For us there are no forces that exist across the ocean – Opp MP

For us there are no forces that exist across the ocean – Armenian opposition MP

news.am
March 07, 2012 | 13:45

YEREVAN. – The circulating rumors, according to which the Armenian
opposition Heritage Party is not too enthusiastic about forming a bloc
with the Free Democrats Party for the upcoming parliamentary
elections, are nonsense, Heritage’s Parliamentary Faction leader
Stepan Safaryan told Armenian News-NEWS.am.

In his words, if for some people there exist forces that instruct them
from across the Atlantic Ocean, there are no such forces in the case
of Heritage. “The Heritage Party itself decides what is beneficial
for it, and what is not,’ Heritage’s leader Raffi Hovannisian stated
with respect to deepening relations with the Free Democrats Party. I
have nothing to add to his statement,’ Safaryan said.

As Armenian News-NEWS.am informed earlier, there are rumors that
Armenian opposition Heritage Party is not too enthusiastic about
forming a bloc with the Free Democrats for the upcoming parliamentary
elections, Hayatsk daily wrote. `But those across the [Atlantic] Ocean
[that is, the US] made the Free Democrats understand that if Heritage
attempts to oppose the `bloc project,’ they will place their `bets’ on
the Free Democrats alone. [And] On the 18th of the month, Raffi
Hovannisian’s party will most likely `approve’ the US plan to enter
the parliament in a bloc with the Free Democrats,’ Hayatsk wrote.

Sarkozy to meet French-Armenians

Sarkozy to meet French-Armenians

13:56 – 07.03.12

French President Nicolas Sarkozy is going to receive representatives
of the local Armenian community later today, a week after the
country’s Constitutional Council rejected the bill criminalizing the
denial of genocides, Nouvelles d’Armenie reported.

The French Senate passed the bill with a vast majority of votes on
January 23. Under the new legal measure proposed by lawmaker Valerie
Boyer, anyone on the territory of France publicly denying the Armenian
Genocide would face up to one year in prison and a fine of 45,000.

Several lawmakers opposing to the bill later appealed to the
Constitutional Council, asking it to revise the document. Their move
received approval by President Sarkozy, who had promised the
French-Armenians, back in 2007, to adopt a law criminalizing the
Armenian Genocide denial.

France recognized the Armenian Genocide in 2001, but the Council ruled
the bill unconstitutional, arguing that would restrict freedom of
speech in the country.

Following the Council’s ruling, the Sarkozy instructed the French
Government to undertake the elaboration of a new draft.
But the Government said the issue cannot be considered after the
current parliamentary session and will be returned to the legislative
after the presidential election in May.

Tert.am

FM in expanded meeting of Visegrad Group of Eastern Partnership coun

The Armenian Minister of Foreign Affairs participated in the expanded
meeting of the Visegrad Group of the Eastern Partnership countries

05.03.2012

On March 5, Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian in Prague participated
in the meeting of the Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the Eastern
Partnership countries, Visegrad Group (V4) Poland, Czech Republic,
Slovakia and Hungary and a number of European countries. The European
Union’s High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy,
Catherine Ashton and the Commissioner for Enlargement and European
Neighbourhood Policy, Åtefan Füle attended the meeting, as well.

During the meeting Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian delivered a
speech and presented the progress registered in the cooperation
between Armenia and the European Union, stressing that so far 24
Chapters of the Association Agreement have been agreed upon, the
negotiations over the visa regime facilitation have launched and the
negotiations over the creation of a Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade
Area will start in the near future which the Armenian side, together
with the European counterparts, intends to finish in a short period of
time. Minister Nalbandian spoke about implementing reforms in Armenia,
as well.

In Prague Edward Nalbandian had a meeting with Åtefan Füle, the
Commissioner for Enlargement and European Neighbourhood Policy. The
interlocutors discussed the agenda issues of the upcoming Armenian
President’s visit to the European institutions. They had a thorough
talk on the Armenia-European Union rapprochement, expressing
satisfaction with the achieved progress. Minister Nalbandian and
Commissioner Füle exchanged views on the recent developments in the
settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh issue.

The agenda of the meeting included the issues related to the
preparatory works of the upcoming parliamentary elections in Armenia
and the reforms being implemented in the country.

