million to put 180 electric school buses onto the streets of New York City
Senate confirmed Nicole Berner to Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals, along with Edward Kiel and Eumi Lee as district judges, bringing Biden’s federal judge appointments to 188
Week 11
The Administration responded to the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore, promising to clear the harbor and rebuild the bride. $60 million in emergency funds are already released, and Biden is expected to seek $1 billion from Congress
VP Harris announced $1 billion dollars in new investments as part of the Central America Forward partnership to improve conditions in Central America so people there are not so desperate to trust human traffickers to reach the US. Also announced $175 million dollars of direct aid to Guatemala
Announced $1.5 billion dollar loan to help restart the Palisades Nuclear Plant in Michigan
Social media push to inform the public about the Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) Plan under which anyone making $16 an hour or less has a monthly payment of $0 on their student loans. Republicans are suing to try to shut down the SAVE Plan
Biden extended the window for low-income Americans to apply for Obamacare, rolled back Trump era rules that allowed subsidies for "Junk Health insurance" which offer very little coverage, often mislead consumers about what’s covered, and don't have to follow Obamacare standards so can refuse to cover preexisting conditions.
Announced new regulations aimed at "turbocharging" the number of electric trucks on the road
Thanks to the Inflation Reduction Act, 41 different drugs will cost Medicare enrollees less than last year, announced the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
$6 billion for an effort to decarbonize energy-intensive industries
Executive Order to Strengthen the Recognition of Women’s History
Senate confirmed 3 federal judge nominees, total Biden appointees now 190
Week 12
Biden united with Bernie Sanders at the White House to review Democratic efforts to bring down drug prices.
In the wake of the Francis Scott Key Bridge disaster, the federal government has released $60 million in emergency money toward rebuilding so far,and the Administration is working with business and labor unions to keep workers at work and cover lost wages.
$20 billion to help finance tens of thousands of climate and clean energy projects across the country like clean power generation/storage, 0-emission transportation, etc. 70% will be invested in low-income and disadvantaged communities
$20.5 billion in investments in public transportation
$4 billion in tax credits for businesses investing in clean energy, critical materials recycling, and Industrial decarbonization
$1.5 Billion in investments in climate-smart agriculture
Approved the New England Wind offshore wind project- the 8th such offshore wind project approved by the Biden administration
Dept. of interior announced:
$320 Million for tribal water infrastructure
$244 million to deal with legacy pollution from mining in the State of Pennsylvania
$25 million to protect wetlands in Arizona
$19 million to put solar panels over irrigation canals in California, Oregon and Utah
Dept. of Energy announced $27 million for 40 projects by state, local and tribal governments to combat climate change
Week 13
A further 277,000 Americans had student loan debt canceled through the SAVE plan, bringing Biden’s total to 4.3 million people seeing $153 billion of debt canceled so far
Biden announced a plan that would relieve debt for 30 million Americans through steps like automatically canceling debt for eligible public servants instead of them needing to apply.
Announced rules closing gun-show loophole so that all gun sales legally require background checks, even for gun shows or private sales online
EPA published the first ever regulations on PFAS, known as forever chemicals, in drinking water.
Dept. of Commerce announced a deal with microchip giant TSMC to bring billions in investment and manufacturing to Arizona
EPA finalized rules strengthening clean air standards around chemical plants
Dept. of the Interior announced it had beaten the Biden Administration goals when it comes to new clean energy projects
$830 million to support local communities in becoming more climate resilient.
Senate confirmed 3 federal judge nominees, total Biden appointees now 193
Week 14
Dept. of Commerce announced a deal with Samsung to help bring advanced semiconductor manufacturing and research and development to Texas
Dept. of Energy announced it granted New York State $158 million to help support people making their homes more energy efficient
Dept. of Education began the formal process to make President Biden's new Student Loan Debt relief plan a reality
$1 billion dollar collaboration with USAID to buy American grown foods to combat global hunger
food aid will help feed people in Bangladesh, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Chad, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Haiti, Kenya, Madagascar, Mali, Nigeria, Rwanda, South Sudan, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda, and Yemen
Dept. of Interior announced expansion of four national wildlife refuges to protect 1.13 million acres of wildlife habitat and signed an order protecting parts of the Placitas area sacred to the Pueblo people
announced new workplace safety regulations about the safe amount of silica dust mine workers can be exposed to.
Administration announced its progress in closing the racial wealth gap in America.
Black Unemployment is the lowest it's ever been since it started being tracked in the 1970s and the gap between white and black unemployment is the smallest it's ever been as well
Black wealth is up 60% over where it was in 2019
The share of black owned businesses doubled between 2019 and 2022 and new black businesses are being created at the fastest rate in 30 years
Since the creation of the Interagency Task Force to combat unfair house appraisals, the likelihood of black homeowners having their homes undervalued compared to whites who own comparable property has dropped by 40% and even disappeared in some states
2023 represented a record breaking $76.2 billion in federal contracts going to small businesses owned by members of minority communities. This was 12% of federal contracts and the President aims to make it 15% for 2025
EPA announced it plans to add PFAS, known as forever chemicals, to the Superfund law
Week 15
Biden with AOC, Bernie Sanders, and Senator Ed Markey announced a program, Solar For All, providing $7 billion aimed at supporting low income households install solar power
New rule raises income cap for required overtime. Before, employers only had to pay overtime to employees earning less than $35,568 a year. Now, the limit is $43,888, and in January 2025 it will be raised again to $58,656
$1 billion dollar program to help replace heavily duty vehicles with clean energy versions
To protect 13 million acres of Alaska wildland and secure the livelihood of Alaska native peoples who rely on it, the administration refused oil and mining rights as well as a 210 mile road across vast areas of northern wilderness
Finalized rules requiring airlines to give automatic cash refunds for canceled flights and other inconveniences
Finalized rules on emissions standards for fuel burning power plants
Security of Transportation Pete Buttigieg attended the ground breaking of a new high speed rail project to connect Los Angeles and Las Vegas, which the administration announced $3 billion to support last year
FCC announced a new rule restoring Net Neutrality
FTC passed finalized regulations to ban non-compete agreements in nearly all cases
$1 billion project to connect tribal communities to safe drinking water
announced plans to protect, restore and reconnect 8 million acres of wetlands and 100,000 miles of rivers and streams
Dept. of Health and Human Services announced a new rule boosting privacy protection for abortions
Harris announced a new rule requiring staffing standards at Nursing Homes across the country
$6 billion deal with tech giant Micron to bring high tech manufacturing to New York
Dept. of Education finalized the most comprehensive federal protections for Trans and other Queer students in the nation's history
Week 16
$3 billion to help replace lead pipes in the drinking water system
Biden canceled the student debt of 317,000 former students of a fraudulent for-profit college system
Biden expanded two California national monuments protecting thousands of acres of land
announced new rules that will require car manufacturers to install automatic braking systems in new cars
IRS announced plans to ramp up audits on the wealthiest Americans
Dept. of Interior announced plans for new offshore wind power
Biden Administration announced new rules to finally allow DACA recipients to be covered by Obamacare
Dept. of Health and Human Services finalized rules that require LGBTQ+ and Intersex minors in the foster care system to be placed in supportive and affirming homes.
