education, teachers

Teachers Unions Sue Trump Administration For Harmful Immigration Policies

Teachers believe increased ICE presence near schools is a deterrent to immigrant students and parents.


The two largest teachers’ unions in America are suing the Trump administration for targeting immigrants in schools. 

The National Education Association (NEA) and the American Federation of Teachers, which represent approximately 4 million teachers and school staff nationwide, brought the suit. The suit argues that the recent immigration mandate, which allows Immigration and Customs Enforcement to make arrests near schools, is negatively impacting students, according to the NEA press release. Due to increased fear in immigrant communities, some students have been staying home or dropping out of school.  

The lawsuit states that educators have observed rising anxiety and lower attendance. Additionally, teachers say that immigrant parents are reluctant to seek out school resources. Teachers in several states report that students are declining to enroll in programs like special education or English-learner classes. Educators speculate that the decrease in student participation and attendance is due to concerns that school interactions could expose families to immigration risks. 

In an interview with NBC, preschool teacher Lauren Fong asked, “Why a school? Why not someplace else, any place else? It was in the parking lot, where it could be witnessed by so many young children.” 

In California’s Central Valley region, the case states that in January and February, data showed a 22% increase in student absences compared to the same months over the two previous school years, according to a study conducted by Stanford University’s Institute for Economic Policy Research. The increase followed immigration raids. 

The lawsuit was filed in federal court in Eugene, Oregon. It also involves an Oregon farmworker union and several churches. Prosecutors are claiming that the policy reversal and enforcement actions violate the Administrative Procedure Act and First Amendment rights of affected communities. 

At the beginning of President Donald Trump’s second term, his administration eliminated a long-standing policy that had protected certain locations, such as schools, hospitals, and places of worship, from immigration enforcement, except under very limited circumstances. The lawsuit claims that removing those protections “violated the law.” 

Multiple incidents of ICE activity are cited in the suit. Among them was an Oregon operation where agents wearing masks broke a car window and removed a child’s father from his vehicle. The incident occurred shortly after the child was dropped off at preschool. The school was locked down. Teachers played music so that students would not hear what was happening outside. 

The Associated Press reported on the Department of Homeland Security’s response. Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said arrests at schools or churches would still require supervision. 

She said, “Officers would need secondary supervisor approval before any action can be taken in locations such as a church or a school. We expect these to be extremely rare.” 

Becky Pringle, president of the National Education Association, said the administration is creating “fear and chaos” and added that “our students, schools, and communities are paying the price.” 

Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, said, “America’s classrooms must be safe and welcoming places of learning and discovery.”

RELATED CONTENT: How A Haitian Man Is Making Majority Trump-Backing Ohio Town Confront Party’s Immigration Views

LaToya Cantrell, New Orleans Mayor

New Orleans Mayor Pleads Not Guilty To Charges Related To Alleged Affair with Former Bodyguard

LaToya Cantrell is accused of using taxpayer money to fund multiple rendezvous and personal entertainment with her bodyguard.


On Aug. 10, New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell pleaded not guilty to federal charges.

Cantrell is accused of fraud, obstruction and conspiracy. The charges stem from an alleged romantic relationship with her former bodyguard, Jeffrey Vappie.

According to documents, the New Orleans mayor used taxpayer money to fund multiple rendezvous and personal entertainment with Vappie while he was on duty. Cantrell paid for personal travel and entertainment that totaled nearly $70,000, according to the indictment.

Additionally, she is accused of attempting to hide the relationship by destroying evidence. Vappie and Cantrell both allegedly deleted multiple messages and presented false statements to conceal the affair. 

“Cantrell and Vappie used WhatsApp for more than 15,000 messages, where they professed their love and plotted to harass a citizen who helped expose their relationship, delete evidence, make false statements to FBI agents, “and ultimately to commit perjury before a federal grand jury,” acting U.S. Attorney Michael Simpson said.

During the hearing, U.S. Magistrate Judge Karen Wells Roby ordered Cantrell to surrender her passport and restricted her travel to the southeast region of Louisiana. Cantrell must obtain permission from probation officers if she wants to travel outside of the area. She was also barred from contacting Vappie. 

