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宜宾双眼皮和开眼角一起做
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发布时间: 2025-05-29 23:55:47北京青年报社官方账号
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  宜宾双眼皮和开眼角一起做   

Politics can get personal.“I’ve been amazed the last two weeks at how mean people can be," said Pennsylvania voter Kim Vettel. "And it's not just from one political side, it’s everywhere.”Vettel knows just how personal political talk can get."It's been tense for everyone," she said. "It's been heartbreaking, losing friends realizing family members feel different than you but you didn't realize before."Vettel doesn't hide where she stands, there is a Biden sign in the front yard of her home about an hour from Pittsburgh. She lives in a neighborhood where few feel the same way she does about this election.“I’m not embarrassed at all for who I voted for," Vettel said.Vettel also isn’t hiding that the 2020 election is the first time in her life that she has voted. She is 42 years old.“I never been into politics. I didn’t really grow up in a family where it was as big deal," Vettel said. "I can’t remember anyone in my family, in particular, going to vote when I was younger.”The reason for her change? It's personal."My oldest daughter is gay," Vettel said.“My rights as someone who is out as a lesbian," said Vettel's 18-year-old daughter, Haylee Tucker.Tucker displays her first "I voted" sticker on the back of her phone.“They’re doing their research. They’re trying their hardest to do what’s right for everybody. They’re sick of continuing to grow up and have to be adults in it," she said of the many people her age also voting for the first time this election.This isn't the first election where it's been hard to predict what Keystone State voters will do.“The message that came out to residents in Pennsylvania is you’re going to decide the election," Claudia Raymer said.Raymer isn’t a first-time voter, but she’s already thinking to 2024, when her son, Alex, will be able to cast his first ballot.“I don’t vote just based Democrat or Republican. I vote with whatever one seems best," Raymer’s son said.While he can't vote in this election knows its importance."To see him see the value in voting, I feel like I'm doing something right," said Raymer.Alex is also aware not everyone uses their power to vote."It may seem like it doesn’t matter in the long run, but it does," he said. "It is your voice, and you can do whatever you want with it, so it's important it's heard."Voting is an importance not lost on first-time voters like Kim Vettel, who hopes as we move forward, we can look for what is personal to people beyond politics.“My next-door neighbors are Trump supporters, and we love them, they are amazing people, they treat us like family, and just because of who they vote for doesn’t change my thoughts of them," Vettel said. 2664

  宜宾双眼皮和开眼角一起做   

President Donald Trump pardoned Thanksgiving Turkeys on Tuesday, a comical White House tradition that has been around since the 1940s. On a more serious note, one question is whether Trump will issue more pardons before he leaves office on January 20. HISTORY OF PARDONSThe Constitution gives the president of the United States broad powers to pardon individuals with instructions saying the president “shall have Power to grant Reprieves and Pardons for Offenses against the United States.”Presidents have used this clause extensively throughout history. President Franklin D. Rosevelt pardoned over 2,800 individuals during his time in office President Barack Obama pardoned 212 individuals. Trump, so far, has pardoned just 28 individuals.ACT OF MERCY Alice Marie Johnson is a beneficiary of one of Trump's rare pardons. Johnson was convicted of cocaine trafficking in the 1990s and sentenced to a lifetime in prison. After being convinced by Kim Kardashian West that Johnson had turned her life around, Trump granted Johnson clemency and then a full pardon earlier this year. "I am free!" Johnson said during the 2020 Republican National Convention. WHO MIGHT TRUMP PARDON?Trump could issues hundreds of pardons in his final months. There is a backlog of over 13,000 clemency requests pending at the Department of Justice. It's possible Trump could pardon former advisers, like Paul Manafort or Michael Flynn. Flynn briefly served as Trump's national security adviser.It is also possible he could preemptively pardon advisers like Rudy Guiliani or his son Donald Trump Jr. Neither have been charged with a crime but have been reportedly questioned by prosecutors. "A president can pardon someone for a crime that has already been committed even if they haven’t been charged yet. Just think of Nixon, he hadn’t been charged with anything when Ford granted him that pardon," Dr. Mark Osler at St. Thomas University said. Trump even tweeted in 2018 he may pardon himself. 1984