Senate confirmed another federal judge lifetime appointment, total Biden appointees now 194. For the first time in history the majority of a President's nominees to the federal bench have not been white men
Week 17
Harris announced 5.5 billion dollars to build affordable housing and address homelessness
At the 3rd meeting of the Los Angeles Declaration group (a partnership between the US and 20 other nations in the Americas), Security of State Blinken announced $578 million in new humanitarian aid to Latin America
Dept. of Energy lead an effort to get the G7 to agree to phase out coal by the early 2030s
Biden announced a major investment deal in Racine, Wisconsin, site of the failed Trump Foxconn deal which promised $13,000 jobs that never materialized, and bulldozed over 100 homes and farms before pulling out of the deal. Biden’s deal with Microsoft will bring in 2,000 new jobs to help replace the 1,000 lost jobs during Trump’s presidency
200 tribal governments and the US territories of American Samoa, the Northern Mariana Islands, Guam, and the U.S. Virgin Islands, published climate action plans paid for by the administration’s Pollution Reduction Grants program
As part of marking Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Remembrance Day), the administration announced several actions as part of their National Strategy To Counter Antisemitism, the first ever national strategy addressing the issue by any administration
USAID announced $220 million in additional humanitarian aid to Yemen
$150 million to help communities fight drought supporting 42 projects across 10 western states
Week 18
Justice Dept. endorses lifting many restrictions on marijuana
Dept. of Interior announced moratorium on new coal mining in America's largest coal producing region, the Powder River Basin in Wyoming and Montana (40% of US coal production)
Harris announced that the administration had broken records by investing $16 billion in Historically Black Colleges and Universities
$30 billion dollars in renewal funding for the Housing Choice Voucher Program
$671.4 million in investments in rural infrastructure to improve electric and safe water utilities in 47 projects across 23 states
HUD announced a record breaking $1.1 billion dollar investment in Tribal housing and community development
$2 billion in investments in America's busiest passenger rail route, the Northeast Corridor between Washington DC and Boston
HUD announced plans to streamline its HOME program to speed up building affordable new homes
$520 million in new water projects to help protect against drought in the western states
Dept.s of Agriculture and HHS have stepped up efforts to wipe out the H5N1 virus prevent its spread to humans while protecting farmers livelihoods
Senate confirmed another 3 federal judge lifetime appointments, total Biden appointees now 197
Bonus: The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that transgender health insurance exclusions were illegal
Week 19
Biden wiped out the student loan debt of 160,000 more Americans,
After the supreme court struck down Biden’s original broader forgiveness plan, the administration has patchworked different plans together to cancel $167 billion for 4.75 million Americans so far
Dept. of Justice announced it is suing Ticketmaster for being a monopoly
EPA announced $225 million in new funding to improve drinking and wastewater for tribal communities
Will help with testing for forever chemicals, and replacing of lead pipes as well as sustainability projects
$300 million in grants to clean up former industrial sites known as "Brownfield" sites, which will be cleaned and redeveloped into community assets for 200 projects across 178 communities
Announced a historic expansion of the program to feed low income kids over the summer holidays- rolling out SUN Bucks, a $120 per child grocery benefit
Harris builds on her work in Africa to announce a plan to give 80% of Africa internet access by 2030, up from just 40% today
Senate confirmed another 4 federal judge lifetime appointments, total Biden appointees now 201
Biden's Judges have been historically diverse. 64% of them are women and 62% of them are people of color.
Week 20
$900 million to school districts across the country to replace diesel fueled school buses with cleaner alternatives
For the first time the federal government released guidelines for Voluntary Carbon Markets- a system by which companies offset their carbon emissions by funding project to fight climate change like investing in wind or solar power
IRS announced it'll take its direct file program nationwide in 2025 to allow people to file for free through the IRS website instead of paying for programs like TurboTax
White House announced steps to boost nuclear energy in America- the single largest green energy source in the country accounting for 19% of America's total energy. This is a key part of the administration's strategy to reach a carbon free electricity sector by 2035
$824 million in new funding to protect livestock health and combat H5N1 virus to both protect the animals and make sure it doesn't spread to the human population and become another pandemic situation
announced a partnership with 21 states to help supercharge America's aging energy grid
$343 million to update 8 of America's oldest and busiest transportation stations for disability accessibility
$179 million for drought resilience projects in California and Utah and $242 million for expanding water access in California, Colorado and Washington
$150 million for affordable housing for tribal communities
Secretary of State pledged $135 million to help Moldavia, a tiny state bordering Ukraine which has long been dependent on Russian energy, but thanks to US investment is breaking away from Russia and moving forward with EU membership
US and Guatemala launched the "Youth With Purpose” initiative as part of the administration’s efforts to improve life in Central America. The initiative will train 25,000 young Guatemalans and connect them with with service projects throughout the country
Bonus: This week, May 31st 2024, was the last day of the Affordable Connectivity Program which helped 23 million Americans connect to the internet. Despite repeated calls from President Biden Republicans in Congress have refused to act to renew the program
The Biden Administration has invested $90 Billion high-speed internet investments. Such as $42.45 billion for Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment, $1 billion for the The Middle Mile program laying 12,000 miles of regional fiber networks, and distributed nearly 30,000 connected devices to students and communities, including more than 3,600 through the Tribal Broadband Connectivity Program
Week 21
$480 million in safety grants to all 50 states, DC, and all the US territories as part of Biden's goal to bring the number of traffic deaths to zero
Thanks to DoT safety actions, deaths involving heavy vehicles dropped by 8% from 2022 to 2023 and the dept. wants to keep pushing till the number is 0
$2.8 billion plan to protect public land and support local government Conservation Efforts for restoring national parks, public land, and historic sites, for funding Bureau of Indian Education-funded schools, and for conservation funding.
Dept. of Transportation announced that it had managed to get customers nearly $1 Billion dollars worth of flight reimbursements
$725 million to clean up legacy coal pollution
$700 million for long-term water conservation projects across the Lower Colorado River Basin
$123 million for fighting Youth Homelessness -- the 8th round of investment in Youth Homelessness totaling $440 million so far.
Focused on innovative answers, like host homes, and kinship care models, with emphasis on creating equitable strategies to assist youth who are most vulnerable, including BIPOC, LGBTQIA+, and youth with disabilities.
part of administration’s goal of cutting homelessness by 25% by the end of 2025
Dept. of Agriculture announced a series of actions to strength Tribal food sovereignty to support native animal harvesting, the Tribal Forest Protection Act, and serving Indigenous foods in school meal programs
Bonus: the Bidens and Secretaries of Defense and State marked the 80th anniversary of D-Day in Normandy France with a handful of surviving veterans
Week 22
Harris announced that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is moving to remove medical debt for people's credit score, improving the credit rating of up to 15 million Americans
EPA, Dept. of Agriculture, and FDA announced a joint "National Strategy for Reducing Food Loss and Waste and Recycling Organics" aimed to cut food waste by 50% by 2030
Biden signed with Ukrainian President Zelensky a ten-year US-Ukraine Security Agreement to help them win against Russia and meet the standards it will need to be ready for EU and NATO membership after the war
Biden also spearheaded efforts at the G7 meeting to secure $50 billion for Ukraine from the 7 top economic nations
Announced $500 million for the development of new non-injection vaccines against Covid supporting a clinical trial of 10,000 people testing a vaccine in pill form and two other vaccines administered as nasal sprays
$404 million in additional humanitarian assistance for Palestinians in Gaza, the West Bank and the region
$142 million for drought resilience and boosting water supplies which will provide about 40,000 acre-feet of annual recycled water, for about 160,000 people a year in California, Hawaii, Kansas, Nevada and Texas.
Also supporting 4 water desalination projects in Southern California. Desalination is proving to be an important tool used by countries with limited freshwater
Biden took the lead at the G7 on the Partnership for Global Infrastructure and Investment, a global program to connect the developing world to investment in its infrastructure from the G7 nations.
