Tuesday, July 21, 2020

It is a dog whistle to Ms. Maxwell and her attorneys.

Donald Trump and Ghislaine Maxwell attend a fashion show in 2000 

July 21, 2000
By Sean Neumann

Donald Trump (click here) wished accused child sex-trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell “well” when he was asked about her case Tuesday.

During the president's coronavirus briefing Tuesday, Trump replied to a reporter’s question about Maxwell, the longtime companion of Jeffrey Epstein who was arrested by the FBI earlier this month, saying, “I haven't really been following it too much.”

“I just wish her well, frankly,” Trump, 74, said. “I've met her numerous times over the years, especially since I lived in Palm Beach. I guess they lived in Palm Beach, but I wish her well. Whatever it is."...

We already know how he got his jollies. How that didn't effect the 2016 elections is anyone's guess. I think the American people were far too insulted by the "e-mail" issue. Everyone has emails many of which were hacked at one time or another. It was easy to identify with the feeling of being threatened about the loss of privacy. I am surprised FOX hasn't started an email scandal about the former Vice President Joe Biden.

The Clinton presidential run was hurt the most when the authority of the FBI returned within weeks before the election. It was that final email blow to the confidence in Clinton that melted some of her following and the down-ballot.

12 October 2016
By Rachael Revesz

Donald Trump (click here) used to “stroll right in” to the dressing room of beauty pageants while the contestants - some of whom were teenagers - were naked or half-dressed, a former model has claimed.

Tasha Dixon was 18 when she competed in the Miss USA pageant, winning the state crown.

“Our first introduction to him was when we were at the dress rehearsal and half naked changing into our bikinis,” Ms Dixon told CBS.

“He just came strolling right in. There was no second to put a robe on or any sort of clothing or anything. Some girls were topless. Other girls were naked.”...

I think the Twitter account that Trump has is to allay any interest in his emails.

July 7, 2020

Deutsche Bank (click here) has agreed to pay $150 million to settle claims that it broke compliance rules in its dealings with the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, New York state announced today.

The penalty was announced in a release by Superintendent of Financial Services Linda A. Lacewell.

“Despite knowing Mr. Epstein’s terrible criminal history, the Bank inexcusably failed to detect or prevent millions of dollars of suspicious transactions,” Lacewell said....
The one ethnic group in the USA that needs to conduct "Truth Tribunals" are African Americans. There are a number of organizations that are capable of conducting these tribunals. These tribunals can have international brevity.

The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, (click here) which opened to the public on April 26, 2018, is the nation’s first memorial dedicated to the legacy of enslaved black people, people terrorized by lynching, African Americans humiliated by racial segregation and Jim Crow, and people of color burdened with contemporary presumptions of guilt and police violence.

 Any proceedings and ongoing proceedings can be housed here.

Has anyone begun the non-profit that will carry out the Trump tribunals? I could not be more serious.

Perhaps the most powerful persons to carry out this non-profit, which has the deepest interest in the safety of their students, are the "Wall of Mothers."

"Kent State Truth Tribunals" (click here) There is already a model to carry these tribunals forward.

One of the reasons the Kent State Truth Tribunals was conducted was to stop the assaultive behaviors of presidents fixated on power. The Kent State Tribunals were proof that presidents can go too far in their own ambitions and failings. It was supposed to serve as a warning to prevent such behaviors again. It is best to gather information before the truth disappears from witnesses and victims. The Kent State Truth Tribunals was meticulously reassembled a near-impossible task.

Students (click here) give first aid to a student shot and wounded by Ohio National Guardsmen on the Kent State University campus, May 4, 1970.

The evidence of the government ordering the guns to fire had to be established rather than the "idea" that they fired on their own and by accident.

A man wounded (click here for audio tape) when Ohio National Guard troops opened fire on student anti-war protesters at Kent State University 37 years ago says an audiotape recorded that day reveals someone gave the order to fire.

The recording captures the 13 seconds of gunfire – more than 60 shots were fired – that left four students dead and nine others wounded. One of the injured was Alan Canfora, who was shot in the wrist....

We already know there are injured Americans caused by the federal police. I don't know if there are any fatalities. I am looking for any report but haven't come across it yet. The last time federal police caused harm to Americans there were four dead students at Kent State. It took some time to carry out a tribunal that is on the record today. This continued eruption of hatred and violence against citizens of the USA no matter how occasional in the history it occurs is not looking good for the USA.

