Category: Community

  • Newswire : Why Trump’s decision to  downgrade degrees in Nursing and other Professions is a direct threat to Black students’ dreams

    By Mahalia Otshudy, The Root

    The Trump administration is making it significantly harder for graduate students across the country to fund their education and is jeopardizing their future careers by classifying some degrees as “non-professional.” Here is what you need to know about these changes.
    Education Secretary Linda McHanon, former CEO of the WWE, is implementing caps on student loans for degrees now deemed “non-professional,” as part of President Donald Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill Act,” according to The Independent.
    Trump’s “Big, Beautiful Bill Act” aims to cut federal spending, including on food benefits and Medicaid, while increasing spending on border and defense initiatives, the BBC reports.
    These cuts include reductions to education funds, which will disproportionately affect Black graduate students. The Education Data Initiative notes that 66% of Black graduate students rely on student loans, compared with 47.4% of white graduate students.
    Denying graduate nursing programs “professional degree” status would exacerbate financial hurdles and systemic barriers for Black nurses, hindering their career advancement and worsening their underrepresentation in leadership, faculty, and the overall nursing profession.
    “Professional degree” students, such as law, medicine, dentistry, pharmacy and chiropractic students, can borrow up to $50,000 per year and $200,000 over the course of their degree. Students who are not on a “professional degree” course, like physician assistants, physical therapists and nurses, can only borrow $20,500 per year and $100,000 overall, according to USA Today.
    Online, this decision to redefine what is or isn’t a “professional degree” has sparked outrage with folks who cannot believe nursing is not considered a professional degree, especially during a time when there is a national nursing shortage.
    Former occupational therapist and Congressman Tim Kennedy, representing New York’s 26th congressional district, posted a video on X stating that the funding cuts are an attack on the American healthcare system and will hurt communities nationwide.
    “We should be opening doors, not closing them, and making it more difficult for people to help others and become healthcare practitioners,” Kennedy ended his video.
    The American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN) wrote they are “deeply concerned by the Department of Education’s decision to move forward with a proposed definition of professional degree programs that excludes nursing and significantly limits student loan access… Should this proposal be finalized, the impact on our already-challenged nursing workforce would be devastating.”
    That’s not even taking to account that nursing is a woman-dominated field, with 88 percent of registered nurses being women. Black (male and female) nurses account for the second-largest racial group of registered nurses, with 11.8 percent, a percentage that is growing, according to the healthcare site Magnet ABA therapy.
    The redefinition of “professional degrees” has only further convinced Black folks online that the Trump administration is trying to attack Black people, women especially, and they have posted their thoughts on X.
    “Advanced nursing degrees not being considered a ‘Professional degree’ is a direct shot towards minorities and women and men of color,” wrote one user.
    “Because of the dismantle of The Department of Education NURSING degrees are no longer considered professional degrees….This administration is going to show y’all better than they can tell y’all about how much they hate women and POC,” wrote another.
    Other users posted that this decision has made them want to leave the country, “Removing graduate nursing programs from the professional degree list is really so strange I have to get tf out this country.”

     

     

  • Newswire : Imam Jamil Al-Amin (H. Rap Brown) dies in Federal prison at 82; questions remain about his conviction

