Editor’s Note From Rivera Sun
People are building solutions that work. Like a community-owned microgrid in Puerto Rico. You may recall that Puerto Rico has held many mass protests over the greed-driven power outages that cripple the island. Building a locally-owned renewable power grid is a matter of daily survival. It’s also a form of nonviolent action. (Three, actually: a constructive program, an alternative institution, and a defacto boycott of the other energy company. But who’s counting?)
Other success stories in this week’s Nonviolence News include New York State implementing a Green New Deal program with its electrical utility, a reporter launching a wildly successful mutual aid fund to help fellow journalists who had been laid off, Massachusetts establishing a Green Bank that tackles affordable housing and climate change, Brazil’s Landless Workers Movement modeling sustainable agriculture and growing into a political force, the first bee protection legislation being passed in the United States, and more.
From local anti-violence work in schools to protesting North America’s largest weapons expo, this issue of Nonviolence News also includes a range of stories about how people are saying no to violence and war. In South Sudan, a group of religious sisters have been infusing nonviolence trainings throughout sectors of their society, including among bus drivers, youth, and the people most likely to engage in the civil war. In the United States, Nonviolent Peaceforce is expanding a program that uses peacebuilding to prevent violence in schools. In Ukraine, the group is also at work with a bullet-proof vest lending library that helps aid groups deliver supplies. Hundreds of activists in Germany protested NATO exercises (and last week, villagers in Montenegro kept NATO out of town completely). Safe Streets Baltimore achieved a 32% reduction in homicides and gun violence over a 10+ year period.
And perhaps most interestingly, widespread protests in Serbia over two mass shootings have put the president on the brink of resigning. I will confess, as a US citizen reading the headline, I thought the Serbians were mad about having to hand in their guns. But no, it turns out that Serbians think the government hasn’t gone far enough to curb shootings. They want the president to block the major media channels from broadcasting violent content. And if this president (who has cronies at the stations) won’t do it, they want someone who will. It’s an almost unimaginable demand from my vantage point – but I am rooting the Serbians on and hoping my country learns something from them.
I haven’t even scratched the surface of all the fascinating stories in this week’s Nonviolence News. See for yourself! At least scroll through the headlines … you don’t want to miss the story about how sleuthing teens revealed price gouging in low income neighborhoods. Or how South Koreans (pictured) are rejecting the 14-hr day. Or how the Italians are planning a ‘pasta strike’ in protest of skyrocketing inflation. Or how modern-day Robin Hoods are shoplifting for food banks. (Is that a nonviolent action? Gandhi called poverty ‘the worst form of violence’. Is robbing the rich CEOs of megastores in order to feed hungry families violent or nonviolent? You decide.)
In solidarity,
Rivera Sun
Photo Credit: South Koreans rally against the 69-hr work week.
How many people are featured in this issue? 100,000? A million?
By supporting Nonviolence News, you lift up all the people in these stories.
Donate here>>