Referring to the document adopted by the Council of the European Union
on the South Caucasus, the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia
mentioned that it stresses the similarities between the positions of
Armenia and the EU on the steps to be undertaken towards the deepening
partnership with the EU.

Talking about the Nagorno-Karabakh section of the same document,
Edward Nalbandian said, `We welcome the EU’s approach in support of
the efforts undertaken by the Minks Group Co-Chairs towards the
settlement of the issue.’
In the frames of the Ministerial meeting Edward Nalbandian and
Catherine Ashton, European Union’s High Representative for Foreign
Affairs and Security Policy exchanged views on the Armenia-EU
cooperation and regional issues.

The Armenian Minister of Foreign Affairs met with Urmas Paet, the
Estonian Minister of Foreign Affairs, as well. Issues related to the
bilateral relations and Armenia-EU cooperation were on the agenda of
the talks.

With the Hungarian Minister of Foreign Affairs János Martonyi, Edward
Nalbandian discussed the implementation of the agreements reached
during the official visit of the Armenian President to Hungary.

Concluding the visit, on the same day Foreign Minister Edward
Nalbandian left for Brussels.

http://www.mfa.am/en/press-releases/item/2012/03/05/nal_ep/

Peter Balakian to visit Colorado PR Thank you!

ARMENIANS of COLORADO
P.O. Box 13854
Denver, Colorado 80201
Website:

PRESS RELEASE
Contact: Kim Christianian, [email protected]
Telephone: (303) 588-5524

Denver, Colorado
Wednesday March 7, 2012

Award Winning Author-Poet Peter Balakian To Visit Colorado
For a Series of Educational Events

Peter Balakian will visit Colorado State University in Fort Collins to
read from his latest book of poems Ziggurat for the Creative Writing
Program Reading Series on Thursday, March 8, 2012 at 7:30 PM. The
event will be held in the University Art Museum, University Center for
the Arts, 1400 Remington Street, in Fort Collins.

On Saturday March 10, 2012, 1:00-4:00 PM, Facing History And Ourselves
along with Armenians of Colorado Inc., will host a discussion-
workshop with Peter Balakian. The topic will be Why Studying the
Armenian Genocide Matters Today. This event will be held at the
Johnson & Wales Campus 7039 E. 18th Avenue, Aspen Hall 2nd Floor, Room
A220, Denver. For more information and to RSVP for the workshop
please visit

On Sunday, March 11, 2012, 3:00-5:00PM, Armenians of Colorado Inc.,
will host a talk with Peter Balakian entitled Literary Memory and
Catastrophe: From the Armenian Genocide to 9/11… There will be a
book signing and introduction to his latest book of poems Ziggurat at
the Tattered Cover (Lodo) 1628 16th Street, Denver. A reception will
follow. All events are Free and open to the public.

Peter Balakian, Ph.D. is the Donald M. and Constance H. Rebar
Professor in Humanities at Colgate University. A poet and
award-winning author, Balakian is a leading scholar on the Armenian
Genocide and author of many books, including Black Dog of Fate: A
Memoir (Basic Books, 1997, 2009), The Burning Tigris: The Armenian
Genocide and America’s Response (HarperCollins, 2003) and Armenian
Golgotha: A Memoir of the Armenian Genocide, by Grigoris Balakian
(Translated by Peter Balakian with Aris Sevag; Ra

The lecture at the Tattered Cover, hosted by Armenians of Colorado,
Inc., will be part of the Armenian Genocide awareness and remembrance
events in Colorado that will include a commemoration program on
Sunday, April 22, 2012 at 1:30PM at the State Capitol’s Armenian
Genocide Memorial Plaque located in the NE quadrant of the State
Capitol grounds, Colfax and Grant. The annual Colorado state
resolution designating April 24 as Colorado Day of Remembrance of the
Armenian Genocide, will be read at length.

The Armenian Genocide was carried out by the Ottoman Turks during and
after WWI. It resulted in the complete extermination of modern
Turkey’s indigenous Armenian population (1.5 million), and in the
annihilation of Armenian cultural artifacts dating back thousands of
years. The Turkish government to this day denies that the Armenian
Genocide ever happened despite scholars’, historians’, and most
western governments’ published reports and archives affirming the
facts.