Heavy investment in the Lobito Corridor, an economic zone that runs from Angola, through the Democratic Republic of Congo, to Zambia. The PGI has helped connect the 3 nations by rail allowing land-locked Zambia and largely landlocked DRC access to Angolan ports. Also is investing in a $900 million solar farm in Angola, and got a $5 billion dollar investment from Microsoft for expanding digital access in Kenya, Indonesia, and Malaysia.
Week 23
On the 12th anniversary of President Obama's DACA program President Biden announced a new pathway to legal status and eventual citizenship for Dreamers
Biden also announced protections for the undocumented spouses and children of US citizens
IRS announced that it'll close a tax loophole used by the ultra rich and corporations and believes it'll raise $50 billion in revenue
$850 million to monitor, measure, quantify and reduce methane emissions from the oil and gas sector
Administration took steps to protect the nations Old Growth Forests, greatly restricting any logging against land owned by the federal government
Also touted the $1.4 billion invested in the 20% of America’s forests in urban settings such as parks through Biden’s Investing in America agenda
Released new rules tying government support for clean energy to good paying jobs. To qualify for massive tax credits, companies will have to offer higher wages and better conditions
Announced large reductions in student loan payments, and even a pause for some, starting in July
Biden Administration celebrated the 1 Millionth pension protected under the American Rescue Plan.
Thanks to the Butch Lewis Act passed in 2021, the government stepped in to secure the pensions of 103,000 Bakery and Confectionery Union workers which were facing a devastating 45% cut- bringing to 1 million the number of workers and retirees whose pensions have been secured by the Biden Administration, which has supported 83 different pension funds, protecting them from an average of 37% cut.
$900 million for the next generation of nuclear power to invest in smaller and more flexible nuclear reactors with smaller footprints
Harris announced a $1.5 billion dollar aid package to Ukraine for repairing the devastated energy sector, emergency infrastructure repair, and humanitarian assistance
$315 million in new food, water, and malnutrition treatment aid for Sudan during their ongoing civil war which has led to nearly apocalyptic conditions in the country. USAID director warned that Sudan could quickly become the largest famine the world has seen since the 1980s when million people died over 2 years in Ethiopia.
Bonus: Maryland Governor pardoned more than 175,000 people for marijuana convictions, mirroring Biden’s pardoning of people convicted of federal marijuana charges in 2022 and 2023
Week 24
US Surgeon General declared for the first time ever, firearm violence a public health crisis and recommended firearm restrictions
Harris announced the $85 million in first grants to be awarded through a groundbreaking program to remove barriers to building more housing
Under President Biden more housing units are under construction than at any time in the last 50 years. Plans underway to build 2 million affordable housing units and invest $258 billion in housing overall.
Biden pardoned all former US service members convicted under the US Military's ban on gay sex
$1.8 Billion in new infrastructure building across all 50 states, 4 territories and Washington DC, focusing on smaller, often community-oriented projects that span jurisdictions, like repairing damage from permafrost melting in Alaska or electrifying a bus fleet in Maine
$2.7 billion to support domestic sources of nuclear fuel
$127 million to 6 states to help clean up legacy pollution from orphaned oil and gas wells
$469 million to help remove dangerous lead from older homes
Bonus: Biden’s student loan forgiveness hit a snag this week when federal courts in Kansas and Missouri blocked some elements. The Administration also suffered a setback to its efforts to regulate smog causing pollution which were rejected by the conservative majority on the Supreme Court. These legal setbacks underline the importance of courts and the ability to nominate judges and Justices over the next 4 years
Week 25
OSHA is putting forward the first ever federal safety regulation to protect workers from excessive heat in the workplace
$1 Billion for 656 projects across the country aimed at helping local communities combat climate change fueled disasters like flooding and extreme heat
flight cancellations at the lowest they've been in a decade
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg credited the Dept.'s new rules requiring automatic refunds for any cancellations or undue delays as driving the good numbers as well as the investment of $25 billion in airport infrastructure that was in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law
$600 million in the 3rd round of funding to reconnect communities divided by highways and other Infrastructure projects over the years, which most often affected racial minorities and poor areas.
The Biden Administration approved its 9th offshore wind power project
$504 million for 12 new Regional Technology and Innovation Hubs which will support high tech manufacturing jobs, as well as training for 21st century jobs for millions of Americans
$200 million to support improved care for older Americans, particularly those with Alzheimer’s and related dementia, by training health care providers in best practices, integrating geriatric training into primary care, and providing education for families and caregivers on supporting aging people.
$176 million to help support the development of a mRNA-based pandemic influenza vaccine
As part of the government's efforts to be ready before the next major pandemic, Moderna is working on an mRNA vaccine focused on the H5 and H7 avian influenza viruses, which experts fear could spread to humans and cause a Covid like event
Week 26
IRS announced it had managed to collect $1 billion in back taxes from high-wealth tax cheats through a program focused on persons with more than $1 million in yearly income who owed more than $250,000 in unpaid taxes.
Thanks to funding from the Inflation Reduction Act, the IRS is able to undertake more enforcement against rich tax cheats after years of Republicans cutting the agency's budget, which they hope to do again if they win power this election.
$244 million dollar investment in the federal government’s registered apprenticeship program- focused on getting well paying blue collar opportunities to people
Republicans pledge to cut it, even as employers struggle to find qualified workers
$11 billion dollars in grants for the The Hudson River Tunnel- the most complex Infrastructure project in the nation would link New York and New Jersey by rail under the Hudson, improving and speeding connection throughout the Northeast
$1.7 billion to save or reopen auto factories and convert them for electric vehicles, which will save 15,000 skilled union worker jobs, and created 2,900 new high-quality jobs
Dept. of Housing and Urban Development reached a settlement over racial discrimination with the organization responsible for setting standards and qualifications for real estate appraisers, The Appraisal Foundation.
Black and Latino home owners are far more likely to have their houses under valued than whites. Under the settlement with HUD, TAF (which last year was 94.7% White and 0.6% Black) will have to take serious steps to increase diversity and remove structural barriers to diversity.
Dept. of Justice disrupted an effort by the Russian government to influence public opinion through AI bots, shutting down nearly 1,000 twitter accounts linked to a Russian Bot farm focused on boosting support for Russia’s war against Ukraine.
$1.5 billion to help local authorities buy made in America buses, 80% of which will go toward zero or low-emission technology busses
Biden, Canadian Prime Minister, Finnish President signed agreement on the arctic to boost production of ice breaking ships and counter China’s dominance of that market and Russia's aggressive push into the arctic waters
$1.1 billion for greater rail safety to minimize rail crossings where possible and improve safety measures where not.
$120 million to help tribal communities prepare for climate disasters
$100 million in additional funds to help feed low income kids over the summer
If fully implemented SUN Bucks could help 30 million kids, but many Republican governors have refused the funding.
$100 million to the UN World Food Program to deliver urgently needed food assistance in Gaza. This will bring the total humanitarian aid given by the US to the Palestinian people since the war started in October 2023 to $774 million, the single largest donor nation
Senate confirmed the first Latina judge to serve on the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals, bringing the administration’s total judge appointments to 202.
Biden has appointed more black women to federal judgeships, more Hispanic judges, more Asian American judges, and more LGBT judges than any other President, including Obama's full 8 years in office. President Biden has also focused on backgrounds, appointing a record breaking number of former public defenders to judgeships, as well as labor and civil rights lawyers.
