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World Traveler 2-Piece Hardside Upright Spinner Luggage Set, Butterfly, One Size

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Availability: In Stock.
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Arrives Tuesday, Sep 23
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Features

  • Polycarbonate shell construction with padded top and side grip handles and built-in TSA three digit combination lock
  • Push-button self-locking internally stored retractable handle system and eight (8) 360 degree spinner wheels
  • Expandable 2-inch more for packing capability, dual compartment fully stocked and versatile interior
  • 12 inch Tote Bag Dimensions: 12" H x 13" L x 8" W - 2 lb
  • 21" Carry-On Dimensions: 21" H x 13" L x 9" W - 6.4 lb

Description

A unique butterfly emblazoned design and a dynamic exterior boasts a tough hard side construction that handles travel with grace and ease, while opening to reveal a fully stocked and versatile interior with garment restraints, accessory pockets, zipper pockets and more. Sitting confidently on 8 spinner wheels, this lightweight bag rolls in any and every direction


Product Dimensions: 13 x 9 x 21 inches


Item Weight: 8.4 pounds


Department: unisex-adult


Manufacturer: World Traveler


Country of Origin: China


Item model number: 24DM110-2


Capacity: 0.9 Kilograms


Item Weight: 8.4 Pounds


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If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Tuesday, Sep 23

