Category: General News

  • Newswire : From Civil Rights to ICE Raids, Trump’s unchecked power puts every community at risk

    ICE raid in Chicago

    By Stacy M. Brown
    NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent

    Donald Trump’s presidency has long carried a familiar weight for Black America. What feels different now is that the force once aimed primarily at Black and brown communities is no longer contained there. With the fatal shooting of Renee Good, a 37-year-old white mother of three, by an ICE agent in Minneapolis, the unchecked power of the federal government has moved into spaces many Americans once believed were insulated.
    Good was killed during an immigration operation after her vehicle moved forward as agents blocked a roadway. Federal officials quickly labeled the shooting self-defense and branded Good, a “domestic terrorist,” even as video and eyewitness accounts raised questions and Minnesota officials accused the Trump administration of weaponizing immigration enforcement. Protests spread across the state, and Minnesota, Minneapolis, and St. Paul sued the federal government, calling the deployment of immigration agents a “federal invasion.”
    As the unrest grew, Trump responded with a Truth Social post aimed at Minnesotans that read less like a call for calm and more like a threat. He warned that a “DAY OF RECKONING & RETRIBUTION IS COMING,” while painting entire communities as overrun by criminals and praising ICE for removing “thousands of criminals,” claims local leaders sharply disputed.
    For many Black Americans, the moment felt grimly familiar.
    “This is what unchecked power looks like,” said Rev. Al Sharpton, founder and president of National Action Network. “Donald Trump sent up his latest test balloon for erasing Black history with his twisted, alarming claims that white Americans were discriminated against from the civil rights protections that many fought, bled, and in many cases died for.”
    Sharpton’s remarks came after Trump told The New York Times that white people were “very badly treated” by laws adopted during the Civil Rights Movement. The president framed civil rights protections as a form of “reverse discrimination,” echoing a broader administration effort to dismantle diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives across the federal government.
    “The facts simply don’t match up to the reality Donald Trump has chosen to live in,” Sharpton said. “Even more than 60 years after the Civil Rights Act or the Voting Rights Act, many Black Americans continue to lack access to equitable education, capital dollars, or even their right to exercise democracy.”
    Under Trump, those disparities have widened. His administration has eliminated DEI programs, curtailed civil rights enforcement, and backed legal efforts that have weakened affirmative action and pushed the Voting Rights Act closer to irrelevance. Civil rights leaders say the policies are not abstract. They translate into lost jobs, closed pathways, and communities left unprotected.
    The timing of Trump’s comments struck another nerve.
    “That he made these statements on the eve of the King federal holiday is perhaps the most telling,” Sharpton said. “The Trump administration has already made attempts to minimize this holiday, as well as Juneteenth, while propping up his own birthday.”
    At the same time Trump has elevated claims of discrimination against white Americans, his administration has expanded aggressive immigration enforcement that critics say operates with little transparency or accountability. Investigations have documented immigration agents using banned chokeholds, detaining U.S. citizens, and conducting masked operations that leave communities fearful of leaving their homes.
    The consequences now extend beyond immigrant communities. Good’s killing, and the administration’s rapid defense of the agent involved, has jolted Americans who once viewed federal force as distant or theoretical.
    Members of the Congressional Black Caucus say the pattern is unmistakable. In a separate statement, caucus leaders condemned Trump for bypassing Congress to carry out an unauthorized military operation in Venezuela, calling it a grave abuse of power and warning that the president is increasingly willing to act without legal restraint, whether abroad or at home.
    “While Nicolás Maduro is, in fact, an illegitimate leader, the deployment of U.S. military power to impose political change in a sovereign nation without the consent of Congress threatens to draw the United States into an indefinite conflict,” the caucus said in its statement.
    For Black institutions, the pressure has been economic as well as political. The Black Press of America, founded nearly two centuries ago to give voice to people denied access to mainstream media, has seen corporate advertisers and sponsors retreat under the Trump era’s hostility toward racial equity. Newsrooms have shrunk. Resources have dried up. The mission has grown harder just as the stakes have risen.
    What Black America has warned about for years is now playing out in real time. A presidency that treats civil rights as disposable, dissent as criminal, and federal power as personal authority does not stop at one community.

