|     The Shepp Report Special Edition Happy Thanksgiving! 
        
          
            
              November 23, 2017   
        
          | 
              
                
                  
                    
                      
                          Another Story About Thanksgiving 
                      
                        |  |  
                        | 
                            In 2014 Ben Shapiro took a look at a rarely told story of Thanksgiving.- TruthRevolt |      The Story Behind Norman Rockwell’s ‘Thanksgiving Picture.’ 
                  
                    |  |  
                    | 
                      
                        | Freedom of Speech, Freedom of Worship, Freedom from Want, Freedom from Fear - Breitbart Photo Source: TotalHistory |  |      Is This Your House At Thanksgiving? Take A Look. - Webmaster      On Thanksgiving Day Always Remember The Sacrifices Of The Early Settlers, Fewer Than Half of Those Pilgrims Living Through The First Winter. 
                  
                    |  |  
                    | 
                        
                          | The Pilgrim's Formula On How To Save Our Country In Hard Times  
                                Kirk Cameron shows a famous monument. Be sure to tell your children where their freedoms came from, who sacrificed to give it to them, and why it's important they pass it on. If they don't know their history, someone else will teach them theirs. - Webmaster  Source: YouTube |  |  How Third Reich Progressives May Have Treated Arian Germans in 1936 About What To Do If Someone Comes To Dinner, Asking About What Happened To Those Jewish Neighbors - LifeNews |    
        
          | 
              
                
                  Give Thanks In 2017 To President Trump And His Accomplishments That The Obama Media Just Can't Seem To Put Together    
                    
                      
                        
                          List Of 150 Accomplishments By President Trump In His First 11 Months In Office Most comprehensive  compilation of 1st-year achievements Source: WND   
                  
                    [Editor’s note: The following  comprehensive list of Trump accomplishments has been compiled for WND’s Thank Trump Campaign,  which provides a free way to send personalized messages of  thanks directly to the White House at ThankTrump.us]  
                      With  mainstream media and establishment politicians stacked against him from the  moment he announced his run for the presidency, Donald J. Trump has been in an  ongoing pitched battle to communicate his plans – and his eventual successes –  to Americans. Through public rallies and social media, he has managed to bypass  the traditional information gatekeepers and has spoken directly to the people. Yet,  Americans are subjected to a relentless drumbeat from the Democratic Party,  amplified by virtually the entire establishment press, that Trump is not only  undisciplined, unfit for office and possibly racist, but that embarrassingly  little has been accomplished by the Trump administration. And while  he has befuddled and disappointed some – with major promises such as Obamacare  repeal and a border wall unfulfilled or put on the backburner – the stunning  reality is this: Donald Trump has amassed a long and remarkable list of actions  and accomplishments that will surprise average Americans, even those who  support the president and consider themselves well-informed politically. Here, then,  is an accounting of the truly significant achievements of the first eight  months of the Trump presidency, compiled in conjunction with the Thank Trump Card  Campaign, which has a dedicated  website, ThankTrump.us. The accomplishments are all the more  noteworthy as they have been carried out in an environment of unrelenting  negativity on the part of not only the Democrats and almost the entire news  media, but the Beltway establishment itself, the entire donor class, the “Deep  State,” and even many Republicans wedded to the D.C. “swamp.”   NOVEMBER
                    
                      Iran: Trump issued a memorandum Nov. 16 determining that the U.S. has enough petroleum coming from countries other than Iran to permit “a significant reduction in the volume of petroleum and petroleum products” purchased from the mullah-led nation. 
China trade: During President Trump’s visit to China in November,  trade and investment deals worth more than $250 billion were announced that are  expected to create jobs for American workers, farmers and ranchers by  increasing U.S. exports to China and stimulating investment in American  communities.Government transparency: The federal government on Nov. 9 made public  more than 13,000 additional documents from its files on President John F.  Kennedy’s assassination, under orders from President Trump. It was the fourth  released since October, when the president allowed the immediate release of  2,800 records by the National Archives.International liberty: President Trump proclaimed Nov. 7, the 100th  anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution, as the National Day for the Victims of  CommunismReligious liberty: The Department of Agriculture issued a  guidance Nov. 6 that ensures Christians who opposed same-sex marriage would not  be discriminated against for their beliefs.Job growth: President Trump announced in the Oval Office Nov. 2 that  the semiconductor manufacturing company Broadcom Limited is moving its  headquarters from Singapore to the United States. Broadcom is a Fortune 100  company that already employs more than 7,500 workers in the United States, and  that number is expected to grow exponentially, with an estimated $20 billion to  be spent on employees annually. Broadcom CEO Hock E. Tan said the decision to  relocate Broadcom was driven by “his desire to give back to this country that  has given me so much.”Government reform: EPA Director Scott Pruitt placed 66 new  experts on three different EPA scientific committees who espouse more  conservative views than their predecessors. To prevent conflicts of interest,  Pruitt signed a directive Oct. 31 banning scientists who receive EPA grants  from serving on the agency’s independent advisory boards.  OCTOBER 
                    
