Category: General News

  • 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.

  • Newswire : America’s Maternal and Infant Health crisis deepens 

    By Stacy M. Brown
Black Press USA Senior National Correspondent

     

    The March of Dimes has released its 2025 Report Card, and across the United States, the findings tell a story of mothers and infants facing preventable risks that too often lead to tragedy. The national preterm birth rate remains at 10.4 percent.

    Babies born to Medicaid-insured mothers experienced an 11.7 percent preterm birth rate, while babies born to mothers with private insurance recorded a 9.6 percent rate. For Black mothers, the rate climbed to 14.7 percent, the highest of any group in the country.

    “Behind every statistic is a mom, a baby, and a family that deserves their best chance at a healthy start,” Dr. Elizabeth Kielb, Director of Maternal and Infant Health at the March of Dimes, stated.
    Those numbers speak to families whose lives can change in an instant. Preterm birth remains one of the leading causes of infant death and long-term health complications. For many mothers, the first signs of a problem appear months before delivery, yet too often they cannot secure the early prenatal care that could help keep a pregnancy safe. The United States now has hundreds of counties with no obstetric providers or birthing facilities. Some families travel for hours for a basic checkup. Others miss appointments because clinics are full or insurance does not cover the visit.
    The Commonwealth Fund’s 2025 national analysis found that the United States continues to have the highest maternal mortality rate among wealthy nations. American women die from pregnancy-related causes at rates far beyond those of peer countries. The Fund reported that Black women face the greatest danger, in part because of delays in care, long-standing gaps in coverage, unaddressed chronic conditions, and limited access to trusted providers. These findings match the patterns documented by the March of Dimes.

    The March of Dimes identifies several reasons behind the country’s performance. Many women enter pregnancy with unmanaged hypertension, diabetes, or other chronic conditions. Large portions of the country are considered maternity care deserts, with no birthing hospitals and few clinicians trained in maternal health.
    Millions of women lose health insurance shortly after childbirth, leaving complications untreated. Black and Native mothers often report that their concerns are dismissed during prenatal and postpartum appointments, which can lead to dangerous complications that go unnoticed until they become life-threatening. These conditions place families at greater risk, no matter where they live.
    The states struggling the most sit in every region of the country. Mississippi recorded a preterm birth rate of 14.8 percent. Alabama stood at 13.6 percent. Louisiana recorded 13.2 percent. South Carolina reached 12.7 percent. Georgia reported 12.4 percent. These states received failing grades from the March of Dimes. Each has large rural regions with few maternity care providers, high rates of chronic medical conditions, and long-standing racial gaps that make pregnancy more dangerous for families of color.
    Cities face their own challenges. Memphis recorded one of the highest preterm birth rates among major metro areas. Detroit continued to see some of the largest racial gaps in infant outcomes. In Fresno and Bakersfield, mothers face long waits for prenatal care and limited access to specialists. In Washington, D.C., the preterm birth rate rose to 11.8 percent, the largest one-year increase in the country.
    Maryland and Virginia show mixed signs of progress. Maryland received a D+ with a 10.5 percent preterm birth rate. Virginia earned a C minus at 10.1 percent. Both states continue to wrestle with racial gaps and shortages in maternity care providers across rural communities and urban neighborhoods.
    The March of Dimes notes that these conditions are not distributed evenly. Families with higher incomes and stable private insurance can often secure early prenatal care, while families with low incomes or public insurance face delays that increase the risk of complications. Many women do not receive postpartum care beyond the immediate weeks after childbirth, even when ongoing monitoring is needed.
    The organization is trying to address these gaps through mobile health centers, NICU Family Support programs, and partnerships with hospitals aimed at improving maternal and infant care. On the national level, the March of Dimes is calling for investment in maternal mortality review committees, research funding through the PREEMIE Act, and nationwide adoption of extended Medicaid postpartum coverage.

    Dr. Michael Warren, Chief Medical and Health Officer at the March of Dimes, said the findings show how much is at stake. “As a clinician who has seen how much is possible when we get it right, the data is deeply frustrating,” Dr. Warren said. “We have known about risk factors for preterm birth, including a history of prior preterm birth, chronic disease, and unequal access to care for years.”