The Movement That Built Puerto Rico’s First Community-Owned Microgrid: Founded in 1980, Casa Pueblo is well known across the island and among the diaspora, who were sending aid, trying, in part, to make up for the inadequate federal response after the hurricane. Across the island, groups like the Casa Pueblo have relied on deep roots in the community to create local buy-in and lead an equitable transition to energy security. Read more>>
A Public Power Victory in New York State: New York became the first US state to pass a major Green New Deal policy following four years of organizing by the Public Power NY coalition and allies. The Build Public Renewables Act (BPRA), now New York State law, empowers and directs the state’s public power provider – the New York Power Authority (NYPA) – to plan, build, and operate renewable energy projects across New York State. Organizers are now focusing on growing the movement for Public Power from coast to coast. Read more>>
Despite DeSantis’ Anti-Union Law, Florida’s Teachers’ Union Gains 5,000 Members: Last month, DeSantis passed a provision that stripped public employees’ unions in the state of the ability to collect dues automatically from union members’ paychecks. However, Florida Education Association President Andrew Spar says the attacks have backfired. Surprisingly, they found that teachers, particularly younger teachers, who had never been involved in the union were starting to sign up to become members. Read more>>
‘Landmark Victory’ – New York Passes Nation’s First Legislation Restricting Bee-Killing Pesticides: The Birds and Bees Protection Act would eliminate 80 to 90% of the neonics used in New York each year by banning applications that are either easily replaceable or do not give an economic boost to farmers. Read more>>
Southern Workers Are Defying History: Successful union campaigns could raise wages, reduce poverty, and spread democracy in the former Confederacy. They stood together, believed in themselves, and achieved a historic victory that’s reverberating throughout the South. Read more>>
Massachusetts Launches Green Bank to Battle ‘Compounding Housing and Climate Crises’: The state “has a visionary plan to lead the country on electrifying affordable housing” that “will be a model nationwide for making sure that climate action and equity go hand-in-hand,” said professor Leah Stokes. Read more>>
Journalist Mutual Aid Fund Takes Off: She started an aid network for laid-off journalists and it spread like wildfire. Education reporter Kati Kokal wanted to help Gannett reporters facing job cuts. She got help from all over the country. Read more>>
Prison Agency Rescinds Censorship Policy: Facing pressure, the New York State Prison agency rescinded rules blocking incarcerated writers and artists from publishing their work. Incarcerated writers and watchdogs expressed concerns that the rules were meant to silence information-sharing and possibly violated the First Amendment. Read more>>
Gaining Ground: Brazil’s Landless Workers Movement: It is already one of the largest movements of rural workers in the world, with some 450,000 members and activists. The Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra (MST) is not only modeling sustainable, community powered farming, it’s also growing into a political force to contend with. Read more>>
Social Housing: How a New Generation of Activists Are Reinventing Housing: What is social housing? The simple answer is that it is a systemic approach to providing homes that treat housing not as a commodity, but as a human right. But to make it more than just a slogan, you need policies and institutions to make that right. Read more>>
When California Set Minimum Staffing Levels for Overworked Nurses, Better Patient Outcomes Followed: The case for strict staffing ratios in American hospitals and skilled nursing facilities is remarkably straightforward: They save lives and reduce nurse turnover. Read more>>


Serbia’s President Promises Early Election Amid Large Protests Against His Populist Rule: Serbia’s president promised an early parliamentary election, in an apparent attempt to defuse large protests against his populist rule in the wake of two mass shootings that shook the nation. Protesters are demanding that the major media stations – controlled by the president – stop broadcasting violent content. Read more>>
A Deadly Fight: Senegal’s Political Crisis Escalates After Repression Of Protesters: At least 16 people were killed after protests broke out in Senegal following the sentencing of leading opposition figure Ousmane Sonko to two years in prison. Mass public unrest has grown against President Macky Sall and the continued neo-colonial exploitation of the country by France. Read more>>
ABC News Live Features Cure Violence Site: ABC News Live spent the day with the Cure Violence site in the South Jamaica community in New York City, operated by the King of Kings Foundation. The video offers an inside look at the work of interrupting violence and making communities safer. “In our community, it’s normal to hear gunshots every night. It’s normal to come out of your house on any given day and see yellow tape,” said Lance Feurtado, Founder and Executive Director of King of Kings Foundation. Watch this amazing short profile of a Cure Violence site that is really making a difference. Read more>>
Researchers Find Long-Lasting Programs In Gun Violence Reduction Are Working: Safe Streets Baltimore, a community violence intervention program focused on reducing gun violence, reduced homicides and nonfatal shootings overall from 2007 to 2022, according to a new analysis from the Center for Gun Violence Solutions at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. The researchers found that in these five longest-running sites, homicides were, on average, 32 percent lower in the first four years of program implementation, but there was no significant change in homicides in the six newer program sites. Read more>>