                      Job growth: The White House announced Oct. 25 a new  drone Integration Pilot Program that will accelerate drone integration into the  national airspace system. Under the program, the Department of Transportation  will enter into agreements with state, local, and tribal governments to  establish innovation zones for testing complex UAS operations and to attempt  different models for integrating drones into local airspace. Calling drones “a  critical, fast-growing part of American aviation, increasing efficiency,  productivity, and jobs, the White House said they “present opportunities to  enhance the safety of the American public, increase the efficiency and  productivity of American industry, and create tens of thousands of new American  jobs.”Government reform: Melania Trump, while embracing a  more active and public schedule as first lady, is running one of the leanest  East Wing operations in recent history, according to a Fox News analysis of  White House personnel reports that found she has significantly reduced the  number of aides on the first lady’s office payroll in comparison to her  predecessor, Michelle Obama. During President Obama’s first year in office, 16  people were listed working for Michelle Obama, earning a combined $1.24 million  a year. This year, just four people were listed working for Melania Trump as of  June, with salaries totaling $486,700.Obamacare: Trump signed an executive order Oct. 12 that directs  three federal agencies to rewrite regulations to encourage the establishment of  cheaper health plans that can be purchased across state lines and are not bound  by certain Obamacare rules and regulations. The directive would allow  small-business owners, trade groups and others to join together to purchase  health insurance. The plans would not be required to include benefits such as  prescription drugs. Trump also wants to expand the sale of stopgap policies  that don’t cover pre-existing conditions, mental health services and other  costly benefits.Consumer optimism: U.S. consumer sentiment unexpectedly surged  to a 13-year high as Americans’ perceptions of the economy and their own  finances rebounded following several major hurricanes, a University of Michigan  survey showed Oct. 13.Iran nuclear agreement: President Trump announced Oct. 13 he  will not certify the Iran nuclear deal and vowed that the U.S. would pull out  unless changes are made. He also unveiled a new strategy,  the  culmination of nine months of deliberation with Congress and  allies, on how to best protect American security from the rogue mullah-led  regime. The plan includes denying the regime funding and any paths to a nuclear  weapon and ballistic missiles. The Department of the Treasury sanctioned more  than 25 entities and individuals involved in Iran’s ballistic missile program.  The U.S. also sanctioned 16 entities and individuals that have supported Iran’s  military and Revolutionary Guard Corps in the development of drones, fast  attack boats and other military equipment.United Nations: The United States is quitting the United Nations’  Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. Heather Nauert, a  State Department spokeswoman, announced the move will be made before the end of  the year “This decision was not taken lightly, and reflects U.S. concerns with  mounting arrears at UNESCO, the need for fundamental reform in the  organization, and continuing anti-Israel bias at UNESCO.”Homeland security: The Supreme Court dismissed a major  challenge to President Trump’s travel ban on majority-Muslim countries Oct. 10  because it has been replaced by a new version, sending the controversy back to  the starting block. The ruling is a victory for the Trump administration, which  had asked the court to drop the case after Trump signed a proclamation Sept. 24  that replaced the temporary travel ban on six nations with a new, indefinite  ban affecting eight countries. That action made the court challenge moot, the  justices ruled.EPA reform: Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott  Pruitt announced Oct. 9 a new set of rules that will override the Clean Power  Plan, the centerpiece of President Barack Obama’s drive to curb global climate  change. The agency is moving to undo, delay or block more than 30 environmental  rules, the largest regulatory rollback in the agency’s 47-year history.Immigration: The Trump administration submitted to Congress Oct. 8 a  70-point proposal that calls for increased border security, interior  enforcement of immigration laws and a merit-based immigration system. It  includes funding and completing construction of a southern border wall, improving  expedited removal of illegal aliens, protecting innocent people in “sanctuary  cities,” ending extended-family chain migration and establishing a point-based  system for green cards to protect U.S. workers and taxpayers.Religious liberty: Attorney General Sessions on Oct. 6 issued  guidance to all administrative agencies and executive departments regarding  religious liberty protections in federal law in keeping with Trump’s May 4  executive order. The guidance interprets existing protections for religious liberty  in federal law, identifying 20 high-level principles that administrative  agencies and executive departments can put to practical use to ensure the  religious freedoms of Americans are lawfully protected. Attorney General  Sessions also issued a second memorandum to the Department of Justice,  directing implementation of the religious liberty guidance within the  department. Among the principles are “the freedom of religion extends to  persons and organizations,” “Americans do not give up their freedom of religion  by participating in the marketplace, partaking of the public square, or  interacting with government” and government “may not restrict acts or  abstentions because of the beliefs they display.”Missile defense: The Department of Defense reprogrammed approximately  $400 million for U.S. missile defense systems.Religious liberty: The Trump administration expanded religious  and moral exemptions for mandated contraceptive coverage under Obamacare.  Obama’s signature legislation required that nearly all insurance plans cover  abortion-inducing drugs and contraception, forcing citizens to violate  sincerely held religious or moral beliefs, pay steep fines, or forgo offering  or obtaining health insurance entirely. The interim final rules note that the  United States “has a long history of providing conscience protections in the  regulation of health care entities and individuals with objections based on  religious beliefs and moral convictions.” The rule aligns with the U.S. Supreme  Court’s unanimous ruling protecting the Little Sisters of the Poor, which says  the government cannot fine religious groups for following their faith.Immigration: Amid strong Democratic opposition, the House Homeland  Security Committee gave first approval to the broad scope of President Trump’s  border wall Oct. 4, clearing a bill that would authorize $10 billion in new  infrastructure spending, new waivers to speed up construction, and 10,000 more  border agents and officers to patrol the U.S.-Mexico line.Space exploration: President Trump revived the National Space  Council for the first time in 25 years to assist him in developing and  implementing long-range strategic goals for the nation’s space policy. The pace  program will refocus on human exploration and discovery. Vice President Mike Pence,  who chaired the National Space Council’s Oct. 5 meeting, said the  administration aims to establish a renewed American presence on the moon and  from that foundation become the first nation to bring mankind to Mars. The  administration also will renew America’s commitment to creating the space  technology needed to protect national security. And Pence pointed out the  intelligence community reports that Russia and China are pursuing a full range  of anti-satellite technology designed to threaten our U.S. military  effectiveness.Abortion: The Office of Management and Budget on Oct. 2 issued a Statement  of Administration Policy (SAP) to strongly support the Pain-Capable Unborn  Child Protection Act (H.R. 36), which would generally make it unlawful for any  person to perform, or attempt to perform, an abortion of an unborn child after  20 weeks post-fertilization.Protecting life: The president issued a statement Oct. 1 renewing the nation’s “strong commitment  to promoting the health, well-being, and inherent dignity of all children and  adults with Down syndrome.” The president observed “there remain too  many people – both in the United States and throughout the world – that still  see Down syndrome as an excuse to ignore or discard human life.” He said  Americans and their government “must always be vigilant in defending and  promoting the unique and special gifts of all citizens in need” and “should not  tolerate any discrimination against them, as all people have inherent dignity.”Protecting life: The Department of Health and Human Services has published  a draft of a new strategic plan that states in its introduction that life  begins at conception. The personhood of the unborn child is central to the  abortion debate — as even the justice who wrote the landmark Roe v. Wade  opinion has acknowledged — because, if established in law, it would nullify a  “right” to abortion. The largely overlooked HHS strategic plan for 2018-22  states the agency “accomplishes its mission through programs and initiatives  that cover a wide spectrum of activities, serving and protecting Americans at  every stage of life, beginning at conception.”Tax reform: Trump is working with Congress to lower  taxes by seven points for the middle class and lower business taxes to a 15  percent rate.  SEPTEMBER 
                    
