Richmond speaks up: Letters to the editor for the week of Apr. 17, 2026
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Our weekly round-up of letters published in the Richmond Times-Dispatch.
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Sens. Ricketts and Fisher, as well as Congressmen Flood and Smith, have all been silent as Donald Trump destroys everything that once made America safe, respected and economically strong. America's place in the world is becoming increasingly isolated as the bully-in-chief throws accusations at those who have been allies for a very long time, and has even threatened genocide in Iran.
A billion dollars a day of taxpayer money has already been spent in just over a month on the Iran war, which a majority of Americans do not support.
- Updated
Despite over 50 years of data linking tobacco use to multiple cancers, including lung cancer, tobacco remains a leading cause of cancer and cancer death. In Nebraska 28.4% of cancer deaths are attributable to smoking. Yet the 2026 Nebraska Legislature passed a budget that fails to invest in the protection of the health of all Nebraskans from the harmful interests of Big Tobacco.
Funding a tobacco control program works to prevent tobacco use, promote quitting, reduce exposure to secondhand smoke and eliminate tobacco-related health disparities. These are fact-based programs put in place to reduce tobacco use and reduce taxpayer-funded health care costs. DHHS’ Tobacco Free Nebraska program provides critical tools for communities to prevent death and disease from commercial tobacco use and secondhand smoke exposure.
- Updated
Mike Flood wants to “give the president a long runway.” To where? This war of choice has clearly been a strategic failure that will haunt us far into the future. Iran is stronger, we are weaker, and our allies have been turned away. Mission accomplished? The silly notion that we don’t need the Strait of Hormuz, which we caused to close, ignores the spiking price of fertilizer and diesel fuel at the start of the planting season for farmers. These same farmers have markets that are crushed by Trump’s tariffs. They don’t have a long runway. Food prices are sure to rise more, and the supply chain for everything we need is disrupted again. War and rising prices were not our president's campaign promise on Day 1. We do have a coequal branch of government called the House of Representatives. They control spending, declare war and exercise oversight of the president. That is part of their oath. Currently we are accumulating a national debt that is spiraling wildly and conducting an expensive war while millions of Americans have lost their health care. And Congress does nothing. Can any of us tell our boss we would like to have our six-digit salary deposited regularly, but we plan to do nothing, and if a crisis arises we will go home? How would that end? The best Mike Flood tells us is, “I do not support genocide.” What amazing courage. During this chaos, Trump is planning to manipulate the state-run election process in our country as fear and anger grow. Republicans control every branch of the federal government, they own the results, but others own the suffering. We need new people for new results. If this oppressive corruption continues, we will be fortunate just to make it to the midterms.
Steven D Burbach, Lincoln
- Updated
So now it’s POTUS as Jesus? Well, I suppose it’s only appropriate that the chief executive resides in Palm Beach County as the current administration resembles nothing so much as Florida geology.
Every time you think it’s descended to absolute rock bottom, a whole new sinkhole opens up.
- Updated
The current president of the United States sounds more like a drunk fraternity boy than the leader of the free world. His post on April 5 using the f-word blends in with his presidency.
The First Amendment permits free speech, but even students in public schools would be reprimanded; and other nations do not speak this way. Even the president of Russia, a murderer, sounds better.
- Updated
As a former serviceman in the Nebraska Army National Guard, I am very concerned about our veterans in our country. While many people assume that the VA takes care of the medical needs of all veterans, that is far from the truth. In fact, only about 9 million veterans (about half the population of vets in the U.S.) are enrolled in VA health care! And many of those rely to some degree on outside insurance to cover some of their medical needs as well, including Medicaid. The BBB (Big Beautiful Bill), which Mike Flood voted for, will cut nearly a trillion dollars out of Medicaid over the next decade, which could result in as many as 12 million Americans losing health care coverage. Nearly 1.6 million veterans are enrolled in Medicaid.
The BBB also made substantial cuts and changes to the SNAP program. About 1.2 million veterans live in households that receive assistance through SNAP, based on Census survey data. Thousands of veterans in every state — who may be between jobs, working in low-paying jobs or have disabilities — use SNAP to supplement their low income so they can afford food.
- Updated
Dear Sen. Fischer,
Shame on you for cosponsoring the SAVE America Act, which is now before the Senate.
