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#portman — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #portman, aggregated by home.social.

  1. "Natalie Portman. Das Porträt einer faszinierenden Frau, die ihre jüdische Identität lebt und mit Leidenschaft für gesellschaftlichen Wandel eintritt."

    arte.tv/de/videos/121324-000-A

    #Portman

  2. 2/X"Ideologialla oikeutettua väkivaltaa ei pidä yksinkertaistaa sairaudeksi tai mielen­häiriöksi.

    ”Lapsen puukottaminen ei ole sairasta. Se on väärin ja paha asia. Aikuiset eivät puukota lapsia”, #Portman toteaa.

    #äärioikeisto #Oulu #Lämsä #PVL #hallitus #persut #normalisointi #yhteiskunta #politiikka #kurjistaminen #leikkaukset #terrorismi #väkivalta #rasismi

    hs.fi/suomi/art-2000010502972.

  3. ”Nykyään on hyväksyttävää, että jopa kärkipoliitikkomme voivat käyttää rasistista ja väkivaltaista kieltä. Olemme joutuneet lukemaan heidän #väkivalta­fantasioistaan.” @tuija #Saresma.

    Radikalisoitumisen riski kasvaa, kun elämän perusasiat eivät ole kunnossa. Jos työ, ruoka tai katto pään päällä on uhattuna, ihmiset ovat valmiita epätoivoisiin tekoihin. Tästä syystä esimerkiksi hallituksen vähäosaisiin kohdistuvat leikkaukset pelottavat #Portman ia

    #äärioikeisto #hallitus #terrorismi #rasismi

  4. Watched the film "Closer" last night.

    We need to denormalize the idea that love doesn't involve actually being nice to the loved one.

    I mean COME ON.

    At one point one of the (annoying and deeply sexually insecure) men asks a woman he supposedly loves "What do you expect me to do?" and she says "Understand?". But it's obvious he's not going to, because he's jealous and selfish and doesn't seem to like her especially.

    That's dumb. I guess couples who are kind and understanding to each other and tolerate mistakes, don't make for such interesting plots. BUT WHAT ARE WE TEACHING THE CHILDREN?

    (I'm also team "Jane did not have the sex with Larry, he was lying and she 'admitted' it because Dan wouldn't accept any other answer." Also wow Natalie Portman is small!)

    #film #movie #closer #Portman #Roberts #jealousy #love

  5. Amazing. Just amazing. Read this. [Politico]: ‘The 401(k) industry owns Congress’: How lawmakers quietly passed a $300 billion windfall to the wealthy
    Greased by lobbying and campaign cash, tax breaks for retirement savings are one thing Congress agrees on. But they also blow out the deficit and add to income inequality. By Benjamin Guggenheim, 04/13/2024
    politico.com/news/2024/04/13/h

    #retirement #cardin #neal #portman #lobbyist #grifters #wealthinequality

  6. Lobbyists for a coalition of six groups succeeded in getting changes into a 2021 Portman-Cardin bill governing IRS #oversight of #private #retirement #plans.

    Fact sheets provided to POLITICO
    — which a Hill staffer said the lobbyists distributed to advocate for their proposal
    — sold the changes as fixes that would help elderly Americans, such as retired government and factory workers,
    who had inadvertently put too much in their retirement accounts and could face penalties from the IRS.

    But the lobbyists were also targeting benefits for a different demographic.

    The head of the coalition, according to his biography, specializes in tax planning for🌟 “ultra-high-net-worth clients.” 🌟

    The coalition also included an advocacy group that has previously been tied to the #Koch #network
    — and which engaged in a massive lobbying campaign against efforts to restructure Puerto Rico’s debt that was owned by hedge fund managers in 2015.

    Tax lawyers who reviewed the statutory changes said they would in fact
    👉 make it far more difficult for the IRS to penalize supersized retirement accounts where owners avoided millions of dollars in taxes. 👈

    “The lobby power of these groups is tremendous,” said Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-Texas), a member of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee.

    “There has been little lobby effort for [low-income taxpayers] and plenty of lobbying from those people in the financial services industry that benefit from those retirement plans

    #Secure #financial #services #industry #tax #advantaged #retirement #savings #taxes #Cardin #Portman #Neal #lobbying

  7. Lobbyists for a coalition of six groups succeeded in getting changes into a 2021 Portman-Cardin bill governing IRS #oversight of #private #retirement #plans.