                      Lower courts: Trump is filling up lower courts with lifetime  appointees. In the estimation of Democratic official Ron Klain, a “massive  transformation is underway in how our fundamental rights are defined by the  federal judiciary.” Klain, lamenting Trump’s moves, said the president “is  proving wildly successful in one respect: naming youthful conservative nominees  to the federal bench in record-setting numbers.” On Sept. 28, Trump announced an eighth wave of judicial candidates,  with nine more names.Canada trade: In September, the Commerce Department, siding with  Boeing, slapped a 219 percent tariff on the import of Canadian-made Bombardier  jets, arguing they are supported by subsidies from the governments of Canada  and the U.K., creating an unfair market.Korea trade: Trump began the process of renegotiating the United  States-South Korea Free Trade Agreement in September.Climate: In September, Trump shut down a climate-change advisory panel  under the direction of NOAA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,  that critics have contended was formed largely to promote President Obama’s  climate policies, arguing it lacked representation from “those who think the  empirical evidence points to human actions contributing little to global  warming and that attempting to reduce it would slow the conquest of poverty  around the world.” The EPA also has decided not to renew the appointments of  dozens of scientists on various scientific advisory panels.Homeland security: In September, Trump signed an executive order  to enhance vetting capabilities and processes for detecting attempted entry  into the United States by terrorists or other public-security threats.North Korea: After some 25 years of failed negotiations to contain  Pyongyang’s nuclear program, the communist regime’s latest threatening actions  were met by President Trump with a warning that military action, including a  preemptive nuclear attack, would be considered. After Trump’s warnings, North  Korean dictator Kim Jong Un backed off on his threat to attack the U.S.  territory of Guam.North Korea: On Sept. 7, the U.S. fully deployed the THAAD missile  defense system to South Korea despite objections from Pyongyang’s chief ally,  China.North Korea: In September, Trump signed an executive order  significantly expanding U.S. authority to target individuals, companies and  financial institutions that finance and facilitate trade with North Korea, most  of which are Chinese. Meanwhile, China’s central bank has ordered banks in its  massive banking system to immediately stop doing business with North Korea.United Nations: In his first speech to the United Nations General  Assembly, Trump told the global body in September, “I put America first and you  should do the same with your nations.” In the speech, he also explicitly  denounced socialism and communism, pointing to Venezuela as an example of what  happens when socialism is successfully implemented.Immigration: President Trump, in September, rescinded Obama’s  Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals order, which gave de facto amnesty to  some 800,000 people who came to the country as children with their  illegal-alien parents. Trump delayed implementing his order for six months to  give Congress time to come up with a legislative solution.Stock markets: Through the first week of September, the Dow Jones  Industrial Average had 34 record highs. From Election Day to the Inauguration,  the Dow rose more than 1,500 points. It climbed another 2,500 points from  Inauguration Day, reaching more than 22,400 in mid-September, a gain of more  than $4 trillion in wealth since Trump was elected. The Dow’s spike from 19,000  to above 21,000 in just 66 days was the fastest 2,000-point rise ever. The  S&P 500 and the NASDAQ also have set all-time highs. On Aug. 7, the Dow  closed with an all-time high for the ninth day in a row, the first time the  market has had a run of that length twice under one presidency.  AUGUST 
                    