Activists Risk Arrest — and Smoke Inhalation — to Fight Mountain Valley Pipeline: The backdrop to our recent protest against the Mountain Valley Pipeline was the continent’s latest climate catastrophe. Read more>>
Extinction Rebellion Targets DC Council During Week of Action: This morning, as part of People vs Fossil Fuels’ national week of action, rebels from Extinction Rebellion DC chained themselves to the doors of the Wilson Building to demand the DC Council take a stand against Washington Gas’ deadly Project Pipes. Read more>>
‘The Fight Has Only Just Begun’ – Greta Thunberg Pledges More Protests After Final School Strike: “When I started striking in 2018 I could never have expected that it would lead to anything,” Thunberg tweeted in a reflection on the Fridays For Future movement on the day of her graduation. Read more>>
Climate Activist Interrupt Keynote By Sell-Out Environmental Law Scholar: Climate Defiance tweets: “We just **profoundly** disrupted a keynote speech by Jody Freeman, presenting her the “Big Oil Bestie” award. Once regarded as a preeminent environmental law scholar, Jody sold out. She now takes $350,000 per year from Conoco, where she is complicit in building Willow.” Read more>>
In ‘Climate-Wrecking’ Reversal, Shell Ditches Plans for Oil Production Cut and Hikes Dividend: “It will always be profit over people and planet for polluters,” said one campaigner. “Shell simply cannot be trusted—with either their own meager targets or our futures.” Read more>>
Love of the Land and Community Inspired the Montana Youths To Sue: For the plaintiffs in the first youth climate lawsuit to go to trial, finding their voice and inspiring others has been as much a salve for their climate grief as bringing their case to trial. Read more>>
Climate Activists Protest the Museum of Modern Art’s Fossil Fuel Donors Outside Its Biggest Fundraising Gala: As smoke from Canadian wildfires blanketed Manhattan, protesters at the legendary arts institution’s party demanded it cut ties with the founder of a hedge fund that is among the biggest funders of oil and gas projects. Read more>>
What’s Next For Extinction Rebellion After a Disappointing Success? The British climate movement’s ‘Big One’ brought out record numbers, but ran into a wall of silence. XR’s new strategy could turn this setback into a new lease on life. Read more>>


Why Young People In South Korea Are Standing Up To the 14-Hour Work Day: A government proposal to increase the working week to 69 hours was put on hold due to widespread protests, but there is concern that it still may get pushed through. Read more>>
The Struggle for Food Sovereignty in Immokalee, Florida: The majority of migrant farmworkers live below the federal poverty line, without easy access to healthy foods or affordable housing. To survive, many in this tight-knit community have found strategies for mutual aid and collaborative resilience. Read more>>
Teens Uncover Price Jacking Disparities: In researching how inflation affects low-income families, youth organizers with the Hyde Square Task Force in Jamaica Plain learned that a grocery cart of items at their local Stop & Shop cost $34 more than the same products at the chain’s store in suburban Dedham. “It’s absolutely ridiculous that there’s an 18 percent price difference,” said Zaniyah Wade, 15, a sophomore at Margarita Muñiz Academy and member of the Hyde Square group. Read more>>
Toronto Tenants Are Uniting in a Mass Rent Strike: As Toronto grapples with skyrocketing housing costs, tenant unions across the city are uniting against major corporate landlords in a massive rent strike. The strike is vitalizing the fight for housing justice in one of the world’s most expensive cities. Read more>>
Dollar General Workers Rally At Shareholder Meeting: Overworked, underpaid, and in constant danger: Dollar General workers rally at the shareholder meeting of the chain that has raked in record profits while earning a place on OSHA’s ‘Severe Violators’ list. Read more>>
Port Workers Shut Down Port of Seattle: The Pacific Maritime Association (PMA) said in a tweet on Saturday that coordinated and disruptive work actions led by the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) have shut down cargo operations at the Port of Seattle. Read more>>
As New York Skies Darken, Delivery Workers Help Each Other: The companies punt responsibility for the health and safety of workers. As smog painted the skies ochre, workers like Solís were left on their own. Worried about the sting in their eyes and itch in their throats, they helped each other. Read more>>


How To Help De-Escalate Bad Situations When You’re In Public: “The only way to build true safety is through building solidarity and community”: Following the killing of Jordan Neely in the New York City Subway, NP US Director of Mutual Protection, Kalaya’an Mendoza, spoke with the Huffington Post about how to be an “upstander” and de-escalate bad situations when you’re in public. Read more>>
Thacker Pass Protest Camp Being Raided: The first arrests are underway at a protest camp that is being raided after land defenders halted excavator work at Thacker Pass. A group of Native American water protectors and allies used their bodies to non-violently block construction of the controversial Thacker Pass lithium mine in Nevada, turning back bulldozers and heavy equipment. Read more>>
Black Workers At California Tesla Factory Allege Rampant Racism, Seek Class-Action Status: Tesla may face a class-action lawsuit after 240 Black factory workers in California described rampant racism and discrimination at the electric automaker’s San Francisco Bay Area plant, including frequent use of racial slurs and references to the manufacturing site as a plantation or slave ship. Read more>>
Israel’s Protest Leaders Give The Anti-Occupation Bloc The Cold Shoulder: A protest marking the occupation’s 56th year was rejected by mainstream organizers, showing how messages about Palestinians are still being silenced. Read more>>


