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KENNETH STEPP ANSWERS YOUR QUESTIONS!

1. D o yo u suppo r t o r oppose en di ng some t ax b rea k s a n d l oopholes for the wealthies t Americans in o rd e r to r e i nv es t i n pub l i c se rvi ces a nd infr ast ru cture ? P l ease explain. I support ending some tax breaks and loopholes for the wealthiest Americans in order to reinvest in public services and infrastructure. We should end corporation-welfare and have a more equitable tax burden. 2. W h a t are y ou r ideas for bu i l di n g a h ealthier and more diverse economy in ea s t e rn K e ntucky a nd ac ro ss our Co mm o n wea l t h? The three answers to building a healthier and more diverse economy in Eastern Kentucky are education, education, and education! I support better federal support of higher education, and better Pell Grants. Federal revenue sharing for Kindergarten, elementary education, and high school education has my support. I even will enthusiastically support the military serv

DACA, The Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals

 The Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) was an American immigration policy that allowed some individuals who entered the country as minors, and had either entered or remained in the country illegally, to receive a renewable two-year period of deferred action from deportation and to be eligible for a work permit. As of 2017, approximately 800,000 individuals—referred to as Dreamers after the DREAM Act bill—were enrolled in the program created by DACA. The policy was established by the Obama Administration in June 2012 and rescinded by the Trump Administration in September 2017.[1] In November 2014 President Barack Obama announced his intention to expand DACA to cover additional illegal immigrants. But multiple states immediately sued to prevent the expansion, which was ultimately blocked by the courts. The United States Department of Homeland Security rescinded the expansion on June 16, 2017, while continuing to review the existence of the DACA program as a whole. The DACA po

The Second Amendment

The Second Amendment. THE SECOND AMENDMENT to the United States Constitution provides: " . . . the right to bear arms shall not be infringed." What did the Founding Fathers mean when they added the words "the right to bear arms shall not be infringed"? Did they mean that ordinary citizens were only guaranteed the right to own muzzle-loading muskets, as the kind that British soldiers used in 1776? Did they mean that the government could confiscate all the firearms in the land? No to both of the last two questions. Kenneth Stepp believes that words in the Constitution, and in a statute, are to be interpreted the same as their usual meaning, when read by ordinary people. "Infringed" means "messed with".  The Second Amendment to the United States Constitution means that the right to bear arms shall not be messed with.   The right for ordinary citizens to bear arms is a right given by God, and the Constitution merely codifies that

KENNETH STEPP OPPOSES RACISM!

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‎ Kenneth S. Stepp ‎   to   Kenneth STEPP for Congress 3 hrs · What is Racism? Racism is using a person's race, or racial characteristics, to judge--or prejudge--a person. History of Racism. Racism has a history in the world and in the United States. In 1619, a slave ship carrying black people from Africa arrived at Jamestown, the first town, and the Colonial capital, of Virginia, the first of the British thirteen colonies to be settled in North America. These thirteen colonies later became the United States of America. The slaves were debarked from the ship at Jamestown and sold into slavery in Virginia colony. From that time, racism and slavery were entertwined in colonial British America. Although it had been common in ancient times, Biblical times, and medieval times for conquerors of foreign lands to take conquered inhabitants as slaves, generally the slaves were from neighboring countries, and had a physically-similar appearance with

Kenneth Stepp opposes sex discrimination.

What is Sex Discrimination? Sex Discrimination is using a person's sex, to judge--or prejudge--a person. History of Sex Discrimination. Sex Discrimination has a history in the world and in the United States. In Biblical Times, women were deemed less important than men, and in many places in the Judeo-Christian Bible, the names of men are mentioned, but not the names of women. Of course both Adam and Eve are mentioned at the beginning of the Bible, but the names of the four women on the Ark with Noah and his three sons at the time of The Great Flood are not mentioned. In most lists of ancestors in the Bible, the names of the men are mentioned, but not the names of the women. In the earlier books of the Bible, kings of Israel and Judah are mentioned--but neither nation ever had a ruling queen. The neighboring nations were similar; kings were listed, but not ruling queens. Under Royalist governments, thrones were generally inherited by kings, and rarely by queens.