Bonus: At the NATO summit in Washington DC President Biden joined 32 allies in the Ukraine compact which confirmed their support for keeping a free and Democratic Ukraine in the face of Russian aggression. World leaders praised President Biden's experience and leadership during the NATO summit
Week 27
Biden announced the cancellation of $1.2 billion dollars worth of student loan debt, canceling the debt of 35,000 public service workers, such as teachers, nurses, and firefighters
After the supreme court struck down Biden’s original broader forgiveness plan, the administration has patchworked different plans together to cancel $168.5 billion for 4.8 million Americans so far
Biden announced actions to lower housing costs, make more housing available and called on Congress to prevent rent hikes
The plan calls for landlords who raise the rent by more than 5% a year to face losing major important tax benefits, the average rent has gone up by 21% since 2021
Also told federal agencies to see how unused property could be used for housing
Bureau of Land Management plans on building 15,000 affordable housing units on public land in southern Nevada
USPS is examining 8,500 unused properties across America to be repurposed for housing
HHS is finalizing a new rule to make it easier to use federal property to house the homeless
Calling on lower levels of Gov to do so as well
$5 billion to replace or restore major bridges across the country
Executive Order aimed at boosting Latino college attendance through allowing institutions with 25% or more Latino students to more easily take advantage of federal programs and expand their reach to better serve students and boost Hispanic enrollment nationwide
$325 million in grants for housing and community development in 7 cities which have collectively pledged to develop over 6,500 new mixed-income units, including replacing 2,677 severely distressed public housing units. The cities will invest $2.65 billion – so that every $1 in HUD funds will generate $8.65 in additional resources
Biden took extensive new actions on immigration
Allowing foreign born spouses and step children of American citizens without legal status to apply for it without having to leave the country
Easing Visa rules to allow Dreamers to get work visas to give them legal status and a pathway to citizenship
New rule expanding the federal TRIO program (which supports low-income and first generation college students transition from high school to college) to cover Dreamers
Plans to double number of immigration lawyers available to those going through immigration court
$160 million in grants to support Clean U.S. Manufacturing of Steel and Other Construction Materials
$203 million in humanitarian assistance for the people of Sudan where 25 million people are facing acute food insecurity due to war
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau put forward a new rule that would better regulate popular paycheck advance products to require lenders to tell customers up front about any and all fees and charges, as well as cracking down on deceptive "tipping" options
Week 28
$4.3 billion in Climate Pollution Reduction Grants to support community-driven solutions to fight climate change, and accelerate America’s clean energy transition
Administration announced a plan to phase out the federal government's use of single use plastics in food service operations, events, and packaging by 2027, and from all federal operations by 2035
White House hosted a summit on super pollutants with the goals of better measuring them and dramatically reducing them
$325 million in grants for climate justice, funded by the Inflation Reduction Act,
to help weatherize and energy-efficiency upgrade homes for 35 tribes, to install onsite wastewater treatment systems throughout 17 Black Belt counties in Alabama, to support urban forestry, expanding tree canopy in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, and more
Dept. of Interior approved 3 new solar projects on public land
Pledged $667 million to global Pandemic Fund to support Pandemic prevention, and readiness in low income nations who can't do it on their own
$240 million investment in tribal fisheries in the Pacific Northwest
IRS announced that thanks to funding from President Biden's Inflation Reduction Act, it'll be able to digitize much of its operations allowing taxpayers to retrieve all their tax related information from one source
IRS also announced that New Jersey will be joining the direct file program in 2025. In 2024 140,000 Americans were able to file this way, they collectively saved $5.6 million in tax preparation fees, claiming $90 million in returns
Republicans in Congress lead by Congressmen Adrian Smith of Nebraska and Chuck Edwards of North Carolina have put forward legislation to do away with direct file
Bonus: American law enforcement arrested co-founder of the Sinaloa Cartel, Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada
Week 29
Biden announced his plan to reform the Supreme Court and make sure no President is above the law. After the conservative majority ruled Trump has "absolute immunity" from any prosecution for "official acts" while president, Biden called for a constitutional amendment clarifying that presidents aren’t above the law
In response to a wide ranging corruption scandal involving Justice Clarence Thomas, Biden also called on Congress to pass a legally binding code of ethics for the Supreme Court, and endorsed the idea of term limits for the Justices
Biden Administration sent out an email to everyone who has a federal student loan informing them of upcoming debt relief options, mostly targeting run-away interest or those who have been making payments for over 20 years
Announced that the federal government would step in and protect the pension of 600,000 Teamsters, just the latest in a number of such pension protections the President has done in office.
Biden and Harris oversaw the dramatic release of American hostages from Russia in the largest prisoner exchange in post-soviet history at 24 people
A new Biden Administration rule banning discrimination against LGBT students takes effect, but faces major Republican resistance and lawsuits delaying implementation in red states
$2 billion to black and minority farmers who were the victims of historic discrimination and were improperly denied the loans they needed
Biden Administration took an important step to stop the criminalization of poverty by changing child safety guidelines so that poverty alone isn't grounds for taking a child into foster care
Administration agreed to a plan by the Democratic Governor of North Carolina to forgive the medical debt of 2 million people in the state (which has the 3rd highest medical debt in the nation)
Dept. of Transportation put forward a new rule requiring airlines to seat parents next to their children, with no extra cost
$3.5 billion to combat homelessness in grants to local organizations and programs
Pennsylvania and New Mexico would be joining the IRS' direct file program for 2025\
Bonus: President Biden welcomed families of released hostages into the oval office to call their loved ones on the plane home [video in week 29 post]
Week 30
$325 million to support State, territorial, DC, and tribal governments in buying new land for parks and outdoor recreation sites and the expansion and refurbishment of existing sites
$171 million to update and replace Birmingham, Alabama’s aging water system and remove all lead pipes
$2.2 billion in investments in the national power grid to help boost resiliency in the face of extreme weather
Justice Dept. won its massive antitrust case against Google, ruling it an illegal monopoly
Also has ongoing antitrust suits against Apple, while the Federal Trade Commission is suing Facebook and Amazon for their monopolist practices
$3.9 billion in direct aid to Ukraine to make up for massive budget shortfalls caused by the war with Russia.