- Updated
Having repeatedly insulted NATO allies, avaricious felon Trump has now demanded their aid to get out of the illegal Iran-war hole he’s dug — and keeps digging — himself into. What effrontery, what stupidity! But don't forget; there’s more.
Campaign lies? No wars, yet the lawless killing of alleged maritime narco-terrorists and surgical strikes on Venezuela. And now? The Iran quagmire, without anticipating how the Strait of Hormuz’s control figures in the mess, and how grave collateral geo-economic damage cannot but result. At home? Increasing contempt for American citizens. Millions, now bereft of health care, facing rising prices and a sputtering economy, resulting from capricious tariffing and an unending billions-of-dollars-a-day war.
- Updated
A headline in the Lincoln Journal Star read “Trump demands to appoint Iran’s leader." The Ayatollah dynasty has been committing atrocities against its own people for the last 45 years after toppling the King/Shah of Iran in 1979.
Unfortunately, we are responsible for this tragedy perpetrated on the people of Iran when our government toppled the democratically elected government of Iran in 1953 and replaced it with its puppet, the Shah (King), to have free access to Iran’s oil.
- Updated
In Matthew 5:37, Jesus tells his followers to speak plainly: let your yes be yes, and your no be no. I think about that often when public officials present themselves as Christians.
Recently, our president posted a disturbing and chaotic social media rant full of demands directed at another sovereign nation. Despite his campaign promise to avoid war and his open pursuit of a Nobel Peace Prize, he threatened broad-scale military destruction. Despite his statement last week that the Strait of Hormuz was essentially open, he demanded its immediate opening. Despite his claim that military intervention was, in part, for the welfare of Iranian civilians, he threatened civilian infrastructure.
- Updated
In April 2024, I attended a workshop for adults entitled "Connecting the Dots" referring to puzzles where dots on a page are connected in numerical order to reveal the outline of a character or another object. The workshop was intended to reveal how easy it is to "connect the dots" to reveal the impact that the breakdown in human interaction is having on issues troubling all of us: loneliness, general mental health, and yes, even youth and adult suicide.
Sad to say, these issues are not diminishing and are, in fact, increasing. Is it also possible that our lack of interpersonal human conversation is one of the factors contributing to the friction and misunderstanding in our society today? Our young people are spending more time on "screens" than they spend interacting with others, including their parents.
- Updated
Hasty pudding, a colonial dish made quickly when time was short, is an apt metaphor for the haste surrounding the proposed passage of LB1261.
The bill would authorize data center projects larger than anything Nebraska has seen — using more electricity than the City of Lincoln and daily water on the scale of small cities. Before approving projects of this magnitude, Nebraskans deserve full transparency about water sources and impacts on agriculture. The strain on natural gas supplies that power these centers could raise heating and electric bills statewide.
- Updated
During my visit to Utah's Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, the beauty of the colorful rock formations astonished me. It is easy to understand why last year Americans overwhelmingly opposed Congress flirting with proposals to sell off public lands such as these and the iconic Boundary Waters in Minnesota. However, lawmakers are now wielding the Congressional Review Act (CRA), a quieter, more technical approach to erode the protections of our cherished landscapes.
The CRA allows lawmakers to overturn recently finalized regulations with a simple majority vote, ignoring public comment. The CRA is not intended for land management plans, which are not simple regulations and are drafted over years and multiple administrations, with input from scientists, the public and tribal consultations.
- Updated
It was June 1964. I was 21 years old and just finished my junior year at Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts. I was home in Albany, New York, and my father developed a kidney infection. He ended up in the hospital, and they gave him an antibiotic that was available for that type of infection. He was allergic to the medicine, so they stopped giving the drug. My father's temperature climbed until he was consumed by the infection and he died.
Today, the world has changed, and there are many more drugs available. How did that happen? It required research, which was funded by companies trying to develop cures for many medical problems. It was expensive and a time-consuming process, but many breakthroughs occurred over time.
- Updated
Why would Virginia undo a fair system we fought for just four years ago? The April 21 redistricting referendum claims to “restore fairness,” but it’s a blatant power grab. It scraps the bipartisan redistricting commission we voters approved in 2020 with a two-thirds majority, returning map-drawing to the Democratic-controlled legislature. That’s not progress — it’s a step back to the same politicians we wanted out of the process.