Vappie, who retired from the New Orleans Police Department retiree in 2024, pleaded not guilty to charges of wire fraud and making false statements.

Cantrell, the first female mayor in New Orleans history to face criminal charges while in office, will end her second term in January 2026.

U.S. Attorney’s Office, Eastern District of Louisiana claims Cantrell’s administration misused more than $70,000 in public funds for Vappie’s travel costs, including meals, overtime pay, and transportation. Prosecutors contend she activated message-deleting features after media reports surfaced and that she used her position to help hide evidence. 

Cantrell has denied that the relationship was romantic and has described some of the criticism as rooted in bias because of her race and gender. Her lawyer also stated the case will not impede her duties as mayor. 

RELATED CONTENT: ‘We Are Not Resilient, We Are Indomitable’: New Orleans Residents Speak Out 20 Years After Hurricane Katrina

knicks, spike lee, pope

Clifton Powell Claims Spike Lee Doesn’t ‘Take Care Of His Own People’

Actor Clifton Powell doubles down on his past criticism of Spike Lee.


Actor Clifton Powell is speaking out about what he calls Spike Lee’s poor business practices and alleged mistreatment of fellow Black actors.

On a recent episode of The Art of Dialogue, Powell, who has over 250 acting credits, stood by his criticism of Lee, calling them “facts” he won’t take back, and urged critics to investigate “the kind of business” Lee conducted behind the scenes.

“I don’t dislike Spike Lee. I dislike some of his business practices,” Powell said in a clip shared online. “And people can think about me with one guy call in and say, ‘you old C-list a** actor talking about Spike.’ The problem is people talk a lot of stuff and don’t do their research.”

https://twitter.com/ArtOfDialogue_/status/1965556947454951704

Powell says he’s done his research on the “Do the Right Thing” filmmaker and points to fellow Black actors, including Charles Dutton, who have backed his criticism of Lee.

“I’m never going to accept a Black man doing to us what the man has been doing for the last 70,000 years,” Powell said. “And so go do your research. Listen to what Charles Dutton said. He said Clifton Powell wasn’t wrong.”

Although Powell has never worked with Spike Lee directly, he says friends who have reported that the Academy Award-winning director had a history of mistreating his cast.

“I never threatened him, but I don’t appreciate how he did business with us back in the day,” Powell said. “Not me, but my friends, because I’ve never worked with him.”

Powell acknowledged his respect for Black media moguls like Tyler Perry and even praised Lee’s latest film with Denzel Washington, Highest 2 Lowest. While he recognizes that Black entertainers “got to be careful condemning each other in public,” he says his previous remarks about Lee were made in jest and never intended to go viral.

The Next Friday star is more critical of Lee’s public attacks on Tyler Perry, whom he knows personally and has never had a negative interaction with. Although Powell admits he shouldn’t have publicly criticized Lee, he continues to stand by his claims regarding the director’s alleged poor business practices.

“I don’t respect his business policies,” Powell said.

It was during a 2011 appearance on the Russ Par Morning Show when Powell first made his dislike for Spike Lee public, calling the “Crooklyn” director a “hater” toward his own people.

“I don’t like Spike. I have never said it publicly, but Spike is a hater,” Powell said at the time. “He was doing all these movies, Sam [Samuel L. Jackson] and all these guys know he’s a hater. He kept all the money; there was lawsuits against him. Spike needs to go sit his punk a** down and stop talking about Tyler Perry.”

RELATED CONTENT: ESPN Pulls Spike Lee’s Colin Kaepernick Documentary, Citing ‘Creative Differences’

FAMU, Florida A and M University,DI, Black History Month

FAMU To Update Florida Board Of Governors On Financial Woes After CFO ‘Failed Pretty Miserably’

FAMU officials are sharing the school's plans to fix its financial woes.


Florida A&M University will face the Florida Board of Governors in a public meeting to outline the steps being taken to resolve its financial troubles.