To help pay teachers, emergency workers, and other public employees, as well helping displaced persons, low-income families, and people with disabilities
$190 million to improve air quality and energy upgrades in K-12 schools
$424 million in additional humanitarian aid to the Democratic Republic of the Congo
Due to ongoing conflict and food insecurity, 25 million Congolese are in need of humanitarian aid
Senate confirmed 3 federal judge nominees, total Biden appointees now 205
Week 31
Announced the successful conclusion of the first negotiations between Medicare and pharmaceutical companies over drug prices. Savings on these first ten drugs are between 38% and 79% and will collectively save seniors $1.8 billion dollars in out of pocket costs
For years Medicare was not allowed to directly negotiate prices with drug companies leaving seniors to pay high prices. Thanks to Inflation Reduction Act, passed with no Republican support, this long time Democratic goal is now a reality
This is on top of capping insulin costs at $35/month and all out of pocket drug costs at $2,000 a year starting for Medicare recipients
Administration launched crackdown of companies wasting consumer time
Proposed rules that require companies to make canceling a subscription or service as easy as signing up for it
Requiring automatic refunds for canceled flights
Working on rules to require companies to allow customers to speak to a real person with just one button click
Working on rules around chatbots, particularly their use from banks
Working on rules to ban companies from posting fake reviews, suppressing honest negative reviews, or paying for positive reviews
Taking steps to require insurance companies to allow health claims to be submitted online
The Bidens announced further funding as part of the President's Cancer Moonshot which aims to cut the number of cancer deaths in half over the next 25 years
Harris announced a plan to lower housing costs- offering $25,000 to first time buyers for down-payments, building of 3 million more housing units, and $40 billion innovation fund to spur innovative housing construction- all in addition to Biden's calls for a $10,000 tax credit for first time buyers and to punish landlords who raise the rent by over 5%
Biden Designates a national monument at the site of the 1908 Springfield Race Riot, where thousands of white residents destroyed black homes and businesses and 17 people died. As a direct result of the riot, black community leaders and white allies met a few months later in New York and founded the NAACP
$775 million to help cap and clean up orphaned oil and gas wells
Harris announced plans to ban price-gouging in the food and grocery industries
In response to this pressure from Democrats on price gouging, the supermarket giant Kroger proposed dropping prices by a billion dollars
Week 32
$521 million to help increase the number of electric vehicle charging ports
Dept. of The Interior announced the first ever lease for off-shore wind power in Oregon
Finalized the protection of 28 million acres of public lands across Alaska
$558 Million for improving maternal health
Announced that Maine will join the IRS' Direct File program for tax year 2025 which allows taxpayers to file, for free, simple returns with the IRS instead of paying for services like TurboTax
Week 33
$7.3 billion in clean energy investment for rural communities
Administration announced a historic 10th offshore wind project, this one in Maryland
Executive Order aimed at supporting and expanding unions directing all federal agencies to take steps to recognize unions, not interfere with the formation of unions and reach labor agreements on federally supported projects
$1 billion to make local roads safer to 354 local communities across America to improve roadway safety and prevent deaths and serious injuries
Since National Roadway Safety Strategy launched in 2022 traffic fatalities have decreased for 9 straight quarters
$430 million to support America's aging hydropower- most dams were built in the New Deal Era, and need to be updated for safety
$300 million to help support tribal nations, and US territories cut climate pollution and boost green energy
investing $179 million in literacy to help support states research, develop, and implement evidence-based literacy interventions to help students achieve key literacy milestones
US government secured the release of 135 political prisoners from Nicaragua jailed by the dictator there since political protests started in 2018
Justice Dept. announced the disruption of a major effort by Russia to interfere with the 2024 US Elections. A Russian propaganda network spent $10 million to help spread Russian propaganda and help sway the election in favor of Trump and the Republicans as well as disrupting American society
Harris outlined her plan for Small Businesses at a campaign stop in New Hampshire- she wants to expand from $5,000 to $50,000 tax incentives for startup expenses which would help 25 million new small businesses over 4 years
Week 34
Biden marked the 30th anniversary of the passage of the Violence Against Women Act (which was written by him as a senator). He announced $690 million in grants to support survivors of gender-based violence.
Announced a new rule to force insurance companies to treat mental health care the same as medical care
Announced that 50 million Americans, 1 in every 7, have gotten health insurance through Obamacare's marketplaces
IRS announced that it has recovered $1.3 billion in back taxes from wealthy tax dodgers. The Inflation Reduction Act funded the IRS to chase high income tax cheats, which Republicans have been underfunding for years to hinder the ability to make the wealthy pay their fair share. IRS has collected over a Billion Dollars in back taxes from the richest Americans, so far this year
Dept. of The Interior and White House Climate Advisor Ali Zaidi highlighted the 41 renewable energy projects approved on public land by the administration
$236 million to help fight forest fires and restore landscapes damaged by recent wildfires
$157 million in wetland conservation focused on protecting bird habitats
Senate confirmed 4 federal judge nominees, total Biden appointees now 209
Week 35
$1.3 billion in new funding for Historically Black Colleges and Universities which have proven to be far better at boosting the long term economic prospects of graduates than non-HBCU colleges. Bulk of funding will go directly to helping students afford college.
Dept. of Transportation celebrated 60,000 infrastructure projects funding by the Biden-Harris Bipartisan Infrastructure Law
From major multi-state projects to small town railway crossings every project was lead by a local community in need not a make-work project dreamed up in Washington
Over $3 billion to support the battery sector in 25 projects across 14 states supporting over 12,000 jobs
Maine and Rhode Island both launched a partnership with the federal government to help save low income families money on their utility bills
$156 million to help bring solar power to low-income New Mexico residents as part of the "Solar for All" project to help low-income people afford the switch over to solar power
Announced the first ever leases for wind power in the Gulf of Maine
Senate confirmed 2 federal district judges and 1 appointment to the Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, total Biden appointees now 212
Week 36
Announced new actions to curb gun violence at the one year anniversary of the White House Office of Gun Violence Prevention such as an Executive Order combating machine gun conversion devices, 3-D printed guns, and addresses active shooter drills at schools
One year anniversary of the American Climate Corps has seen 15,000 young people connected to well paid jobs in climate resilience. A new Environmental Justice Climate Corps program was announced which will connect 250 American Climate Corps members with local communities and help them achieve environmental justice projects
Announced that 4.2 million small business owners and self-employed people get their health insurance through the ACA marketplace. The self-employed are 3 times as likely as other Americans to use the marketplaces for their insurance
Pressed freight railroad companies to close the gap and offer paid sick time to all their employees. Under Biden's leadership the number of Class I freight railroad workers with paid sick days increased from 5% to 90%. Now he is pushing to get it for the last 10%.
$965 million to help school districts buy clean energy buses
The administration took another step in its historic efforts to protect the Colorado River System by signing 5 water conservation agreements with local water authorities in California and Arizona conserving over 717,000 acre-feet of water by 2026
$254 million to help support local parks, the largest such investment in history
$1.5 billion to help combat opioid addiction and prevent opioid overdose deaths
$466.5 million in food assistance and development worldwide this year, including helping to feed 1.2 million children and helping 200,000 farmers shift to climate-smart agriculture in low-income countries
First Lady announced at UN meeting a partnership with USAID and UNICEF to end childhood exposure to lead worldwide
Senate approved another federal judge, total Biden appointees now 213
Week 37
Biden and Harris have led the federal response to Hurricane Helene earning praise from both Republican and Democratic local leaders. Thousands of federal workers have given out over 8 million meals, and 7 million liters of water. Harris announced the federal government will reimburse state and local government 100% of the costs from Helene
A strike by the International Longshoremen’s Association, that briefly shut down ports, ended in a tentative deal to give them a 62% raise, after Biden directed the Secretary of Transportation to take the lead pressuring management to make a deal with the workers
Harris announced new actions to help those struggling with medical debt-
Requiring debt collectors to confirm debts are valid and accurate before engaging in collection actions
Cracking down on debt collectors that collect on debt that is not owed by patients
DoD announced that it was reducing pricing for civilians who get medical treatment at DoD hospitals
Crack down on tax-exempt hospitals who are required by law to offer financial assistance but often do not
$62 Billion in infrastructure funding for 2025 for roads, bridges, high speed rail, ports, airports, and high speed internet
$1 Billion dollars of investment in America's passenger rail future to help expand and modernize intercity passenger rail nationwide. (Coming on top of $8.2 billion in investments announced in December 2023)
$2.8 billion joint project between Dept.s of Energy and Agriculture to bring 100% carbon pollution-free energy to the rural Midwest
IRS announced that 30 million Americans, across 24 states will qualify for free direct filing of their taxes in 2025
$7.7 billion in funding for Climate-Smart Practices on Agricultural Lands
$1.5 billion in investments in transmission infrastructure to help ensure our grid is reliable and resilient
Week 38
Biden announced a new EPA rule that will require all lead pipes in America's drinking water systems to be replace within 10 years
Harris plans to expand Medicare to cover home health care. Currently long term care is only covered by Medicaid, the health program for the poor, so people must spend all their savings before they can qualify. This would allow more seniors to stay in their homes and would be a gamechanger for disabled Americans, who also get coverage from Medicare
Medicare released a preliminary list of 101 generic drugs which it would cover that would cost $2 or less for a month for enrollees. Thanks to the Inflation Reduction Act, Medicare will be allowed to pay for generic drugs, which was long resisted by drug companies
Administration’s Domestic Policy Advisor announced they had blown past goal of hiring 250,000 student support staff for 2024, with 320,000 tutors, mentors, student success coaches, postsecondary transition coaches, and support coordinators nationwide
$420 million to help get rid of lead paint and other lead hazards from homes
Week 39
Announced they had forgiven the student loan debt of 1 million public sector workers through the Public Service Loan Forgiveness, which was passed in 2007 but almost impossible to access until the Biden Administration’s overhauls
Federal Trade Commission finalizes its "one-click to cancel" rule which requires businesses to make it as easy to cancel a subscription as it was to sign up for it
Announced there are 1.7 million more construction and manufacturing jobs and 700,000 more jobs in the transportation sector since the start of the administration, and 400,000 more union workers than in 2021.
