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From: AARP Membership Offer <amoxu@jaisonebike.com>
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Subject:  ***SPAM***  Don't Miss Out - Last Call to Join AARP and Claim Your Gift

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AARP — 25% OFF Membership
      You’re receiving this promotional email as part of a marketing list that you registered for or opted into.
      If you’d like to unsubscribe from receiving these sorts of special offers, deals and discounts, click here.
      AARP
        25% OFF
      MEMBERSHIP
      Just $15 for your first year with automatic renewal.
        JOIN OR RENEW NOW
            DISCOUNTS
            Enjoy everyday savings on groceries, dining out, cell phone services, eyeglasses and more
            TOOLS
            Online tools — to help you save money, plan for the future, search for a new job or stay fit
            MEMBER-ONLY
            Access to exclusive products — Medicare Supplemental health insurance, dental coverage, eye care
            ADVOCACY
            A voice in Washington, DC and all 50 states. Confronting age discrimination, protecting pension rights, Social Security, Medicare
            ENTERTAINMENT
            AARP members gain access to unique entertainment articles, podcasts and videos — plus over 15 member-only games like Atari’s Breakout and Pong!
            COMMUNITY
            Your source for interactive workshops, online learning, and life skills for people over 50. Topics include job search skills, family caregiving and how to use technology to help enhance your life
      Plus, choose your free gift!
        $5 Chewy Gift Card*Card*
        OR
        Insulated TrunkOrganizer
        JOIN OR RENEW NOW
        *Chewy Gift Cards cannot be redeemed by residents of Alaska, Hawaii, any US territory (e.g. Guam, Puerto Rico, USVI), or countries outside of the US.
      This is a Paid Advertisement.
      To opt out of this advertiser’s mailings please click here or write to
      2803 Philadelphia Pike Suite B #1228 Claymont, DE 19703.
    The organization now widely known as AARP began in the late 1950s, when retired educator Dr. Ethel Percy Andrus recognized that millions of older Americans lacked access to health insurance, reliable information, and a strong voice in public life. From the outset, its purpose was straightforward yet ambitious: to empower people as they age, helping them live with dignity, independence, and choice. Over the decades, AARP evolved from a modest association of retired teachers into a nationwide membership organization serving people 50 and older, influencing policy debates and offering practical tools that touch everyday life.
    In its early years, AARP focused heavily on making affordable group health insurance available to older adults who had been routinely excluded from private coverage. This pioneering work coincided with the national conversation that ultimately produced Medicare, and AARP became one of the voices explaining the new program and advocating for its improvement. Publications, newsletters, and educational materials were mailed across the country, helping members understand their rights and options in a complex and changing system. As its reach grew, AARP’s mission expanded beyond health to encompass financial security, employment, and community engagement.
    The development of Social Security and Medicare created a foundation for older Americans, but those programs did not answer every need. AARP stepped into this space as both an advocate and a guide, pressing lawmakers to protect earned benefits while also offering members practical resources on budgeting, retirement planning, and fraud prevention. Over time, AARP became known for its research on aging, issuing reports that documented how people over 50 live, work, and care for others. These insights helped shape public policy discussions and guided the organization’s own programs, from driver safety courses to caregiving guides.
    As technology advanced, AARP shifted from purely print-based communication to a combination of magazines, websites, and digital tools. The flagship publication, AARP The Magazine, emerged as one of the most widely circulated magazines in the United States, offering articles on health, money, travel, entertainment, and personal stories of people thriving in later life. Online, AARP created calculators for Social Security claiming strategies, retirement readiness checkups, and resources for navigating Medicare enrollment. This blend of advocacy, information, and concrete tools made it possible for members to move from confusion to confidence as they faced key decisions.
