career Foreign Service Officers demonstrate patriotism, professionalism, and integrity in the face of tough questioning from both sides of the aisle and unprecedented personal attacks from the President.

I am sure Sen. Johnson feels that these career diplomats are lying because he does not want the president to be impeached. As he says, “The president is right about whatever he does because he is the president.”
Mary, Two years ago, I resigned my commission as a US Foreign Service Officer to run for Congress, because I saw hyper-partisanship tearing our country apart and I could not in good conscience continue to serve in this administration Recently, I was prouder than I have ever been to have served as an FSO. In dramatic impeachment hearings on Capitol Hill, we have seen career Foreign Service Officers — Ambassador Masha Yovanovitch, George Kent, Jennifer Williams, David Holmes — demonstrate patriotism, professionalism, and integrity in the face of tough questioning from both sides of the aisle and unprecedented personal attacks from the President. This is what public service is truly about and should always be: country over party. In her hearing, Ambassador Yovanovitch said, “we are people who repeatedly uproot our lives, who risk and sometimes give our lives for this country…I count myself lucky to be a Foreign Service Officer and fortunate to serve with the best America has to offer.” I couldn’t agree more. Mary, Foreign Service Officers pride themselves in being willing to sacrifice their own interests for our country’s, not the other way around. At this critical moment, we need more public servants in Washington, and fewer politicians. That’s why I am so proud to be one of only two Foreign Service Officers in the country currently running for Congress. If you believe we need that spirit in Washington right now, we need your help. Help send another Foreign Service Officer to Washington by making a contribution now! DONATE NOW ⇨ As a Foreign Service Officer, I made a vow to serve and protect the Constitution. I plan to keep that vow while serving in the US Congress, and to always remain #ForeignServiceProud. Thank you for standing with me, standing with our Foreign Service Officers, and standing up for our democracy when it is under threat. Sincerely,
Sri Preston Kulkarni DONATE NOW ⇨  
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Published by David Brockert

Joe was born in xxxx, Arizona on xxxx xx 1955 to David Joseph and Alta Mary Brockert. He joined xxxxxx. His early life was spent in various houses in Globe, Miami, Claypool and Superior, Arizona. He remembered starting school in second grade in Superior and went there until he finished seventh grade. They made a move to the Midwest that summer. His parents tried to get work in Minnesota that summer, to no avail, came to Wisconsin and finally found something. Joe went to eight grade in Evansville, Wisconsin. He went to Holy Name Seminary in Madison, Wisconsin for his Junior year of high school. Joe did not make the grade (literally & figuratively) at the seminary, so he went back to graduate from Evansville. He started college at Edgewood in Madison, but without a focus , he did not get very far towards a degree. He did get an Associate of Arts degree from Madison Area Technical College in 1978 for Accounting just to prove he could get a degree of some sort. He never did use it to any extent. Joe worked as a paperboy in Superior and, some, in Evansville. He did some work study jobs in college, but really started to work at the donut shop on Regent Street, Donuts Unlimited. He worked there, off and on, for many years. He spent a summer at Edgewood Summer Theatre near Baraboo, tried to find a job doing bookkeeping after graduation but fell back to working seasonal at Blaney Farms (seed corn). He worked at the donut shop until 1993. He left to work at Triggs Bakery, Quarra Stone and Colonial Bakery. He has worked at Colonial Bakery since 1994. Joe met the love of his life in a coffee shop near MATC, where they attended classes and they never really left the coffee shop. Joe was married on 17 May 1980 xxxxxxxxxxxxxx Joe lived a contented, relaxed life. He did not do much but learn, work, raise a daughter and support his family. He did not attract a lot of attention. He did learn to live for the day. He felt that the key to happiness was to remember to stop and smell the roses, or to look at the most beautiful sight he had ever seen, Mary, or to just go for a walks with her. He was humble enough to know that his writing would be of interest to very few, mostly those related to him, obviously, so he never tried too hard to get his rambling thoughts recorded.

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