Look closer, and the deception deepens. The ballot question’s loaded phrasing, “restore fairness,” violates Virginia’s tradition of neutral language. It’s crafted to mislead voters into approving a system that could lock in a 10-to-1 congressional gerrymander in a competitive state. This isn’t hypothetical; it’s a real threat to balanced representation.
- Updated
As a constituent of Virginia’s 1st District, I am increasingly concerned by Representative Rob Wittman’s continued prioritization of party loyalty over the needs of our community.
Throughout his tenure, Congressman Wittman has consistently failed to provide a meaningful check on Donald Trump, demonstrating a reluctance to challenge the president even when policies conflict with the interests of our district. His record is one of quiet compliance, with his rare breaks from the party line appearing more tactical than principled. A prime example is his vote regarding health care subsidies — a move that came only after months of refusing to discuss the matter with the public and only when the political pressure became unavoidable.
- Updated
We have a reprieve from our great country decimating a civilization and committing war crimes. Israel is not yet abiding by the ceasefire as it applies to Lebanon. The GOP Congress is not providing checks and balances or oversight on the war and has been sent home on vacation. The Trump Administration is running through weapons and money like water on a war that neither Congress nor the American people sanction.
Trump says the federal government cannot afford to fund Medicaid and Medicare and the states should take it over because of the costs of the war. I thought this administration was about America First. The New York Times ran an article that indicates Trump was warned that the advice he was getting from the Israelis was unreliable about the difficulties of the war, but decided to proceed. When will this country make him accountable?
- Updated
Virginia’s struggle over mid-decade congressional redistricting reflects more than political advantage or the next election; it reflects character.
Even when political actions are lawful, we must still ask: Are they right? A republic’s strength lies not in what power permits, but in the fairness and restraint with which power is used.
- Updated
Doug Kelly recently argued in an opinion piece that Virginia should continue building more data centers to compete with China for AI dominance, because doing so is good for all Virginians. We should be wary, however, of imitating Chinese tactics.
China can turf farmers off their land unilaterally. It has problems with desertification and shrinking water supplies, which will worsen if it supplies its data centers with dirty energy. Moreover, the argument that data centers will bring prosperity to “have not” communities seems suspect. “Have not” communities are chosen for data centers precisely because such communities rarely muster the strength to fight for their own clean water and air.
- Updated
As communities across the country grapple with rising fuel costs, air pollution and the growing impacts of global warming, one solution is becoming increasingly clear; the widespread adoption of electric vehicles.
Electric cars offer a cleaner, more sustainable alternative to gasoline-powered vehicles. By producing zero tailpipe emissions, they reduce air pollution and improve public health, especially in urban areas where smog and poor air quality disproportionately affect vulnerable populations.
- Updated
The recent article on the Virginia Virtual Academy was unfair to the school and unfair to the many parents and families across the state of Virginia that continue to choose to enjoy the flexibility VAVA offers. It would have provided a more accurate representation if you would have spoken to more VAVA families. We love VAVA, and it has been a wonderful school for our family over the past 12 years. Parents and families from across the Commonwealth would’ve told you very different stories.
Our oldest started VAVA in the third grade and graduated with the highest honors in 2024 with both her high school diploma and an Associates degree from NVCC. She is excelling in her second year of college with an expected graduation date in advance of her peers. My youngest, a high school student, is excelling in VAVA. His test scores, including SOL and SAT, are in the top percentiles. He is dual enrolled at Northern Virginia Community College.
- Updated
I supported, voted for and canvassed several neighborhoods distributing literature supporting the successful OneVirginia2021 campaign for a constitutional amendment ending political gerrymandering in Virginia. I would do it again in a heartbeat, with enthusiasm.
I also voted this year for the proposed one-time mid-decade realignment of our congressional districts. I did so without joy; but the question presented by the ballot this year is whether we will simply stand by and watch as Donald Trump, Greg Abbott and Ron DeSantis rig this fall’s congressional elections with political gerrymanders of their own. That, I am not willing to do.
- Updated
Starting with Odie Donald II's guarantee of 1 year severance regardless of cause, and now Connie Clay getting $549,000 after departing her $158,684-a-year job, it seems leaving our city's government jobs is a lucrative business in and of itself. This on top of $630,000 in attorney's fees for the city. Waste indeed.