  • Greene County Health System chooses Rodgerick Williams as new CEO/Administrator

    The Greene County Health System (GCHS) Board of Directors has selected Rodgerick Williams (age 49) as the new CEO/Administrator of the hospital, nursing home, physicians’ clinic and all ancillary health care services. His starting date was November 17, 2025.
    Dr. Marcia Pugh, former GCHS CEO/Administrator had informed the board that she was retiring effective October 31, 2025, but would remain available to assist the board and orient the new Administrator, as needed after that date.
    Rodgerick Williams was born in Jackson, Mississippi but grew up in Eutaw, Greene County, Alabama, living in Branch Heights most of that time. He graduated from Eutaw High School and knows many of the people in Greene County.
    Most recently, Williams was System Director of Capital Procurement at Houston, Methodist Hospital, where he oversaw a $1 Billion annual budget and implemented strategies that achieve $1 Million in weekly cost savings. Previously, at Tenet Healthcare, he unified procurement strategies across 61 hospitals and 475 surgical centers, generating meaningful cost savings while preserving Joint Commission and CMS compliance.
    He also was, earlier in his career at Community Health Systems, leading a multi-division operation for over 200 hospitals and spearheaded cost reductions of more than $1 million dollars a week.
    He began his healthcare career as a U. S. Army Combat Medic/EMT, and he transferred to the Air Force to be a Biomedical Equipment Technician. He has a bachelor’s degree and Master’s of Science in Health Administration, from the University of Alabama, Birmingham (UAB).
    In addition to his operational and financial management expertise, Williams has a strong commitment to community health and equity. As a Professor of Strategic Management in Healthcare at UAB, he partnered with local governments to reduce healthcare disparities. He was honored with the UAB Alumni Services Award for revitalizing underserved communities.
    “Recently, I purchased 85 acres of land in Fosters to build a home and a farm near Greene County. I was attracted to this position, as CEO/Administrator of the Greene County Health System, because I can bring my vision and experience in healthcare management and finance to this opportunity in a rural setting,”  said Williams.
    He added, “I am confident in my ability to lead with integrity, innovation, and a deep commitment to patient centered care, while driving strategic growth and operational excellence.”
    John Zippert, GCHS Board Chair said, “ We are fortunate to find an experienced and dedicated leader to manage and operate our small rural hospital and nursing home into the uncertain future of healthcare in America and Alabama. We know that Rodgerick Williams came to us at a considerable sacrifice in compensation, but we wanted to offer locally grown talent a chance to lead our facility and serve our people and community.”
    Rodgerick Williams lives in Fosters, with his wife Leontyne Gulley Williams and two middle school children.

  • Newswire : A week later: a dire need in Jamaica

    Water rushing through the streets of Jamaican towns from Hurricane Melissa; Melissa ripped roofs off houses and buildings; “wooden houses in Negril, Jamaica”