Migrant Cleaners At An ‘Anti-Racist’ Ad Firm Are On Strike Over Pay: Black, Brown and migrant workers at a major advertising firm that made anti-racism pledges after George Floyd’s murder have gone on strike over pay. Outsourced night cleaners at London’s Ogilvy UK – part of the global Ogilvy group – walked out today after the agency refused to negotiate on higher wages and full sick pay. Read more>>
Thousands Rally Against Anti-Immigrant Laws In Florida: Thousands in Florida rallied against a new law going into effect July 1 that makes it a felony to cross state lines with an undocumented person in your car … even a family member. It also requires most hospitals to ask for a patient’s immigration status when they come in. Read more>>


Thousands Protest Against Strict Abortion Law In Poland: Women’s rights advocates called for protests in dozens of Polish cities after a woman in her fifth month of pregnancy died of sepsis. Read more>>
‘World’s Smallest’ Pride March: Around 80 people have attended the “world’s smallest” Pride event at tiny housing estate in the United Kingdom. It was started by residents who wanted to support LGBTQ+ community and to ‘celebrate love in all its forms’. They marched for 80 meters. Read more>>
Transgender and Nonbinary People Are Often Sidelined At Pride. This Year Is Different. The growing number of new laws and policies, including restrictions on gender-affirming care, public bathroom use and participation in sports, has prompted Pride organizers to more fully embrace a segment of the LGBTQ+ populace that hasn’t always felt included. Read more>>
Italian Lawmaker Becomes First To Nurse Baby In the Parliament. She Passed the Law That Made It Possible. An Italian lawmaker who fought for a rule so that women can be allowed to nurse their babies during a parliamentary session has now become the first woman to do just that. Bipartisan applause broke out on Wednesday when Gilda Sportiello, a member of the lower Chamber of Deputies, nursed her 2-month-old son during a legislative vote. In the previous legislature, Sportiello had successfully pushed for a rule to be passed by the chamber’s rules committee to allow women to participate in voting and debates while nursing their children until their babies are 12 months old. Read more>>


Protests Disrupt North America’s Largest Weapons Expo: Over a hundred people have disrupted the opening of CANSEC, North America’s largest military weapons convention in Ottawa, where 10,000 attendees were expected to gather. The Victoria Peace Coalition, Vancouver Island Peace Council, and committed activists were out today in Victoria to support demonstrations in Ottawa and demonstrate, locally, our opposition to the CANSEC weapons fair. Read more>>
Activists In Germany Protest NATO’s Military Exercise: On June 10, hundreds of activists from various anti-imperialist and anti-war groups as well as the Communist Party of Germany (DKP) marched to the Wunstorf Air Base in Hannover to protest the NATO’s Air Defender 2023 exercise scheduled from June 12-June 23. A vigil was also held at the Spangdahlem Air Base near Trier, which will also serve as a base for the exercise. Read more>>
Ceasefire and Negotiations Now! Statement from the International Summit for Peace in Ukraine, 2023: The organizers of the International Summit for Peace in Ukraine call on leaders in all countries to act in support of an immediate ceasefire and negotiations to end the war in Ukraine. They are a broad and politically diverse coalition that represents peace movements and civil society, including people of faith in many countries. We are firmly united in our belief that war is a crime against humanity and there is no military solution to the current crisis. Read more>>
The Building Peaceful Schools Project: In 2021, Nonviolent Peaceforce began working with Minneapolis Public Schools on the Building Peaceful Schools Project to support their first student peace advisory group – a student group that works with school staff, administrators, and Nonviolent Peaceforce to voice safety concerns and co-create the school safety and security system. This group represents a new vision for school safety that school districts in Minnesota and around the country are working to implement—a vision that is not based on the use or threat of force, but rooted in relationships. Read more about the Building Peaceful Schools project and how students are becoming more confident in their ability to address conflict nonviolently. Read more>>
Community Protection: Lending a Hand, Lending a Bulletproof Vest: Since 2022, Nonviolent Peaceforce Ukraine has been lending flak jackets and helmets to local aid organizations and volunteers. On May 3, volunteers with Nonviolent Peaceforce’s local partner survived a rocket shelling while evacuating people in Kherson thanks to a bulletproof vest lent by Nonviolent Peaceforce. Read more>>
Why Aren’t Anti-War Russians Filling The Streets? Firstly, it’s worth pointing out that there has been plenty of opposition – more than 21,000 arrests and 370 prosecutions were recorded for anti-war statements in 2022 and this week independent Russian media outlets including Meduza and Mediazona ran a media marathon day to raise money for political prisoners. But you won’t see large crowds of people demonstrating on the streets of Moscow or St Petersburg. For an observer not immersed in Russian reality, this could suggest that the population en masse supports the war. But for Russians themselves, the question of protest in the repressive totalitarian state in which they now find themselves seems irrelevant. Read more>>
Sisters Teach Nonviolence In South Sudan: In South Sudan, 14 religious sisters from different congregations went out to train different groups of people in nonviolence, especially those susceptible to violent tendencies such as the youth, the girl-child school dropouts, street children, boda-boda riders (hired motorcyclists), candidates in formation houses, and learners at all levels of education. Here’s what happened. Read more>>
Peace Activists Release Updated #DivestFromWar Toolkit: Learn more about which companies are profiting off of militarized violence in Palestine, Yemen, and Somalia. Then, check out a resource on why peace activists use divestment as their movement tactic of choice, and what divestment has accomplished globally in the last 50 years. Read more>>