60,000 Infrastructure projects across the nation have been funded by the Biden-Harris Bipartisan Infrastructure Law
$2 billion to protect the U.S. power grid against growing threats of extreme weather
$125 million to help upgrade older diesel engines to low or zero-emission solutions
Dept. of The Interior and State of California broke ground on the Salton Sea Species Conservation Habitat Project restoring and protecting a total of 5,000 acres of land in California’s largest lake
$900 Million in investment in next generation nuclear power, developing smaller lighter reactors which in theory should be easier to deploy
The federal government took two big steps to increase the rights of Alaska natives.
The Departments of The Interior and Agricultural finalized an agreement to strengthen Alaska Tribal representation on the Federal Subsistence Board
Dept. of Interior signed 3 landmark co-stewardship agreements with Alaska Native Tribes
$860 million to help support solar energy in Puerto Rico
Dept. of Interior announced it had approved the Fervo Cape Geothermal Power Project, a major step forwards towards geothermal energy of public lands and the goal of a carbon pollution-free power sector by 2035
Bonus: Biden meets with a Kindergarten Teacher whose student loans were forgiven this week [video in week 39 link]
Week 40
Biden issued the first presidential apology on behalf of the federal government to America's Native American population for the Indian boarding school policy
Proposed a new rule which would make contraceptive medication (the pill) free over the counter with most Insurance
EPA announced its finalized rule strengthening standards for lead paint dust in pre-1978 housing and child care facilities. The new standards set the lowest level of lead particle that can be identified by a lab as the standard for requiring lead remediation
$50 million dollar fine against American Airlines for its treatment of disabled passengers and their wheelchairs. Half the fine will go to replacing such damaged wheelchairs
Biden administration has leveled a historic # of fines against airlines ($225 million) for their failures. Also published an Airline Passengers with Disabilities Bill of Rights, passed a rule on accessible lavatories on aircraft, and is drafting a rule to make airlines replace lost or damaged wheelchairs with equal equipment at once
$430 million dollars to help boost domestic clean energy manufacturing in former coal communities in 15 different towns
$4.2 billion in new infrastructure investment for 44 projects across the country
$200 million to replace aging natural gas pipes saving the average consumer over $900 on gas bills and removing 1,000 metric tons of methane pollution, annually
$244 million to address legacy pollution in Pennsylvania coal country
Data shows that President Biden's Inflation Reduction Act (passed with Vice-President Harris' tie breaking vote) has saved seniors $1 billion dollars on out-of-pocket drug costs by capping yearly out of pocket costs and allowing generic drugs and price negotiation
Announced new proposed rule to bring student debt relief for 8 million struggling borrowers
Despite roadblocks from Republicans at all levels, the administration has managed to bring student loan forgiveness to 5 million Americans so far through different programs patchworked together. The new proposed rule to bring it to 8 million more can’t be finalized before 2025, so the election will decide its fate
$1.5 billion in 92 partner-driven conservation projects aimed at making farming more sustainable and environmentally friendly
What Joe Biden and Kamala Harris did in 2024.
I started this project back in January and for most of a year, every week, I came up with the highlights of what the Biden-Harris Administration did. I did it because it felt to me our media and national conversion was broken, our government was doing huge things that it felt like almost no one knew about. It's amazing how often I struggled to find a single news source that wanted to cover a huge life changing project.
This is the last Friday before Election Day, and if you haven't already voted, take a minute to go back and look at the last 40 weeks, and decide, do you like these things or want literally the reverse on every issue.
Week 1 January 19th
Week 2 January 26th
Week 3 February 2nd
Week 4 February 9th
Week 5 February 16th
Week 6 February 23rd
Week 7 March 1st
Week 8 March 8th
Week 9 March 15th
Week 10 March 22nd
Week 11 March 29th
Week 12 April 5th
Week 13 April 12th
Week 14 April 19th
Week 15 April 26th
Week 16 May 3rd
Week 17 May 10th
Week 18 May 18th
Week 19 May 24th
Week 20 May 31st
Week 21 June 7th
Week 22 June 14th
Week 23 June 21st
Week 24 June 28th
Week 25 July 5th
Week 26 July 12th
Week 27 July 19th
Week 28 July 26th
Week 29 August 2nd
Week 30 August 9th
Week 31 August 16th
Week 32 August 30th
Week 33 September 6th
Week 34 September 13th
Week 35 September 20th
Week 36 September 27th
Week 37 October 4th
Week 38 October 11th
Week 39 October 18th
Week 40 October 25th
Feel free to reblog this or go back and reblog a favorite, one that impacts your life or the one from the week of your birthday, whatever.
and remember to read past the headlines and dig to find out what your government is up to, it might shock you how much is happening that no one talks about.