  • State Rep. Curtis Travis seeking re-election

    It is election year in Alabama and State Rep. Curtis Travis (D – District 72) has announced he is seeking re-election. The first term Democrat’s district covers portions of Tuscaloosa, Bibb, Hale and Greene counties.
    As a political novice, Travis knocked off incumbent State Representative Ralph Anthony Howard in the May 2022 Democratic Party Primary with 52% of the vote. He was then unopposed in the fall General Election which led him to being sworn into office for the next term.
    The Tuscaloosa County Legislative Committee member was born and raised in Sawyerville in Hale County. He graduated from Akron High School then earned a Bachelor of Science Degree in Petroleum Engineering from the University of Alabama. Travis then obtained a master’s degree in environmental engineering.
    Travis’ career experience includes working as a builder, a manager, and an assistant pastor.
    Rep. Travis is a member of the Agriculture and Forestry Committee, Ethics and Campaign Finance Committee, Ports, Waterways and Intermodal Transit Committee, and Transportation, Utilities and Infrastructure Committee.
    Among the more prominent legislation he has sponsored or co-sponsored is a 2024 bill that allows simulcast racing for parimutuel wagering in Greene County, a 2024 bill that provided fair and reasonable terms for sale of agricultural equipment, Ad valorem taxes, a bill setting reappraisal of Class II and Class III property every three years, and legislation preserving Alabama’s state tax exemption on overtime pay.
    Rural expansion of broadband internet, rural healthcare and support for volunteer fire departments have been among his top priority issues.
    Party primaries are scheduled for Tuesday, May 19 with the General Election set for Tuesday, November 3

  • Garria Spencer seeks District One seat

    I am Garria Spencer, and this is to announce my candidacy for reelection for Greene County Commissioner of District One. My wife of fifty years Althenia Spencer, and I have three adult children, eleven grandchildren and four great grandchildren, I am a member of the First Baptist Church Union and serve on the Deacon Board. I am retired from Phifer Wire Product and presently work for the Greene County Board of Education serving as a proud Bus Driver.
    During my tenure over the past three years here are some of my accomplishments, I have helped in building storm shelters accessible to the communities. I have been able to pave four dirt roads in District One, I have worked tirelessly to keep our hospital open and maintain our ambulance service. 
    Greene County is my home and a county I truly love, and I pledge to use my experience, my good will and dedication to not only serve the people of District One but all of Greene County. I am asking for your vote, Your Support and Most Important Your Prayers. Experience Counts!

  • Tonjula Carey announces candidacy for District Court Judge


    My name is Tonjula Carey and I’m proud to announce my candidacy for District Court Judge in Greene County, Alabama.
    Greene County has always been a part of my story. Being surrounded by great people who believe in hard work and values is what makes this community so special. My roots are here and so is my heart. Greene County is more than just a place, it’s home.
    I’m running because I believe in a District Court that reflects the strength, resilience, and values of our community. A court that serves with integrity, transparency, and respect.
    After completing law school, I made the intentional decision to return back to Greene County. I wanted to pour back into the community that poured so much into me. My experiences here helped shape my character, values, and passion for justice. I knew I wanted to use my legal training to serve the people who helped mold me, to give back in a meaningful way, and to help strengthen the systems that impact our everyday lives. Coming back to Greene County wasn’t a career move, it was a calling. Having served in this community the past few years, I know that it is my purpose to be at the forefront of Justice and Change.
    As I begin this journey, I look forward to building a relationship with even more of the incredible people who make Greene County the strong and vibrant community it is today. In the months ahead, I’ll be sharing more about my vision and how we can work together to ensure our courts are accessible, transparent, and worthy of the trust placed in them.
    If you believe in building a court system that reflects our community’s values and serves with fairness and integrity, I invite you to join me — because justice matters, and so does your voice. Whether you can volunteer your time, help spread the word, or simply share your support, we welcome you. This campaign will be powered by people, and we can’t do it without you. Let’s do this, TOGETHER. I hope to earn your support, your prayers, and your vote in the Primary Election on May 19, 2026.