For additional information please contact Kim Christianian
303-588-5524. Armenians of Colorado, Inc. (AOC) was established in
June 1982. It is a 501(c) (3) non-profit, cultural organization
charged with a purpose to create a cohesive Armenian community and to
further the understanding of Armenian history, culture, and
heritage. AOC actively supports issues and concerns of the
Armenian-American community here in Colorado as well as those
identified within the Armenian Diaspora throughout the world. For more
information about Armenians of Colorado go to

www.armeniansofcolorado.org
www.facinghistory.org/offices/denver
www.armeniansofcolorado.org

Armenia Tree Project Hosts Community-Wide Events in Los Angeles Area

ARMENIA TREE PROJECT
65 Main Street
Watertown, MA 02472 USA
Tel: (617) 926-TREE
Email: [email protected]
Web:

PRESS RELEASE
March 7, 2012

Armenia Tree Project Hosts Community-Wide Events in Los Angeles Area

PASADENA, CA–On February 7, Armenia Tree Project (ATP) hosted a reception
at the Ararat-Eskijian Museum in Mission Hills as part of a three-day visit
by ATP Director Jeff Masarjian and Forestry Director Zack Parisa. This first
event was an update on ATP’s program accomplishments and plans for 2012. The
intimate affair allowed long-time supporters and those not so familiar with
ATP to learn about the organization and its important work in Armenia.

The following evening, ATP joined forces with the Armenian Engineers and
Scientists of America (AESA) to co-host a panel discussion on “Armenia’s
Environmental Challenges in the 21st Century” at Parsons in Pasadena. The
AGBU Young Professionals and Armenian Environmental Network (AEN) were also
part of the evening, inviting their membership to attend.

Presenters included Varouj Abkian, Assistant Director with the City of Los
Angeles Bureau of Sanitation, Robert Kurkjian, Principal Scientist,
Tetratech and International Environmental Consultant, Zack Parisa and Jeff
Masarjian. The topics discussed at the panel included “Environmental Issues
Related to Waste Water and Waste Management,” “Water: Armenia’s Abundant
Resource,” “Surface Mining: Pathways of Toxicity,” and “Building Resilient
Forests and Communities: An Armenian Experience.”

“This was the first of what I hope will be many collaborative efforts on the
part of Armenian organizations to inform the Diaspora of critical threats to
Armenia’s environmental integrity. We are at a crucial tipping point in
history, and the choices made today will have long-term consequences on the
quality of air, land, water, and public health in Armenia for generations to
come,” noted Masarjian.

“In addition to educating the Southern California community on ATP’s
activities in Armenia, we wanted to raise awareness about Armenia’s current
environmental situation,” said Hermine Mahmouzian, Southern California
Development Director. “We hope to organize events such as the one held at
Parsons in different areas around Southern California.”

Masarjian and Parisa also joined Anahit Gharibyan, Assistant to the
Development Director, at the Ararat Charter School (ACS) for a meeting with
educators to speak on a continued relationship between the ACS and ATP as
part of the Building Bridges environmental education program.

ATP’s mission is to assist the Armenian people in using trees to improve
their standard of living and protect the environment, guided by the need to
promote self-sufficiency, aid those with the fewest resources first, and
conserve the indigenous ecosystem. ATP’s three major programs are tree
planting, environmental education, and sustainable development initiatives.

For more information about upcoming ATP events and how to get involved,
please call Hermine Mahmouzian at (310) 990-4371 or email
[email protected].

www.armeniatree.org

Expert: "Armenian Role Will Become More Important For Iran"

EXPERT: “ARMENIAN ROLE WILL BECOME MORE IMPORTANT FOR IRAN”

06.03.12, 17:28

Iranian regional policy will become more aggressive. Speaking about the
regional developments expert on Iran, vise president of the “Noravanq”
scientific-educational center Sevak Sarukhanyan told about this during
the press-conference.

“Sunni countries of the region try to increase the US influence in
the Middle East and reduce Iranian role. I expect some problems in
Iranian-Turkish relations. In this context Armenian role will become
more important for Iran”, the speaker said.

The expert separated two categories in this context which are
Turkish-Iranian and Azerbaijani-Iranian relations.