    Alongside policy and information, discounts and member benefits became a familiar part of the AARP experience. By negotiating with national and local businesses, AARP arranged savings on travel, dining, prescriptions, vision care, and other essentials that people use frequently. While these benefits are often the first thing many new members notice, they are rooted in the same idea that inspired the organization’s founding: using the power of a large membership to secure better value and greater access. Over time, these savings expanded to include entertainment, online learning opportunities, and specialized insurance products tailored to people over 50.
    Community engagement has always been another crucial element of AARP’s history. Volunteers organized local events, driver safety classes, tax preparation assistance, and educational workshops. When natural disasters struck or economic downturns hit older workers particularly hard, AARP worked with partners to provide information, relief, and guidance. In recent years, the focus on fighting age discrimination has intensified, with campaigns highlighting the value of experienced workers and the importance of fair hiring practices. AARP’s history is filled with examples of local chapters and state offices amplifying the concerns of older residents in town halls, state legislatures, and community centers.
    Against this historical backdrop, consider the daily life of a member named Ellen, who lives in a mid-sized city and recently turned 62. Each morning, after brewing a cup of coffee, she opens her laptop and signs into her AARP account to glance at a curated feed of articles about health, money, and technology. One article might explain the latest updates to Social Security rules, another might offer tips on stretching a grocery budget, and yet another could suggest low-impact exercises for people managing joint pain. Ellen reads these pieces not as abstract essays, but as instructions she can apply when she plans her meals, revises her household budget, or schedules her preventive care appointments.
    Later in the week, Ellen uses an AARP retirement calculator to test different scenarios: What happens if she waits two more years to claim Social Security How might part-time work affect her income in her seventies The tool gives her clear, numerical projections, but it also links to webinars and articles that explain the tradeoffs in plain language. Encouraged by what she learns, Ellen joins an online AARP workshop on job search skills for people over 50. There, she practices updating her resume to highlight her experience and learns how to navigate video interviews. She leaves the virtual session with a list of concrete next steps and a sense that her age is an asset rather than an obstacle.
    On weekends, Ellen leans into the lifestyle benefits that have grown out of AARP’s long history of negotiating member advantages. She and a close friend plan occasional road trips using hotel and car rental discounts available through her membership, and she checks AARP’s travel content for destination ideas that match her budget. When her granddaughter asks for help with a school project on digital safety, Ellen pulls up an AARP guide on recognizing online scams, showing how the same information that protects older adults can also help younger family members. In the evenings, she sometimes relaxes with AARP’s games and entertainment offerings, discovering podcasts and articles that make her feel connected to a larger community of people navigating similar stages of life.
    In all of these moments, Ellen is participating in a story that began decades before she was eligible to join. The history of AARP is not just a timeline of policy victories or membership milestones; it is a sequence of everyday interactions like hers, in which information, advocacy, and benefits translate into practical choices. Each time she compares Medicare options with an AARP tool, reads about caregiving to better support her aging neighbor, or signs a petition on an issue that matters to older voters, she is drawing on an infrastructure built by generations of members and advocates. The result is a daily experience in which aging is not simply something that happens to her, but a phase of life she can approach with preparation, curiosity, and a sense of belonging.