                      North Korea: In August, the U.S. initiated a resolution in the U.N.  Security Council establishing sanctions that would cut North Korea’s export  revenue by a third. Another resolution passed Sept. 11 with new sanctions.North Korea: The U.S. implemented its own sanctions in August on 16  Chinese and Russian individuals and entities for conducting business with North  Korea.Business optimism: In August, the National Federation of  Independent Business said its Small-Business Optimism Index reached 105.3, the  highest since 2006 and an 11 percent jump since the week before Trump was  elected. The Wells Fargo/Gallup Small Business Index said small business owners  are the most optimistic since July 2007. The Bloomberg Consumer Comfort measure  reached a 16-year high, with current views of the economy also reaching a  16-year high. The Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence Index rose in July to  near a 16 year high, with consumers short-term outlook improving.Job growth: While the new administration certainly can’t take all of  the credit – and the government itself doesn’t create jobs – employers make  hiring decisions based on the long-term economic outlook, and the president has  a great deal to do with that. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported nearly  1.3 million new jobs were created during Trump’s first 200 days. Meanwhile,  Obama, in his first six months, saw the loss of more than 4.1  million jobs in his first 200 days. The bureau said 6,000 construction jobs  were added in July for a total of 82,000 since January. In addition, 16,000  manufacturing jobs were added in July, a total of 70,000 since January. The  labor-force participation rate increased to 62.9 percent in July. In June,  there were 6 million job openings in the U.S., one of the highest levels  recorded.U.S. manufacturing: During Trump’s first six months, the  manufacturing index was the highest it had been since 1983 under President  Reagan. The National Association of Manufacturers’ Outlook Survey showed the  highest two-quarter average, of 91.4 percent, for manufacturing optimism in the  survey’s 20-year history. The Institute for Supply Management reported its June  barometer of manufacturing rose to 57.8, the fastest pace in three years.China trade: The president signed an order in August to investigate  Chinese theft of U.S. intellectual property. The IP Commission Report estimates  that the annual cost to the United States economy from IP theft could be as  high as $600 billion, with China as the major contributor.Infrastructure: The Trump administration aims to dramatically reduce  permitting time for projects from 10 years to two years, spurring investment  and job creation.Argentina trade: The U.S. struck a deal in August to export  pork to Argentina that will allow U.S. pork to enter the Argentine market for  the first time since 1992, a potential $10 million a year market for American  producers.Trade: More than $2 billion in fines were assessed to China and Canada  in August for illegal trade practices.Immigration: DHS in August ended the Central American Minors Parole  Program that had allowed certain minors from El Salvador, Guatemala and  Honduras to enter the U.S.Immigration: A report in August said that due to reforms and  additional hirings of immigration judges, the number of deportation orders  increased by nearly 28 percent compared to the same period of time in 2016.Immigration: In August, the government also said that of the 42,000  illegal immigrants in federal prisons, nearly all of them either had  deportation orders or were being investigated for possible deportation.Immigration: The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services in August  denied requests from employers to import cheap foreign labor into the U.S. for  high-skilled jobs if the employers could not explain why they wanted to pay a  lower wage for such work.Military: Trump elevated the Department of Defense’s Cyber Command  to the status of Unified Combatant Command in August, demonstrating an  increased focus on cyber security.Military: In August, Trump directed the military not to move  forward with a controversial Obama-era mandate to allow, for the first time,  transgender individuals to be recruited into the armed forces.Islamic jihad: In August, Trump presented in an address to the nation a  new military strategy that put Pakistan on notice for supporting jihadists and  warned Kabul it would no longer receive a “blank check,” moving the U.S. away  from the Bush-era policy of “nation-building” and focusing on “killing  terrorists.”Veterans Administration reform: President Trump signed the Veterans  Appeals Improvement and Modernization Act in August, streamlining the lengthy  process that veterans undergo when appealing disability benefits claims with  the VA. More than 470,000 veterans are awaiting decisions regarding their  appeals. The Veterans Affairs administration is the first agency to post  information on employee disciplinary action online.Veterans Administration reform: The president signed the Harry W.  Colmery Veterans Educational Assistance Act in August, which provides  educational benefits to veterans, service members and their family members,  including tuition, fees, books, housing and other additional costs.Government reform: The president signed an executive order in  August projected to save billions of dollars by streamlining and expediting the  permitting process for infrastructure projects. The order establishes a  two-year goal for the federal government to process all of the actions required  by federal law for the environmental reviews and permits of major  infrastructure projects.Welfare reform: In August, the Department of Health and Human Services  rescinded an Obama-era directive that had allowed states to request a waiver to  ignore work requirements for the poor in order to receive welfare.Welfare reform: In August, more than 1.1 million fewer Americans were on  food stamps under President Trump, compared to the Obama administration.Law enforcement: In August, the DOJ launched an opioid fraud  and abuse unit to fight opioid prescription abuses.Second Amendment: In August, the Justice Department terminated  Operation Choke Point, an Obama program encouraging banks not to do business  with “high risk” businesses, which was used to target gun dealers.  JULY 
                    