     H. Rap Brown, as a young Black leader; Imam Jamil Al Amin

    By Stacy M. Brown
Black Press USA Senior National Correspondent

    H. Rap Brown did not wait for permission to define himself. Long before federal agents called him a menace and politicians wrote laws in his name, he was a young man from Baton Rouge who believed the country needed an honest confrontation with its own history. Long before he died at 82 in a federal medical facility in North Carolina, he had already become Imam Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin, a name he adopted after turning to Islam inside Attica.
    “Violence is necessary. Violence is a part of America’s culture. It is as American as cherry pie,” he said during the height of the Black Power movement.
    Brown grew up fighting his way to and from school. He was sent to a Catholic orphanage for discipline and learned early that resistance required both strength and wit. He earned the nickname “Rap” for his unmatched wordplay on the streets of Baton Rouge. His political direction began with his older brother, Ed Brown, who introduced him to the Nonviolent Action Group at Howard University, where Brown met future movement leaders like Courtland Cox, Muriel Tillinghast, and Stokely Carmichael. Carmichael later described him as a serious and strong brother whose calm presence inspired confidence.
    By 1967 Brown became chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee at just 23 and immediately pushed the group to remove the word “nonviolent” from its name. His speeches captured the rage of Black communities across America. He reminded audiences that Black people had waited a century after emancipation for promises that never came. “Black folk built America, and if it don’t come around, we’re gonna burn America down,” he told crowds from college campuses to street corners.
    Federal authorities responded with surveillance and suppression. FBI COINTELPRO documents placed him on a list of four men considered top targets to disrupt. Congress passed the federal anti-riot statute in 1968 and openly called it the “H. Rap Brown Law.” When asked for comment, Brown rejected the idea that a statute could contain widespread fury. “We don’t control anybody,” he said. “The Black people are rebelling.”
    His arrest record grew as law enforcement pursued him across states. In 1971 he was wounded in a police shootout in New York, denied the charges, and was convicted of robbery and assault. He served five years in Attica. That time behind bars reshaped him. The foreword to “Die Nigger Die” describes his spiritual shift as a change rooted in self-discipline and study, noting that he embraced Islam and emerged committed to building a moral path forward.
    After his release, now known as Imam Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin, he settled in Atlanta’s West End. He founded a mosque, ran a small store, organized youth programs, and worked to rid the neighborhood of drugs. He preached self-control and responsibility. He explained that the Muslim’s duty began with teaching oneself and then guiding one’s family, adding that successful struggle required remembrance of the Creator along with the doing of good deeds.
    For many in Atlanta, he became a trusted spiritual leader. A local Islamic civic leader called him a pillar of the Muslim community. To law enforcement, he remained the militant figure they had pursued in the 1960s. FBI agents infiltrated his religious circle. The New York Times reported that some investigations began shortly after the first World Trade Center bombing in 1993.
    In 2000 two Fulton County deputies were shot while serving a warrant. One died. The surviving deputy identified Imam Al-Amin. He denied involvement. Federal inmate Otis Jackson later confessed repeatedly and under oath to being the shooter. The Fulton County District Attorney’s Conviction Integrity Unit interviewed Jackson but never moved to vacate the conviction.
    After Imam Al-Amin’s death in federal custody, CAIR and its Georgia chapter renewed their call for justice. CAIR National Executive Director Nihad Awad issued a statement that read, “To God we belong and to Him we return. Imam Jamil Al-Amin was a hero of the civil rights movement and a victim of injustice who passed away in a prison, jailed for a crime he did not commit.” Awad added that the justice system should reopen the case and clear his name.
    Brown’s life spanned eras of open segregation, mass rebellion, state repression, spiritual transformation, and community leadership. He understood that freedom movements required structure and purpose. In one of his clearest reflections on struggle, he said liberation movements had to rest on political principles that gave meaning and substance to the lives of the masses. “And it is this struggle,” he said, “that advances the creation of a people’s ideology.”
     

  • Newswire : A Black Friday of resistance as Americans push back

    Young Black women shopping in mall

    By Stacy M. Brown
Black Press USA Senior National Correspondent

    Black Friday arrives this year in a country wrestling with the weight of policies that have stripped stability from millions of Americans and placed Black communities at the edge of economic ruin.
    Storefront lights shine as if the nation were whole, yet in living rooms across the country, families count the losses of a political agenda that has torn apart the federal workforce and shattered the financial security of those who once depended on it. Hundreds of thousands of Black federal workers have been removed from their positions since Trump returned to office, and the effect on neighborhoods, schools, and generational wealth has been immediate.
    The crisis facing Black women is even deeper. The National Partnership for Women and Families reports that 265,000 Black women have been pushed out of the labor market since January, and the unemployment rate for Black women has climbed to 7.5 percent, which is the highest in years.  “These numbers are damning and confirm what we’ve long known to be true,” said Democratic Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley.  “Under Donald J. Trump, Black women continue to face a crisis of disproportionately high unemployment. Their systematic pushout not only has dangerous consequences for Black women, Black families, and Black futures. It is also a glaring red flag for the entire U.S. economy.”

    This is the country entering Black Friday. It is why the Mass Blackout movement and the We Ain’t Buying It coalition have stepped forward to reclaim the weekend that once symbolized celebration. Their message calls for shoppers to keep their money, their labor, and their attention away from the companies they believe profit from silence while Black households are battered by economic loss. “No spending. No work. No surrender,” the Mass Blackout coalition announced in its call to action, which accuses the nation’s corporate power structure of thriving while ordinary people struggle to survive.