#Joe Biden#kamala harris#politics#US politics#2024 presidential election#I spent all day doing this#I know a lot of people are more likely to read if you don't have to follow a link#(I mean I am too)#and this stuff is so important#takeaways from like 9 hours straight of staring at this stuff:#Biden has done so much to work on climate change#just over and over projects to work on so many different aspects of climate change#and student loan forgiveness#they just keep plugging away at all these different programs patchworked together#to get around Republicans trying to block it at every turn#We are now at 5 million people who have received some loan forgiveness#with a proposed plan for 8 million more but that won't be finalized until next year so depends on the election#also#so much of the climate change funding is earmarked to support marginalized communities#and there's even a program to reconnect marginalized communities split by racist urban planning of the interstate system#and I had no idea about it until now#and the healthcare costs#allowing medicare to negotiate drug prices#allowing them to pay for generic drugs#I didn't even know they weren't allowed to before- cause that's so stupid#so many things#and they're all in danger if that orange asshole gets back in#so please#vote
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🗣️THIS IS WHAT INCLUSIVE, COMPASSIONATE DEMOCRACY LOOKS LIKE
Minnesota Dems enacted a raft of laws to make the state a trans refuge, and ensure people receiving trans care here can't be reached by far-right governments in places like Florida and Texas. (link)
Minnesota Dems ensured that everyone, including undocumented immigrants, can get drivers' licenses. (link)
They made public college free for the majority of Minnesota families. (link)
Minnesota Dems dropped a billion dollars into a bevy of affordable housing programs, including by creating a new state housing voucher program. (link)
Minnesota Dems massively increased funding for the state's perpetually-underfunded public defenders, which lets more public defenders be hired and existing public defenders get a salary increase. (link)
Dems raised Minnesota education spending by 10%, or about 2.3 billion. (link)
Minnesota Dems created an energy standard for 100% carbon-free electricity by 2040. (link)
Minnesota already has some of the strongest election infrastructure (and highest voter participation) in the country, but the legislature just made it stronger, with automatic registration, preregistration for minors, and easier access to absentee ballots. (link)
Minnesota Dems expanded the publicly subsidized health insurance program to undocumented immigrants. This one's interesting because it's the sort of things Dems often balk at. The governor opposed it! The legislature rolled over him and passed it anyway. (link)
Minnesota Dems expanded background checks and enacted red-flag laws, passing gun safety measures that the GOP has thwarted for years. (link)
Minnesota Dems gave the state AG the power to block the huge healthcare mergers that have slowly gobbled up the state's medical system. (link)
Minnesota Dems restored voting rights to convicted felons as soon as they leave prison. (link)
Minnesota Dems made prison phone calls free. (link)
Minnesota Dems passed new wage protection rules for the construction industry, against industry resistance. (link)
Minnesota Dems created a new sales tax to fund bus and train lines, an enormous victory for the sustainability and quality of public transit. Transit be more pleasant to ride, more frequent, and have better shelters, along more lines. (link)
They passed strict new regulations on PFAS ("forever chemicals"). (link)
Minnesota Dems passed the largest bonding bill in state history! Funding improvements to parks, colleges, water infrastructure, bridges, etc. etc. etc. (link)
They're going to build a passenger train from the Twin Cities to Duluth. (link)
I can't even find a news story about it but there's tens of millions in funding for new BRT lines, too. (link)
A wonky-but-important change: Minnesota Dems indexed the state gas tax to inflation, effectively increasing the gas tax. (link)
They actually indexed a bunch of stuff to inflation, including the state's education funding formula, which helps ensure that school spending doesn't decline over time. (link)
Minnesota Dems made hourly school workers (e.g., bus drivers and paraprofessionals) eligible for unemployment during summer break, when they're not working or getting paid. (link)
Minnesota Dems passed a bunch of labor protections for teachers, including requiring school districts to negotiate class sizes as part of union contracts. (Yet another @SydneyJordanMN special here. (link)
Minnesota Dems created a state board to govern labor standards at nursing homes. (link)
Minnesota Dems created a Prescription Drug Affordability Board, which would set price caps for high-cost pharmaceuticals. (link)
Minnesota Dems created new worker protections for Amazon warehouse workers and refinery workers. (link)
Minnesota Dems passed a digital fair repair law, which requires electronics manufacturers to make tools and parts available so that consumers can repair their electronics rather than purchase new items. (link)
Minnesota Dems made Juneteenth a state holiday. (link)
Minnesota Dems banned conversion therapy. (link)
They spent nearly a billion dollars on a variety of environmental programs, from heat pumps to reforestation. (link)
Minnesota Dems expanded protections for pregnant and nursing workers - already in place for larger employers - to almost everyone in the state. (link)
Minnesota Dems created a new child tax credit that will cut child poverty by about a quarter. (link)
Minnesota Democrats dropped a quick $50 million into homelessness prevention programs. (link)
And because the small stuff didn't get lost in the big stuff, they passed a law to prevent catalytic converter thefts. (link)
Minnesota Dems increased child care assistance. (link)
Minnesota Dems banned "captive audience meetings," where employers force employees to watch anti-union presentations. (link)
No news story yet, but Minnesota Dems forced signal priority changes to Twin Cities transit. Right now the trains have to wait at intersections for cars, which, I can say from experience, is terrible. Soon that will change.
Minnesota Dems provided the largest increase to nursing home funding in state history. (link)
They also bumped up salaries for home health workers, to help address the shortage of in-home nurses. (link)
Minnesota Dems legalized drug paraphernalia, which allows social service providers to conduct needle exchanges and address substance abuse with reduced fear of incurring legal action. (link)
Minnesota Dems banned white supremacists and extremists from police forces, capped probation at 5 years for most crimes, improved clemency, and mostly banned no-knock warrants. (link)
Minnesota Dems also laid the groundwork for a public health insurance option. (link)
I’m happy for the people of Minnesota, but as a Floridian living under Ron DeSantis & hateful Republicans, I’m also very envious tbh. We know that democracy can work, and this is a shining example of what government could be like in the hands of legislators who actually care about helping people in need, and not pursuing the GOP’s “culture wars” and suppressing the votes of BIPOC, and inflicting maximum harm on those who aren’t cis/het, white, wealthy, Christian males. BRAVO MINNESOTA. This is how you do it! And the Minnesota Dems did it with a one seat majority, so no excuses. Forget about the next election and focus on doing as much good as you can, while you still can. 👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿
👉🏿 https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1660846689450688514.html
#politics#minnesota#social justice#culture wars#this is what democracy looks like#republicans are evil
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I'm like at this point where I feel hungry, but I feel like if I eat anything, I'm going to get sick. I also feel tired, but I'm not actually like sleepy tired. Like, it is sleepy tired, but I know I won't fall asleep sleepy tired. I have no idea if that makes any sense.
#shut it void#at least i know the whole hungry but not actually hungry thing is the wegovy and i honestly did eat way too much today#but the tired but not tired thing is definitely new i really need to figure out my job's policy on marijuana because that helps me sleep#i don't smoke it i either eat or drink it but it's like if it helps me sleep i'd rather get the sleep y'know?#but not if it's gonna cost me my job i know it shouldn't since it's legal here but it is also a healthcare type of field sometimes
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i'm alive folks, just dealing with some major changes in life and have extreme emotions that I do not want leading me to say anything I regret.
recently, as in today, I made a decision that is objectively unsustainable and lied about being prepared for a ton of things. it's pretty stupid but I just hate feeling weak. plus, i've gotten through worse, and I do like an adrenaline rush.
overall though I do need to learn to prioritize myself and stop seeking validation of family authority figures as if i'm 10 years old. I guess I just feel inadequate in comparison to my siblings.
i'm still going to not be using tumblr and will need to delete some other social media apps too. I just keep getting caught up in nonsense. i'm very argumentative. it's not productive for anyone.
let's hope this all is resolved within a few months or less and that I don't run out of money from transportation costs by then! probably 80% of my expenses right now are transportation. luckily I saved money years before this became a necessity, but it's not infinite (I am making money from work, but it's not balanced with expenses, especially healthcare, fuck you insurance companies)
sooo yeah you don't need to send asks questioning if i'm still conscious or not.
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New donors needed to help keep Scarleteen’s queer, trans and gender nonconforming sex educators going!
We, the queer and trans, staff & volunteers at Scarleteen spend the vast majority of our time giving support. We very actively maintain a friendly and accessible website full of resources, advice and information, and provide a caring, safe and patient environment in all of our direct services. We continue to make a massive contribution towards sexuality education as a whole, as we have for the whole of our 25 year tenure. Everywhere we go we receive thanks from educators and service workers for the motivation we, and our founder Heather Corinna, have given them to do incredible work in their communities. However, for our daily survival and our dreams of the future, we need support too!
Unless our current trajectory changes we will not have the funding this year to give our volunteers end-of-year stipends to reward their generous efforts, nor bring our codirectors’ wages any closer to industry standard or even industry average rates of pay for their positions and tenure - averages which we continue to undershoot by quite some margin, nor will we be able to reimburse those staff for the many hours they have worked in excess of their basic 30 hours a week. We will also be unable to increase their healthcare benefits which for one disabled member of our team, will have been exceeded 4 times over by actual healthcare costs by the end of the year, which they have had to pay for out-of-pocket.
As part of our annual Pride celebration we are asking you to consider becoming one of the 50 (and fabulous) new recurring donors we are determined to find this week! Please consider supporting a few good queer & trans people to help us continue to deliver queer sex and relationships education, info and support, which remains free and open to all.