    Fact sheets provided to POLITICO
    — which a Hill staffer said the lobbyists distributed to advocate for their proposal
    — sold the changes as fixes that would help elderly Americans, such as retired government and factory workers,
    who had inadvertently put too much in their retirement accounts and could face penalties from the IRS.

    But the lobbyists were also targeting benefits for a different demographic.

    The head of the coalition, according to his biography, specializes in tax planning for🌟 “ultra-high-net-worth clients.” 🌟

    The coalition also included an advocacy group that has previously been tied to the #Koch #network
    — and which engaged in a massive lobbying campaign against efforts to restructure Puerto Rico’s debt that was owned by hedge fund managers in 2015.

    Tax lawyers who reviewed the statutory changes said they would in fact
    👉 make it far more difficult for the IRS to penalize supersized retirement accounts where owners avoided millions of dollars in taxes. 👈

    “The lobby power of these groups is tremendous,” said Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-Texas), a member of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee.

    “There has been little lobby effort for [low-income taxpayers] and plenty of lobbying from those people in the financial services industry that benefit from those retirement plans

    #Secure #financial #services #industry #tax #advantaged #retirement #savings #taxes #Cardin #Portman #Neal #lobbying

  8. Lobbyists for a coalition of six groups succeeded in getting changes into a 2021 Portman-Cardin bill governing IRS #oversight of #private #retirement #plans.

    Fact sheets provided to POLITICO
    — which a Hill staffer said the lobbyists distributed to advocate for their proposal
    — sold the changes as fixes that would help elderly Americans, such as retired government and factory workers,
    who had inadvertently put too much in their retirement accounts and could face penalties from the IRS.

    But the lobbyists were also targeting benefits for a different demographic.

    The head of the coalition, according to his biography, specializes in tax planning for🌟 “ultra-high-net-worth clients.” 🌟

    The coalition also included an advocacy group that has previously been tied to the #Koch #network
    — and which engaged in a massive lobbying campaign against efforts to restructure Puerto Rico’s debt that was owned by hedge fund managers in 2015.

    Tax lawyers who reviewed the statutory changes said they would in fact
    👉 make it far more difficult for the IRS to penalize supersized retirement accounts where owners avoided millions of dollars in taxes. 👈

    “The lobby power of these groups is tremendous,” said Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-Texas), a member of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee.

    “There has been little lobby effort for [low-income taxpayers] and plenty of lobbying from those people in the financial services industry that benefit from those retirement plans

    #Secure #financial #services #industry #tax #advantaged #retirement #savings #taxes #Cardin #Portman #Neal #lobbying

  9. Lobbyists for a coalition of six groups succeeded in getting changes into a 2021 Portman-Cardin bill governing IRS #oversight of #private #retirement #plans.

    Fact sheets provided to POLITICO
    — which a Hill staffer said the lobbyists distributed to advocate for their proposal
    — sold the changes as fixes that would help elderly Americans, such as retired government and factory workers,
    who had inadvertently put too much in their retirement accounts and could face penalties from the IRS.

    But the lobbyists were also targeting benefits for a different demographic.

    The head of the coalition, according to his biography, specializes in tax planning for🌟 “ultra-high-net-worth clients.” 🌟

    The coalition also included an advocacy group that has previously been tied to the #Koch #network
    — and which engaged in a massive lobbying campaign against efforts to restructure Puerto Rico’s debt that was owned by hedge fund managers in 2015.

    Tax lawyers who reviewed the statutory changes said they would in fact
    👉 make it far more difficult for the IRS to penalize supersized retirement accounts where owners avoided millions of dollars in taxes. 👈

    “The lobby power of these groups is tremendous,” said Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-Texas), a member of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee.

    “There has been little lobby effort for [low-income taxpayers] and plenty of lobbying from those people in the financial services industry that benefit from those retirement plans

    #Secure #financial #services #industry #tax #advantaged #retirement #savings #taxes #Cardin #Portman #Neal #lobbying

  10. Lobbyists for a coalition of six groups succeeded in getting changes into a 2021 Portman-Cardin bill governing IRS #oversight of #private #retirement #plans.