Nothing screams confidence in work performance like getting something for nothing. Perhaps I should come out of retirement and apply for anything and then make a fuss, get axed, then sue. Voila! Vacation here I come.
More like this...
Sens. Ricketts and Fisher, as well as Congressmen Flood and Smith, have all been silent as Donald Trump destroys everything that once made America safe, respected and economically strong. America's place in the world is becoming increasingly isolated as the bully-in-chief throws accusations at those who have been allies for a very long time, and has even threatened genocide in Iran.
A billion dollars a day of taxpayer money has already been spent in just over a month on the Iran war, which a majority of Americans do not support.
Despite over 50 years of data linking tobacco use to multiple cancers, including lung cancer, tobacco remains a leading cause of cancer and cancer death. In Nebraska 28.4% of cancer deaths are attributable to smoking. Yet the 2026 Nebraska Legislature passed a budget that fails to invest in the protection of the health of all Nebraskans from the harmful interests of Big Tobacco.
Funding a tobacco control program works to prevent tobacco use, promote quitting, reduce exposure to secondhand smoke and eliminate tobacco-related health disparities. These are fact-based programs put in place to reduce tobacco use and reduce taxpayer-funded health care costs. DHHS’ Tobacco Free Nebraska program provides critical tools for communities to prevent death and disease from commercial tobacco use and secondhand smoke exposure.
Mike Flood wants to “give the president a long runway.” To where? This war of choice has clearly been a strategic failure that will haunt us far into the future. Iran is stronger, we are weaker, and our allies have been turned away. Mission accomplished? The silly notion that we don’t need the Strait of Hormuz, which we caused to close, ignores the spiking price of fertilizer and diesel fuel at the start of the planting season for farmers. These same farmers have markets that are crushed by Trump’s tariffs. They don’t have a long runway. Food prices are sure to rise more, and the supply chain for everything we need is disrupted again. War and rising prices were not our president's campaign promise on Day 1. We do have a coequal branch of government called the House of Representatives. They control spending, declare war and exercise oversight of the president. That is part of their oath. Currently we are accumulating a national debt that is spiraling wildly and conducting an expensive war while millions of Americans have lost their health care. And Congress does nothing. Can any of us tell our boss we would like to have our six-digit salary deposited regularly, but we plan to do nothing, and if a crisis arises we will go home? How would that end? The best Mike Flood tells us is, “I do not support genocide.” What amazing courage. During this chaos, Trump is planning to manipulate the state-run election process in our country as fear and anger grow. Republicans control every branch of the federal government, they own the results, but others own the suffering. We need new people for new results. If this oppressive corruption continues, we will be fortunate just to make it to the midterms.
Steven D Burbach, Lincoln
So now it’s POTUS as Jesus? Well, I suppose it’s only appropriate that the chief executive resides in Palm Beach County as the current administration resembles nothing so much as Florida geology.
Every time you think it’s descended to absolute rock bottom, a whole new sinkhole opens up.
The current president of the United States sounds more like a drunk fraternity boy than the leader of the free world. His post on April 5 using the f-word blends in with his presidency.
The First Amendment permits free speech, but even students in public schools would be reprimanded; and other nations do not speak this way. Even the president of Russia, a murderer, sounds better.
As a former serviceman in the Nebraska Army National Guard, I am very concerned about our veterans in our country. While many people assume that the VA takes care of the medical needs of all veterans, that is far from the truth. In fact, only about 9 million veterans (about half the population of vets in the U.S.) are enrolled in VA health care! And many of those rely to some degree on outside insurance to cover some of their medical needs as well, including Medicaid. The BBB (Big Beautiful Bill), which Mike Flood voted for, will cut nearly a trillion dollars out of Medicaid over the next decade, which could result in as many as 12 million Americans losing health care coverage. Nearly 1.6 million veterans are enrolled in Medicaid.
The BBB also made substantial cuts and changes to the SNAP program. About 1.2 million veterans live in households that receive assistance through SNAP, based on Census survey data. Thousands of veterans in every state — who may be between jobs, working in low-paying jobs or have disabilities — use SNAP to supplement their low income so they can afford food.
Dear Sen. Fischer,
Shame on you for cosponsoring the SAVE America Act, which is now before the Senate.