On Sept. 11, FAMU Vice President for Audit Credentials Joseph Maleszewski will deliver a presentation during the board’s 8:15 a.m. audit and compliance committee meeting, which is open to the public, the Tallahassee Democrat reports. The briefing comes in response to recent audit findings and will precede a full board meeting later that afternoon at 3 p.m.

FAMU’s financial practices came under scrutiny during a June 18 meeting, which confirmed Marva Johnson as the school’s new president. It followed a March 2025 audit that flagged delayed bank reconciliations, late vendor payments, weak internal controls, and limited staff oversight. In addition to the audit issues, critics said Rebecca Brown, FAMU’s CFO and Senior VP of Finance for over two years, had “failed pretty miserably” in overseeing the school’s finances.

“This is serious. It’s systemic, and that’s a word I don’t think they were tossing around lightly. This time around, it’s pretty systemic in the accounting side,” Audit and Compliance Committee Chair Aubrey Edge said during the June meeting.

As a result, Brown was placed on leave in July, and Chief Budget Officer Nichole Murray was named senior vice president of Finance and Administration and CFO by former interim President Timothy Beard. The audit issues followed the school’s decision to terminate a planned audit of its athletics department in September 2024, after failing to provide the required documentation.

The program’s last completed audit covered the fiscal year ending June 30, 2021, although NCAA rules require financial reporting to be done annually. All the while, FAMU’s Athletics Director Angela Suggs remains on paid administrative leave following charges of grand theft and fraudulent travel claims tied to her former role as CEO of the Florida Sports Foundation.

FAMU’s plan to address its financial challenges includes expanding the Athletics Business Office to handle audit issues, hiring and training additional staff for bank reconciliations, and partnering with the national accounting firm Cherry Bekaert for support. Steps already underway include correcting investment accounting and recording errors identified in FAMU’s operational audit, settling overdue invoices, and utilizing third-party onsite support to address staffing gaps.

RELATED CONTENT: From Slavery To Liberation: The Diasporic Legacy Of Black Breastfeeding

Haiti, Royal Caribbean, cruise ship

Royal Caribbean Passenger Jumps Ship—LITERALLY—To Allegedly Avoid $16K Gambling Debt

When 'jumping ship' isn’t just a figure of speech.


A man who authorities say jumped off a Royal Caribbean cruise ship near the Port of San Juan to avoid paying a $16,000 in gambling debt to the cruise line has been charged with a federal crime, authorities say. 

Jey Gonzalez-Diaz was a passenger on Rhapsody of the Seas, which departed from the Port of San Juan for a week-long cruise to Barbados before returning September 7.

When other passengers were disembarking, Gonzalez-Diaz jumped into the water, according to the criminal complaint obtained by CBS News. Survival videos showed passing jet ski drivers rescuing Gonzalez-Diaz.

US Customs and Border Protection officers later detained Gonzalez-Diaz near San Juan. The complaint states that González-Díaz told officials he jumped off the ship to avoid reporting the money he was carrying because he believed he would be taxed. Upon further investigation, authorities soon learned that González Díaz owed $16,710.24 to the cruise line, “almost exclusively associated with casino and gaming expenses,” El Nuevo Dia reported. 

According to the complaint, he was carrying two phones, five IDs, and $14,600 in cash. González-Díaz told investigators that Jeremy Omar González Díaz is his brother. Records checks of the identifications showed that Jeremy Omar González Díaz has been in federal prison in Puerto Rico since January for drug trafficking and weapons possession. 

When authorities asked him for his full name, he told investigators, “If you guys were good at your job, you would know that.”

According to the Royal Caribbean website, guests can charge up to $10,000 per day to their onboard expense account for gambling at the casino. The cruise line stated that the Icon of the Seas houses the largest casino at sea. 

A spokesperson for Royal Caribbean told The New York Times that the cruise line was cooperating with authorities but declined to comment further. 

Authorities have accused Gonzalez-Diaz of attempting to avoid monetary reporting requirements when traveling into the United States. If convicted, he could face a fine of up to $250,000 or a maximum five-year prison sentence.

