[100968] in Discussion of MIT-community interests
This delicious herb you have to start using
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Boone)
Tue Jan 30 03:10:18 2018
Date: Mon, 8 Jan 2018 14:29:47 -0500
From: Boone <boone@warsiiinwe.com>
To: <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>
This super delicious herb will prevent your memory loss in 2018
"I tried it last week and already im metally thinking clearer and remembering
more then I ever have before."
CNM Reports >
http://www.warsiiinwe.com/6478q6EUC853v16cRhvVdVKyxdhVtFMuKmji0hvV0ONW586/disagreements-incompatible
Take a look at which herb to use > >
http://www.warsiiinwe.com/6478q6EUC853v16cRhvVdVKyxdhVtFMuKmji0hvV0ONW586/disagreements-incompatible
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Homeland security officials said that they were ending a humanitarian program, known as Temporary Protected Status, for Salvadorans who have been allowed to live and work legally in the United States since a pair of devastating earthquakes struck their country in 2001.
And despite its name, the administration says, the Temporary Protected Status program, known as T.P.S., had turned into a quasi permanent benefit for hundreds of thousands of people. On a conference call Monday, senior officials at the Department of Homeland Security, who spoke on the condition they not be named, said that after studying the conditions in El Salvador they had concluded that the circumstances that led to the designation the destruction from the 2001 earthquakes no longer exist.
There is no limit to the number of extensions a country can receive. Countries that have received and then lost the designation in the past include Bosnia and Herzegovina, which endured a civil war in the 1990s, and Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia during the Ebola crisis. El Salvador was one of the first countries in the program because of its civil war; that designation expired in 1994.
T.P.S. is a temporary benefit, one official said, adding, only Congress can legislate a permanent solution. The ending of protection for Salvadorans, Haitians and Nicaraguans leaves fewer than 100 people in the program, which was signed into law by President George Bush in 1990.
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