    Fact sheets provided to POLITICO
    — which a Hill staffer said the lobbyists distributed to advocate for their proposal
    — sold the changes as fixes that would help elderly Americans, such as retired government and factory workers,
    who had inadvertently put too much in their retirement accounts and could face penalties from the IRS.

    But the lobbyists were also targeting benefits for a different demographic.

    The head of the coalition, according to his biography, specializes in tax planning for🌟 “ultra-high-net-worth clients.” 🌟

    The coalition also included an advocacy group that has previously been tied to the #Koch #network
    — and which engaged in a massive lobbying campaign against efforts to restructure Puerto Rico’s debt that was owned by hedge fund managers in 2015.

    Tax lawyers who reviewed the statutory changes said they would in fact
    👉 make it far more difficult for the IRS to penalize supersized retirement accounts where owners avoided millions of dollars in taxes. 👈

    “The lobby power of these groups is tremendous,” said Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-Texas), a member of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee.

    “There has been little lobby effort for [low-income taxpayers] and plenty of lobbying from those people in the financial services industry that benefit from those retirement plans

    #Secure #financial #services #industry #tax #advantaged #retirement #savings #taxes #Cardin #Portman #Neal #lobbying

  11. Five months before Congress faced a near-catastrophic 2022 standoff over the debt ceiling,
    with Republicans demanding restrictions to food and Medicaid programs to rein in spending,
    a bill that raised the cost of private retirement savings accounts to $282 billion per year was quietly signed into law.

    In this era of deeply divided politics, the 2022 bill known as "#Secure 2.0" was hailed as a bipartisan success — a victory for average Americans.
    It had sailed through the House by a whopping 414-5 vote.
    It followed four other major bills passed between 1996 and 2019 that 🔸dramatically expanded taxpayer savings 🔸– all equally lauded as bipartisan victories.

    But that rare issue that brought a divided Washington together also 💥increased wealth disparities and the federal deficit. 💥

    And the victory was most strongly applauded by the burgeoning #financial #services #industry, for whom #tax-#advantaged #retirement #savings has transformed a $7 trillion retirement market in 1995 to a $38.4 trillion behemoth in 2023.

    👉Tax-advantaged savings has become a staple of the American retirement system, with 60 million savers squirreling away $6.6 trillion in their 401(k)s, alone.

    But a yearlong POLITICO investigation found that Secure 2.0 and its predecessor bills have expanded the system well beyond its goal of helping the middle class.

    Today, ⭐️wealthy taxpayers can protect up to $452,500 per year ⭐️in tax-advantaged accounts in a single year, 👉saving up to $203,600 on their #taxes.

    And they can keep their money in tax-advantaged accounts far longer.

    More striking is how these victories were achieved:
    A quarter-century partnership between two senators
    — Democrat Ben #Cardin of Maryland and Republican Rob #Portman of Ohio
    — joined more recently by the former House Ways and Means Committee Chair Richard #Neal (D-Mass.).

    Backed by one of the most highly skilled and lavishly funded industry #lobbying teams, and greased by campaign contributions, Portman, Cardin and Neal turned what could have been a deeply controversial giveback to higher-income taxpayers into a staple of the American Dream.

    They appealed to core beliefs in both parties
    — free enterprise for Republicans, economic security for Democrats
    – to enact what is arguably the most costly series of non-Defense bills in recent decades.

    Indeed, that success now vexes many retirement experts, alarmed by how easily Congress acquiesces to tax breaks for retirement savings that 🔹disproportionately help the wealthy 🔹while treating the benefits relied upon by most retirees
    — Social Security and Medicare
    — as "budget-busters ripe for reform".

    🔥“The 401(k) industry owns Congress,” 🔥said Daniel Hemel, a professor and tax law scholar based at NYU School of Law.
    “Either lawmakers were trying to pull a fast one on the American people or lobbyists were trying to pull a fast one on Congress.
    I don’t know which story is better. I don’t know which one I should want to believe.”

    politico.com/news/2024/04/13/h

  12. Five months before Congress faced a near-catastrophic 2022 standoff over the debt ceiling,
    with Republicans demanding restrictions to food and Medicaid programs to rein in spending,
    a bill that raised the cost of private retirement savings accounts to $282 billion per year was quietly signed into law.