    By April Ryan, NNPA

    The United Nations reports that Hurricane Melissa has scattered nearly 5 million tons of debris across Western Jamaica, hindering crews from delivering aid and restoring critical services promptly.
    According to reports, crews are still working to clear roads, attempting to reach 27 communities cut off by landslides and flooding. Many of those communities are still without power and Wi-Fi. The category five storm killed at least 32 people in Jamaica and another 43 in nearby Haiti, where 13 people remain missing. Here in the United States, the head of the Congressional Black Caucus, New York Congresswoman Yvette Clarke, is working feverishly with the State Department to ensure help is coming from the United States to the affected Caribbean nations, particularly Jamaica.
    Both of the New York Congresswoman’s parents immigrated to the United States from Jamaica. Clarke has been a strong advocate for Caribbean issues and serves as co-chair of the Congressional Caribbean Caucus. According to a State Department website, “Within hours, Secretary [Marco] Rubio deployed a regional Disaster Assistance Response Team, including urban search-and-rescue teams, to assess needs and provide search and recovery assistance.
    The State Department also indicates it “is collaborating with UN agencies, NGOs, and host governments to deliver food, water, medical supplies, hygiene kits, temporary shelter, and search and rescue support.”
    Iconic and award-winning actress, activist, and Jamaican native Sherly Lee Ralph said on The Tea with April, “It is exactly one week later, and there are some people who have not had anybody come to help them, nobody!”
    Ralph emoted,” It’s rough. We need help there now.” She is calling on all the people who have “enjoyed the beaches in Jamaica” to help by finding trusted places you know and making a donation, as the storm’s destruction has halted the normalcy of life on the island.” Ralph provided an update on some areas that hold personal significance for her. “The school that my parents helped build lost their roof.  They’re trying to figure out where we’re going to put these kids, how we’re gonna get them back into school, all of these things, and it’s like I can see where we’re going afterwards, but how do we start to get the help there now?”
    The actresses’ children have also started a donation center at their facility, Walk Good LA, to help address some of the dire needs in Jamaica. Her family used the same space for donations to help the victims of the L.A. fires earlier this year.
    Relief efforts coordinated by Jamaican government
    Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness vowed that his government would devote “all our energy” to a strong recovery. On Facebook, Holness said recently: “Yesterday, In Manchester, I met with residents whose lives were upended by Hurricane Melissa. Many have lost homes and belongings, yet their strength and faith remain unshaken. In every story shared, I saw courage, the kind that defines us as Jamaicans. We will not leave anyone behind. Recovery has already begun, and we will rebuild stronger.”
    Holness, who visited devastated areas to meet residents and assess the damage up close, declared the entire island a disaster area while noting that the destruction is particularly difficult on communities in Saint Elizabeth and elsewhere which rely significantly on farming.
    The prime minister announced that the government launched supportjamaica.gov.jm to coordinate relief which will accept for donations, allow for people to report emergencies, and help those in need locate shelters.

    Holness said Jamaica is resilient and will recover but Baker Brown said sometimes resilience comes at a cost.
    “Resilience is often celebrated as our superpower, but despite the resilience we are noted for, our souls are gone. This is beyond resilience. I must admit that this is emotional fatigue and exhaustion,” she said. “True resilience is not just about surviving adversity. It’s also about having access to resources, investment and psychological care, that will allow individuals and communities recover and thrive without having to carry the weight alone.”
    The United Nation’s World Food Program announced that it had received 2,000 boxes of emergency food assistance shipped from Barbados which will be distributed to shelters and in the most-affected communities in the St. Elizabeth area.
    And UNICEF said it is sending water, sanitation and hygiene kits for about 14,500 people and nutritional supplies for more than 4,000 children had been sent before the hurricane hit. Another $1 million was allocated to support immediate emergency response.
    The UN Population Fund has provided up to 5,000 reproductive health kits and 4,000 dignity kits alongside significant emergency relief support from the United Kingdom and Canada.  A further $4m from its Central Emergency Response Fund has also been allocated to affected people in Jamaica. Medical kits for about 11,000 people were provided by the Pan American Health Organization.

    NNPA reporting supplemented by Barrington M. Salmon, Trice Edney Newswire

  • Newswire : Dr. Benjamin Chavis celebrated as ‘Father of the Environmental Justice Movement’ – ‘Don’t cop out, cop in,’ Chavis calls for activists to use their power at the upcoming United Nations COP30 conference

    Dr. Ben Chavis, center, honored during the Mississippi Statewide Environmental Justice Climate Change Summit 2025 and  –Ben Chavis

     