  • Greene Co. Racing Commission 2025 distribution totals nearly $2 million

    The Greene County Racing Commission (Linette Brown- Chairperson, Morris Hardy-Vice Chairman and Donald Means - Secretary) is proud to announce that its fourth -quarter distribution of $500,000 to local agencies, along with $10,000 to the Courthouse Fund brings its total 2025 distributions to the agencies and charities of Greene County, Alabama to nearly $2 million dollars.
    On August 8, 2025, the Racing Commission also disbursed its 2025 Charity Awards totaling $116,500 The Racing Commission holds two Charity Days each year one in March and one in July, the proceeds of which are distributed as charity disbursements. The Commission’s goal is to assist as many qualified 501 (c) (3) nonprofit organization possible that provide vital services to the community.
    These organizations support a wide range of needs including health initiatives, food drives, parenting and adoption guidance, housing assistance, youth development camps, fire and emergency services, education and social services. The Racing Commission encourages the public to support Charity Days at the Palace.
    Disbursement under Senate Bill #40, Act No. 223-206 (“Bill”) for the year total $1,700,000, with an additional $40,000 for the courthouse fund. Under the Bill, each recipient percentage is determine by legislation. The Statement of Distribution provides detail information on the amounts allocated to each recipient. These awards are made possible through proceeds generated from licensed gaming activities at the Palace Entertainment Center.
    The Racing Commission is proud to report that in 2025 it provided a total of $1,856,500 to the Charities, agencies, municipalities and citizens of Greene County.

  • Newswire: Beyoncé is officially a billionaire, Forbes says

    She is the fifth musician to ever reach billionaire status, according to the outlet.

    By Kate Reilly , NBC News

    Beyoncé has officially reached billionaire status, Forbes reports.
    She is the fifth musician to ever hit the milestone, joining her husband, Jay-Z, as well as Taylor Swift, Bruce Springsteen and Rihanna.
    Beyoncé, the most decorated artist in Grammys history, has had major success in recent years. 
    In 2023, her 39-city, 56-show Renaissance tour made more than $500 million and drew more than 2.7 million concertgoers.

    Her “Renaissance: A Film by Beyoncé” topped the box office during its opening weekend in December 2023, grossing $21 million.
    In 2024, she released the country album “Cowboy Carter,” which was named album of the year at the 2025 Grammys, where she took home three awards.
    The “Cowboy Carter Tour” grossed more than $400 million, making it the highest-grossing country tour in history, according to Pollstar.
    But her success extends much further back.
    In 1990, a 9-year-old Beyoncé formed the singing-rapping girl group “Girl’s Tyme,” which became known as “Destiny’s Child.”
    In 1999, the group won two Grammys for its album “The Writing’s on the Wall.” 
    The group eventually split, and Beyoncé pursued an incredibly successful solo career. 
    In 2003, she released her first solo album, “Dangerously in Love,” which dominated charts worldwide. 
    Beyoncé founded Parkwood Entertainment in 2010, which gives her control over almost every aspect of her music career in-house, according to Forbes.
    Beyoncé’s company “produces all of her music, documentaries and concerts, fronting most of the production costs in order to capture more of the back-end economics,” it said.