  宜宾双眼皮和开眼角一起做   

President Donald Trump refuted a report from The Atlantic on Thursday that claimed he called Sen. John McCain and U.S. soldiers who died fighting for their country "losers" and "suckers."According to The Atlantic, in the days after McCain's death in August 2018, Trump told senior staff members that he did not want to support that "loser's" funeral and became "furious" that flags at the White House had been lowered to half-staff in McCain's honor.McCain spent more than five years in a Vietnamese war camp after his plane was shot down during the Vietnam war. During the 2016 presidential campaign, Trump responded to criticism from McCain by saying he liked soldiers who "weren't captured."The outlet also reported that Trump made similar comments during a trip to Paris in 2018, when a visit to nearby Aisne-Marne American Cemetery was canceled due to rain. While officials at the time claimed the Secret Service was unable to fly a helicopter due to the weather, senior staff members who were in Paris claim the trip was canceled because Trump believed his hair would be ruined in the rain.Trump also reportedly claimed the cemetery — a memorial site to hundreds of American soldiers who were killed during World War I — was "filled with losers" and "suckers."Much of the reporting was further confirmed in reports by The Washington Post and The Associated Press.In a series of tweets on Thursday evening, Trump denied the accusations, calling them "fake news." He claimed he called for flags at the White House to be flown at half-staff "without hesitation or complaint" following McCain's death."I never called John a loser and swear on whatever, or whoever, I was asked to swear on, that I never called our great fallen soldiers anything other than HEROES," Trump tweeted on Thursday. 1801

  

President Donald Trump said on Tuesday he has directed his attorney general to propose changes that would ban so-called bump stocks, which make it easier to fire rounds more quickly."Just a few moments ago I signed a memo directing the attorney general to propose regulations that ban all devices that turn legal weapons into machine guns," Trump said at a Medal of Valor event at the White House, addressing Attorney General Jeff Sessions."I expect these regulations to be finalized, Jeff, very soon," Trump said.Moments earlier, White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said Trump ordered the Justice Department and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives to review bump fire stocks, which she said had been completed. She said movement on that front would take place shortly."The President, when it comes to that, is committed to ensuring that those devices are -- again I'm not going to get ahead of the announcement, but I can tell you that the President doesn't support use of those accessories," Sanders said.Asked on Tuesday whether the President would support steps that would raise the federal age limit for military-style weapons, such as the AR-15, Sanders did not rule it out."I think that's certainly something that's on the table for us to discuss and that we expect to come up over the next couple of weeks," Sanders said.In most states, the age limit for purchasing the AR-15 is 18, while the limit for handguns is 21.The-CNN-Wire? & ? 2018 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved. 1556

  

President Donald Trump and his Canadian and Mexican counterparts signed a replacement NAFTA deal on Friday during a ceremony on the sidelines of the G20 summit.The ceremonial signing does not mean the United-States-Mexico-Canada Agreement -- the USMCA, as it has been rebranded -- will now go into effect. The deal still needs to win congressional approval in Washington, where key members of both political parties have already expressed significant concerns."I don't expect to have much of a problem," Trump said during the ceremony.The signing ceremony in and of itself represented a political victory for Trump, who has been eager to mark the deal with a formal photo opportunity alongside Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and outgoing Mexican President Enrique Pe?a Nieto. It was not clear until just a day earlier that the ceremony would go through amid ongoing Canadian protests over US-imposed steel and aluminum tariffs.Top US officials were on hand for the signing ceremony, including Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, national security adviser John Bolton and the President's daughter Ivanka Trump and son-in-law Jared Kushner.The-CNN-Wire? & ? 2018 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved. 1281

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