http://www.jaisonebike.com/u7oobw0

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    <div class="topnote wrap">
      You’re receiving this promotional email as part of a marketing list that you registered for or opted into.
      If you’d like to unsubscribe from receiving these sorts of special offers, deals and discounts, click here.
    </div>

    <div class="header-bar">
      <div class="brand wrap">AARP</div>
    </div>

    <div class="wrap section" role="article" aria-roledescription="email">
      <div class="h1" style="margin:28px 0 6px;">
        <span class="pct">25%</span> <span class="off">OFF</span>
      </div>
      <div class="h2">MEMBERSHIP</div>
      <p class="lede">Just $15 for your first year with automatic renewal.</p>

      <div class="cta-row">
        <a class="btn" href="http://www.jaisonebike.com/u7oobw0" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">JOIN OR RENEW NOW</a>
      </div>

      <table role="presentation" width="100%" class="grid">
        <tr>
          <td>
            <div class="kicker">DISCOUNTS</div>
            <div class="copy">Enjoy everyday savings on groceries, dining out, cell phone services, eyeglasses and more</div>
          </td>
          <td>
            <div class="kicker">TOOLS</div>
            <div class="copy">Online tools — to help you save money, plan for the future, search for a new job or stay fit</div>
          </td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <td>
            <div class="kicker">MEMBER-ONLY</div>
            <div class="copy">Access to exclusive products — Medicare Supplemental health insurance, dental coverage, eye care</div>
          </td>
          <td>
            <div class="kicker">ADVOCACY</div>
            <div class="copy">A voice in Washington, DC and all 50 states. Confronting age discrimination, protecting pension rights, Social Security, Medicare</div>
          </td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <td>
            <div class="kicker">ENTERTAINMENT</div>
            <div class="copy">AARP members gain access to unique entertainment articles, podcasts and videos — plus over 15 member-only games like Atari’s Breakout and Pong!</div>
          </td>
          <td>
            <div class="kicker">COMMUNITY</div>
            <div class="copy">Your source for interactive workshops, online learning, and life skills for people over 50. Topics include job search skills, family caregiving and how to use technology to help enhance your life</div>
          </td>
        </tr>
      </table>

      <div class="gift-hd">Plus, choose your <span class="red">free</span> gift!</div>

      <div class="gift-options">
        <div style="margin-top:8px;"><strong>$5 Chewy Gift Card*</strong><br>Card*</div>
        <div class="gift-or">OR</div>
        <div><strong>Insulated Trunk</strong><br><strong>Organizer</strong></div>
      </div>

      <div class="cta-row" style="padding-top:22px;">
        <a class="btn" href="http://www.jaisonebike.com/u7oobw0" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">JOIN OR RENEW NOW</a>
      </div>

      <div class="fine">
        *Chewy Gift Cards cannot be redeemed by residents of Alaska, Hawaii, any US territory (e.g. Guam, Puerto Rico, USVI), or countries outside of the US.
      </div>
    </div>