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REEVOLT watch culture

REVOLT Brings Watch Culture To The Mainstream With ‘Wrist Check Pod’ Partnership


REVOLT is expanding its cultural footprint once again, this time bringing watch culture into the mainstream. The youth-driven multimedia company announced a new partnership with Wrist Check Pod, the breakout series merging watches and culture. 

Beginning September 15, episodes of Wrist Check Pod will air weekly on REVOLT, marking a major moment for the watch industry as conversations once confined to collector circles move into the cultural mainstream. The move not only broadens REVOLT’s content mix but also signals a new era for the watch industry – one that reflects the voices, creativity, and cultural relevance of communities often excluded from traditional conversations.

The New Guard of Watch Culture

Co-founded and hosted by longtime friends Perri Dash and Rashawn Smith, Wrist Check Pod has quickly become a go-to voice in modern watch culture. Guests like rapper Larry June and media personality N.O.R.E. have already helped connect the dots between music, entrepreneurship, and collecting.

Dash and Smith bring a unique dual perspective to every episode. Dash’s career includes an impressive background at Pharrell Williams’ Billionaire Boys Club, David Yurman and Watches of Switzerland, and Ralph Lauren’s vintage watch division, establishing him as both an insider and tastemaker. Smith, whose background spans J.Crew and Watches of Switzerland, adds a creative lens that balances industry experience with storytelling. Together, they represent the new guard of watch culture, authentic voices who merge credibility, creativity, and cultural fluency to push the industry forward.

“We built Wrist Check Pod to prove watch culture isn’t a closed world—it’s alive, it’s ours, and it’s part of the culture,” Dash said. “Partnering with REVOLT lets us amplify that message, showing the stories, legacies, and identities behind every timepiece to an audience that already understands the value of authenticity.”

Timepieces as Storytelling

For REVOLT, the series adds another layer to its mission of elevating authentic cultural narratives. “Watches have never just been about telling time,” said Deon Graham, Chief Content Officer of REVOLT. “They have always been about telling stories, about identity, heritage, and culture. On every wrist is a narrative: a symbol of where someone comes from, what they have achieved, and what they aspire to. This show is about putting those stories into the cultural spotlight and honoring the role Hip-Hop, street culture, and independent voices have played in shaping the global watch industry.”

Beyond Luxury: A Cultural Investment

Produced with the help of entertainment executive Vincent Lambino, the partnership underscores REVOLT’s strategy to push cultural boundaries and open the gateways to traditionally exclusive spaces, reframing them for a broader, younger audience.

Wrist Check Pod premieres on September 15, 2025, with new episodes airing every Monday at 8 p.m. EST on REVOLT. Episodes will also be available Tuesdays at 11 a.m. EST on YouTube and the REVOLT app. Fans can join the conversation using #REVOLTWristCheck.

RELATED CONTENT: WADDUP DOE? AfroFuture Detroit 2025 Takes Over The ‘D’ & The Diaspora Showed Up And Out

Texting, social media

Black People React To The Fatal Shooting Of Right-Wing Activist Charlie Kirk At A Utah College

Kirk had built a platform off of white supremacist ideologies.


As the fatal shooting of right-wing commentator Charlie Kirk made headlines, Black people shared their reactions to the polarizing incident.

Kirk died during an event on Sept. 10 for Turning Point USA, a nonprofit for conservative youth co-founded by the Christian Nationalist, at Utah Valley University. The graphicness of the scene sparked its own controversy, with many political figures condemning the violence.

President Donald Trump, whom Kirk was a staunch supporter of, had all U.S. flags lowered to half-mast after his death. He even suggested that he remains a “legendary” figure who had the “heart of the youth,” Reuters reported.

However, many Black people had differing reactions to Kirk’s death. The 31-year-old conservative pundit became a notorious leading voice of the alt-right movement. He often used his platform to promote white supremacist ideologies as well as racist and prejudiced rhetoric. Right before his death, Kirk had brought up gang violence, considered coded language for Black people committing crimes, when asked about mass shootings in America.

Given this, some critics had little empathy to spare for his death.


“Charlie Kirk isn’t a martyr. He’s a casualty of the violence he incited,” shared educator and organizer Zellie Imani.