    In this era of deeply divided politics, the 2022 bill known as "#Secure 2.0" was hailed as a bipartisan success — a victory for average Americans.
    It had sailed through the House by a whopping 414-5 vote.
    It followed four other major bills passed between 1996 and 2019 that 🔸dramatically expanded taxpayer savings 🔸– all equally lauded as bipartisan victories.

    But that rare issue that brought a divided Washington together also 💥increased wealth disparities and the federal deficit. 💥

    And the victory was most strongly applauded by the burgeoning #financial #services #industry, for whom #tax-#advantaged #retirement #savings has transformed a $7 trillion retirement market in 1995 to a $38.4 trillion behemoth in 2023.

    👉Tax-advantaged savings has become a staple of the American retirement system, with 60 million savers squirreling away $6.6 trillion in their 401(k)s, alone.

    But a yearlong POLITICO investigation found that Secure 2.0 and its predecessor bills have expanded the system well beyond its goal of helping the middle class.

    Today, ⭐️wealthy taxpayers can protect up to $452,500 per year ⭐️in tax-advantaged accounts in a single year, 👉saving up to $203,600 on their #taxes.

    And they can keep their money in tax-advantaged accounts far longer.

    More striking is how these victories were achieved:
    A quarter-century partnership between two senators
    — Democrat Ben #Cardin of Maryland and Republican Rob #Portman of Ohio
    — joined more recently by the former House Ways and Means Committee Chair Richard #Neal (D-Mass.).

    Backed by one of the most highly skilled and lavishly funded industry #lobbying teams, and greased by campaign contributions, Portman, Cardin and Neal turned what could have been a deeply controversial giveback to higher-income taxpayers into a staple of the American Dream.

    They appealed to core beliefs in both parties
    — free enterprise for Republicans, economic security for Democrats
    – to enact what is arguably the most costly series of non-Defense bills in recent decades.

    Indeed, that success now vexes many retirement experts, alarmed by how easily Congress acquiesces to tax breaks for retirement savings that 🔹disproportionately help the wealthy 🔹while treating the benefits relied upon by most retirees
    — Social Security and Medicare
    — as "budget-busters ripe for reform".

    🔥“The 401(k) industry owns Congress,” 🔥said Daniel Hemel, a professor and tax law scholar based at NYU School of Law.
    “Either lawmakers were trying to pull a fast one on the American people or lobbyists were trying to pull a fast one on Congress.
    I don’t know which story is better. I don’t know which one I should want to believe.”

    politico.com/news/2024/04/13/h

  13. Five months before Congress faced a near-catastrophic 2022 standoff over the debt ceiling,
    with Republicans demanding restrictions to food and Medicaid programs to rein in spending,
    a bill that raised the cost of private retirement savings accounts to $282 billion per year was quietly signed into law.

    In this era of deeply divided politics, the 2022 bill known as "#Secure 2.0" was hailed as a bipartisan success — a victory for average Americans.
    It had sailed through the House by a whopping 414-5 vote.
    It followed four other major bills passed between 1996 and 2019 that 🔸dramatically expanded taxpayer savings 🔸– all equally lauded as bipartisan victories.

    But that rare issue that brought a divided Washington together also 💥increased wealth disparities and the federal deficit. 💥

    And the victory was most strongly applauded by the burgeoning #financial #services #industry, for whom #tax-#advantaged #retirement #savings has transformed a $7 trillion retirement market in 1995 to a $38.4 trillion behemoth in 2023.

    👉Tax-advantaged savings has become a staple of the American retirement system, with 60 million savers squirreling away $6.6 trillion in their 401(k)s, alone.

    But a yearlong POLITICO investigation found that Secure 2.0 and its predecessor bills have expanded the system well beyond its goal of helping the middle class.

    Today, ⭐️wealthy taxpayers can protect up to $452,500 per year ⭐️in tax-advantaged accounts in a single year, 👉saving up to $203,600 on their #taxes.

    And they can keep their money in tax-advantaged accounts far longer.

    More striking is how these victories were achieved:
    A quarter-century partnership between two senators
    — Democrat Ben #Cardin of Maryland and Republican Rob #Portman of Ohio
    — joined more recently by the former House Ways and Means Committee Chair Richard #Neal (D-Mass.).