    By: Siena Gleason,
     

    (TriceEdneyWire.com) – Dr. Benjamin Chavis, president/CEO of the National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA), was celebrated as the father of the environmental justice movement at the Mississippi Statewide Environmental Climate Justice Summit organized by Jesus People Against Pollution (JPAP) October 24-26, 2025, headquartered at Tougaloo College. 
    Aaron Mair, the first African American president of the Sierra Club and an early environmental justice leader from Albany, NY, celebrated Chavis for his contribution to the movement, specifically citing his 1987 study, Toxic Waste and Race in the United States of America.
    “What really gave [the environmental justice movement] force was the Toxic Waste and Race study providing a foundational, as they say, evidence-based approach which could then be replicated by frontline communities,” said Mair.
    Mair described how Chavis bravely demanded that the environmental poisoning of Black and poor communities must be looked at through the lens of civil rights, creating the movement that is now known as the environmental justice movement.
    “During the 1980s, you couldn’t make just an allegation of discrimination; you had to prove it. You had to statistically show that it existed,” said Chavis. “Nobody ever asked, was there a correlation between the proximity of toxic waste facilities, toxic emissions, and climate emissions to public health?”
    Karenna Gore of the Center for Earth Ethics at Union Theological Seminary traced back Chavis’ founding of the environmental justice movement even further.
    Gore praised Chavis for catalyzing the environmental justice movement when he organized and led a nonviolent sit-in protest in 1982 against the planned dumping of toxic polychlorinated biphenyls in Warren County, North Carolina. This sit-in is widely understood to be the launchpad for the modern-day environmental justice movement, said Gore.
    During the protest, Chavis was arrested and put into the Warren County Jail. While he was in his cell, he came up with the term “environmental racism”. It quickly became widely used by activists and later was replaced with the phrase “environmental justice” which also includes the way in which poor people of all colors are systematically poisoned by corporate and government polluters.
    Gore reminded people of the courage it took Chavis to get arrested that day given he had been a political prisoner in North Carolina just a few years before as part of a group of persecuted civil rights activists known as the Wilmington Ten.
    The Wilmington Ten were arrested in February 1972 during racial unrest over school desegregation in Wilmington, North Carolina. The group – Chavis, eight Black students, and one white female – were charged with arson and conspiracy after firebombs were set downtown and firefighters received sniper fire. All ten were convicted in October 1972 and sentenced to a combined 282 years in prison, with Chavis receiving 34 years. Amnesty International designated them as political prisoners in 1978. After key witnesses recanted their testimony in 1977, admitting police pressure and bribery, their convictions were overturned in December 1980 due to prosecutorial misconduct. In 2012, they received full Pardons of Innocence.
    However, his time in prison has never discouraged him from continuing his activism. Chavis has been arrested over 30 times and continues to fight for environmental justice.
    The summit took place at Tougaloo College in Jackson, Mississippi, and was organized by Dr. Charlotte Keys, founder of Jesus People Against Pollution. Dr. Keys is one of Mississippi’s earliest leaders in the environmental justice movement. Like Chavis, she has never stopped. She is still fighting for change in Columbia, Mississippi, and throughout the state. Her community in Colombia became a notorious cancer cluster after a Reichold chemical plant explosion.
    On Oct. 25, Chavis added meaning to a panel hosted by Gore, a discussion intended to generate recommendations for the 30th United Nations Conference of the Parties (COP30) in Brazil, focusing on the Global Ethical Stock Take initiative. He was joined on the panel by his fellow, former national president and CEO of the NAACP Ben Jealous.
    During the panel, Chavis said he believes that acknowledging the struggle against climate change is essential for uniting and creating global solutions.
    “To COP30: don’t cop out, cop in,” said Chavis. “Cop in to lay the groundwork and the reaffirmation of a global struggle to prevent climate crisis, climate injustice, and to respond to the environmental injustices that are growing all over the world.”
    Chavis also said that COP30 offers an opportunity for younger generations to get involved and continue fighting for environmental justice.
    “It’s very important for each generation to rise to the occasion,” said Chavis. “Quite frankly, the first voices that came out against climate change and the climate injustice were young people because young people realized that they may not live to be old if we don’t solve this situation.”