The tribunal is the only real way to carry out a record of the harm the USA government is doing to the American people. I do believe family of the dead students at Kent State tried every way through the Justice Department without success. The tribunal is the only way forward and it can be started at any time.

Commissioner Hardesty is correct. The fire department is a uniquely important department in the city of Portland. They cannot tolerate interference in their role to protect lives.

July 20, 2020
By Rebecca Ellis

Commissioner Jo Ann Hardesty (click here) has distanced Portland’s fire department, which she oversees, from the city’s police bureau, controlled by Mayor Ted Wheeler, who she has said is in denial about the violence being perpetuated by local police during protests. 

During more than 50 consecutive nights of demonstrations against police brutality and racism, the two public safety bureaus can occasionally overlap in the parking lot of the city’s fire stations. The police bureau’s Rapid Response Team, tasked with responding to large protests, can wait in the parking lots along with their equipment and their vans until they’re called upon. 

But Portland police will no longer be able to use any of the city’s 31 fire stations as a staging ground. On Sunday, Fire Chief Sara Boone sent out a memo, saying Hardesty had directed Portland Fire and Rescue to bar all law enforcement from using fire stations as staging areas for “any tactical operations” until further notice. 

Boone wrote that the decision was made “to ensure that there is no confusion in regards to our role in providing safety to the residents of the city of Portland.”...

It looks as though Speaker Pelosi's prayers finally worked.

Trump had his come to Jesus moment. I congratulate him on seeing the light and not rejecting it.

I am not happy. It took all this time to bring his plutocrats to the reality that Americans are dying and suffering through disease when this should have been over already. And the money he squandered on Wall Street with his Treasury Secretary, small businesses are in bankruptcy and the workers that were supposed to be able to return to work with PPP are now unemployed.

Trump has a lot to answer for and this is just the beginning.  Hopefully, Americans that were political hellions while he was objecting to a face mask and stating they weren't necessary will finally comply and the USA can get this over with and take our place alongside of other democracies that overcame this virus and won their fight.

Florida is trying to achieve herd immunity with a virus that maims citizens and visitors alike. There are not enough hospital beds and medical professionals to save all the lives that need help. The Florida Governor needs to be impeached and removed from office. He is hurting thousands upon thousands of innocent Americans. And why? Because the economy is dependent on tourism. What is Florida going to do when the lawsuits start rolling in?

No legislated immunity is going to save them either, because they violated their oath of office, and PURPOSELY ignored professionals seeking to save lives. There is no excuse and any legislation that allows malpractice of governance and the resulting deaths of Americans is a violation of the public trust and those that voted for it conspirators against the American people for their own corrupt reasons.

It is the bedside professionals trying to save lives with a new virus that was faced with a "learn as you go" medical regime that needs protection. At least they tried. They didn't throw their arms up and walkaway. They are sincere heroes for the role they played in moving a very dangerous virus to find treatments and save lives. They and only they are exempt from any type of malpractice and negligence. 

Monday, July 20, 2020

Virus briefings begin tomorrow again?

There can only be one reason. HHS finally has control of all the information and the information before is so wrong it is scandalous.

Vladimir Putin lives in the White House.

Portland is only the beginning for sending the country into Marshall Law by November. 

Trump created the problems in the city by his hate-mongering, so now he is going to take over the cities in order to take the election away from the American people. He escalated the spread of SARS-CoV-2 throughout the country for the same reasons.


July 20, 2020
By Gregory Pratt and Jeremy Gorner

This is what is on the streets of Portland. Trump's war on the American people.

Chicago may see an influx of federal agents (click here) as soon as this week as President Donald Trump readies to make good on repeated pledges he would try to tamp down violence here, a move that would come amid growing controversy nationally about federal force being used in American cities.

U.S. Department of Homeland Security, for example, is crafting plans to deploy about 150 federal agents to the city this week, the Chicago Tribune has learned....

Both Portland and Chicago are lead by women. Trump believes women are incompetent to lead American cities. He has made disparaging remarks about Governor Whitmer as well.

The strategy he has for the elections in November is Marshall Law. The country went to the polls during the Civil War.