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • 5.0 out of 5 stars Trauma, Trump, and the American racist state
Mary Trump’s second book about her uncle is absolutely amazing, because, quite simply, in a time when the truth is increasingly falling out of favor in certain circles, she is unflinching in reminding us of how it really went in the United States and the world at large since the time that Donald and Melania Trump traveled down the golden escalator in Trump Tower on 16 June 2015. Her efforts to warn the world about the threat posed by her uncle in this book and the one that preceded it, Too Much and Never Enough, are having the much-too-predictable effect on the super-volatile Trump. As many readers will know, she and the New York Times is being sued for a reported 100 million dollars for releasing a report on Trump’s 2018 taxes. If releasing information on his taxes has this effect, what will The Donald think of “The Reckoning”? Perhaps, that is not the correct question to ask. Maybe the correct question should be “Will he read the book?” since he is reported not to do much reading. The rest of us, however, need to read this book as soon as possible, especially the 74,222,958 people who are documented to have voted for Trump in the 2020 election, the results of which he is still disputing, even if the evidence does not support that conclusion. The 81,283,098 people who voted for Joseph Bident should also read this book. It is that important. It also should be read, most especially, by the approximately one-third of the voting-eligible population who did not vote. There is, after all, as of this writing (12 October 2021), only slightly more than three years remaining before we go to the polls to elect Biden’s successor or Biden himself, should he choose to run. These numbers came from a piece posted at www.cfr.org/blog/2020-election-numbers. Why does the entirety of the voting public need to read this book? Why, in fact, do all people who know how to read need to do so? The reason is because Mary Trump has written this book for all of us, so that we can understand the origin of our national trauma that has afflicted all people born and raised in this country since it has existed as a country and before. Dr. Trump, who holds a Ph.D. in psychological studies, traces the trauma produced by living in a while supremacist nation that pretends to be a democracy, supposedly guaranteeing the “liberty and justice for all” in the U.S. Pledge of Allegiance. When we say “for all,” we are supposed to mean that we propose to provide and protect liberty and justice for all individuals regardless of gender, ethnicity, age, economic status, religious affiliation, or political ideology. In short, everyone, even those welcomed by Lady Liberty with the words “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free.” Dr. Trump maintains that we are still dealing with a double-edged trauma that reaches at least back to 1619, when the first enslaved African people were brought to the English colony of Virginia and beyond to the time, apparently in 1492, when Native Americans began to suffer genocide. The American Civil War was fought from April, 1861 to May, 1865, in part because of the practice of slavery. Jim Crow laws were enacted in 1877 that mandated racial segregation in all public facilities in the states of the former Confederate States of the United States. Dr. Trump reminds us of the ugly history of Black people attempting to enjoy the liberty and justice supposedly available to all people in this country, from 400 years ago with the advent of slavery and the equally ugly history of the 500+ years of the Native American genocide involving the Seminole Wars, the Trail of Tears, the Sioux Wars, the Wounded Knee massacre, and the list goes on and on. Yes, on and on to the present day, to the murder of George Floyd at the hands of the police in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on 25 May 2020, just to cite one example of the brutal hand of American racism. Like I, Mary Trump is troubled by the trauma of white privilege, defined as “a concept that highlights the unfair societal advantages that while people have over non-white people” (www.verywellmind.com/what-is-white-privilege-5070460). Like I, she knows that white privilege is not something she asked for nor was it anything over which she had any control, no more than any person can control his or her genetic background. She also did not ask to become a Trump and admits to lying about her association with the rest of the Trumps, especially her uncle. In my case, even though I live a relatively peaceful and secluded life (some might say hermetic), I am still reminded about perceived white privilege and its accompanying denial of that reality. When I was growing up in the Midwest, my father was willing to tell me that the deplorable conditions under which Black people lived in my hometown were of their own design. “That’s the way they choose to live,” I was told. I was reminded where Black people stood in a small sundown town in which I used to spend my summers as a young boy. Sundown towns are places that still exist where Black people and other non-white people are not allowed to live or even stay after dark, with signs posted to that effect. James Loewen examines this “hidden dimension of American racism” in his book Sundown Towns (2018). Even recently, I have been told that in a certain town where I used to live when a boy “there would be no crime were there no Blacks here.” When I inquired about what evidence exists to support that statement, the response was that “I do not need evidence to support my beliefs.” That same person told me a few days ago that “I am so fed up with people thinking I am a racist” when I mentioned that I was reading Mary Trump’s book on our racist nation. Denial is a powerful defense mechanism for keeping unpleasant internal and external realities out of our conscious awareness. So, white privilege can be and is accompanied by white denial. The subtitle of The Reckoning is “Our nation’s trauma and finding a way to heal.” The trauma, of course, is that created by continuing the history of the domination of generations of white people over non-white peoples in the United States of America. Mary Trump knows about such trauma, because she has taught graduate-level courses about it and has suffered herself from a serious outcome of it known as post-traumatic stress disorder or PTSD. Therapy for this condition can involve both psychotherapy and medication. So, how do we apply such therapy to an entire nation…to an entire nation that is compromised further by the stresses created by the threat of the coronavirus pandemic…of the many months “of isolation, of anguish, of government-driven division, of loss,” as Dr. Trump states in the last chapter of her book titled “Facing the Truth?” She concludes by say that “If we want to create a society in which there really is equal justice for all, we’ve got to level the playing field and dismantle every part of the system that grants white American unearned privilege at the cost of oppressing others.” She acknowledges, however, that “Until the playing field is leveled, America is not a democracy. Until everyone eligible is allowed to vote unimpeded, America is not a democracy. As long as a majority of the majority doesn’t have a problem with the deliberate economic plunder and disenfranchisement of large swaths of the population, and as long as the rest of us ignore it—because to pay attention would be to challenge our privilege—nothing will change.” Amen, fellow Americans. So, when will we begin? Unfortunately, Mary Trump was left to spouting what amounts to be platitudes by way of suggesting a way to heal our trauma. In my mind, there is only one other problem of greater scope than attempting to ask the powerful to willingly give up power, and that is the assault that the entirety of humanity is visiting on the ability of planet Earth to support all life. Addressing the power imbalance among people in the United States is just an important subset of the larger problem of the power imbalance between humanity at large and the rest of the living world. I am working to address, with the help of others, this larger problem, which also will involve giving attention to all of its components. However, I did take out time to read The Reckoning and I recommend that everyone else also read it. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on November 3, 2021 by Larry David Wilson