  • Newswire : Senate passes deal to reopen government after Shutdown

    By Sahil Kapur, Frank Thorp V, Melanie Zanona 
    and Julie Tsirkin, HBCU News

    WASHINGTON — The Senate passed legislation Monday night to reopen the government and end the record-long shutdown after eight Democrats broke with their party and joined Republicans to break the logjam.
    The vote was 60-40, with every Republican except Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky voting in favor of the measure.
    The measure now goes to the House, which could vote as early as Wednesday to pass the package and send it to President Donald Trump, who said Monday that he supports the bipartisan deal.
    Senate passage came after a long vote series to reject several amendments and package the components of a deal into one.
    The legislation includes a “minibus” of three full-year appropriations bills, including a full funding of SNAP benefits through the end of next September, and keeps much of the government open on a short-term basis through Jan. 30.
    But in a major concession for Democrats, the deal does not include an extension of expiring subsidies under Obamacare, or the Affordable Care Act, after Republicans held firm against continuing those funds. That means more than 20 million Americans could see their premiums spike next year.
    “The American people have now awoken to Trump’s health care crisis,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said Monday before voting against the legislation. “Democrats demanded that we find a way to fix this crisis and quickly, but Republicans have refused to move an inch. So, I cannot support the Republican bill that’s on the floor because it fails to do anything of substance to fix America’s health care crisis.”
    The Senate deal with Republicans was struck by Sens. Angus King, I-Maine, Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., and Maggie Hassan, D-N.H. Joining them to support the measure were Catherine Cortez Masto and Jacky Rosen of Nevada; Dick Durbin of Illinois; John Fetterman of Pennsylvania; Tim Kaine of Virginia.
    “This was the only deal on the table,” Shaheen told reporters before the vote. “It was our best chance to reopen the government and immediately begin negotiations to extend the ACA tax credits that tens of millions of Americans rely on to keep costs down.”
    Durbin said that while he shares other Democrats’ misgivings about the Trump administration, he “cannot accept a strategy that wages political battle” at the expense of paychecks for federal workers by keeping the government closed.
    Despite backing down on their main demand during the shutdown, the Democrats walked away with a promise by Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., to vote on an ACA funding bill by the end of the second week of December. But there’s no guarantee that will achieve the 60 votes necessary to pass, which is why most Democrats voted against the negotiated bill.
    King said reopening the government boosts the prospects of an ACA funding extension to “maybe 50%,” but he added, “I can’t guarantee a result. Nobody can.”
    And in a bad omen for that cause, all 53 Senate Republicans voted Monday against including a simple one-year extension of the ACA funds, proposed by Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., in the funding bill. That vote came in the run-up to final passage.
    Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., held a conference call with House Republicans on Monday morning and laid out a potential timetable for votes this week after the chamber has been out of session since Sept. 19, according to four sources on the call.
    Johnson said he’s hoping to vote as soon as Wednesday on the Senate’s deal to re-open the government. Still, even though the vote timing is fluid, members were encouraged on the call to start getting back to D.C. as soon as possible given the air travel delays.
    The speaker also vowed that, before the House votes, he will swear in Democratic Rep.-elect Adelita Grijalva, who won her special election on Sept. 23. The House has been out of session since Sept. 19 in an unusually long and unscheduled recess.
    Following her swearing-in, the House will then vote on a rule for the Senate deal, followed by final passage, and then the House will leave town again, Johnson told members on the call.
    While the House vote is expected to be tight and leadership is still in the process of doing a whip check, Johnson expressed confidence that they’d be able to pass the Senate’s government funding package, the sources said.
    House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., said House Democrats are “focused on dealing with the bill that’s coming over from the Senate to the House, and we’re going to fight hard to defeat it.”
    Asked if the shutdown was worth it, Jeffries said Democrats “waged a battle on behalf of the American people.” He added that “the fight lives on.”
    Jeffries deferred to House Minority Whip Katherine Clark, D-Mass., when asked if all Democrats will vote against the bill.

  • School Board receives report on Superintendent Search Community Input Process

    The Greene County Board of Education held a called session, Monday, November 10, 2025 to receive a report on the Community Input Process of the Superintendent Search for Greene County School System conducted by the Alabama Association of School Boards (AASB). Ms. Susan Salter, AASB Consultant, coordinated local stakeholder engagements in October and November with 33 attendees as well as a stakeholder survey with 76 respondents. Salter noted that although there was a small number of parent and community participants, the responses were similar. “There was a consistency in views,” she said.
    Regarding superintendent traits desired, the community input listed the following: strong communication skills, good listener, relationship builder, approachable, committed to accountability and transparency, creates a good work environment, leadership ability – has strength to make difficult decisions but can be flexible, and have strong visibility in community.
    In responding to challenges the new superintendent will face, the participants listed declines in enrollment; issues at the middle school; special education services; parent involvement. Other challenges include student achievement (academic and behavior), teacher recruitment, morale and retention and improving communications with parents and the public.
    When asked if the superintendent should be hired from among existing employees, from outside the school system, or no preference, approximately 44% indicated no preference; 32% said from within the system; 25 % said from outside the system.
    Ms. Salter stated that next steps include accepting applications through December 10, 2025. All applications must go through AASB. In this process the board does not accept superintendent applications.The link to apply is on the board’s website and can be widely distributed. AASB will screen and vet all applicants (checking credentials and references) and select five finalists. Salter and the board will compile a list of questions for the finalists. She suggested creating about 10 questions for an hour interview with each finalist.
    On December 15, Susan Salter will give the board the final list of the top five candidates screened and recommended by AASB. The board will schedule the interviews beginning December 17. The interviews of the top five applicants for superintendent will be open to the public.