This is Portland's Canine Unit. (click here)

Trump's police are way out of line (click here)

They are beating people.

Violence has escalated in Portland after the arrival of Trump's police squad. I guess if they are going to beat innocent people that may happen.

Since taking office, Trump has done nothing but escalate the level of hate in the USA. He needs the hate to drive his base. These SHOW OF FORCE will be used in propaganda videos to drive the base. He wants his base to believe the USA is out of control by anarchists and the women elected to office, just can't handle the responsibility.

The people of Portland are not taking a backseat to this Trump assault on their city. None of this was an issue before Trump's police arrived.

July 20, 2020
By Linda Givetash

To the left is a FBI chart (click here) on the crime statistics in Portland. It is improving.

Dozens of women (click here) wearing yellow linked arms to form a protective "wall of moms" around Black Lives Matter protesters in Portland, Oregon, on Sunday as the protesters clashed with federal law enforcement.

Video from the scene showed crowds chanting “Feds stay clear, moms are here!" and "Feds go home!" before protesters toppled a fence erected around the federal courthouse. Federal agents fired back with what appeared to be tear gas and flash bangs, the video showed....
This is reporting as of 20 July 2020

Global Confirmed Cases 14,348,858

The Americas still have the greatest number of confirmed cases, 7,584,675. That is 52.8 percent of the global confirmed cases.

The United States of America has 3,685,460 confirmed cases. That is 48.6 percent of all the cases in the Americas and 25.7 percent in the world. The USA is still leading globally in the number of CONFIRMED cases. Not tests, but, confirmed cases. And that is across the board with cases and deaths. Europe has also been leading in treatments for the virus. The steroid treatment and now interferon is out of Europe. I think the CDC encouraged the use of remdesivir.






























Global deaths: 603,691
The Americas have 309,309 deaths which is 51.2 percent of the global death.
The United States of America has 139,468 deaths which is 45.1 percent of the Americas' deaths and 23.1 percent of the global deaths. The USA has the largest number of deaths caused by COVID-19 in the world.

It looks like Europe is having the best outcomes by region.

Southeast Asia worries me. Their growth in cases and deaths is still exponential. I am wondering about their ability to actually fight this virus. It is unacceptable for any region of the work to have uncontrolled exponential growth. That places the future in danger.



























April 20, 2020
By Amy Searight'

...What is becoming clearer (click here) is that the impact of this pandemic will be hard-hitting and long-lasting in Southeast Asia, along with much of the rest of the world. Countries that earlier stood out as global leaders in “flattening the curve” are now grappling with massive new outbreaks; Singapore, for example, is grappling with a new wave of cases tied to its large migrant worker population. For other countries, such as Indonesia and the Philippines, the slow government response to the crisis and weaknesses in their public health systems are beginning to take a toll. The economic impact, which I wrote about last week, will be massive for a region that is widely under lockdown and heavily dependent on trade and tourism. This commentary provides updates on the public health impact of Covid-19 on Southeast Asia and the steps that governments in the region are taking to deal with it.

Southeast Asia has been hit hard by the novel coronavirus, with a surge of new cases over the past week in Indonesia, the Philippines, Malaysia, Myanmar, and Singapore (for the latest numbers, see our CSIS Southeast Asia Covid-19 tracker). Only Thailand and Vietnam saw the number of daily cases drop....

Vietnam has been interestingly resistant to trends from other countries and on more than the SARS-CoV-2 virus. It has taken its sovereignty very seriously and develops policy without being reactionary. It's economic success to date has been impressive as well. Some really nice resorts that actually value its ecology and species are in Vietnam. Luxurious actually. Perhaps, Vietnam would consider being a leader in policy for the region that needs direction to end their viral spread.

I am sure Vietnam already knows if the region conquers SARS-CoV-2 it will be an accomplishment that will effect the Vietnamese people, too.

end

There is absolutely no reason to violate the rules regarding COVID-19. Scientists are making incredible progress.

The time invested in protecting lives is minor. Scientists are making incredible progress and it is just a matter of having patience.

This potential new treatment is absolutely brilliant.