    The second coalition focuses its attention on retailers like Amazon, Target and Home Depot. Activists accuse these companies of cooperating with or benefiting from Trump’s political agenda. LaTosha Brown, cofounder of Black Voters Matter and a member of the We Ain’t Buying It coalition, delivered her remarks in the coalition’s public statement. “We ain’t buying this foolishness. We’re not buying this racism. We’re not buying the abandonment of DEI. We’re not buying that the wealthiest country in the world cannot take care of its own citizens,” she stated. “If they want to call it Black Friday, let’s show them what a Black Friday really looks like.”

    Home Depot issued its response after activists accused the retailer of working with immigration authorities during enforcement actions. The company stated that it is not notified before such actions occur and that it is not involved in them. Organizers remain unconvinced and continue to include the retailer in holiday boycott plans.
    Amazon has faced scrutiny for working conditions and for the $1 million it contributed to Trump’s inauguration, which boycott leaders cite as evidence of political alignment. The coalition argues that Amazon has benefited from federal policy while workers across the country face tightening hours and declining wages, and its owner, Jeff Bezos, has fully capitulated to Trump.
    Behind all these confrontations sits a larger truth. Black Americans are living through an economic emergency that has been shaped by federal policy decisions targeting the jobs, protections, and historical pathways that built the Black middle class. Analysts at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities report that Trump’s agenda has attacked food assistance, health care, and family income supports at the very moment when unemployment among Black women is rising, and Black communities are losing stable federal careers that once offered a route out of poverty.

    Organizers say this Black Friday is not about discounts. It is a line drawn by people who are tired of being told to spend in a country that is stripping away their ability to live. It is a refusal to pretend that holiday lights can hide the harm done to families who have been pushed to the margins of the economy.
    The final word from organizers cut through the noise of the season. “We’re not buying from companies that won’t stand with us,” LaTosha Brown stated. “Our dollars will go elsewhere.”

  • Newswire : Trump’s death threat against six Congress members, for video that explains service-peoples’ right to disobey “illegal orders”, sends Nation into crisis

    By Stacy M. Brown
Black Press USA Senior National Correspondent

    President Donald Trump has again shocked the conscience of the nation with his latest outburst. This time, the president accused six Democratic lawmakers of sedition and declared their conduct “punishable by DEATH” as he reposted calls on social media to “hang them” and demanded their arrest.
    The president’s words landed with a violent weight, particularly as he continues to publicly support and pardon individuals convicted of attacking the United States Capitol on January 6, 2021. Trump himself has long faced allegations of encouraging sedition by praising the rioters who erected gallows and hunted his own vice president.
    The president escalated his attacks after the lawmakers, all veterans or former intelligence officers, released a video urging members of the military to refuse unlawful orders. Trump responded with a barrage of posts accusing them of treason and sedition and sharing messages declaring “HANG THEM GEORGE WASHINGTON WOULD.” In one post, Trump wrote that their behavior was “punishable by DEATH,” calling their message “really bad, and Dangerous to our Country.”
    The six Democratic lawmakers at the center of Trump’s attacks include Sens. Elissa Slotkin and Mark Kelly, and Reps. Jason Crow, Chrissy Houlahan, Maggie Goodlander, and Chris Deluzio. In a joint statement, they reaffirmed their oath to the Constitution. “No threat, intimidation, or call for violence will deter us from that sacred obligation,” they stated. “This isn’t about politics. This is about who we are as Americans.”