Recurring monthly donations of $10 or more are part of the treasured community of donors who give us peace of mind like nothing else can. We will need a further 250 recurring donors at that level or the financial equivalent to keep us on-track for our most modest projections through the coming years, so whatever help you can give us today to exceed our initial target of 50 will be cherished by us more than you can know.
Here’s some ways to help:
If you can become a new monthly donor, please do! We would love to welcome you to our valued bunch of fabulous supporters!
If you are already a donor, please consider tacking on an extra $10 per month, even temporarily, if you can!
If you cannot currently afford to donate an increased amount, or cannot donate at all, please consider reaching out to someone who you think can, so that eventually we can find that new donor. (And if you manage to sign someone up, do let us know so we can thank you!)
If you only want to or can give us a one-time donation we will still be incredibly grateful for that help at any level. We know a thing or 12 about deep financial limitations and having to choose very carefully where you give.
Please go to scarleteen.com/donate to begin your monthly donation, or if you have further questions head to scarleteen.com/contact drop us a message.
Thank you once more for your support and for being your queer/trans/allied/otherwise-awesome self,
Yours sincerely,
The Scarleteam …
of Scarleteen: queer sex ed for all since 1998❤️
#pride#fundraising#sex ed#support#queer sex education#zine#lgbtq community#queer sex ed forever#queer sex ed for all
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potentially triggering but ultimately harm reductionist statement about how people treat those with suicide ideation below, just a warning!
it's pretty fuckin rich that people tell suicidal people that they're "being selfish" by wanting to die, because it could not be more selfish to expect someone to just continue suffering through a life they do not want simply because their death would make them sad.
the people who say that kind of thing never want to offer any genuine help to the suicidal person that will change their life circumstances in a lasting way. they never want to house them, get them medical care, pay off their debts, introduce them to new friends, nurse them through a years-long trauma recovery process, get them a pet, drive them to a support group every week, buy them their groceries, clean their house, listen to them talk about their tough feelings for the millionth time.
lasting healing within a dramatically different and better life is never what they want for the suicidal person. they just want the person to not do anything that would make them sad. and not look too sad when they are around them, either, because even if they do white-knuckle their way through a painful existence, they are expected to also make it look easy.
but it's funny, isn't it, that by pushing away all thoughts of sadness, all thoughts of suicide, the person who says such a dismissive thing to the suicidal person is revealing how much they are on the brink of despair themselves. if, when faced with a suicidal person, your number one goal is to prevent their suicide for the sake of your own emotions rather than to improve circumstances for the suicidal person themselves, well, your own emotional grip on reality must be quite tenuous indeed. if you think the most important emotionally reality about a suicide is how it impacts you and not the person that has done it, well, you really must think that it's normal to expect other people to just constantly silently suffer for one another.
there's almost a bit of sick envy that i sometimes hear when people claim that they suicidal are "selfish." the statement almost seems to betray that everybody thinks of suicide at one point or another, that everyone has been in enough pain before that they've wished for it to end, but that since they have endured, they expect everyone else to endure the same for them, so that they don't slip into despair again as well.
it's so offensive because it is such a deeply missed opportunity. instead of batting away the statements of a suicidal person as if they were the greatest, most evil taboo, a person could really sit with them in their despair and say hey, I have felt that way too.
If only we lived in a world where acknowledgement of suicide ideation was not so taboo. Even psychologists and psychiatrists treat it as this untouchable thing, they freak out and jump into action and rob you of your body autonomy if you are willing to voice that you have thought of it. but virtually everyone has thought of it at one point or another, and some live with thoughts of it all the time forever but still have basically decent lives that they experience as worthwhile.
the legal apparatus that exists to prevent suicides at all costs have made it too risky for any kind of healthcare professional to allow the frank acknowledgement of suicide ideation to happen. hell, even the protections that have evolved online to supposedly "protect" suicidal people by filtering out content about suicide and redirecting those browsing for information about it to suicide prevention resourcse has, counterproductively, served to make the state of suicidality even more unspeakable. it cannot be spoken about, cannot be posted about, cannot be acknowledged, is not permitted, is never allowed to just be.
and that harms suicidal people so much.
we are so deeply selfish and cowardly in how we approach suicide and suicidal people.
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In Pakistan as well, they used health workers and vaccination campaigns to conduct the raid under Obama Administration. US Government's raid is also the reason why health workers specifically were targeted and killed by taliban militants.
The raid by U.S. forces on bin Laden's compound fueled the anger that many Pakistanis already felt about American involvement in the region, and the revelations about the CIA's covert vaccination plot fed into such rumors and gave them credence, say health experts. "After Abbottabad, these rumors became fact in the minds of many Pakistanis," says an international health worker who asked not to be identified because the attack on Abbottabad remains a sensitive issue for the Pakistani government. [...] After rumors spread that Afridi was connected to the CIA, every vaccination worker in Pakistan fell under suspicion. This was especially true in the mountains along the Afghan border, which were both high-contagion areas and Taliban and al Qaeda strongholds. The Taliban also suspected that polio workers were secretly collecting intelligence for U.S. drone strikes. To the Pashtun tribes that inhabited these mountains, it wasn't so far-fetched. They lived in terror of the drones.
The distrust sowed by the sham campaign in Pakistan could conceivably postpone polio eradication for 20 years, leading to 100,000 more cases that might otherwise not have occurred, says Leslie F. Roberts of Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health. “Forevermore, people would say this disease, this crippled child is because the U.S. was so crazy to get Osama bin Laden,” he argues. The vaccination ruse also poses a moral problem. Physicians take a Hippocratic oath to do no harm. Humanitarian workers adhere to an international code of conduct that requires that their services be provided independently of national agendas, on the basis of need alone. The misguided vaccine program in Pakistan was started in a poor neighborhood of Abbottabad, no doubt to give it an air of legitimacy. Yet after the first in a standard series of three hepatitis B shots was given, the effort was abandoned so that the team could move to bin Laden's wealthier community. This lapse in protocol proves that the best interests of the recipients were not the guiding principle of the effort—while not coincidently betraying the program for the sham it was.
I know this isn’t a novel observation but I’ve been reading a lot of articles about colonial and imperial policy (specifically demography history papers) & one pattern that keeps coming up is that colonial/imperial governments try to institute what can reasonably be described as “good” social policies in colonised places (like vaccine programs, funding for schools, etc, things that are associated with the smooth functioning of a state), and these are often rejected by local colonised governments and people because like obviously they don’t trust colonial/imperial administrators wanting to become involved with their healthcare or education. And what often ends up happening is this backlash against “progressive” policies because they’re being pushed by colonial governments, so you get shit like the Catholic Church running all the primary schools in Ireland because they refuse to open British-funded state schools, or people refusing to immunize their children because those “public goods” are (rationally & understandably) associated with things like US imperial population management programs. And then these colonial & imperial administrators turn around and say look! These people won’t even accept money for schools and vaccines! Look how backwards they are! And paint colonised populations as Great Rejectors of Democracy which western populations then readily eat up. Just a really horrendous feedback loop of misery that generates a lot of ‘secondary’ death and violence on top direct colonial oppression and plunder
#and further fallout of that is that people were still suspicious of foreign vaccines for covid-19 too and many people refused to get them#it's so difficult trying to convince people to take vaccines when CIA has pulled shit like this in the past#i despise Taliban and blame them for many things but US government has played extremely dirty and set our country's healthcare back decades#and they never take responsibility for the war on terror and the high cost the rest of us have had to pay
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