20 July 2020
By Clare Wildon, Jessica Hamzelou, Adam Vaughen, Conrad Quilty-Harger and Layal Liverpool

...new nebuliser treatment for covid-19 (click here) reduced the risk of severe cases requiring a ventilator by 79 per cent in a preliminary trial of 101 patients in the UK. The treatment involves inhaling a protein called interferon beta, which is naturally produced in the body as part of the immune response to a viral infection. In the double-blind trial, half of the participants were given the protein and half were given a placebo. Those who received the drug were two to three times more likely to recover sufficiently to resume their everyday activities, according to Synairgen, the company behind the treatment. The coronavirus blocks the natural production of interferon beta in lung cells, according to Tom Wilkinson, professor of respiratory medicine at University Hospital Southampton, who led the trialDelivering interferon directly to lungs is crucial because it is not possible to inject a high enough dose without serious side effects, he said. Although promising, the results must be treated with caution as the study size is small and the findings have yet to be peer-reviewed. “We accept this is not the largest study. It was an exploratory study,” Wilkinson said....


It is not getting better in the USA. So, let's take a look. I am grateful the world hasn't given up on treatments and vaccines.

...The seven-day average for daily new coronavirus cases in the US has risen for the 41st consecutive day, mostly due to ongoing spikes in the number of cases in Florida, Texas and California. Los Angeles mayor Eric Garcetti said the county is “on the brink” of shutting down again due to the recent rise in cases....

No right is absolute. One carrier can infect an entire city.

Morning Papers

The Rooster

“Okeydoke”

This is ridiculous and a threat to all people. If religious freedom means breathing poison, then it is a cult and not a religion. No person or organization is allowed to MAKE ILL or KILL any American, actively or passively. It is out of the question!

This is arrogance and not faith.

COVID-19 will never come under control if BOZO religious groups are spreading the virus in the name of God. Church services are one of the super spreaders with only 50 people at a service. The schools will be the same way.

The practice of exempting religious gatherings from COVID-19 restrictions is a national security issue. Spreading a deadly virus is an assault on Americans. Why do we have medical doctors then? To treat errant practices by ministers?

July 20, 2020
By Valerie Strauss

Religious schools in Texas, (click here) where coronavirus rates have been spiking for weeks, do not have to follow any coronavirus-related health restrictions that local governments may impose on educational institutions because, the state’s attorney general said, it could impede the free exercise of religion.

In a July 17 letter, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said that it would be unconstitutional to force religious schools to follow recommendations of health authorities about reopening schools during the pandemic, and he said they may decide for themselves “when it is safe for their communities to resume in-person instruction free from any government mandate or interference.”

“Religious private schools therefore need not comply with local public health orders to the contrary,” he wrote.

Texas in recent weeks has experienced a big spike in coronavirus cases, and many hospitals in the state are running out of space for intensive care patients, as well as ventilators, drugs and some personal protective equipment...

"Good Night, Moon"

The new moon

28.9 days

0.5 percent lit

New Moon is a great time to see the sky, especially if in the Dark Sky Park.

July 19, 2020
By Jamie Carter

With a New Moon on Monday, (click here) the early part of this week is a great time to go looking for both Comet NEOWISE and the Milky Way, both of which should be looking their best as soon as it gets dark.

If you want to see Comet NEOWISE—the best naked-eye comet for 27 years—this week could be you last chance to see it and photograph it. For now it’s possible to see it even from light-polluted cities in the northern hemisphere, but it looks its best through binoculars....

July 20, 2020

The first Arab space mission to Mars (click here) blasted off Monday aboard a rocket from Japan, after weather delays set back the launch of the probe dubbed “Hope.”

A live feed of the launch showed the rocket carrying the unmanned probe, known as “Al-Amal” in Arabic, lifting off from the Tanegashima Space Centre in southern Japan.

“We have launched the H-IIA Launch Vehicle No. 42 (H-IIA F42) carrying aboard the Emirates Mars Mission’s (EMM) HOPE spacecraft... at 6:58:14 (JST) (2158GMT),” rocket manufacturer Mitsubishi Heavy Industries said in a statement shortly after the launch....

Sunday, July 19, 2020

Why the police instigated violence?

Why was it so violent? President Kennedy spoke to the organizers of the March on Washington about his fear of violence in the nation's capital.

The people were unarmed. They were standing up for their civil rights. They wanted what every American wants, a better quality of life through work, and good pay.