    Backed by one of the most highly skilled and lavishly funded industry #lobbying teams, and greased by campaign contributions, Portman, Cardin and Neal turned what could have been a deeply controversial giveback to higher-income taxpayers into a staple of the American Dream.

    They appealed to core beliefs in both parties
    — free enterprise for Republicans, economic security for Democrats
    – to enact what is arguably the most costly series of non-Defense bills in recent decades.

    Indeed, that success now vexes many retirement experts, alarmed by how easily Congress acquiesces to tax breaks for retirement savings that 🔹disproportionately help the wealthy 🔹while treating the benefits relied upon by most retirees
    — Social Security and Medicare
    — as "budget-busters ripe for reform".

    🔥“The 401(k) industry owns Congress,” 🔥said Daniel Hemel, a professor and tax law scholar based at NYU School of Law.
    “Either lawmakers were trying to pull a fast one on the American people or lobbyists were trying to pull a fast one on Congress.
    I don’t know which story is better. I don’t know which one I should want to believe.”

    politico.com/news/2024/04/13/h

  14. Five months before Congress faced a near-catastrophic 2022 standoff over the debt ceiling,
    with Republicans demanding restrictions to food and Medicaid programs to rein in spending,
    a bill that raised the cost of private retirement savings accounts to $282 billion per year was quietly signed into law.

    In this era of deeply divided politics, the 2022 bill known as "#Secure 2.0" was hailed as a bipartisan success — a victory for average Americans.
    It had sailed through the House by a whopping 414-5 vote.
    It followed four other major bills passed between 1996 and 2019 that 🔸dramatically expanded taxpayer savings 🔸– all equally lauded as bipartisan victories.

    But that rare issue that brought a divided Washington together also 💥increased wealth disparities and the federal deficit. 💥

    And the victory was most strongly applauded by the burgeoning #financial #services #industry, for whom #tax-#advantaged #retirement #savings has transformed a $7 trillion retirement market in 1995 to a $38.4 trillion behemoth in 2023.

    👉Tax-advantaged savings has become a staple of the American retirement system, with 60 million savers squirreling away $6.6 trillion in their 401(k)s, alone.

    But a yearlong POLITICO investigation found that Secure 2.0 and its predecessor bills have expanded the system well beyond its goal of helping the middle class.

    Today, ⭐️wealthy taxpayers can protect up to $452,500 per year ⭐️in tax-advantaged accounts in a single year, 👉saving up to $203,600 on their #taxes.

    And they can keep their money in tax-advantaged accounts far longer.

    More striking is how these victories were achieved:
    A quarter-century partnership between two senators
    — Democrat Ben #Cardin of Maryland and Republican Rob #Portman of Ohio
    — joined more recently by the former House Ways and Means Committee Chair Richard #Neal (D-Mass.).

    Backed by one of the most highly skilled and lavishly funded industry #lobbying teams, and greased by campaign contributions, Portman, Cardin and Neal turned what could have been a deeply controversial giveback to higher-income taxpayers into a staple of the American Dream.

    They appealed to core beliefs in both parties
    — free enterprise for Republicans, economic security for Democrats
    – to enact what is arguably the most costly series of non-Defense bills in recent decades.

    Indeed, that success now vexes many retirement experts, alarmed by how easily Congress acquiesces to tax breaks for retirement savings that 🔹disproportionately help the wealthy 🔹while treating the benefits relied upon by most retirees
    — Social Security and Medicare
    — as "budget-busters ripe for reform".

    🔥“The 401(k) industry owns Congress,” 🔥said Daniel Hemel, a professor and tax law scholar based at NYU School of Law.
    “Either lawmakers were trying to pull a fast one on the American people or lobbyists were trying to pull a fast one on Congress.
    I don’t know which story is better. I don’t know which one I should want to believe.”

    politico.com/news/2024/04/13/h

  15. Five months before Congress faced a near-catastrophic 2022 standoff over the debt ceiling,
    with Republicans demanding restrictions to food and Medicaid programs to rein in spending,
    a bill that raised the cost of private retirement savings accounts to $282 billion per year was quietly signed into law.

    In this era of deeply divided politics, the 2022 bill known as "#Secure 2.0" was hailed as a bipartisan success — a victory for average Americans.
    It had sailed through the House by a whopping 414-5 vote.
    It followed four other major bills passed between 1996 and 2019 that 🔸dramatically expanded taxpayer savings 🔸– all equally lauded as bipartisan victories.

