Staten Island, Former NYC School Superintendent, Education Department , Anti-White Discrimination Allegations, suicide, Black History

Department Of Education Eliminates $350M In Funding For Minority Serving Institutions

The seven grant programs, per the DOE, were aimed at increasing minority enrollment in science and engineering programs as well as serving those institutions classified as minority-serving institutions.


On Sept. 10, Department of Education Secretary Linda McMahon announced that the DOE would be suspending $350 million in funds that had previously been earmarked for minority serving institutions, using the prevailing logic of the Trump administration that anything that primarily serves historically disadvantaged students is inherently racist.

“Stereotyping an individual based on immutable characteristics diminishes the full picture of that person’s life and contributions, including their character, resiliency and merit,” McMahon said before saying that she wanted to “re-envision” the grant programs to continue supporting “underprepared or under-resourced students.”

According to The New York Times, this announcement was met with swift criticism, led by Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA), the ranking Democrat on the Senate Appropriations Committee, who pointed out that McMahon and the Trump administration appear to be “putting politics ahead of students simply looking to get ahead, and is sowing chaos in our nation’s schools.”

She continued, “These are longstanding programs that Congress has authorized and provided funding for on an annual basis that the Trump administration — empowered by the yearlong slush fund spending bill passed in March — is unilaterally deciding to eliminate funding for at the end of the year. This is another important reminder of why Congress needs to pass funding bills, like the one the Senate marked up this summer, that ensure Congress — not Donald Trump or Linda McMahon — decides how limited taxpayer dollars are spent.”

It is, however, unclear exactly how many institutions would be affected by the elimination of the funding, as there are hundreds of two- and four-year institutions that serve Black, Latinx, or Alaskan Native or Hawaiian Native populations, all of which could be affected.

The seven grant programs, per the DOE, were aimed at increasing minority enrollment in science and engineering programs as well as serving those institutions classified as minority-serving institutions.

The Department of Justice previously declined to protect institutions that primarily serve Latinx students from a lawsuit that claimed, in part, that those institutions are unconstitutional because of a 25% Latinx enrollment threshold.

Furthermore, U.S. Solicitor General John D. Sauer indicated in a letter to House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) that he believed it “violates the Constitution,” so the DOJ was bowing out.

As Amanda Fuchs Miller, the former deputy assistant secretary for higher education programs under the Biden administration and now president of the higher ed consultancy Seventh Street Strategies, told Inside Higher Ed, the Education Department’s plan is actually unconstitutional itself.

The DOE’s plan “violates the statute and violates Congress’s power of purse to appropriate funds and that the department has to spend them the way Congress appropriates,” Miller said, before noting that the “executive branch can’t just declare these programs unconstitutional…That would be the role of the courts.”

Roxanne Garza, the director of higher ed policy at the Education Trust, noted that this development portends darker days for higher education and the education system in general.

“It’s unclear what else they could suddenly decide to not fund, or to move funding from one program to the other,” Garza said. “It just continues to set up a dangerous and very unpredictable environment for our schools, our universities, the grantees that essentially depend on this funding.”

https://twitter.com/ArevaMartin/status/1966272368755826721?s=19

Areva Martin, a leading civil rights attorney and a Legal Analyst for CNN, noted in a post to her X account that Donald Trump and his administration’s legacy is one of destruction, not progress.

“Calling fairness ‘racist’ is nothing but gaslighting. These programs open doors that history slammed shut. And now—under Trump’s America, where racism thrives—multiple HBCUs were forced into lockdown after receiving threats: Alabama State, Virginia State, Hampton, Southern University, and Clark Atlanta. Spelman College also sheltered in place out of precaution,” Martin wrote.

She concluded, “By cutting funding and emboldening racist rhetoric, Trump’s administration is targeting HBCUs and Black students directly. Stripping resources, fueling racism—Trump’s legacy is destruction, not progress.”

RELATED CONTENT: Clark Atlanta And Other Atlanta HBCUs Released From Shelter-In-Place Orders

Kathy Hochul, Black church

NY Gov. Hochul Under Fire For Black Church Comment On Affordability Checks: ‘Don’t Stop By The Liquor Store’

Gov. Kathy Hochul is under fire for remarks made at a Buffalo church, with critics calling them offensive while community leaders defend her intent.