                      Gross Domestic Product: GDP in the second quarter of the year  increased by 2.6 percent, more than doubling the first quarter  performance.Unemployment: The jobless rate decreased from 4.8 percent to 4.4  percent from January through June 2017. In contrast, during the first six  months of 2009, Obama’s first year in office, the rate increased from 7.8  percent to 9.5 percent.Oil drilling on federal lands: In July, Trump signed an order  boosting oil and gas development on federal lands.Coal power: In July, President Trump kept his campaign promise to  coal miners and rolled back the previous administration’s “Stream Protection  Rule,” which targeted the industry with estimated costs of at least $81 million  a year.Made in USA: Trump has convinced companies such as Ford, Chrysler and  Carrier Air Conditioners to manufacture and build plants in the United States.  At the White House, Corning announced with the president it was investing $500  million in new U.S. production, creating 1,000 new jobs. Foxconn, the world’s  largest contract electronics manufacturer, which makes the iPhone, announced in  July it was investing $10 billion in Wisconsin to build a factory that will  employ 3,000 workers directly and up to 22,000 workers indirectly.Disarming jihad: In July, the Trump administration ended a  CIA program to arm “moderate” Syrian rebels after previous efforts of its kind  were shown to have aided Islamic jihadists, including the terrorists who  carried out the disastrous Benghazi attack in which four Americans, including  the ambassador, were killed.Islamic jihad: After months of heavy fighting, Iraqi coalition forces  finally pushed ISIS fighters out of Mosul in early July. The U.S. is also  supporting efforts to rid the Philippines of ISIS cells.Government reform: Trump created the Office of American  Innovation in July to streamline and improve the government for future  generations.Government reform: Trump signed an executive order in July  implementing tough new lobbying standards for political appointees, including a  five-year ban on lobbying and a lifetime ban on lobbying for foreign countries.Law enforcement: In July, federal gun-crime prosecutions by  the DOJ in the preceding three months increased 23 percent over the same period  in 2016.Law enforcement: In what Attorney General Jeff Sessions  described as the “largest health-care fraud takedown operation in American  history,” the DOJ in July charged more than 400 people, including doctors and  medical facilities, who it said were prescribing unnecessary opioids to addicts  and fueling the current drug crisis.Law enforcement: Sessions and the DOJ cracked down on illegal  leaks of classified information from within the government, pursuing three  times more investigations in the first six months of the Trump administration  than had been open at the end of the Obama administration. The administration created  a counterintelligence unit within the FBI for the investigations.  JUNE 
                    
                      Unemployment: The jobless rate decreased from 4.8 percent to 4.4  percent from January through June 2017. In contrast, during the first six  months of 2009, Obama’s first year in office, the rate increased from 7.8  percent to 9.5 percent.Oil pipelines: Trump approved the Dakota Access Pipeline project and  the construction of the Keystone XL oil pipeline from Canada, which are  expected to create more than 42,000 jobs and $2 billion in earnings. The Dakota  Access Pipeline, which is transporting 500,000 barrels of oil a day, has  reinvigorated the North Dakota economy. In June, Trump approved production of  the New Burgos Pipeline to Mexico.Inflation: The rate decreased to an eight-month low in June to 1.6  percent.China trade: For the first time since 2003, American beef imports  have returned to China, opening up a $2.5 billion market to American ranchers  and producers.Cuba relations: Trump in June delivered on his campaign promise to roll  back the Obama administration’s agreement with Cuba, which Trump contends  benefitted the Cuban regime at the expense of the Cuban people.Apprenticeships: Trump signed an executive order in June  making it easier for businesses to start and expand apprenticeship programs.Property rights: Trump issued an executive order in June to  begin the process of rescinding the 2015 Waters of the United States rule,  which has been used to expand federal control over private land. Under the  Obama administration, the broadly crafted rule was applied to “navigable  waters” such as man-made ditches and water that accumulated after heavy rain.Homeland security: On June 19, DHS announced it had implemented  a method of tracking whether or not visitors leave the United States. Twenty  years ago, Congress ordered the installation of an entry-exit tracking system,  but the Clinton, Bush and Obama administrations never took action, allowing  millions of people to remain on temporary visas. Approximately 416,500 people  overstayed their visas in 2015 alone.Paris Climate Accord: Trump, in June, pulled the U.S. out of the  global agreement, which, according to a study by NERA Consulting, could have  cost the United States economy nearly $3 trillion. According  to the same study, by 2040, 6.5 million industrial sector jobs could have been  lost, including 3.1 million manufacturing sector jobs.NATO: Trump’s urging of NATO members to pay their fair share of  financial support for the military alliance has resulted in an increasing of  allied contributions of $10 billion, according to NATO’s secretary-general,  Jens Stoltenberg.Russia: The administration in June implemented the Global Magnitsky  Human Rights Accountability Act, which blacklisted certain Russian citizens for  human rights violations.Russia: In June, on the same day President Trump met with Ukrainian  President Petro Poroshenko, the U.S. Treasury Department imposed sanctions on  38 Russian individuals and entities involved in the conflict with Ukraine.Immigration: ICE arrested an average of 13,085 people each month from  February through June, whereas the average during the last three months of the  Obama administration was 9,134 arrests per month.Immigration: Trump’s Department of Homeland Security canceled in June  the Deferred Action for Parents of Americans program created by the Obama  administration in November 2014 that would have given amnesty to about 4  million illegal immigrants.Military: In June, the Trump administration authorized the Defense  Department to set troop levels in Afghanistan. The expanded authority given to  the military could also be seen in U.S. operations in Somalia.Veterans Administration reform: Trump signed the Veterans  Accountability and Whistleblower Protection Act in June to allow senior  officials in the VA to fire failing employees and to establish safeguards to  protect whistleblowers. The department reported it had fired more than 500  employees since January 2017 and suspended nearly 200 as part of the  president’s efforts to restore integrity and accountability.Veterans Administration reform: In June, the VA announced the  adoption of a medical records system successfully used by the Defense Department,  ending a decades-old problematic rift in sharing information between the two  agencies.Veterans Administration reform: A new White House VA Hotline to help  veterans, fully staffed by veterans, went live in June.Education: Trump’s education secretary, Betsy DeVos, in June  appointed Adam Kissel, a noted critic of the Obama administration’s  implementation of Title IX – the much-abused 1972 federal law that bars  discrimination in education “on the basis of sex” – and a strong supporter of  free speech, as deputy assistant secretary for higher education programs. The  staff of the Title IX enforcement office was reduced in the 2018 budget.  MAY 
                    