Having repeatedly insulted NATO allies, avaricious felon Trump has now demanded their aid to get out of the illegal Iran-war hole he’s dug — and keeps digging — himself into. What effrontery, what stupidity! But don't forget; there’s more.
Campaign lies? No wars, yet the lawless killing of alleged maritime narco-terrorists and surgical strikes on Venezuela. And now? The Iran quagmire, without anticipating how the Strait of Hormuz’s control figures in the mess, and how grave collateral geo-economic damage cannot but result. At home? Increasing contempt for American citizens. Millions, now bereft of health care, facing rising prices and a sputtering economy, resulting from capricious tariffing and an unending billions-of-dollars-a-day war.
A headline in the Lincoln Journal Star read “Trump demands to appoint Iran’s leader." The Ayatollah dynasty has been committing atrocities against its own people for the last 45 years after toppling the King/Shah of Iran in 1979.
Unfortunately, we are responsible for this tragedy perpetrated on the people of Iran when our government toppled the democratically elected government of Iran in 1953 and replaced it with its puppet, the Shah (King), to have free access to Iran’s oil.
In Matthew 5:37, Jesus tells his followers to speak plainly: let your yes be yes, and your no be no. I think about that often when public officials present themselves as Christians.
Recently, our president posted a disturbing and chaotic social media rant full of demands directed at another sovereign nation. Despite his campaign promise to avoid war and his open pursuit of a Nobel Peace Prize, he threatened broad-scale military destruction. Despite his statement last week that the Strait of Hormuz was essentially open, he demanded its immediate opening. Despite his claim that military intervention was, in part, for the welfare of Iranian civilians, he threatened civilian infrastructure.
In April 2024, I attended a workshop for adults entitled "Connecting the Dots" referring to puzzles where dots on a page are connected in numerical order to reveal the outline of a character or another object. The workshop was intended to reveal how easy it is to "connect the dots" to reveal the impact that the breakdown in human interaction is having on issues troubling all of us: loneliness, general mental health, and yes, even youth and adult suicide.
Sad to say, these issues are not diminishing and are, in fact, increasing. Is it also possible that our lack of interpersonal human conversation is one of the factors contributing to the friction and misunderstanding in our society today? Our young people are spending more time on "screens" than they spend interacting with others, including their parents.
Hasty pudding, a colonial dish made quickly when time was short, is an apt metaphor for the haste surrounding the proposed passage of LB1261.
The bill would authorize data center projects larger than anything Nebraska has seen — using more electricity than the City of Lincoln and daily water on the scale of small cities. Before approving projects of this magnitude, Nebraskans deserve full transparency about water sources and impacts on agriculture. The strain on natural gas supplies that power these centers could raise heating and electric bills statewide.
During my visit to Utah's Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, the beauty of the colorful rock formations astonished me. It is easy to understand why last year Americans overwhelmingly opposed Congress flirting with proposals to sell off public lands such as these and the iconic Boundary Waters in Minnesota. However, lawmakers are now wielding the Congressional Review Act (CRA), a quieter, more technical approach to erode the protections of our cherished landscapes.
The CRA allows lawmakers to overturn recently finalized regulations with a simple majority vote, ignoring public comment. The CRA is not intended for land management plans, which are not simple regulations and are drafted over years and multiple administrations, with input from scientists, the public and tribal consultations.
It was June 1964. I was 21 years old and just finished my junior year at Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts. I was home in Albany, New York, and my father developed a kidney infection. He ended up in the hospital, and they gave him an antibiotic that was available for that type of infection. He was allergic to the medicine, so they stopped giving the drug. My father's temperature climbed until he was consumed by the infection and he died.
Today, the world has changed, and there are many more drugs available. How did that happen? It required research, which was funded by companies trying to develop cures for many medical problems. It was expensive and a time-consuming process, but many breakthroughs occurred over time.
Why would Virginia undo a fair system we fought for just four years ago? The April 21 redistricting referendum claims to “restore fairness,” but it’s a blatant power grab. It scraps the bipartisan redistricting commission we voters approved in 2020 with a two-thirds majority, returning map-drawing to the Democratic-controlled legislature. That’s not progress — it’s a step back to the same politicians we wanted out of the process.