    House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries, Democratic Whip Katherine Clark, and Democratic Caucus Chair Pete Aguilar released a statement that said political violence must never be normalized. “Political violence has no place in America,” they stated. “Donald Trump must immediately delete these unhinged social media posts and recant his violent rhetoric before he gets someone killed.”
    Members of Congress across the country denounced Trump’s language. Representative Norma Torres said the president’s words represented a direct threat to democracy. “The President of the United States is calling for Members of Congress to be executed,” Torres stated. “We will not be intimidated. We will not be silenced.”
    Trump’s accusations arrive as concerns grow about his willingness to issue illegal orders and expand the use of military force both abroad and domestically. A CNN analysis noted that Democrats are responding to a pattern in which Trump has repeatedly floated illegal military actions. The analysis cited his past suggestions involving torture, shooting protesters in the legs, and ordering strikes that violated international law.
    Lawmakers who served in uniform said the president’s charges distort the law. Maine Senator Angus King said the Democratic lawmakers simply reminded service members of a basic principle. “All these people said was common knowledge,” King stated. “Military officers are not required to follow illegal orders. That is simply a statement of fact.”
    The reaction among members of Congress has been swift, wide, and unusually unified. Even Republican Senator Susan Collins condemned Trump’s words. “The president should not be calling for the death of members of Congress because of what they say,” Collins stated. “Such incendiary comments risk sparking political violence.”
    Texas Democrat Al Green, who has repeatedly sought Trump’s impeachment, said allowing this rhetoric to stand threatens constitutional order. “On our watch, we refuse to allow the demise of our democracy,” Green said on the House floor as he renewed his call for impeachment proceedings.
    As the warnings mount, the six lawmakers targeted by the president said they will not retreat from their oath. “In these moments, fear is contagious, but so is courage,” they stated. “We will continue to lead and will not be intimidated. Don’t Give Up the Ship.”

  • Eutaw City Council meets on Nov. 12 handles routine business

    The Mayor and the Eutaw City Council met for their first regular meeting since being installed and holding their organizational meeting, to consider regular business of the city. All Council members were present except for Carrie Logan, who was attending a training session for new council members.
    The Council heard from Jimmie Moore of Meridian Waste Company, which has the contract for garbage collection and disposal in Eutaw and some surrounding jurisdictions. Moore explained the cost per customer has increased by a small account. The Eutaw City Council approved the contract with Meridian Waste and will absorb the increase within the current monthly charge for residents and businesses in the city.
    The Council approved the creation of a new position of Administrative Assistant to the Mayor and City Council of Eutaw, which is Ordinance 2025-6. This Ordinance also names Joe Powell to the position of Administrative Assistant. His duties and responsibilities will be to assist the City Clerk in her administrative duties; also, to assist the Mayor and Council in preparing meeting agendas, notices, and correspondence; assist with public record and resident inquiries; and otherwise assist the Mayor and Council in other tasks as assigned. His rate of pay will be $16 per hour and benefits.
    The Council approved the salary of Kendrick Howell as Chief of Police at $60,000 annually, which is $5,000 less that the previous Chief Tommy Johnson was being paid. The Council also agreed to a $3.00 an hour increase for SheKelvia Spencer, City Clerk.
    An approval of the 2025-26 Annual Budget was tabled, to give the new Mayor and his staff a chance to review and perhaps change some of the staffing, expenses and revenues projected for the year that started on October 1, 2025, and running through September 30, 2026. A Council Work Session on the budget was scheduled for November 18, 2025. A request to purchase a new 2026 Chevrolet Tahoe vehicle was also tabled pending the budget review.
    In other business, the Eutaw City Council:
    • Approved a request from Mayor Cockrell to enter an agreement with Diversified Computer Software to purchase trackers for all city vehicles and equipment.
    • Approved travel, registration and per diem for staff to attend training.
    • Approved for Mayor Cockrell to hold a Thanksgiving Dinner for staff and residents.
    • Approved reimbursements to staff for necessary small purchases to continue operations.
    • Approved Resolution No. 2025-27 for “Use of Social Media” by staff to carry out work requirements.
    • Approved rental of city property at $150 a day for K & S Southern Midways to hold a fair in the city at the park adjoining the Robert H. Young Community Center in Eutaw on November 14-17, 2025.
    • Approved payment of bills for the city.
    At the end of the meeting, Mayor Corey Cockrell said he had received a report from the Water Department Clerk that over $300,000 in late and unpaid water accounts were in the records. The Mayor said, “All residents and businesses in the city must get their water bills in order and paid, including city staff and council members. We should not have to carry so many late and overdue accounts, if we want to improve our city – streets, water and other infrastructure.”