    But that rare issue that brought a divided Washington together also 💥increased wealth disparities and the federal deficit. 💥

    And the victory was most strongly applauded by the burgeoning #financial #services #industry, for whom #tax-#advantaged #retirement #savings has transformed a $7 trillion retirement market in 1995 to a $38.4 trillion behemoth in 2023.

    👉Tax-advantaged savings has become a staple of the American retirement system, with 60 million savers squirreling away $6.6 trillion in their 401(k)s, alone.

    But a yearlong POLITICO investigation found that Secure 2.0 and its predecessor bills have expanded the system well beyond its goal of helping the middle class.

    Today, ⭐️wealthy taxpayers can protect up to $452,500 per year ⭐️in tax-advantaged accounts in a single year, 👉saving up to $203,600 on their #taxes.

    And they can keep their money in tax-advantaged accounts far longer.

    More striking is how these victories were achieved:
    A quarter-century partnership between two senators
    — Democrat Ben #Cardin of Maryland and Republican Rob #Portman of Ohio
    — joined more recently by the former House Ways and Means Committee Chair Richard #Neal (D-Mass.).

    Backed by one of the most highly skilled and lavishly funded industry #lobbying teams, and greased by campaign contributions, Portman, Cardin and Neal turned what could have been a deeply controversial giveback to higher-income taxpayers into a staple of the American Dream.

    They appealed to core beliefs in both parties
    — free enterprise for Republicans, economic security for Democrats
    – to enact what is arguably the most costly series of non-Defense bills in recent decades.

    Indeed, that success now vexes many retirement experts, alarmed by how easily Congress acquiesces to tax breaks for retirement savings that 🔹disproportionately help the wealthy 🔹while treating the benefits relied upon by most retirees
    — Social Security and Medicare
    — as "budget-busters ripe for reform".

    🔥“The 401(k) industry owns Congress,” 🔥said Daniel Hemel, a professor and tax law scholar based at NYU School of Law.
    “Either lawmakers were trying to pull a fast one on the American people or lobbyists were trying to pull a fast one on Congress.
    I don’t know which story is better. I don’t know which one I should want to believe.”

    politico.com/news/2024/04/13/h

  16. With just days to go before the Ohio Republican primary election, the three-way Republican Senate primary race in Ohio has turned into a food fight, fueling concerns about former President Donald J. Trump’s favored candidate, Bernie Moreno.

    The contest on Tuesday to decide who will face Senator Sherrod Brown has been contentious for months, with Mr. #Moreno, a wealthy former car dealer who has never held elected office, struggling to outrun his rivals, State Senator Matt #Dolan and Secretary of State Frank #LaRose.

    But in recent weeks, a handful of independent surveys have indicated that Mr. Dolan, a more traditional conservative with deep pockets of his own, is gaining traction.
    On Monday, Mr. Dolan received the endorsement of Gov. Mike #DeWine of Ohio
    — after gaining backing last week from another statewide Republican, former Senator Rob #Portman.
    That same day, Mr. Trump’s campaign announced that the former president would appear alongside Mr. Moreno on Saturday in Dayton, widely interpreted as a sign that Mr. Moreno could benefit from an 11th-hour boost.
    (The former president had planned to attend a rally in Arizona but was redirected because of concerns about Mr. Dolan's surge in internal polling, according to two people familiar with the planning.)
    In the homestretch, Mr. Dolan and groups supporting him have outspent both Mr. Moreno and Mr. LaRose, blanketing the airwaves with attacks highlighting inconsistencies in Mr. Moreno’s record that could be of concern in a Republican primary, such as the more liberal views on immigration he espoused in the past.
    Simultaneously, Mr. Moreno and his backers have portrayed Mr. Dolan as not sufficiently supportive of Mr. Trump.

    nytimes.com/2024/03/16/us/poli

  17. Sari Valton vieraina Korkman ja Portman - Sixten ja Anneli.

    areena.yle.fi/podcastit/1-6745

    Keskustelua ja pohdintaa luterilaisista juonteista kulttuurissamme ja hyvinvointivaltion perustassa.

    #yle #radio #valto #korkman #portman #luterilaisuus #perinne #juuret