So, what was it that broke out during these marches? None of the marchers wanted to evoke violence. There is every indication these were church-going folks.

The police in the USA, including those in Oregon right now, are escalating the circumstances of the protests. If violence breaks out it is a direct result of OVER POLICING. There is something very wrong in the way police confront protesters.

June 1, 2020
By Maggie Koerth and Jamiles Lartey

"Disproportionate use of force can turn a peaceful protest violent, research shows." (click here)

Minneapolis - Last Wednesday, Marcell Harris was hit by a rubber bullet. He had joined the second day of protests in this city over the killing of George Floyd, a black man who died after a police officer kneeled on his neck for more than eight minutes while bystanders filmed. Though these protests began with peaceful demonstrations outside the city’s 3rd Precinct, interactions between police and protesters had escalated. Police unleashed pepper spray, projectiles and tear gas. Protesters threw water bottles, built barricades and destroyed nearby property.

Harris said he had used his backpack as a shield and maneuvered close enough to take the baton of the officer who shot him. On Thursday night, he returned to the same spot to watch the precinct burn. With no police presence to be seen, he and other protesters were celebrating a victory. “I’m nonviolent,” he said. “But this feels emotional. George Floyd popped the bubble. It feels like the beginning of the end.” The end of what? “What we’ve been going through,” he said, referring to heavy-handed and often deadly policing of African Americans. “All the bullshit.”

Watching a peaceful protest turn into something much less palatable is hard. There has been a lot of hard the past few days, as people in dozens of cities have released pent-up anger against discriminatory police tactics. Cars and buildings have burned. Store windows have been smashed. Protesters and police have been hurt. When protests take a turn like this we naturally wonder … why? Was this preventable? Does anyone know how to stop it from happening?...

Testimony (click here) of John Lewis from a hearing resulting from the March 7, 1965, march from Selma to Montgomery in support of voting rights, page 288

...With Hosea Williams of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) (click here) leading the demonstration, and John Lewis, Chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), at his side, the marchers were stopped as they were leaving Selma, at the end of the Edmund Pettus Bridge, by some 150 Alabama state troopers, sheriff ’s deputies, and possemen, who ordered the demonstrators to disperse.

One minute and five seconds after a two-minute warning was announced, the troops advanced, wielding clubs, bullwhips, and tear gas. John Lewis, who suffered a skull fracture, was one of fifty-eight people treated for injuries at the local hospital. The day is remembered in history as “Bloody Sunday.” Less than one week later, Lewis recounted the attack on the marchers during a Federal hearing at which the demonstrators sought protection for a full-scale march to Montgomery. A transcript of his testimony is presented in the following pages....             

"Bloody Sunday" occurred March 7, 1965 to unarmed peaceful marchers on their way to the state capital over the racist named Edmund Pettus Bridge.


Martin Luther King, Jr. at the March on Washington

...In 1963, (click here) in the wake of violent attacks on civil rights demonstrators in Birmingham, Alabama, momentum built for another mass protest on the nation’s capital.

With Randolph planning a march for jobs, and King and his Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) planning one for freedom, the two groups decided to merge their efforts into one mass protest.

That spring, Randolph and his chief aide, Bayard Rustin, planned a march that would call for fair treatment and equal opportunity for black Americans, as well as advocate for passage of the Civil Rights Act (then stalled in Congress).

President John F. Kennedy met with civil rights leaders before the march, voicing his fears that the event would end in violence. In the meeting on June 22, Kennedy told the organizers that the march was perhaps “ill-timed,” as “We want success in the Congress, not just a big show at the Capitol.”

Randolph, King and the other leaders insisted the march should go forward, with King telling the president: “Frankly, I have never engaged in any direct-action movement which did not seem ill-timed.”...                 
Whitney M. Young, Jr.
July 31, 1921 to  March 11, 1971

Early in 1968, (click here) AIA President Robert Durham, FAIA, extended an invitation to the executive director of the National Urban League, Whitney M. Young, Jr., inviting him to deliver a keynote speech at AIA’s National Convention in Portland, Oregon.