     

  • Newswire : Maryland to consider slavery reparations after Gov. Wes Moore’s veto is overridden

    Maryland Governor Wes Moore

    By The Associated Press


    ANNAPOLIS, Md. — Maryland will create a commission to study potential reparations for slavery after lawmakers voted Tuesday to override a veto by Gov. Wes Moore — currently the nation’s only Black governor — that disappointed many fellow Democrats.
    Moore said in his veto letter in May that it was a difficult decision to veto the bill, which was a priority of the Legislative Black Caucus of Maryland. But he wrote there has been enough study of the legacy of slavery, and it was now time to “focus on the work itself” to address it.
    But Democrats who control both chambers of the Maryland General Assembly decided the commission was needed to better examine how to do that.
    “This topic isn’t easy, but, again, without formal study, reparations risk being dismissed as symbolic or unconstitutional, regardless of moral merit,” said Sen. Charles Sydnor, a Democrat.
    After his veto was overridden, Moore said that while he disagrees with the legislature’s decision, “I am eager to move forward in partnership on the work of repair that we all agree is an urgent and pressing need.”
    “I believe the time for action is now — and we must continue moving forward with the work of repair immediately,” Moore said in a statement. “That mission is especially vital given the immediate and ongoing effects of this federal administration on our constituents, including communities that have been historically left behind.”
    Potential reparations outlined in the bill include official statements of apology, monetary compensation, property tax rebates, social service assistance, as well as licensing and permit fee waivers and reimbursement. Reparations also could include assistance with making a down payment on a home, business incentives, childcare, debt forgiveness and tuition payment waivers for higher education.
    Maryland’s Black population is about 30%, the highest percentage of any state outside of the Deep South.
    Support for reparations gained momentum in the wake of the murder of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer in 2020. However, the issue has been a difficult one, particularly for high-profile Democrats, and comes amid a broader conservative backlash over how race, history and inequality are handled in public institutions.
    “At a time of growing attacks on diversity and equity, today’s action reaffirms our shared commitment to truth-telling, accountability, and meaningful progress for Black Marylanders,” the state’s Legislative Black Caucus said in a statement.
    In October, California Gov. Gavin Newsom delivered a mixed bag for proponents of bills aimed at addressing racist and discriminatory policies against African Americans. He signed a law authorizing $6 million for California State University to study how to confirm an individual’s status as a descendant of an enslaved person. But he vetoed other bills the California Legislative Black Caucus championed as tools to atone for the state’s history.
    Newsom, who is considering running for president in 2028, signed a law last year to formally apologize for slavery and its lingering effects on Black Californians.
    Moore has said he is not planning to run for president in 2028, but he has continued to cultivate a national profile that has drawn pundits’ attention as a potential White House contender.
    New York City lawmakers approved legislation last year to study the city’s significant role in slavery and consider reparations to descendants of enslaved people.
    In 2021, Evanston, Illinois, a Chicago suburb, became the first U.S. city to create a reparations plan for its Black residents, using tax revenue from the sale of recreational marijuana.
    As recently as a few years ago, Americans viewed the prospect of reparations mostly negatively. A Pew Research Center survey conducted in 2021 found that only about 3 in 10 U.S. adults said descendants of people enslaved in the U.S. should be repaid in some way, such as given land or money. About 7 in 10 said these descendants should not be repaid.
    Maryland lawmakers did not take up congressional redistricting in their one-day special session. Moore has expressed interest in pursuing a new map, which could come up when lawmakers convene in January for their annual 90-day session. However, the state Senate president has said he doesn’t support moving forward with a new map. Democrats hold a 7-1 advantage over Republicans in the state’s eight congressional district.

  • Newswire : Five years later, Capitol Officer Harry Dunn says January 6 was the ‘worst day of his life’

    • Harry Dunn, Capitol Police Officer and  people attacking the U. S. Capitol on January 6, 2021

    By Stacy M. Brown
NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent


    On the fifth anniversary of January 6, a date now fixed in the American conscience, Capitol Police Officer Harry Dunn returned to the moment that altered his life and the nation’s course. Appearing on “Let It Be Known,” Dunn spoke about the unforgettable day that’s shaped by time, pain, and resolve, revisiting what he has called the worst day of his life.