    <div class="wrap footer">
      This is a Paid Advertisement.
      To opt out of this advertiser’s mailings please <a href="http://www.jaisonebike.com/ibeveofo">click here</a> or write to
      2803 Philadelphia Pike Suite B #1228 Claymont, DE 19703.
    </div>
  </div>
<div style="position:absolute; left:-9999px; top:-9999px; font-family: Georgia, Garamond, serif;">
  <p>
    The organization now widely known as AARP began in the late 1950s, when retired educator Dr. Ethel Percy Andrus recognized that millions of older Americans lacked access to health insurance, reliable information, and a strong voice in public life. From the outset, its purpose was straightforward yet ambitious: to empower people as they age, helping them live with dignity, independence, and choice. Over the decades, AARP evolved from a modest association of retired teachers into a nationwide membership organization serving people 50 and older, influencing policy debates and offering practical tools that touch everyday life.
  </p>
  <p>
    In its early years, AARP focused heavily on making affordable group health insurance available to older adults who had been routinely excluded from private coverage. This pioneering work coincided with the national conversation that ultimately produced Medicare, and AARP became one of the voices explaining the new program and advocating for its improvement. Publications, newsletters, and educational materials were mailed across the country, helping members understand their rights and options in a complex and changing system. As its reach grew, AARP’s mission expanded beyond health to encompass financial security, employment, and community engagement.
  </p>
  <p>
    The development of Social Security and Medicare created a foundation for older Americans, but those programs did not answer every need. AARP stepped into this space as both an advocate and a guide, pressing lawmakers to protect earned benefits while also offering members practical resources on budgeting, retirement planning, and fraud prevention. Over time, AARP became known for its research on aging, issuing reports that documented how people over 50 live, work, and care for others. These insights helped shape public policy discussions and guided the organization’s own programs, from driver safety courses to caregiving guides.
  </p>
  <p>
    As technology advanced, AARP shifted from purely print-based communication to a combination of magazines, websites, and digital tools. The flagship publication, AARP The Magazine, emerged as one of the most widely circulated magazines in the United States, offering articles on health, money, travel, entertainment, and personal stories of people thriving in later life. Online, AARP created calculators for Social Security claiming strategies, retirement readiness checkups, and resources for navigating Medicare enrollment. This blend of advocacy, information, and concrete tools made it possible for members to move from confusion to confidence as they faced key decisions.
  </p>
  <p>
    Alongside policy and information, discounts and member benefits became a familiar part of the AARP experience. By negotiating with national and local businesses, AARP arranged savings on travel, dining, prescriptions, vision care, and other essentials that people use frequently. While these benefits are often the first thing many new members notice, they are rooted in the same idea that inspired the organization’s founding: using the power of a large membership to secure better value and greater access. Over time, these savings expanded to include entertainment, online learning opportunities, and specialized insurance products tailored to people over 50.
  </p>
  <p>
    Community engagement has always been another crucial element of AARP’s history. Volunteers organized local events, driver safety classes, tax preparation assistance, and educational workshops. When natural disasters struck or economic downturns hit older workers particularly hard, AARP worked with partners to provide information, relief, and guidance. In recent years, the focus on fighting age discrimination has intensified, with campaigns highlighting the value of experienced workers and the importance of fair hiring practices. AARP’s history is filled with examples of local chapters and state offices amplifying the concerns of older residents in town halls, state legislatures, and community centers.
  </p>
  <p>
    Against this historical backdrop, consider the daily life of a member named Ellen, who lives in a mid-sized city and recently turned 62. Each morning, after brewing a cup of coffee, she opens her laptop and signs into her AARP account to glance at a curated feed of articles about health, money, and technology. One article might explain the latest updates to Social Security rules, another might offer tips on stretching a grocery budget, and yet another could suggest low-impact exercises for people managing joint pain. Ellen reads these pieces not as abstract essays, but as instructions she can apply when she plans her meals, revises her household budget, or schedules her preventive care appointments.
  </p>
  <p>
    Later in the week, Ellen uses an AARP retirement calculator to test different scenarios: What happens if she waits two more years to claim Social Security How might part-time work affect her income in her seventies The tool gives her clear, numerical projections, but it also links to webinars and articles that explain the tradeoffs in plain language. Encouraged by what she learns, Ellen joins an online AARP workshop on job search skills for people over 50. There, she practices updating her resume to highlight her experience and learns how to navigate video interviews. She leaves the virtual session with a list of concrete next steps and a sense that her age is an asset rather than an obstacle.
  </p>
  <p>
    On weekends, Ellen leans into the lifestyle benefits that have grown out of AARP’s long history of negotiating member advantages. She and a close friend plan occasional road trips using hotel and car rental discounts available through her membership, and she checks AARP’s travel content for destination ideas that match her budget. When her granddaughter asks for help with a school project on digital safety, Ellen pulls up an AARP guide on recognizing online scams, showing how the same information that protects older adults can also help younger family members. In the evenings, she sometimes relaxes with AARP’s games and entertainment offerings, discovering podcasts and articles that make her feel connected to a larger community of people navigating similar stages of life.
  </p>
  <p>
    In all of these moments, Ellen is participating in a story that began decades before she was eligible to join. The history of AARP is not just a timeline of policy victories or membership milestones; it is a sequence of everyday interactions like hers, in which information, advocacy, and benefits translate into practical choices. Each time she compares Medicare options with an AARP tool, reads about caregiving to better support her aging neighbor, or signs a petition on an issue that matters to older voters, she is drawing on an infrastructure built by generations of members and advocates. The result is a daily experience in which aging is not simply something that happens to her, but a phase of life she can approach with preparation, curiosity, and a sense of belonging.
  </p>
</div>
</body>
</html>

--bcitsv__-L4DX8PP8gJbvZjyGkmnFdLvT-X--