Referring to the possibility of starting military actions by the
West against Iran, the speaker said: “Israel urges the USA to start
a military attack against Iran or to assist Israel to do it. But it
is obvious that the USA refuses to do it. USA hardly manages to keep
stability in Iraq. Shia organizations which are sponsored by Iran
and act in Iraq have agreed to keep balance otherwise the USA would
not manage. If the USA attacks Iran it will lose the last chance and
civilian war will restart in Iraq.”

The expert also commented the last Parliamentarian elections in Iran
and noted that this was the first time the opposition boycotted the
elections after the Revolution.

S. Sarukhanyan noted that a group of conservatives gathered at the
religious leader Ali Khamenei and the other group gathered around
President Mahmud Ahmadinejad.

“Future Parliament will be anti Presidential and will criticize the
President. ”

http://times.am/?l=en&p=5476

Retirement No Option For Sarkisians

RETIREMENT NO OPTION FOR SARKISIANS
by Tom Vartabedian

March 6, 2012

ANDOVER, Mass.-Sarkis and Rita Sarkisian have found the perfect
formula for perpetual youth in their retirement years.

Sarkis and Rita Sarkisian of Andover keep active by operating a
driving range and hiring students.

Run an active business, hire students, and help local charities.

Thus far, it’s paying dividends for the couple as they open their
driving range for the 17th year and soon answer the call for ice
cream. The fact both are into their 70s pays no heed.

On a busy weekend, all 33 stalls are getting a workout. A putting
green is mobilized. People are lined up at the window for ice cream,
slush, and hot dogs. It’s become a recreational extravaganza inside
a neighborhood setting that has long been their family home on
Chandler Road.

It all started in 1932 when Ovogen Sarkisian came to the United States
and purchased land in Andover to start his farming business. It was
hard work, clearing the land and cutting down all the trees by hand.

For many years, he farmed the land with his wife and three children,
as did other Armenians in the area. For these newly arrived immigrants,
it was a way of life in this land of opportunity.

After his death in 1968, son Sarkis took over the reins and, with his
wife Rita, a Syrian immigrant, continued to farm the land. Over time,
it became a successful greenhouse operation as families flocked here
to purchase vegetables and flowers.

It went well for years until the chains began taking a bite out of
their trade. So instead of packing it in, they took their 15 acres
and turned it into a golfer’s haven. That was in 1995. Ten years
later, they added ice cream. For four years, they’ve cultivated a
“pick your own strawberries” sideline.

“We like the open land,” says Rita. “It’s all ours and we’re using
it to our advantage. Our pleasure is everyone else’s joy.”

It wasn’t easy. At a time when both were approaching retirement,
thoughts of retooling a business called for extensive planning,
engineering, architects, loans, and equipment. It took years and
plenty of chutzpah.

“Were we doing the right thing?” Sarkis wondered. “God gave us a
nudge and we ran with it.”

A former Red Sox Hall-of-Famer hits balls here. Actor Robert Urich
(“Spenser for Hire”) bought his flowers here. Parents of talk show
host Jay Leno were regulars for years. PGA aspirant Rob Oppenheim
comes here to sharpen his swing.

Armen Kourkounian takes a swing at his grandparents’ driving range.

A hawk might hover overhead. Deer and pheasants frolic through an
opening in the woods. Wild turkeys strut along at will. Nature has
a way of manifesting itself in this paradise setting.

It’s not so much the clientele who benefit from this enterprise as the
help. The Sarkisians have made it a point to hire students. They’ve
opened the door to kids in high school and college, many of them
getting their start in the business world.

“We had one student who was so shy and withdrawn when he came here,”
recalled Sarkis. “Each year, he gained confidence behind that counter.

By the time he was a senior at Bentley University and been working
here eight years, he became student council president of the college
and presided over the entire student body. I like to think we played
a small part in his development.”

Besides the responsibility and maturity, graduates have come away with
letters of recommendation. The Sarkisians have been like surrogate
parents to many. Nothing hits home more than having them pay a return
visit as adults and recall their first job with fondness.

An organization called KIDS (Kids In Disability Sports) golfs here
on Monday afternoons at half price. Youth camps converge during the
summer months, run by the town’s Department of Community Services.

Forty youngsters at a time fill the air with golf balls.

Business is never short of demand. The season runs about eight months
with hardly a free day, except for rain. Shagging golf balls at 6 a.m.

each day and keeping the grass trimmed at all times might have worn
a lesser person.