    Dunn joined the United States Capitol Police in 2008 and has served as a Private First Class since 2011. His career placed him on duty for presidential inaugurations, joint sessions of Congress, State of the Union addresses, and hundreds of peaceful protests. As a Crisis Intervention Officer on the USCP Crisis Negotiation Team, he was trained for hostage situations, barricades, and mental health emergencies. None of that training, he said, prepared him for January 6, 2021.
    “I lived the worst day of my life on national TV,” Dunn said.
    Five years later, Dunn said something he had not always been able to say. “I’ve healed from that trauma,” he said, referring to his personal wounds from that day.
    The healing, which he made clear, did not mean forgetting. Dunn said it is possible to recover personally while remaining troubled by what continues to unfold in the country.
    “As we look around at the things that are going on,” he said, “it’s hard to be okay with everything. If you’re okay right now, I feel like you’re kind of like a callous soul.”
    Dunn said he remains focused on what he can change and where his voice still matters. January 6, he noted, made him known to much of the world, but it did not define the limits of his responsibility.
    Accountability, or apparent lack of it, ran through the conversation. Dunn spoke as civil lawsuits continue against President Donald Trump and as Trump has pardoned those convicted for their roles in the attack. Dunn said he was not surprised, adding that Trump had promised those pardons openly.
    “I knew it was coming,” Dunn said. “So, I had time to prepare.”
    Preparation meant action. Dunn said he worked as a surrogate for former Vice President Kamala Harris during the Harris–Walz campaign, trying to stop Trump’s return to office. When that effort failed, he said the pain was not sudden. It was familiar.
    “The wounds were already there,” Dunn said. “I just had time to brace for it.”Dunn rejected calls to move on from January 6, saying the record remains unsettled.
    “History bends toward distortion when accountability is denied,” he said. “A hundred years from now, somebody is going to read about January 6 and read that he was elected again and ask, ‘How could that happen?’”
    He said Americans do not need explanation to understand what occurred inside and around the Capitol. “You don’t need a talking head,” Dunn said. “Just press play. Put it on mute. Watch.”
    Dunn recalled how rioters filmed themselves, how juries later watched those same videos in court, and how the attackers felt emboldened. He said they told officers repeatedly that the president had sent them. “They were telling us, ‘The president said we could,’” Dunn said.
    He addressed comparisons often drawn between January 6 and Black Lives Matter protests. Dunn said Black Lives Matter demonstrators came to the Capitol, protested, shouted, and left.
    “They didn’t storm the Capitol,” he said. “Every single person went home that night. I can’t say the same thing about January 6.”Dunn spoke of officers who died and of others who later took their own lives. He said attempts to equate the events ignore those losses.
    The conversation turned to the present, with Dunn saying January 6 laid groundwork for what he sees now, from threats against other nations to the erosion of democratic norms. He said Americans were warned in advance.
    “He told us what he was going to do,” Dunn said. “And when he did it, people acted surprised.”
    The cost, he said, remains deeply personal. Dunn described election night as feeling like a knife through his heart, saying it was difficult to accept that many voters returned to power a man he holds responsible for one of the darkest days in U.S. history.
    Dunn said he continues to receive hateful messages and death threats, including in recent weeks. He said he takes precautions, leans on his community, and keeps showing up.
    “That means I’m doing something right,” he said.
    Dunn also discussed his New York Times bestselling memoir, “Standing My Ground: A Capitol Police Officer’s Fight for Accountability and Good Trouble After January 6th,” which he said was part of his healing. “Where does it end?” Dunn said. “The story is still being written. You can add to it, but you can’t take away from it.”