  • Gov. Kay Ivey appoints Latasha Johnson to fill District 3, County Commission seat

    L-R: Ms. Latasha Johnson, her mother Mrs. Annie Johnson, District Judge Lillie Jones Osborne.


    Former Eutaw City Mayor, Latasha Johnson was sworn-in as Greene County Commissioner, District 3, on Monday, November 10, 2025 at the William M. Branch Courthouse. Greene County District Judge Lillie Jones Osborne officiated at the installation. Ms. Latasha Johnson was assisted by her mother Mrs. Annie Johnson.

    In her remarks Commissioner Johnson extended her appreciation to the crowded courtroom witnessing her special occasion. “ The Lord has given each of us special gifts and I know that mine is a servant’s heart, and I am dedicated to serve. I was born and raised in Greene County; I love this community and I am committed to serve the people with or without a title. I am grateful for the trust and confidence you have placed in me at this time. I asked that we work together in love to continue to build our community.”

    Commissioner Johnson was appointed by Governor Kay Ivey to complete the term vacated by former Commissioner Corey Cockrell, recently installed as Eutaw City Mayor. All Greene County Commission seats, and other county offices, will be up for election in 2026.

  • Newswire : Congressman Meeks chastises President Trump for possible invasion of Nigeria

    Congressman Gregory Meeks (D – NY)

    By April Ryan, NNPA

    “A complex reality” is being overlooked by President Donald Trump, with his Friday proposal to send the U.S. military into Nigeria over alleged anti-Christian behaviors, believes Congressman Greg Meeks, Ranking Member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
    The president said last week in a post to social media that if Nigeria does not halt the persecution of Christians, he may send U.S. troops “guns-a-blazing” to “completely wipe out the Islamic Terrorists who are committing these horrible atrocities.”
    Trump has directed the Department of War “to prepare for possible action,” he wrote (https://truthsocial.com/@realDonaldTrump/posts/115476385101120405). “If we attack, it will be fast, vicious, and sweet, just like the terrorist thugs attack our CHERISHED Christians!” Congressman Meeks responded in a written statement with, “I know President Tinubu recognizes the importance of interfaith harmony and is working to address this challenge.”
    While chastising the president’s plans, Meeks said, “Providing security support is one thing; Trump’s threatening military intervention to ‘defend Christians’ is a reckless distortion of the facts. And Trump’s aid cuts have blocked much-needed emergency nutrition and livelihoods programs—the very tools essential to preventing the spread of insurgency.”
    “The Trump Administration’s designation of Nigeria as a Country of Particular Concern ignores the complex reality of violence there. Clashes between Christian farmers and Muslim herders are driven by resource scarcity and competition for land, not religion alone,” adds the New York federal lawmaker who went on to say, ” Terrorist groups have devastated communities, especially in the predominantly Muslim north, and all Nigerians deserve protection.” According to a 2019 Pew Research study, Nigeria ranked fifth among the world’s Christian populations and third among the world’s largest Muslim populations.
    Meeks also makes the distinction that Nigeria’s President Tinubu is Muslim while his wife is Christian. The last time President Trump met with a Nigerian president was in April 2018, when he hosted then-President Muhammadu Buhari of Nigeria at the White House. The bilateral meeting focused on enhancing partnerships between the two countries, promoting economic growth, and fighting terrorism, including Boko Haram and ISIS in West Africa.
    There is no chance of ironing out this issue at the end of the month at the G-20 Summit in South Africa, as President Trump has declined to attend the world leaders’ event on the African continent. Although not a formal member of the G20, Nigerian officials plan to participate in the summit and make presentations.