                      Middle East: Trump strengthened traditional alliances with Israel and  the Arab nations, which had deteriorated badly under President Obama.Middle East: During a visit to Saudi Arabia in May, his first foreign  trip as president, he announced the signing of a $110 billion arms deal with  Saudi Arabia, with another $350 billion of arms for the following 10 years.  American and Saudi businesses signed similar agreements on the same day, with  billions of dollars to be invested in the U.S. Trump also gave a major speech  to leaders of 50 Islamic nations, challenging them to fight Islamic terror.Personal income: According to the Bureau of Economic  Analysis, U.S. personal income rose 0.4 percent in May, while a 0.3 increase  was expected.Housing: The U.S. Census Bureau found housing sales recently have doubled  compared to the same period under President Obama. The annualized housing sales  rate for May 2017 was 610,000, compared to just 376,000 in 2009. New home  prices hit a record high in May, according to the Commerce Department. In 2011,  houses for sale were on the market an average 84 days. This year, it’s just 45  days.Mexico trade: Mexico agreed in June to curb its exporting of raw and  refined sugar to the U.S, benefitting the American industry.Trade: Trump announced in May that he intends to renegotiate the North  American Free Trade Agreement, NAFTA, to better reflect the modern economy  while benefitting every party to the pact.Syria: After the Syrian regime used chemical weapons against civilians,  President Trump authorized strikes in May against the airbase that launched the  chemical attacks, destroying 20 percent of Syria’s operational aircraft.Immigration: In May, the administration said the number of child  illegal immigrants entering the nation monthly had fallen below 1,000 for the  first time in several years.Voter fraud: In May, Trump created a commission to investigate voter  fraud chaired by Vice President Mike Pence and vice-chaired by Kansas Secretary  of State Kris Kobach.Education: In May, the administration announced it will create a  school choice plan and give states the option of implementing it, rather than  making it a federal program.Religious liberty: On the annual National Day of Prayer in May,  Trump signed an executive order on religious liberty that included a loosening  of IRS restrictions, known as the Johnson Amendment, against political  activities by tax-exempt religious organizations. The order also attempted to  make it easier for employers not to provide contraceptives if they had  religious objections and gave Attorney General Jeff Sessions greater authority  regarding religious liberty policy.Abortion: In May, the administration broadened the scope of the Mexico  City Policy to restrict funding to any international health organization that  performs or gives information about abortions, expanding the amount of money  affected from $600,000 to nearly $9 billion.  APRIL 
                    