  • 5.0 out of 5 stars It's Time for America To Listen & Admit What We've Been Running From
When I ordered this book, I was curious about what she would say about how her uncle and his base harmed America. But this book is so much more than the 45th president and Republicans. Dr. Mary L. Trump explores how America was created and built by trauma to Native Americans and to kidnapped slaves. Readers are guided through the American socialization traumas from the inception of this country through April 2021. And she is holding all presidents, members of the media, and other leaders accountable for nourishing and preserving America’s denial of the truth, by their refusal to directly state the causes of trauma. “It’s dispiriting, though, when our leaders who purport to want to heal our country miss the opportunityto unite us. Choosing the easy path shuts down conversations, requires no sacrifices, effects no change, and in the end keeps in place the system that privileges some of us and shuts everybody else out – that’s what happens when you cling to the notion that America is not a racist country.” She’s saying this as a White woman. She’s reacting to Senator Tim Scott and Vice President Kamala Harris’ having said that America is not a racist county. While she seems to admire how former President Barack Obama led our county, she takes issue with his not having sued bankers, and his predecessor for the harm that they did to America with the sub-prime loans. I think if she read “The Promised Land,” she might change her position on this. While Dr. Mary Trump (I’m spelling this out this way, so as to not be confused by her uncle), goes on to point out how # 45’s wrongs should be no surprise to anyone, she uses his well-publicized wrongs to demonstrate that # 45’s presidency, demonstrates how the gains of Black Americans and Native American’s threatened the those who believe that to be America is to be White and Protestant. Dr. Mary L. Trump has managed to say what Black Americans in the public eye have been conditioned to avoid saying, because the cost for them is too high. An example of this is when thirty-seven Republican senators reacted to President Biden’s attempt to right wrongs done against Black Americans, with, “Families did not ask for this divisive nonsense. Voters did not vote for it. Americans never decided our children should be taught that our country is inherently evil.” It always amazes me when White Americans react to mention of Black oppression in America as the speaker bringing up “divisiveness,” or “race-baiting.” Those labels seemed to be methods to run away from guilt and shame, which of course leaves us, Blacks, Whites, and all, limited. If “This country was born in trauma – trauma inflicted on the native inhabitants of a land from which they were forcibly removed, trauma sustained by generations that have succeeded the kidnapped and enslaved Africans who’d been brought to a continent both foreign and hostile, the trauma of those bystanders who failed to intervene when they could, those could not intervene at all, and even those who committed the atrocities and continued to perpetuate a system that benefitted them at the expense of so many others,” as Dr. Mary Trump states, and if we can’t talk about it, we are allowing the past to hold us back from reaching out potential as a nation, and as individuals. “Bryan Stevenson, the founder and executive director of the Equal Justice Initiative, said in a Vox interview with Ezra Klein in May 2017, ‘I actually think the great evil of American slavery wasn’t involuntary servitude and forced labor. The true evil of American slavery was the narrative we created to justify it. They made up this ideology of white supremacy that cannot be reconciled with our Constitution, that cannot be reconciled with a commitment to fair and just treatment of all people. They made it up so they could feel comfortable.’” Looking at today’s attempts to elevate the potential for Black Americans, “Black Lives Matter. It’s a simple enough statement. The responses - All Lives Matter, Blue Lives Matter – underscore the necessity of having to say something so essential.” In the early stages of this movement’s traction, public reactions told a story of guilt, trauma, shame, and insistence upon continuing to pretend that the problem doesn’t exist. Until reading this book, I never thought much about reparations for the losses of my ancestors. Now, that ideal is becoming the right thing to do. “In April 2021, HR 40, a bill introduced over thirty years ago, by John Conyers and named in homage to General William T. Sherman’s Field Order 15, which granted forty-acre plots to freedmen and -women, wending its way through Congress as of this writing. The purpose of HR 40 is to evaluate the legacy and ongoing harm slavery and debate the idea of reparations. Again, leadership matters, and it’s probably not a coincidence that the bill finally gained traction while Biden’s in the Oval office.” While I agree that “White superiority is a fiction, but it’s so deeply ingrained that the privileges that accrue are real and have a real impact” I also see that “…the problem with white privilege is that you can’t give it up even if you wanted to.” This book, and a healthy dose of life-long introspection by everyone in America, could be the beginning of equal justice for all. Having enjoyed reading this book, I’m wondering why the subject of historian Phillip Rubio’s comments about the G.I. Bill benefit was not annotated in the references section. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on August 28, 2021 by Zoey Roosevelt

  • 5.0 out of 5 stars Don't Only Read...Act
Mary was on TV again last night sending another warning to all about her uncle, but is anyone listening. I've ordered and read Mary's books and many others, including The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump. We all read these books but there is an ever increasing need to act. Trump is a 'clear and present danger' if ever there was one, bolstered by Fox News and a GOP political machine. The truth is that this man is mentally ill. He won't change so 'we the people' need to sound the alarm that he has to be stopped from ever holding office again. Send emails, let your thoughts be known to others. We cannot remain silent any longer. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on June 15, 2023 by PatriciaS

  • 5.0 out of 5 stars Top quality as described
Bought for information & author’s perspective insights of the subject. Artfully, clearly, and knowledgeably written.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on June 10, 2023 by Amazon Customer

  • 5.0 out of 5 stars Very good book
Well written and easy to understand. I was surprised that it is such a good book. Would recommend.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on May 18, 2023 by Steven Alex

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