    He said he now speaks across the country about resilience, rejecting easy assurances. “I don’t know if it’s going to be okay,” Dunn said. “But I do know if we don’t fight, if we don’t show up, they’re going to steamroll us.”
    He paused, then offered what he could promise. “If we show up,” Dunn said, “we give ourselves a fighting chance.”

     

  • Newswire : From Washington to Bogotá,protests grow as Maduro face U.S. judge

     

    Maduro being escorted by Federal agents to court trial

    By Stacy M. Brown
NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent

    The arrest of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro by U.S. forces set off an immediate reckoning in Washington, where protesters poured into the streets, security tightened around federal buildings, and lawmakers confronted the reality of an American operation that removed a foreign head of state and brought him to U.S. soil.
    That reckoning widened Monday as Maduro was transported under heavy guard to federal court in Manhattan, with demonstrations unfolding across major U.S. cities and overseas, from New York and Chicago to Bogotá and Caracas, exposing a global divide over the Trump administration’s military action.
    Outside the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, protesters chanted for Maduro’s release and questioned the legality of the operation. “What’s stopping Trump from doing this to other countries?” said Zoe Alexandra of the ANSWER Coalition, as demonstrators lined the sidewalk near the facility where Maduro is being held.
    In Detroit, hundreds gathered near federal buildings, braving winter conditions to oppose the intervention. Organizers said the rallies began within hours of the announcement of Maduro’s capture and continued through the weekend, drawing activists, labor organizers, and members of the Venezuelan diaspora.
    Similar scenes played out in Minneapolis, where marchers moved through city streets carrying signs calling for an end to U.S. military action. “They don’t want war,” said Andrew Josefchak, an organizer with the Minnesota Peace Action Coalition.
    In Chicago, protesters filled Federal Plaza before marching toward Trump Tower, while in San Francisco and Seattle, crowds gathered with banners reading “No War on Venezuela” and “Hands Off Latin America.”
    The reaction overseas was swift and sharply critical. China and Russia condemned the operation, while leaders across Latin America warned of regional instability. Colombian President Gustavo Petro issued one of the most forceful rebukes.
    “A clan of pedophiles wants to destroy our democracy,” Petro said. “To keep Epstein’s list from coming out, they send warships to kill fishermen and threaten our neighbor with invasion for their oil.”
    Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said the action crossed an unacceptable line, while the United Nations secretary general expressed concern about violations of international law.
    The Trump administration has defended the operation as a law enforcement action tied to long-standing narcotics charges. Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, face U.S. indictments alleging narco-terrorism conspiracy, cocaine importation conspiracy, and weapons offenses.
    Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the United States is targeting drug trafficking organizations, not Venezuela itself, while President Donald Trump said the U.S. would temporarily oversee Venezuela during a transition.
    On Capitol Hill, criticism crossed party lines. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said the operation was reckless without congressional authorization, while Sen. Amy Klobuchar warned of unintended consequences from regime-change actions.
    Supporters of the operation, including some Venezuelan Americans, gathered in New York’s Times Square and near the Simón Bolívar statue in Washington, waving flags and celebrating what they described as the end of years of repression.
    “We share this feeling of joy, of happiness, of hope,” said Leonardo Angulo, who has lived in the United States for eight years.
    As Maduro prepares to enter a Manhattan courtroom, the protests show no sign of slowing, with organizers planning additional demonstrations as the legal proceedings begin and the world watches what comes next.

     

  • Local attorney qualifies for District Judge race

    Robert J. Lee Sr. (Rob), local attorney and life-time Eutaw resident, has officially qualified as a candidate for Greene County District Judge. With 28 years of legal experience he has built a reputation for fairness, integrity and respect for the rule of law. Rob has a wealth of experience in criminal, domestic, juvenile, and civil law providing a balanced and thoughtful approach to justice. “I am committed to applying the law fairly, treating every individual with dignity, and ensuring our courts remain impartial and accessible”, stated Rob.

    Rob humbly asks for your support and vote in the Democratic Primary Election to be held May 19, 2026.