“It’s been an endowment for our children,” they concur.

The Sarkisians celebrated their 50th anniversary last year, joined
by their two children, Jeffrey and Christine Kourkounian, together
with three grandchildren, Nyree, 8, Petra, 7, and Armen, 5. All play
a role in the business.

Both are active members of St. Gregory Church in North Andover,
relish their get-aways to a second home at Salisbury Beach, where
they enjoy walking the shoreline, and joined a group of friends on a
trip to Armenia in 2006. Travel and fitness are high on their social
calendar when the occasion permits.

But business has its demands in this venture. The season runs eight
months with hardly a free day except for rain. A golf pro is on hand
to offer lessons. A well-lighted overhead keeps the place open through
early evening.

“It’s given us a lot of flexibility in our lives,” the Sarkisians
maintain. “At a time when there is a lot of difficulty in the world,
you come here and find peace. We’re blessed in many ways.”

http://www.armenianweekly.com/2012/03/06/retirement-no-option-for-sarkisians/

Armenian Chess Players In Cappelle La Grande

ARMENIAN CHESS PLAYERS IN CAPPELLE LA GRANDE

Panorama.am
06/03/2012

Armenian champion Tigran L. Petrosian has scored 4 points after 4
rounds and is currently first at Cappelle la Grande Open. GM Bassem
Amin (Egypt) has also scored 4 points and is second in the tournament.

GMs Zaven Andriasian, David Arutinian, Tigran Gharamian, Krikor
Sevag Mekhitarian have 3 points each. GMs Gevorg Harutjunyan, Sergey
Grigoriants have scored 2.5 points each. WGMs Evgeniya Doluhanova,
Karina Ambartsumova and Tatev Abrahamyan have 2 points each.

There are five rounds until the end of the tournament, according
to armchess.am.

MP Says He Doesn’t ‘Owe A Dime’ To Entrepreneur. She Says He’s Lost

MP SAYS HE DOESN’T ‘OWE A DIME’ TO ENTREPRENEUR. SHE SAYS HE’S LOST HIS MEMORY

epress.am
03.06.2012

Republican Party of Armenia MP and former Minister of Nature Protection
Vardan Ayvazyan told journalists in Yerevan today that he “owes not
a single dime” to entrepreneur Silva Hambartsumyan.

Recall, Hambartsumyan charges that the lawmaker owes her $70,000,
since she returned the mine she purchased from him for $500,000 and
is asking for her money back, which Ayvazyan has gradually paid –
all except for the $70,000, which he reportedly is refusing to pay.

“Ask Silva Hambartsumyan two things: the year the deal was signed
and the name of the mine,” he said at the press conference today.

Hambartsumyan, speaking to Epress.am, however, said Avyazyan has lost
his memory – as a result of frequently visiting casinos.

“I am referring to the Jrkap mine in the community of Tashton. I
returned the [mining] company because the mine’s coordinates were
different and the mine itself was somewhere else. He was such a
disconnected minister that he didn’t know the place of his mine.

Ayvazyan didn’t deny that he owes me money; he says, when I return
from Tbilisi, from China, I’ll give it. He wants to shrug me off;
I won’t forgive it,” she said.

Noted French Writer Calls French Court Ruling A ‘Mistake’

NOTED FRENCH WRITER CALLS FRENCH COURT RULING A ‘MISTAKE’

asbarez
Tuesday, March 6th, 2012

Bernard-Henri Levy

Noted French writer, Bernard-Henri Levy, wrote in the Huffington Post
Tuesday that the last week’s French Constitutional Council decision
to invalidate a measure to criminalize the denial of the Armenian
Genocide a “mistake.”

Levy also hints that the decision was made under pressure from Turkish
denialist agents determined to overturn an earlier decision by both
house of the French Parliament. He also casts doubt on the impartiality
of the members of the Constitutional Council.

“A discredited Council, even if it is constitutional, is not the
guardian of the Truth, and, fortunately, the decision it has just
taken cannot judge in advance the outcome of a battle the historians
of genocides have long since won,” notes Levy.

He adds that the law should be passed as a “law for humanity.”

“A just and eminently universal law we count on the next president,
whoever he may be, to put back on the agenda,” concluded Levy.

Read the entire Bernard-Henri Levy piece in the Huffington Post.

