[楽天]パスワードの変更完了のお知らせ
平素より楽天グループのサービスをご利用いただき、誠にありがとうございます。
ただいま、お客様からの変更処理に基づいて楽天会員アカウントのパスワード変更が変更されました。
※秘密の質問と答えをご登録されている場合は、不正アクセス被害防止のため、あわせてご変更頂くことをおすすめします。
>以下の会員情報管理トップページより、秘密の質問と答えの登録・変更が可能です。
※本メールはご登録いただいたメールアドレス宛に送信されています。※このメールにお心あたりがない場合は、お手数おかけいたしますが本メールを破棄していただけますようお願いいたします。※本メールは送信専用です。ご返信いただきましてもお答えできませんので、ご了承ください。ご不明な点がございましたら、下記ヘルプページをご確認ください。https://ichiba.faq.rakuten.net/※当社の個人情報の取扱いについては「個人情報保護方針」をご覧ください。https://privacy.rakuten.co.jp/━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
楽天株式会社
Prosecutors in the US state of Georgia are investigating
attempts by former President Donald Trump to overturn results from last
November's election. Mr Trump was recorded telling the state's top election
official to "find" more than 11,000 votes, enough to give him victory there. The
official is heard replying that Georgia's results are correct. Joe Biden's win
in Georgia and other swing states secured him the presidency. Fulton County
District Attorney Fani Willis sent a letter asking state officials to preserve
documents including those relating to the phone call and saying that a criminal
investigation was being carried out. "I just want to find 11,780 votes," Mr
Trump told Georgia's Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger in a
recording of the call released by the Washington Post last
month.
In Houston and a handful of other
cities and states, the pandemic has pushed the criminal legal system to
reimagine itself a bit, delivering services in ways that might have seemed
unthinkable a year ago, from outdoor vocational programs to art classes via
Google Hangouts. These are cutting-edge changes that have been a lifeline for
incarcerated people craving contact with their families and opportunities to
better themselves. But they come with risk: Families of prisoners fear
corrections officials will use the technology to replace in-person interactions
even after the pandemic ends. As someone who’s been through the system and
understands its limitations, I know how remarkable some of these changes are.
For as long as prisons and jails have existed, living in them has meant coming
to terms with loss: the loss of freedom, the loss of chances in life, the loss
of friends and family. At a time when you’re hoping to reinvent yourself and
your life, the ties that bind you to the free world can feel so tenuous,
especially in the face of major milestones — events that keep happening, with or
without you. A few weeks after I was arrested on drug charges in upstate New
York in 2010, I remember watching another prisoner get the news that one of her
family members had died. She was only a few weeks from going home and seemed
almost disoriented by the news. But she was one of the lucky ones: She got to go
to one hour of the funeral in person, shackled and under guard. Most of the time
that doesn’t happen — the funeral is too far, the prisoner doesn’t qualify, or
the facility doesn’t allow it. The rest of us knew we would have to rethink what
loss looked like while we were in jail. Now, amid all the sickness and suffering
of the past year, it’s the jails and prisons that are doing the rethinking — or
at least some of them are.
コメント
コメントを投稿