Other social media users shared empathy for his children. However, they could not shake Kirk’s stances against many, if not most, marginalized identity groups.

“I have pity for his kids, but that’s about it. Charlie Kirk was a hateful individual who derived joy from being racist, homophobic, islamophobic, pro-genocide, anti-human rights, a religious fanatic, pro-guns, anti-abortion, anti-women, and anti-people of colour,” wrote another.

While not going as far as celebrating Kirk’s shooting, another X user reminded others that Kirk spent his life demeaning Black people’s plight before his unexpected death.

“I do not CELEBRATE anyone’s death, so I’m not celebrating, but LET THIS BE A LESSON TO OTHERS. Charlie Kirk spent his time on this earth attacking Black people & being racist… & that’s how he’ll be remembered.”

On the other hand, some had more mixed feelings toward the alt-right conservative’s gruesome death. Cultural commentator Van Lathan emphasized that he felt “terrible” about his death, despite all of the man’s offensive words.

“There is no way I’m going to see that video of Charlie Kirk being shot and feel anything other than terrible. I’m aware of all of it, the rhetoric, the hatefulness, all of it from him, but I can’t be robbed of my compassion, that was awful, and we HAVE to try to be better,” expressed Lathan.

However, others also highlighted how his death was an act of gun violence. While not mincing words about Kirk’s suggested ideologies, another X user emphasized how the “lack of gun control” played a role.

“Charlie Kirk was a neo Nazi. And I do not feel bad for neo Nazis,” asserted the social media user. “He was a victim of his own advocacy for a lack of gun control. He advocated for violence against marginalized people for the advancement of white evangelical Christianity and white supremacy.”

While many agreed that gun violence should stop, Black people felt mixed emotions, or no empathy at all, for the man who died while talking about gang violence.

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New York, Mayor Eric Adams, Chromebooks, students, NYC,

350K NYC Students To Receive Free Computers Thanks To Mayor Eric Adams, Yankees Star Jazz Chisholm Jr. 

Chisholm, who was born in the the Bahamas, says he enjoys giving back to the less fortunate.


Students in the New York City school system will have access to brand new laptops thanks to a massive donation from New York Yankees All-Star infielder and center fielder Jazz Chisholm Jr., in collaboration with Mayor Eric Adams and mobile service provider T-Mobile, the New York Post reports. 

Underserved students in grades K-12 will receive 350,000 new Chromebooks featuring free LTE and 5G network provided by the phone carrier for a campaign to “Bridge the Digital Divide.”

Adams made the Sept. 8 announcement from DeWitt Clinton High School in The Bronx alongside Chisholm, Department of Education (DOE) Chancellor Melissa Aviles-Ramos and chief technology officer Matthew Fraser.

Thes computers, Adams said, will go to the “future writers, teachers, mathematicians in the making.” 

The commitment, which Aviles-Ramos said will result in every student receiving a new device by the end of the school year, correlates to a bigger promise from February 2025 from the Adams administration and T-Mobile, which was labeled as the primary wireless carrier in the Big Apple in exchange for city employees receiving discounted cell service. 

The Chromebooks will first go to the schools where they are needed and then to students living in temporary housing and high-poverty areas.

“I’ve been in New York for two years now, and this is like the seventh school I’ve visited, and this is the seventh time we’re doing this,” said Chisholm, who was born in the Bahamas and has a nonprofit, the Jazz Chisholm Foundation. “So I love giving back. I love giving back to the community because this reminds me of where I grew up.”

In addition to the Chromebooks, Chisholm’s foundation recently partnered with CS/PS-55 in the Bronx, donating 25 touch-screen laptop computers and other necessary improvements to the school’s computer lab.

Helping kids in need is near to the Yankees star’s heart. While growing up in Nassau, big leaguers such as Gary Sheffield, Hanley Ramirez and Antoan Richardson donated equipment to Little Leaguers. 

“I got some stuff from the big leaguers, and I always remembered how I felt every time I received a bat and batting gloves,” Chisholm said. “At 12 years old, my Little League team went to Florida for the Little League World Series regionals, and Hanley Ramirez gave our entire team two batting gloves. 