Italians Plan Pasta Protest: Food prices are squeezing Europe. Now Italians are calling for a pasta protest. When it comes to skyrocketing pasta prices, Italians are crying: Basta! They have had enough after the cost of the staple of every Italian table soared by twice the rate of inflation. One consumer advocate group is calling for a weeklong national pasta strike starting June 22 after the Rome government held a crisis meeting last month and decided not to intervene on prices. Read more>>
Loyal A’s Fans Organize a Reverse Boycott To Keep Team In Oakland: Loyal fans, lawmakers and even Stephen Curry of the Golden State Warriors are coming to bat to keep the Oakland A’s in Oakland. Oakland A’s fans say they’re not going down without a fight. The Oakland 68’s, a nonprofit made up of die-hard A’s fans, is holding a reverse boycott at the next home game, calling on fans to pack the stadium. Read more>>
Breakthrough Disruptors Is Building Working Class Media: No one can ever predict where exactly the next major movement will erupt, but BT wants to be there. The working class needs its own media, and together we can build it. BreakThrough Disrupters is a network of media makers reporting from grassroots movements. Read more>>
Meet the Robin Hood-Style Activists ‘Shoplifting’ for Food Banks: Activists are “shoplifting” from supermarket shelves and dumping the proceeds straight into the stores’ food bank bins in a “redistributive action” to protest the cost of living and the climate crisis. ‘It’s not going to be the CEO of Tesco who’s going hungry.’ Read more>>


Dozens of Truck Drivers Went On Strike In Germany And Won. Here’s How. After a six-week strike and a failed attempt to disperse them using force, more than 60 truck drivers from Georgia and Uzbekistan finally left their picket off a German motorway, and headed home with their wage arrears paid in full. This spring’s historic strike marked the first time they had engaged in industrial action on such a wide – or successful – scale. Read more>>
Debt Ceiling Deal Hurts Working People, Climate Activists, Student Loan Borrowers: No victory comes without a cost, and in America it’s often the poor that pay the highest tab. The ultimate version of the bill brings a formal end to the student loan pandemic pause with repayments set to begin at the end of August — benefitting the online bank SoFi, which was suing the U.S. government over the pause — and increases work requirements for food and cash assistance programs. Read more>>
A New Biography of Martin Luther King, Jr. For a New Generation: Jonathan Eig discusses his book “King: A Life,” which draws on newly recovered sources to paint a full and nuanced picture of a great revolutionary and the forces aligned against him. Read more>>
A Japanese Report On the G7 Protest: “In this report, I, as a citizen of Japan, would like to share with the readers what I felt and thought about the G7 Hiroshima Summit based on some media coverage and articles I came across. For a full and comprehensive report on the caravan action, please read the article written by Joseph Essertier, the Coordinator of the World BEYOND War (WBW) Japan Chapter. After the caravan action, and 24 hours of reflection on the event, members of the WBW Japan Chapter exchanged thoughts and we all agreed that engaging in a direct action had been positive and meaningful.” Read more>>
Eve Tetaz, Stalwart Human-Rights Activist, Dies At 91: The retired Washington educator was arrested so often that police and judges knew her by her first name.She joined social justice groups at demonstrations into her 80s, facing arrest about 20 times while protesting the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and the detentions at the U.S. military prison at Guantánamo Bay. Read more>>
How Police In England Can Now Stop Basically Any Protest: At midnight last night, the right to protest in England and Wales became a matter of police discretion. Yesterday, the police could restrict or stop a protest to prevent it causing either “serious public disorder, serious damage to property, or significant and prolonged disruption to the life of the community”. Those powers already allowed plenty of room for interpretation, but from today the threshold is even lower. Read more>>