                      U.S. Supreme Court: Keeping a major campaign promise, President  Trump nominated to the highest court a strict constructionist and originalist  in the mold of Antonin Scalia, Neil Gorsuch, who was confirmed by the Senate  and sworn in as an associate justice in April. In his first term, in June,  Gorsuch voted in every case with the justice generally regarded as the most  conservative, Clarence Thomas. The conservative Committee for Justice said in a  report that Gorsuch’s early performance says a lot about both what he will be like  as a Supreme Court justice “and what the president can be counted on to do as  more high court vacancies occur. Conservatives hoping for a solid conservative  majority on the court in the near future had good reason to cheer.”Immigration: The administration announced illegal border crossings  had decreased by 40 percent in the first month of Trump’s presidency. By  Trump’s 100th day in office, crossings had decreased by 73 percent, thanks to  the president’s policies deterring people from attempting to enter the country.Offshore oil drilling: In April, Trump signed an executive order to  extend offshore oil and gas drilling and reissue a leasing program to develop  offshore resources. The order reversed Obama’s December ban on drilling in the Arctic  and parts of the Atlantic Ocean.China trade: Trump initiated an investigation in April into whether  or not Chinese and other foreign-made steel and aluminum threaten U.S. national  security. China has 26 percent of the steel market in the U.S., and Chinese  steel imports are up nearly 20 percent over the last year.Made in the USA: President Trump signed the “Buy American and  Hire American” executive order in April, prioritizing the interests of American  businesses and workers. “Buy American” protects American industry from unfair  competition by targeting the abusive use of waivers and exceptions to laws on  the books. Trump’s “Hire American” effort calls for the reform of visa  programs, ensuring that they no longer displace American workers, while fully  enforcing laws governing the entry of foreign workers.Agriculture regulations: In April, in an effort to help farmers  affected by NAFTA and the trade imbalance with Canada, Trump signed an  executive order ordering the Department of Agriculture to find and eliminate  unnecessary regulations.G-7: In April, the administration refused to sign the G-7 joint  statement because the other nations could not agree to include support for  nuclear and fossil fuels without support for the Paris climate agreement. The G-7,  consequently, did not issue a joint statement.Russia: In April, the administration refused to issue waivers to any  companies that wanted to do business with Russia, which was under economic  sanctions, including ExxonMobil, which had applied for a waiver.Immigration: In March and April, the DOJ announced plans to speed up  the deportation of imprisoned illegal aliens, instructing U.S. attorneys to  employ stricter guidelines in the prosecution of immigration crimes while  seeking to hire 125 immigration judges in the next two years.Immigration: Trump signed an executive order in April cutting funding  for sanctuary cities, and despite encountering opposition from city officials,  ICE agents have been enforcing U.S. immigration laws in those cities.Immigration: In the first 100 days of the Trump administration,  arrests and deportations of criminal aliens such as MS-13 members were up 38  percent compared with the last year of the Obama administration. ICE conducted  a crackdown on the gangs that resulted in the arrests of nearly 1,400 people.  The Trump administration also cooperated with Central American countries to  combat MS-13 recruitment in the region. An estimated 6,000 MS-13 gang members  were arrested during the president’s first five months.Military: In April, Trump gave Defense Secretary James Mattis  authority to set troop levels in Iraq and Syria for the fight against ISIS. And  military commanders were granted authority to perform military actions without  approval from Washington. As a direct result, this newly autonomous U.S.  military made large advances against ISIS.Islamic jihad: Under the increased autonomy Trump gave the Defense  Department, the U.S. dealt a heavy blow to ISIS in Afghanistan in April,  dropping a GBU-43B – known as MOAB or the “Mother Of All bombs” – the largest  non-nuclear bomb in existence, on a complex of ISIS tunnels. At least 94 ISIS  fighters were killed, including four commanders, and tunnels and weapon  stockpiles were destroyed.Veterans Administration reform: In April, Trump signed the VA Choice  and Quality Employment Act of 2017 to authorize $2.1 billion in additional  funds enabling veterans who live more than 40 miles from the closest eligible  VA medical facility, experience wait times of more than 30 days to schedule an  appointment, or meet other special criteria to be treated outside the VA  system.Law enforcement: In April, Attorney General Jeff Sessions, in  an effort to give back local control to police departments, ordered the  Department of Justice to review Obama’s agreements with local police  departments.Education: In April, Trump signed an executive order requiring  Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos to review department regulations with the  intent of returning power to the states and local governments.Abortion: In what was regarded as the first major national pro-life bill  in more than a decade, Trump signed in April a Congressional Review bill into  law annulling a recent Obama administration regulation that would have  prohibited states from discriminating in awarding Title X family planning funds  based on whether a local clinic also performs abortions.Abortion: The Trump administration in April cut off U.S. funding of the  United Nations Population Fund, which has links to inhumane abortion programs  such as China’s one-child policy (which became a two-child policy in 2015).  More than $32 million was instead shifted to the U.S. Agency for International  Development.Abortion: In April, Trump appointed pro-life advocate Dr. Charmaine Yoest,  the former president of Americans United for Life, as assistant secretary of  public affairs for the Department of Health and Human Services, replacing a  strong Planned Parenthood supporter. Later, two pro-life advocates who had  worked for the Family Research Council were appointed to key positions. And  Valerie Huber, an abstinence education advocate, was appointed in June as chief  of staff to the assistant secretary for health at the HHS.  MARCH 
                    
                      G-20: In March, the Trump administration successfully forced the G-20  to remove its opposition to protectionism and temper its support for free  trade. Any mention of climate change was eliminated from its joint statement.Trade deficit: Trump signed an executive order in March directing a  review of and reporting on major U.S. trade deficits.Middle East: In March, the administration, led by U.N. Ambassador  Nikki Haley, condemned a report against Israel by the U.N. Economic and Social  Commission for Western Asia that was deemed anti-Semitic, prompting the  resignation of the commission’s executive director.Syria: In March, the Trump administration successfully forced the G-20  to remove its opposition to protectionism and temper its support for free  trade. Any mention of climate change was eliminated from its joint statement.Government reform: In March, Trump signed an executive order to  perform an audit on every executive branch agency to reduce spending and waste  and improve services.  FEBRUARY 
                    