“We still have them to this day. I always remember that memorabilia stuff.”

RELATED CONTENT: Tyler Smith Aims To Be First Gen Z Man Elected To Texas House, Vows To Fight For Families

Rep. Carlos Gimenez

Cuban-Born Lawmaker Urges Trump And DHS To Probe Alleged Cuban Agents In The U.S.

A Cuban-born Florida congressman is urging DHS to investigate alleged Cuban agents residing in the U.S.


The nation’s only Cuban-born lawmaker is urging the Department of Homeland Security to investigate a list of people he claims may be agents of Cuba’s current president, Miguel Díaz-Canel, or related to the late Fidel Castro.

On Sept. 9, Rep. Carlos Gimenez, R-Fla., who fled Cuba as a child in 1960, called on DHS to investigate individuals his office and human rights groups believe are tied to Díaz-Canel’s regime or the late Castro brothers, Fox News reports. Gimenez, who represents the congressional district closest to Cuba in Miami-Dade and Monroe counties, sent a “warning” to DHS Secretary Kristi Noem about the “presence of agents of the murderous Castro regime and the Communist Party of Cuba currently residing in the United States.”

“It is crucial that the Department of Homeland Security enforce existing U.S. laws to identify, deport, and repatriate these individuals who pose a threat to our national security,” Gimenez wrote in the letter.

Gimenez’s letter named individuals in the U.S. under humanitarian programs who, according to pro-democracy groups, are tied to Díaz-Canel’s communist regime and accused of human rights abuses. It comes after Trump ordered an airstrike on a boat allegedly carrying drug-trafficking gang members, a move critics say violates the War Powers Act.

The strike, part of Trump’s crackdown on cartels, dictatorships, and migration, has spurred Cuban-American lawmakers and activists to push for similar action against Havana.

The Florida lawmaker argues that many of the individuals named in his letter “gamed” the immigration system, and sees their presence in the country as a “direct insult” to Cuban exiles who fled in search of freedom. He urged Noem to deliver a report by Sept. 26 outlining whether DHS has investigated the named individuals, pursued deportation or removal, and, if not, why no action has been taken.

RELATED CONTENT: Caribbean Outrage Erupts As Trump’s U.S. Travel Ban Threatens Families And Diplomacy

Djimon Hounsou

Djimon Hounsou Hosts Annual Run In Richmond, Virginia, To Promote Preservation Of Black History

The Djimon Hounsou Foundation will hold its fourth annual 'Run Richmond' to highlight and preserve Black history.


Actor Djimon Hounsou is taking to Richmond, Virginia, to host his fourth annual run in an effort to promote the preservation of Black history.

On Sept. 27, the Djimon Hounsou Foundation will host its “Run Richmond,” featuring running and walking routes designed to honor the history of African enslavement across Europe and the Western world. Hounsou, a native of Benin and star of Steven Spielberg’s 1997 film Amistad, hopes the event will inspire greater awareness of the history linking the United States and Europe to African nations.

“It’s time for Afro descendants to know where they come from and to know who they are and how powerful their history is and how powerful they are as people,” Hounsou told USA Today.

Although Hounsou grew up in Benin, a central hub of the transatlantic slave trade, he says it wasn’t until starring in Amistad that he fully grasped the era’s brutality and its lasting global impact.

“It really opened my mind about who I am … the history of my continent and the history of the diaspora,” Hounsou said. “We are very cut off from our past.”

Run Richmond covers 16.19 km (10.6 miles), symbolizing 1619, the year a slave ship from Angola arrived in the English colonies. A shorter 6.19K (3.85-mile) walk/run will also take place that day. Along the route, participants can use an app to hear a tour of Black historic sites narrated by Hounsou.

The award-winning actor hopes the event will serve as a meaningful pilgrimage for African Americans and others eager to engage with this history, particularly as the teachings of Black history face increasing challenges in schools and museums.

“It’s time for Afro descendants to know where they come from and to know who they are and how powerful their history is and how powerful they are as people,” he said. “It’s our obligation as people of the land … to keep that history alive in whatever ways possible.”

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