Blame Climate Polluters For Hazy Orange Skies: For days, tens of millions of people were forced to breathe air that was literally poisonous. At one point, New York had the most polluted air of any city in the world. Call out Citi executives who continue to provide funding to companies like Exxon, Shell, Chevron, and Enbridge, who are building new pipelines, oil rigs, and power plants. Read more>>
Apartheid-Free Communities’ Campaign Kicks Off: Last week, American Friends Service Committee (AFSC) and a coalition of faith groups and secular organizations launched a new initiative to end Israeli apartheid. We’re urging congregations, faith communities, schools, and organizations to take a pledge to work against apartheid in all its forms. More than 100 groups have already signed on. “Witnessing is not enough,” says AFSC’s Jennifer Bing. “More collective action is needed to dismantle apartheid.” Read more>>
Sign The Petition: Restore The Right To Asylum: We’re still collecting signatures for our petition urging President Biden to stop denying people their right to claim asylum. All people—regardless of where they’re from—should be welcomed with dignity and have their rights respected. If you haven’t already, please add your name today. Read more>>
The Power of Listening Circles For Racial Healing: Listening Circles play a vital role in racial reconciliation. Listening Circles offer allies and directly impacted communities the opportunity to openly share their experiences and perspectives without judgment. Our session will begin with the exploration of the historical background of talk/listening circles and drumming circles and why Indigenous and African cultures created them. (June 24) Learn more>>
Gender Justice and Nonviolence: As more and more people are targeted in our society because of their gender, faithful and strategic nonviolence is needed. Trainers Rev. Lauren Grubaugh-Thomas and Rev. Jerry Monroe Maynard will lead the group in exploring nonviolence as a powerful lens for gender justice in our churches, social circles, and global human family. You’ll come away with practical tools rooted in proven strategies and informed by lived experiences. (June 27) Learn more>>
Kingian Nonviolence – An Online Intro: Join trainer Jonathon Jones online and learn about the transformative power of Dr. King’s theories and philosophies. Come see if you’re interested in Dr. King’s nonviolent social activism through this 1 day workshop! (June 29) Learn more>>
Leaving World War II Behind: The purpose of the course is to inform the participant and enable them to inform others of why World War II is not a good justification for military spending and war planning, both because WWII happened in a very different world from today’s, and because common beliefs about the nature of and justifications for WWII are false. By debunking myths about WWII having been necessary, justifiable, and beneficial, we can strengthen arguments for moving to a world beyond war. (July 3 – August 13) Learn more>>
Power In Protest: Preparing For Street Demonstrations: Contrary to popular belief, protesting is not simply about creating pretty signs, marching down a street, and singing “feel good” songs. Various strategies, tactics, and tools have been developed over the decades to aid in the work of global transformation. In this training, organizers and activists will learn how they can empower themselves in preparation for public demonstrations within their local communities. (July 6) Learn more>>
A World of Change: Summer Film & Discussion Series: Films. Friends. Fantastic stories. Fascinating conversations. Join Pace e Bene’s six-week summer film series featuring A Force More Powerful on the power of nonviolent action in South Africa, Poland, Chile, India, Denmark, and the US. In each of these six sessions, we will watch and discuss one of the incredible 30-minute documentary video segments on a classic nonviolent struggle for change. (July 27-Aug 31) Learn more>>
Hey! You read to the end. Congrats.
One more thing … donate here>>