Armenian Genocide: The French Constitutional Council’s Mistake Posted:
03/ 6/2012 8:36 am

Thus the Constitutional Council’s invalidation of the law voted by the
two Houses aiming to penalize the denial of genocides is, in the eyes
of the law, and until the same two Houses reconsider it, the last word.

Nonetheless.

Respect for the constitutional State and its rules should not to
blind its citizens to a certain number of facts — case in point —
that are rather disturbing.

These include, for example, the pressure exerted by representatives
of Turkey before submission of the case to the Council.

And the busloads of nationalist demonstrators gathered beneath the
windows of the French Senate, demanding the right to quite freely
violate the memory of the dead and the honor of the survivors.

The amazing letter of January 30th, signed by one of the magnates of
the CAC40, named, for the occasion, “co-president of the scientific
committee,” of the main Franco-Turk pressure group, the Institut du
Bosphore: in it, M. de Castries, who is also the boss of Axa insurance
company, implored the legislators to resist the request of French
citizens of Armenian origin.

And the very composition of the Council, whose impartiality, wisdom,
and distance, imperative when confronted with a deliberation of this
nature, were seriously damaged by a series of stands opportunely
recalled by the irreverent French weekly, Le Canard enchaîne.

Such as former Senator Haenel, the “wise man” whose affiliation with
the Institut du Bosphore has never been a secret and who, for this
reason, was prevented from participating in the vote. Before that,
however, he did have the time to produce a report deploring the fact
that the first law, that of October 2001, recognizing the genocide,
“undermined bilateral economic exchanges” between France and Turkey.

Such as attorney Jacqueline de Guillenchmidt, prevented from voting
as well due to her signature, in 2008, of the famous appeal of Blois
“for the freedom of History” (whose love of freedom, by the by, does
not go so far as to demand that Ankara release Ragip Zarakolu, the
Turkish editor incarcerated for having published works by historians
denouncing the systematic extermination of the Armenians).

The ineffable Michel Charasse, former minister under Mitterrand,
whose reputation for “wisdom” is not particularly well established,
and whose hostility to the text was a matter of common knowledge at
the time the negationist lobby began its campaign.

The President of the Council and no less hilariously entertaining
Jean-Louis Debre who, as Mayor of the city of Evreux in 2006, went
so far as to have an inscription mentioning the victims of genocide
sawn off a plaque honouring Franco-Armenian friendship.

And I am not mentioning the conditions of the submission of the
case which, in the opinion of several jurists, could amount to abuse
of procedure.

The point, I repeat, is not to call into question the principle of a
decree that, like every decision of every republican body, is reputed
to be authorless and transcending motifs, virtues, or, unfortunately,
the absence of virtue of those who have inspired it.

But the policy of spreading confusion in people’s minds is such that it
is by no means forbidden to recall that this high body of deliberation
is not so very high as we are told and, in any case, not this Supreme
Court a la francaise so highly spoken of here and there.

We may remind ourselves that it has taken several liberties with
Article 3 of the order of November 7, 1958, defining its operational
rules and demanding that its members “swear” to “carry out their
duties” with all “impartiality,” to “keep its deliberations and votes
secret,” to “take no public position” and “to give no consultation
concerning the questions relevant to the competence of the Council.”

And it is especially not forbidden to encourage those the ballet of
interests and influence around this noble cause that is the truth
has led to despair — it is not forbidden to hope that the last word
will not be that of the partisans of a free speech who have already
given themselves away, in their haste, the day after the vote,
to requalify the Armenian genocide as a “massacre” and request
“historical commissions” (we’ve seen it all before) to establish
the “reality of the facts.” A discredited Council, even if it is
constitutional, is not the guardian of the Truth, and, fortunately,
the decision it has just taken cannot judge in advance the outcome
of a battle the historians of genocides have long since won.

Not, I’ve said it a hundred times, the battle for I don’t know what
“memorial laws,” the spectre of which is brandished before us every
time.

But the battle for recognition of the radical singularity of
occurrences of genocide, these events that are characteristic of
modern times.

A law for humanity.

A law for the respect of these very rare truths, the transgression
of which is a threat to each of us, because they aim at the heart of
the human race.

A just and eminently universal law we count on the next president,
whoever he may be, to put back on the agenda.