  • Newswire : Millions suffer as Trump’s economy crumbles

    By Stacy M. Brown
Black Press USA Senior National Correspondent

    America’s economy is not collapsing by accident. Under President Donald Trump, Russell Vought, and Stephen Miller, a deliberate plan has taken hold, a plan that weakens the labor market, starves families of food and health care, and rewards the wealthy with power and profit. What was once called “economic populism” has become an organized campaign of cruelty that has left the country broken and millions of Americans in despair.
    The labor market is in free fall. UPS cut 48,000 workers, the largest reduction in its 117-year history. Amazon is firing up to 30,000 corporate employees. Intel eliminated 24,000 positions. Nestlé slashed 16,000 jobs. Ford and Accenture each let go of 11,000 workers. Novo Nordisk terminated 9,000 employees. Microsoft cut 7,000. PwC laid off 5,600. Salesforce dismissed 4,000. Paramount reduced 2,000. Target eliminated 1,800. Kroger cut 1,000. Applied Materials reduced 1,444, and Meta let go of 600.
    The layoffs have rippled across every major industry, devastating workers, families, and communities nationwide. According to Intellizence data, more than 4,200 companies have announced mass layoffs since January. The Associated Press reported that executives cite Trump’s tariffs, erratic trade actions, and federal instability as the leading causes of widespread job losses and frozen hiring.
    While the job market collapses, Trump’s government shutdown has unleashed a humanitarian crisis. More than 42 million Americans, many of whom supported Trump, will lose access to food assistance through SNAP and WIC. Another 25 million people will lose their health care.
    Trump also canceled nearly 94 million pounds of food aid, including meat, eggs, and dairy, that were supposed to reach food banks across the country. For those working on the front lines of hunger relief, it was an invisible theft—food promised but never delivered.
    The U.S. Department of Agriculture confirmed it will not release $6 billion in contingency funds, claiming the money can only be used for “unforeseen events” such as natural disasters. Yet Trump approved $40 billion for Argentina, spent $1 billion for a private jet stationed in Qatar, and at least $300 million to destroy historic White House property and construct a new ballroom for himself.
    Taxpayers have been forced to pay an estimated $30 million for his golf trips, $520 million for unnecessary National Guard deployments, and $172 million for jets requested by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem. None of those expenditures has lowered health care costs or provided relief to struggling families.
    While ordinary Americans lose jobs, food, and medical care, Trump’s personal income has skyrocketed. The Trump Organization reported $864 million in revenue in the first half of 2025, a 17-fold increase from the previous year. Most of that money came from cryptocurrency ventures. Financial filings show $463 million from sales of World Liberty Financial tokens and another $336 million from TRUMP meme coins.
    The investigation revealed that foreign investors were heavily involved. Hong Kong-based billionaire Justin Sun, who reportedly was charged with fraud by the SEC in 2023, bought $75 million worth of Trump tokens. Abu Dhabi’s state-controlled MGX used Trump’s stablecoin to fund a $2 billion investment in Binance. Chinese businessman Guren “Bobby” Zhou, reportedly under investigation for money laundering in Britain, purchased $100 million in tokens. Trump, meanwhile, eliminated federal crypto enforcement teams, withdrew regulatory warnings, and pardoned Binance founder Changpeng Zhao after his conviction for anti-money-laundering failures. Ethics experts have called it the most blatant conflict of interest in U.S. history.
    Vought, Trump’s former budget director and the author of Project 2025, created the framework for this collapse. His plan dismantles federal oversight, guts safety nets, and funnels public funds into private and partisan interests. Miller, Trump’s longtime political enforcer, has turned those ideas into action by starving agencies, blocking aid, and tightening control of the economy under the White House.
    Wall Street, meanwhile, is celebrating the pain. UPS shares surged nine percent after its mass firings, and Amazon’s stock climbed on news of more job cuts. Economists say this “profit from pain” economy has become Trump’s defining legacy, an America where corporate success depends on working-class suffering. The fallout is everywhere. Food banks are running out of supplies. Hospitals are closing departments. Families are skipping rent to pay for prescriptions. Millions who once believed Trump would protect them are now struggling to survive policies that favor billionaires, foreign investors, and the politically connected.
    Georgetown University business professor Jason Schloetzer told the Associated Press that uncertainty has replaced confidence in every corner of the job market. “A lot of people are looking around, scanning the job environment, scanning the opportunities that are available to them, whether it’s in the public or private sector,” he said. “And I think there’s a question mark around the long-term stability everywhere.”