  • Greene Co. Commission approves joining lawsuit on Simplified Seller Use Tax (SSUT) litigation

    In a special called meeting on November 20, 2025, the Greene County Commission voted 5-0 to intervene in a lawsuit filed by the City of Tuscaloosa, the Tuscaloosa City Schools, and the City of Mountain Brook against the Alabama Department of Revenue, concerning revenues from the Simplified Seller Use Tax (SSUT).
    County Attorney Mark Parnell recommended to the Commission that they join this lawsuit in conjunction with the Alabama Association of County Commissioners. This will make sure Greene County gets a fair share of the flat 8% simplified seller use tax (SSUT) currently being levied on out of state shippers into Alabama.
    The lawsuit seeks to deal with loopholes in the law that provide some delivery services, based out of state, like Door-Dash and Instacart, to receive special savings not available to local retailers. The lawsuit would more equitably distribute the proceeds of this seller use tax to rural counties and city jurisdictions as the revenues from Internet purchasers grows.
    The Montgomery Circuit Judge hearing the case set December 10, 2025, as the deadline for other interested parties to join this litigation. This deadline is very close to the Greene County Commission’s next regular meeting date, which necessitated a special called meeting to allow Greene County to join the case.
    The Commission also accepted the resignation of the current Greenthumb Development Board member from District 4 and appointed Para Davis to this position at the recommendation of Commissioner Allen Turner Jr. The Greenthumb board is considering ways to help finance a medical marijuana operation in the Knoxville community of Greene County.
    The Commission also voted to spend up to $1,500 on shirts and other apparel for Commission members and staff which would help identify them as members of a team serving the county.
    In lieu of an Executive Session, Attorney Parnell reported that he was continuing negotiations and communications with Mr. Gomez, concerning his non-compliance with a lease on the former Greenetrack building, owned by the County. Gomez has not fulfilled his commitments under the lease and is now out of compliance and in danger of losing the lease.

  • Newswire :Rep. Shomari Figures files bill to name post office in honor of Tuskegee Airmen

    By Wesley Walter, Alabama Political Reporters

     

    U.S. Representative Shomari Figures, D-Ala., introduced bipartisan legislation today to recognize the Tuskegee Airmen in honor of Veterans Day.
    The bill introduced by Figures would designate the U.S. Postal Service facility at 401 North Elm Street in Tuskegee as the “Tuskegee Airmen Memorial Post Office.”
    “Today, on my first Veterans Day in Congress, I want to wish a happy Veterans Day to all the men and women who have ever put on the uniform in defense and protection of the United States of America,” Figures said in a written statement.
    “You are the reason we enjoy the rights, privileges, and freedoms that we do in this country. On today and every day, I want to thank you for the commitment and courage you have shown throughout your careers to make this a better nation,” the representative continued. “I also want to thank your families, because I know when servicemembers serve, their families do too.”
    The legislation has received endorsements from each of Alabama’s seven representatives in the U.S. House of Representatives, as well as the Tuskegee Airmen Incorporated.
    Figures expressed hope that the bill would bring attention to the legacy and impact of the first group of African American pilots and support crews to serve in the U.S. Army Air Corps during World War II, who trained at Tuskegee Army Airfield.
    “Every person who enters the Tuskegee Airmen Memorial Post Office will be reminded of their courage, sacrifice, and service to our country,” Figures’ office wrote.2

     

  • Newswires : Rep. Sewell secures $3.2M for four local projects in Alabama’s Black Belt

    By Alabama Political Reporters staff

    U.S. Representative Terri Sewell, D-Alabama, announced Monday that she secured $3,265,000 for four local projects in Alabama’s Black Belt as a part of the annual appropriations process.
    “Each year, my office works to secure funding for local projects that will make a tangible difference in the lives of our constituents,” Sewell said. “I am thrilled that this year, we are delivering at least $3.2 million worth of investments in the Black Belt. These four projects will expand access to health care, support our first responders, increase public safety, and improve our infrastructure. I will continue advocating for additional projects in our district as Congress finalizes the remaining nine spending bills for FY26.”

    The four local projects include:

    Perry County

    $500,000 to renovate the Marion National Guard Armory, transforming an abandoned building into a multi-purpose community center. The renovated facility will serve as a hub for workforce development training, a temporary shelter for families during emergencies, and a community hub for the deployment and distribution of essential supplies.

    $1,015,000 for Rural Health Medical Program, Inc., RHMPI, to renovate the Uniontown Health Center in Uniontown, Alabama. The proposed project will transform the existing facility into a modern, fully equipped medical center. The renovation will address critical gaps in medical infrastructure by upgrading clinical equipment, labs, X-ray capabilities, and IT systems, and by enhancing the roads and parking facilities around the center

    Pickens County

    $1,000,000 to construct a new joint police and volunteer fire station in Aliceville, helping first responders better serve the residents of Pickens County and West Alabama.