Gov. Kathy Hochul is once again on the defensive after comments made during a visit to a Buffalo church drew criticism from some who labeled her remarks racially insensitive. “Checks are coming out soon. Watch the mail, OK?” Hochul told the congregation at True Bethel Baptist Church on Sept. 7, “Don’t spend it all in one day. Get something you really need, OK? Don’t stop by the liquor store, OK? Buy something for the kids — buy them some food.”

Bishop Darius Pridgen, the church’s pastor and a former Buffalo Common Council president, argued critics were misinterpreting her intent. “I was surprised to hear that there were some people who took the governor’s comments as racist,” he said.

“Kathy Hochul being at True Bethel is like family coming home. The crowd was very appreciative of her being there, of the remarks she made, because they were in context to the sermon I preached that morning.”

Pridgen explained that his sermon, titled “Before You Crash Out,” centered on avoiding destructive decisions. “She was commenting on not crashing out and not making bad decisions, which I had just preached,” he added, according to Politico.

Assembly Majority Leader Crystal Peoples-Stokes, who is a member of the church, also defended Hochul. “I know that she’s Irish, and if you understand the history of a lot of people who are Irish, they have significant issues with alcohol abuse,” she said. “So I don’t think it was intended to be racist at all.”

Still, the exchange adds to a string of missteps Hochul has faced with Black communities. Last year, she was criticized after saying, “We have young Black kids growing up in the Bronx who don’t even know what the word computer is.”

The backlash then was swift, with Bronx leaders calling the remark “harmful, deeply misinformed and genuinely appalling.”
Lt. Gov. Antonio Delgado, who is challenging Hochul in the Democratic primary, said her recent statements reflect a troubling pattern. “That’s a pattern — and it’s racist,” he argued. “It reduces whole communities to harmful stereotypes and strips away the dignity of parents and children alike. Words matter, especially when they come from the highest office in our state.”

Hochul apologized at a press conference Sept. 8. “I wasn’t making any generalization about any particular community at all,” she said. “My intention is never to offend anybody in that context, and I regret that that is the takeaway for some people.”

RELATED CONTENT: NY Governor Kathy Hochul Regrets Suggesting Black Kids In The Bronx Don’t Know What ‘Computer’ Means

Lisa Cook, President Trump, mortgage, resignation

So Much For Mortgage Fraud? Lisa Cook’s Bank Records Undercut Trump’s Case

U.S. District Judge Jia Cobb barred Trump from potentially removing Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook.


On Sept. 9, U.S. District Judge Jia Cobb barred Donald Trump from potentially removing Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook in a move seen as protecting the central bank’s independence. Now, newly surfaced loan documents show that Cook listed an Atlanta property as a “vacation home,” contradicting earlier claims by Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Bill Pulte that it was her primary residence.

According to NBC News, a 2021 loan summary from Bank-Fund Staff Federal Credit Union spells out that Cook’s application is for “Property Use: Vacation Home,” and not a primary residence.

In addition to this, another document, which NBC News noted is her “questionnaire for national security positions,” also listed the Atlanta address as a “2nd home,” but Pulte is clinging to his initial accusation of Cook, per a post to his X account.

“Dr. Cook represents herself as an extremely accomplished financial operator. If Dr. Cook solicited estimates as a vacation home and then entered into a mortgage agreement as a primary residence, that is extremely concerning, and in my opinion, evidences further intent to defraud,” Pulte wrote.

However, according to ProPublica, this rigorous standard is only applied to individuals who are in the way of the Trump administration, and not across the board. Furthermore, mortgage fraud, in such terms as Pulte has defined it, is not as black and white as he presents.

According to Jon Goodman, an attorney specializing in real estate at Frascona, Joiner, Goodman, and Greenstein, fraud has its own distinct legal definition. “Fraud requires the borrower to be aware that the borrower was making a false representation.”

MSNBC’s Legal Analyst Barbara McQuade was upfront about the as-of-yet unproven claims of Trump and Pulte that Cook engaged in mortgage fraud, saying on a Sept. 12 episode of The Last Word that this fight is “critically important” to the future of the United States.

“I can’t emphasize enough how important it is that we maintain the independence of the Federal Reserve. We set interest rates through the Federal Reserve based on the expertise of economists who are looking at the long-term interests of the United States, not the short-term political whims of the president,” McQuade, a former U.S. Attorney and a professor of law at Michigan State University, noted.