                      Savings for oil companies: Trump signed a bill in February that  eliminated a Dodd-Frank rule requiring oil companies such as Exxon Mobile to  publicly disclose the taxes and fees they pay to foreign governments, which  would have cost the industry as much as $385 million annually.Finance reform: The administration ordered review of the 2010 Dodd-Frank  financial oversight law in February while urging Congress to remove the  Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s authority to supervise banks and  financial companies, returning that power to other federal and state  regulators.Russia: The administration countered Russian propaganda by launching two  government-run media outlets in February broadcasting in Russian.Military: In February the administration reached a tentative  deal with Lockheed Martin to purchase 90 F-35 jets at the lowest price in the  program’s history. The first 90 planes were about $725 million below budget,  with billions of dollars in additional savings expected. The deal saved at  least one U.S. ally, Japan, $100 million.Government reform: In February, the president announced he did  not plan on filling numerous government positions he considered unnecessary.Law enforcement: In February, President Trump signed three  executive orders to strengthen law enforcement.The first strengthens the law  against international crime organizations. The second combats  anti-law-enforcement crimes. The third seeks a strategy for reducing crime in  general, including, in particular, illegal immigration, drug trafficking and  violent crime.School bathrooms: Trump, in February, reversed Obama’s  executive order requiring public schools to allow students to use bathrooms and  locker rooms according to their preferred “gender identity.”Second Amendment: President Trump signed a bill into law in  February repealing an Obama-era Social Security Administration rule adding  mental disability determinations to the background check registry. The Obama  regulation potentially allowed the denial of Second Amendment rights to many  competent, mentally healthy citizens.  JANUARY 
                  
                    
                      Trans Pacific Partnership: Trump signed an executive order in January  removing the U.S. from the international pact, which critics charged was a  monumental compromise to American sovereignty and would take millions of jobs  away from American workers.Persecuted Christians: Reversing Obama administration policy, Trump  pledged in January that Christian refugees suffering persecution in Muslim  countries would be given priority over other refugees seeking to enter the  United States.Homeland security: Trump signed an executive order in January  banning people from seven countries regarded by the Obama administration as  havens for terrorism from entering the U.S. for 90 days and blocked all  refugees for 120 days while the administration assessed its security process.  After legal challenges, the administration issued a revised order in March, and  in June the U.S. Supreme Court decided a version of the ban could go into  effect until the court addresses its constitutionality in October.Immigration: The DOJ resumed the criminal prosecution of first-time  illegal border crossers after it had been stopped by the Obama administration.Government reform: Trump signed an executive order in January  to expedite environmental reviews of infrastructure projects, to jumpstart  industry spending and investment.Manufacturing regulations: Trump signed an executive order in January  reducing regulations on manufacturers.Abortion: In January, Trump expressed strong support for the annual  pro-life March for Life. Vice President Mike Pence became the first vice president  to speak at the event, and White House senior adviser Kellyanne Conway also  spoke.Regulatory reform: Trump set up task forces in every agency to  remove “job killing regulations” and increase “economic opportunity.” The Trump  administration is on track to finish the first phase of its regulatory reform  program with $645 million in net annual regulatory savings, according to an  analysis by the American Action Forum. By comparison, during President Obama’s  years in office, more than 22,700 regulations were imposed on Americans at a  cost to American consumers, businesses and workers of more than $120 billion  each year. AAF called Trump’s order reducing regulation and controlling  regulatory costs “one of the most significant developments in regulatory policy  in decades,” noting it was the first time in U.S. history that the executive  branch has established a regulatory budget.Women in business: Trump launched the United States-Canada  Council for Advancement of Women Entrepreneurs and Business Leaders with  Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in February.Immigration: Trump expanded deportation priorities, signing an  executive order in January that includes people who “have committed acts that  constitute a chargeable criminal offense,” which could include anyone who  entered the country illegally, leading to a significant increase in arrests.Military: In January, Trump signed a memorandum to begin the  expansion and rebuilding of the U.S. military.Government reform: Trump signed an executive order Jan. 23  placing a hiring freeze on federal employees.Regulatory reform: Shortly after his inauguration, President  Trump signed an executive order mandating that for every new regulation, two  regulations must be revoked. In practice, the administration has exceeded that  mark, rescinding or delaying more than 860 regulations, or 16  regulations for every new one implemented.Abortion: In January, Trump signed an order reinstating the Mexico City  Policy, which defunded the International Planned Parenthood Federation and  other organizations that promote foreign abortions.President’s salary: President Trump, as promised during his  election campaign, has donated his salary.Technology: After his election, Trump met with top tech leaders,  including Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook, Bill Gates of Microsoft and Jeff Bezos  of Amazon. According to Gates, it was “a good conversation about innovation,  how it can help in health, education, the impact of foreign aid and energy, and  a wide-ranging conversation about power of innovation.”   Source: WND   |              
        
          
            
              
                
                  
                    Click here for previous HTML   e-mail releases from Freedom is Knowledge (2011 - current.) 
        
          | Thank you for considering to pass along these e-mails. |  Did you miss one of our e-mails? Check out the link below.  On Facebook 
 Sample Of A Few Archived Links | Fascism Comes To America | It Doesn't Matter?! | What Privacy? | America Facing Evil | Whistleblower | Historic Biblical Times |  | Obama's 1990 article   -  “We’re Going To Reshape Mean-Spirited Selfish America.” | Print Page | | The United States Flag: Federal Law Relating To Display And FAQs |  U.S. Flag Code |   It is no measure of health to be well-adjusted to a profoundly sick society - J. Krishnamurti       Freedom is Knowledge   |