    Sumter County

    $750,000 for the Sumter County Commission for a new community center where residents of all ages can gather, connect and engage in activities that promote community empowerment and resilience. The community center will offer educational programs, workshops and skill-building sessions to enhance the knowledge and capabilities of community members, particularly youth and adults.

  • Newswire: Ag Sec: Every SNAP recipient is going to have to reapply

    Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins speaks alongside Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, R-La., at a news conference to talk about SNAP benefits on day 31 of the government shutdown, at the Capitol in Washington, Friday, Oct. 31, 2025.   (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

    Move aims to remove alleged 186K dead people who are receiving aid

    By Polly Davis Doing, Newser AI

    The Trump administration is planning to require all recipients of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program to reapply for benefits, citing concerns about widespread fraud, reports the Hill.

    Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins announced the move on Newsmax, saying the administration discovered that 186,000 deceased people were still receiving benefits, based on data from 29 Republican-led states. “Can you imagine when we get our hands on the blue state data what we’re going to find?” Rollins said. “It’s going to give us … a trajectory to fundamentally rebuild this program, have everyone reapply for their benefit, make sure that everyone that’s taking a taxpayer-funded benefit through SNAP or food stamps, that they literally are vulnerable, and they can’t survive without it.”

    Rollins described the program as “corrupt” and claimed that “for years, no one has really ever dug into” the issue, but that the Trump administration now has the tools to do so. She also said that 120 people have been arrested for SNAP fraud so far. There is already a recertification process in place in every state that requires SNAP recipients to update their information, typically every six to 12 months.

    Federal officials did not clarify how the new testing would sync with that, notes Politico. A USDA spokesperson said the administration is simply using standard recertification processes to crack down on “fraud, waste, and incessant abuse” of the program. More than 41 million Americans rely on SNAP benefits, according to the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities.

    The Food Research & Action Center (FRAC) has not issued a specific, direct public comment solely on the recent USDA claims that deceased individuals are receiving SNAP benefits. Instead, FRAC’s recent public statements focus on broader issues of program integrity versus access, particularly in the context of recent government actions and proposals to overhaul the program. 

    FRAC and other advocates have raised “real questions about how they’ve arrived at these numbers,” arguing that statistics regarding fraud need more detail and context to be properly evaluated.

     

  • Newswire : Former President Obama has spoken with Rev. Jesse Jackson, who remains in a Chicago hospital

    President Obama and  Rev. Jesse Jackson

    By April Ryan, NNPA White House Correspondent

     

    Several sources have confirmed that former President Barack Obama phoned Reverend Jesse Jackson over the weekend, who is in Stable Condition at a Chicago Hospital. President Obama is said to have been coordinating with the family for several days before the 44th president reached the civil rights icon.
    There have been family connections spanning decades between the Jackson family and the Obamas. In 2008, Jesse Jackson Jr. served as the national co-chair of the Obama Presidential campaign.
    On Sunday, Reverend Jesse Jackson Sr. also received a FaceTime call from Rev. Amos Brown, another Civil Rights pioneer who worked with Jackson. In the 1950s and 1960s, they marched and labored alongside Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in the fight for first-class citizenship for African Americans. In the 1970s, the two lieutenants of Dr. King separated and served in different parts of the country.
    Brown told this reporter that Jackson recognized him during the FaceTime communication “by his expression and countenance.” The San Francisco Pastor of former Vice President Kamala Harris also says the elder Jackson did not speak, but Brown “encouraged him to fight on as we had fought in the struggle as friends and freedom fighters.”
    In a matter of days, politicians, former staffers, and others have also gone to Jackson’s bedside to encourage him during his illness. Some of those include Reverend Al Sharpton.
    In a recent written statement, the Jackson family said that Reverend Jackson was diagnosed with Parkinson’s syndrome in 2013. In April, the diagnosis changed to supranuclear palsy (PSP), a neurological disorder.
    The family that is constantly by Reverend Jackson’s side in the hospital says, “We believe in the power of prayer, and we are grateful for the overwhelming outreach and prayers of the faithful.
    Our father is alert and continues to share his vision for churches and pastors to come together and reduce malnutrition during this period. He is enlisting 2,000 churches and pastors to distribute 2,000 baskets of food, to feed four million families this season,” said son and family spokesperson, Yusef Jackson.