The Trump administration, meanwhile, has appealed the decision and seeks an emergency ruling on the matter by Monday, ahead of a vote by the Fed on whether to cut interest rates.

Notably, Trump has not been shy about expressing his desires, threatening at various points to remove Fed Chair Jerome Powell if the Federal Reserve doesn’t cut federal interest rates.

According to Victoria Guida, an economics correspondent at Politico, the market is watching intently for any signs of abnormal behavior from the Fed, including less independent behavior than it has exhibited in the past.

As BNY Chief Economist of Investments, Vincent Reinhart, told Guida, “Concerns about central bank independence should be really important when inflation is high. That independence does grant them the ability to do something [politically] hard.”

Likewise, Tim Duy, chief economist at SGH Macro Advisors, noted Trump’s desire for a more pliable Federal Reserve. “Trump is seeking a Fed that will lower interest rates. We can view this attempted firing of Lisa Cook as a way to accelerate that process.”

According to Vox, the rate cut is likely to come, but it’s a double-edged sword, as Trump’s tariffs could also raise inflation as more companies pass on their costs to the average consumer, which points to the Fed perhaps making a smaller rate cut than Trump wants.

As Cameron Peters noted in his Aug. 26 newsletter, The Logoff, “The Fed is designed to be independent, and its governors serve nonrenewable 14-year terms to insulate them from partisan politics (Cook’s term, should she serve it out, will expire in 2038). But two of the seven Fed governors are already Trump appointees, and he’s currently filling a third vacancy; if he succeeds in replacing Cook, he would have a majority of the Fed board — and, potentially, a dangerous degree of power over the U.S. economy.”

RELATED CONTENT: Try Again: Judge Blocks Trump’s Attempt To Fire Federal Reserve Board Member Lisa Cook

baltimore met gala

Baltimore Met Gala Returns With Bold Fashion, Art, And Community Spirit

Fashion, art, and philanthropy converge at the fourth annual Baltimore Met Gala, highlighting local designers, visual artists, and community organizations under the theme 'Timeless — the Evolution of Style.'


When LaRian Finney first envisioned the Baltimore Met Gala, he imagined something on par with the iconic New York event — but rooted in the city’s own creativity and style. “I thought Baltimore deserved that same type of lens,” Finney said. Now in its fourth year, the Baltimore Met Gala is set to return on Sept. 13 at Live! Casino and Hotel in Hanover.

This year’s edition blends fashion, visual art, food, and philanthropy under the theme “Timeless — the Evolution of Style: Past, Present, Future.” For organizers Finney and Derrick Chase, the focus goes beyond glamour. It’s also about affirming Baltimore’s cultural legacy at a time when President Donald Trump has singled out the city in political attacks.

“We thought it was an appropriate theme based not only on the [political] climate but to pay homage to what those three verticals have meant to Baltimore and beyond,” Finney explained, as reported by The Banner.

The gala has expanded dramatically since its debut in 2021, when about 400 people attended at the Baltimore Museum of Art. Last year, the event drew roughly 1,600 guests, and organizers expect a similar crowd this weekend.

The runway remains the centerpiece, with over 80 models set to showcase looks by designers including Dermaine Johnson, Andrew Nowell, and Afua Sam. For Sam, the theme resonated with her African heritage. Her women’s line will highlight bold Ghanaian prints and textiles.

“It will be very colorful,” said Sam, who lives in Silver Spring. “I want everybody to just smile when they see it. I also hope that it will inspire people to actually incorporate African prints into their wardrobe.”

The visual art element is equally central. This year’s “Timeless” exhibition is curated by Ainsley Burrows, Ernest Shaw, and Laurielle Noel, featuring their own work alongside pieces from Baltimore-based artists like Qrcky, Alma Roberts, and Melissa Sutherland Moss. Guests will be able to buy or commission pieces directly using QR codes placed near the artworks.

For Burrows, the event reflects something larger than aesthetics. “The Baltimore Met Gala showcases another art form: the art of creating community,” he said.

Community building is woven into the event’s DNA. Each year, the gala highlights a nonprofit partner; this year, it is the Justice Thurgood Marshall Amenity Center, which provides resources and programming for residents in West Baltimore’s Upton neighborhood.