Young (click here) was appointed to head the NUL in 1961, a position he would hold until his untimely death in 1971 at the age of 49. During the decade of Young's leadership the organization experienced pronounced growth, which included a nearly twenty-fold increase in its annual budget from $325,000 to over $6,000,000, and an increase in staffing from three dozen employees to more than a thousand. Young also moved the organization to the forefront of the civil rights movement. Prior to Young's tenure, the NUL held a cautious stance regarding civil rights issues.

Young was one of the most influential leaders of the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom and a member of the legendary "Big Six" civil rights leadership team. Planners for the March used the NUL headquarters office in New York for their meetings and Young served as a featured speaker. Following the March, Young advocated for federal assistance to cities combating poverty. He developed a 10-point domestic program, the "Domestic Marshall Plan" as a strategy for combating poverty and closing the wealth gap between Black and White Americans. Young's plan was influential to President Johnson's War on Poverty and was partially incorporated into the legislation. In 1968, the Johnson administration awarded Young the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honor....
Roy Wilkins 
(August 30, 1901 – September 8, 1981)

Executive Director, (click here) National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)

A prominent civil rights activist (click here) in the United States from the 1930s to the 1970s. Wilkins was active in the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and between 1931 and 1934 was assistant NAACP secretary under Walter Francis White. When W. E. B. Du Bois left the organization in 1934, Wilkins replaced him as editor of Crisis, the official magazine of the NAACP....
Bayard Rustin
March 17, 1912 to August 24, 1987

In front of 170 W 130 St., March on Washington, Bayard Rustin, Deputy Director, and Cleveland Robinson, Chairman of Administrative Committee (left to right).

...There was no lonelier man in Washington, D.C., (click here) at 5:30 a.m. August 28, 1963, than Rustin. He had predicted a crowd of 100,000 marchers, and with only four and a half hours to go before the meet-up, he had his doubts. Would everything he had been working toward pan out? Would the coalition hang together? Would the march remain peaceful, thus defying the 4,000 troops President John F. Kennedy had ready in the suburbs, as Taylor Branch reminds us in Parting the Waters: America in the King Years, 1954-63?

Twenty-two years earlier, A. Phillip Randolph and Rustin had come very close to delivering on their plans for a first march as a way to pressure President Franklin Roosevelt into opening defense-industry hiring to blacks. Roosevelt was so alarmed by the specter of violence and the negative publicity during the “war against fascism” that a deal was reached before the march could even begin. Now, with the 1963 march about to begin, Rustin was forced to wonder, could they really pull this off? And would its impact help to achieve the goals of the movement? In a matter of hours, he would have his answers....      

A labor organizer as well.

Asa Philip Randolph
(April 15, 1889 – May 16, 1979) 

A. Philip Randolph (click here) (seated, center) and other leaders of the 1963 March on Washington. (U.S. National Archives)  

A. Philip Randolph, whom Martin Luther King, Jr., called “truly the Dean of Negro leaders,” played a crucial role in gaining recognition of African Americans in labor organizations (Papers 4:527). A socialist and a pacifist, Randolph founded the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, the first successful black trade union, and the Negro American Labor Council (NALC).

The youngest son of a poor preacher deeply committed to racial politics, Randolph was born in Crescent City, Florida, on 15 April 1889. He graduated from Jacksonville’s Cookman Institute in 1911, relocating to New York City soon afterward. In 1917 Randolph and Chandler Owen founded the Messenger, an African American socialist journal critical of American involvement in World War I.

After the 1925 founding of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, Randolph succeeded in gaining recognition of the union from the Pullman Palace Car Company in 1937. When the union signed its first contract with the company, membership rose to nearly 15,000. In 1941 Randolph threatened a march on Washington, D.C., if the federal government did not address racial discrimination in the defense industry. In response, President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued Executive Order 8802, which banned discrimination in the defense industry and established the Fair Employment Practices Commission. Randolph also helped to form the League for Non-Violent Civil Disobedience against Military Segregation, which influenced President Harry S. Truman’s decision to desegregate the armed services in 1948....

The Late John Lewis was a leader, a friend and an icon of strength. He was loved.

Rep. John Lewis and Tybre Faw in Selma, Alabama, in March 2018.

...We sent him (click here) the original story from March 2018, which showed Tybre not only meeting Lewis, but marching with him across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma and even going to Washington at Lewis' invitation to spend time on the floor of House of Representatives, where Tybre decided he too wants to be a congressman one day...