Look closer, and the deception deepens. The ballot question’s loaded phrasing, “restore fairness,” violates Virginia’s tradition of neutral language. It’s crafted to mislead voters into approving a system that could lock in a 10-to-1 congressional gerrymander in a competitive state. This isn’t hypothetical; it’s a real threat to balanced representation.
As a constituent of Virginia’s 1st District, I am increasingly concerned by Representative Rob Wittman’s continued prioritization of party loyalty over the needs of our community.
Throughout his tenure, Congressman Wittman has consistently failed to provide a meaningful check on Donald Trump, demonstrating a reluctance to challenge the president even when policies conflict with the interests of our district. His record is one of quiet compliance, with his rare breaks from the party line appearing more tactical than principled. A prime example is his vote regarding health care subsidies — a move that came only after months of refusing to discuss the matter with the public and only when the political pressure became unavoidable.
We have a reprieve from our great country decimating a civilization and committing war crimes. Israel is not yet abiding by the ceasefire as it applies to Lebanon. The GOP Congress is not providing checks and balances or oversight on the war and has been sent home on vacation. The Trump Administration is running through weapons and money like water on a war that neither Congress nor the American people sanction.
Trump says the federal government cannot afford to fund Medicaid and Medicare and the states should take it over because of the costs of the war. I thought this administration was about America First. The New York Times ran an article that indicates Trump was warned that the advice he was getting from the Israelis was unreliable about the difficulties of the war, but decided to proceed. When will this country make him accountable?
Virginia’s struggle over mid-decade congressional redistricting reflects more than political advantage or the next election; it reflects character.
Even when political actions are lawful, we must still ask: Are they right? A republic’s strength lies not in what power permits, but in the fairness and restraint with which power is used.
Doug Kelly recently argued in an opinion piece that Virginia should continue building more data centers to compete with China for AI dominance, because doing so is good for all Virginians. We should be wary, however, of imitating Chinese tactics.
China can turf farmers off their land unilaterally. It has problems with desertification and shrinking water supplies, which will worsen if it supplies its data centers with dirty energy. Moreover, the argument that data centers will bring prosperity to “have not” communities seems suspect. “Have not” communities are chosen for data centers precisely because such communities rarely muster the strength to fight for their own clean water and air.
As communities across the country grapple with rising fuel costs, air pollution and the growing impacts of global warming, one solution is becoming increasingly clear; the widespread adoption of electric vehicles.
Electric cars offer a cleaner, more sustainable alternative to gasoline-powered vehicles. By producing zero tailpipe emissions, they reduce air pollution and improve public health, especially in urban areas where smog and poor air quality disproportionately affect vulnerable populations.
The recent article on the Virginia Virtual Academy was unfair to the school and unfair to the many parents and families across the state of Virginia that continue to choose to enjoy the flexibility VAVA offers. It would have provided a more accurate representation if you would have spoken to more VAVA families. We love VAVA, and it has been a wonderful school for our family over the past 12 years. Parents and families from across the Commonwealth would’ve told you very different stories.
Our oldest started VAVA in the third grade and graduated with the highest honors in 2024 with both her high school diploma and an Associates degree from NVCC. She is excelling in her second year of college with an expected graduation date in advance of her peers. My youngest, a high school student, is excelling in VAVA. His test scores, including SOL and SAT, are in the top percentiles. He is dual enrolled at Northern Virginia Community College.
I supported, voted for and canvassed several neighborhoods distributing literature supporting the successful OneVirginia2021 campaign for a constitutional amendment ending political gerrymandering in Virginia. I would do it again in a heartbeat, with enthusiasm.
I also voted this year for the proposed one-time mid-decade realignment of our congressional districts. I did so without joy; but the question presented by the ballot this year is whether we will simply stand by and watch as Donald Trump, Greg Abbott and Ron DeSantis rig this fall’s congressional elections with political gerrymanders of their own. That, I am not willing to do.
Starting with Odie Donald II's guarantee of 1 year severance regardless of cause, and now Connie Clay getting $549,000 after departing her $158,684-a-year job, it seems leaving our city's government jobs is a lucrative business in and of itself. This on top of $630,000 in attorney's fees for the city. Waste indeed.
Nothing screams confidence in work performance like getting something for nothing. Perhaps I should come out of retirement and apply for anything and then make a fuss, get axed, then sue. Voila! Vacation here I come.
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