latform that focuses on every group but middle-class whites.
By the AFP Staff
The 2020 Democratic Party Platform was approved at the virtual convention by party delegates via remote vote on Aug. 18. AFP reviewed the Democratic platform in detail, particularly as compared with the priorities put forth by President Donald Trump’s campaign team in its second-term agenda, which was accepted by the Republican Party alongside the 2016 platform in lieu of preparing a new platform for 2020 and reviewed for
American Free Press Issue 36 & 37 by John Friend.
To briefly summarize, the agenda’s relatively vague priorities, which were expanded upon in the president’s nomination acceptance speech, include: creating jobs, eradicating Covid-19, ending U.S. reliance on China, improving healthcare and education, “draining the swamp,” defending law enforcement and bringing “violent extremist groups like Antifa to justice,” ending illegal immigration and protecting American workers, ex
Posted by Lia Rovira in Human World |
January 10, 2021
Joe Biden is the United States presidential election winner, but his plans for NASA remain unclear. And while citizens digest the election results, the space industry is left wondering what comes next.
President-elect of the United States Joe Biden speaking with supporters at a community event at Sun City MacDonald Ranch in Henderson, Nevada. Image via Planetary Society/ Gage Skidmore.
Shortly before 4 a.m. (12:00 UTC) last week (January 7, 2021), Congress confirmed Democrat Joe Biden as the United States presidential election winner. Vice President Mike Pence, presiding over the joint session, announced the tally, 306-232. Whatever your political leanings, if you are a space fan, you watched closely during the Donald Trump administration as it supported NASA’s long-term goal of sending astronauts to Mars. And you saw our nation’s course change during Trump’s tenure to a short-term goal of returning the nex