The gala’s mix of style, art, and purpose has made it a unique fixture in the region’s cultural calendar. For designers like Sam, it is also a platform that pushes creative boundaries. “The Baltimore Met Gala has created this platform for people like me and other creatives to continuously challenge ourselves to do things that we’ve never done before,” she said.

What started as a local spin on a global fashion spectacle has evolved into a platform for Baltimore to showcase its creativity, resilience, and community spirit — proving that the city deserves its moment in the spotlight.

RELATED CONTENT: The 2025 Met Gala: Why Its Display Of ‘Superfine’ Black Fashion And Dandyism Matters Now

jason collins, brain tumor

Jason Collins, The NBA’s First Openly Gay Player, Is Undergoing Treatment For A Brain Tumor

Collins became the first openly gay athlete to play a game in either the NBA, NFL, MLB, or NHL, the four major American sports.


On Sept. 11, the National Basketball Association announced that Jason Collins, the league’s first openly gay player who is now an NBA Ambassador, is in the middle of receiving treatment for a brain tumor via a press release.

“NBA Ambassador and 13-year veteran Jason Collins is currently undergoing treatment for a brain tumor. Jason and his family welcome your support and prayers and kindly ask for privacy as they dedicate their attention to Jason’s health and well-being,” the statement read.

Collins, a former first-round pick in the 2001 NBA draft, had a solid, if unremarkable, 13-year career as a center. His most remarkable feat while playing in the NBA was his public coming out via a 2013 Sports Illustrated article. The following year, after he signed with the Brooklyn Nets in free agency, Collins became the first openly gay athlete to play a game in any of the four major American sports leagues: the NBA, NFL, MLB, or NHL.

Notably, also in 2013, Brittney Griner became the first openly gay WNBA player to be drafted out of college when the Phoenix Mercury drafted her with the first overall pick. Griner played at Baylor University, a Baptist-affiliated private university. At the time, she noted in an interview with ESPN that the environment for women who come out is drastically different from that of men.

In a 2023 interview with The Athletic, Collins noted that there remains a need for male athletes who are gay to come out because it normalizes and humanizes gay people, in particular, gay men, who are still often targets of hatred.

“We need more and more male athletes to step forward so that we can get to that day when, after the game is over, everyone’s significant other is in the family room waiting for them along with everybody else’s, regardless of gender,” Collins told the outlet.

In 2021, when then-Las Vegas Raiders defensive end Carl Nassib became the first active openly gay NFL player, Collins remarked to The Los Angeles Times that Nassib’s decision would have an impact on people whom he will never meet.

“He’s going to have a positive impact on someone else’s life that he may never meet in his lifetime. I’ve met many people who have come up to me and told me how my story has impacted them. But he’s going to find that his actions have inspired not only people who are younger than him but older than him. I can’t tell you the amount of people who were decades older than me who came up to me and said how my story impacted them. You don’t know what to say. You’re still in that mindset of being an athlete and helping kids. But he’s helping people across the board, of all ages,” Collins said.

To that end, over his last two seasons, 2012-2014, during which time he played for three teams, the Boston Celtics, the Washington Wizards, and the aforementioned Nets, he wore number 98 in tribute to former University of Wyoming student Matthew Shepard, whose 1998 murder helped create state and federal hate crime laws aimed at prosecuting people who targeted gay people with violence. That jersey was one of the top sellers in the league at the time, and has since been sent to the Smithsonian Institution.

The Stanford University men’s basketball program, where Collins spent his college years before entering the draft, sent their love and support to Collins and his family via a post to its Twitter (X) account, as did the last team Collins played for, the Brooklyn Nets.

https://twitter.com/StanfordMBB/status/1966208844595663149?s=19

“Sending our love and support to Jason, his husband Brunson, Jarron and the entire Collins family,” the Stanford men’s basketball program wrote.

Collins recently married Brunson Greene, the 57-year-old film producer who received a Best Picture Oscar nomination for the Viola Davis and Octavia Spencer-led film “The Help.”

According to People Magazine, Spencer attended the wedding ceremony of Collins and Greene, and shared her elation over the newlywed couple on her Instagram account.

“Welcome to the family, Jason Collins. You’ve chosen well, and so has he! Love you, B!” Spencer wrote.

In 2018, Collins told People Magazine that before he came out publicly, only his friends and family really knew the reason why he chose to wear number 98 across his chest and his back.

