The problem with Victory Day is not that it remembers our war with Japan, the problem is that its focus is too narrow.
Victory Day
- Post author By Dylan Conley
- Post date
- Categories In Education, In the News
The problem with Victory Day is not that it remembers our war with Japan, the problem is that its focus is too narrow.
Listen to Dylan Conley’s speech at the “Peace & Justice Rally 4 Crystal Caldwell.”
With all the information swirling around the Ocean State about mail-in ballots, we wanted to ease things up for you a bit.
Congressman Jim Langevin (D-RI), a member of the House Armed Services and Homeland Security Committees has made hundreds of thousands of dollars in stock trades involving Chinese high-tech companies.
All Americans are entitled to know who we truly are. We must educate on our country’s whole truth – our failures as well as our successes. Without understanding our past failures, we will not learn how to overcome future challenges. We need real changes, with real teeth, on every level.
For profit colleges are all too often scams designed to use students’ ability to acquire student loans without providing them with the requisite education.
I have listened to you tell me about your hope for the future and the really hard work and total commitment it will take to realize that hope. I want to be with you and tell Copeland that he is growing up in the greatest democracy in the history of the world – dedicated to justice for all its citizens. Our state and country need the strength and clarity of purpose that you will bring to Congress. Godspeed.
Read Dylan Conley’s letter in The Westerly Sun entitled “We must make R.I.’s ‘after’ better than its ‘before‘.” In it, he discuses how we need to take the opportunity that this moment in history has afforded us to forge a new path to a better future.
“From my perspective, true freedom is only borne from true equity,” Conley, the assistant town solicitor in Johnston, said.
When the pandemic hit and we realized our country didn’t have a plan for this, we all took stock of where we were.