“I remember being a sophomore in college when Matthew Shepherd was killed. Every time I put on that jersey, it was just a silent acknowledgment to myself and to my friends and family — who knew why I was wearing that number — of being a proud gay Black man playing in the NBA. Sort of hiding in plain sight,” Collins noted.

RELATED CONTENT: President Obama Announces Key Administrative Posts

North Carolina A&T State University in Greensboro, NC, HBCU,

North Carolina A&T Hits Record Enrollment, Solidifying Status As Nation’s Largest HBCU

North Carolina Agricultural and Technical School saw a total of 15,275 enrolled students, which is nearly 1,000 more than last year.


North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University has surpassed 15,000 students this fall, marking the largest enrollment in its history and extending its reign as the nation’s biggest public historically Black university.

The university reported a total of 15,275 students, nearly 1,000 more than last year, reflecting a 6.7% increase. It is the 12th consecutive year A&T has led all HBCUs in size, and the fourth year in a row it has been the largest such institution ever.

“The 2025-26 student body reaffirms our commitment to the people of North Carolina, our national appeal and impact as an exponential, doctoral research HBCU, and the promise that North Carolina A&T holds for students around the world,” said Chancellor James R. Martin II.

Growth was evident across nearly every area. In-state enrollment climbed by 849 students, a 9.3% increase that aligns with A&T’s land-grant mission. The Graduate College surpassed 2,000 students for the first time, with doctoral enrollment increasing by more than 23%. Transfer students jumped 17%, with 814 newcomers this fall, while international enrollment rose 10.3%, bringing nearly 1,000 students from abroad, with almost half from Africa.

First-year students also continue to arrive at North Carolina A&T with strong academic credentials. The fall’s 3,021 freshmen held an average GPA of 3.7, while out-of-state freshmen averaged 3.93. Students now come from 36 states, Washington, D.C., and 103 countries.

According to NCAT, retention is another area of progress: 81% of last year’s freshmen returned as sophomores, the highest rate in school history.

A&T officials point to the school’s value as a major draw. Graduates earn some of the strongest salaries in the UNC System, with Forbes estimating median pay of $112,000 a decade after graduation. Students also benefit from some of the largest career fairs in the nation.

“As interest in A&T continues to grow, our team of enrollment professionals remains dedicated to finding the best and brightest students from North Carolina and beyond,” said Joseph Montgomery, associate vice provost for Enrollment Management. “We will continue to review all applicants carefully, intentionally, and through a comprehensive, holistic process.”

Chancellor Martin called the growth humbling, adding: “North Carolina A&T is setting a national standard as a land-grant HBCU and model for what it means to be a public university in this new millennium.”

RELATED CONTENT: HBCU Enrollment Skyrockets

knicks, spike lee, pope

Spike Lee Fronts Timberland’s 50th Anniversary Yellow Boot Global Campaign

Timberland is celebrating the 50th anniversary of its iconic Yellow Boot with a global campaign featuring Spike Lee, Skepta, and Kiko Mizuhara.


Timberland is celebrating the 50th anniversary of its iconic Yellow Boot with a new global campaign, “Advice of an Icon,” fronted by filmmaker Spike Lee alongside rapper Skepta and actress Kiko Mizuhara. The effort highlights creativity, authenticity, and community while honoring the boot’s decades-long influence on fashion and culture.

The campaign, launched on Sept. 11, was unveiled through a series of Instagram posts. For Lee, the project carries a message rooted in discipline. “You have to have a work ethic,” he said in a statement. “You got to put the work in. You can’t cheat that, if you’re cheating, you’re cheating yourself.”

Lee has long been a visible supporter of Timberland, most recently spotted courtside at Madison Square Garden in custom Knicks-themed Yellow Boots during the NBA season.

Skepta, the British rapper who also stars in the Timberland campaign, emphasized perseverance and the power of community. “There was never another option for me apart from success,” he said. “Anyone who’s built something will tell you — you need blind faith, even when the outcome isn’t clear. People need to remember community. Get back to that idea of doing it for the people around you.”

For Mizuhara, the campaign is about staying true to oneself despite setbacks. “I kept going. I kept doing what I liked,” she said. “Sometimes there were challenges, and I failed. It’s because I stayed true to who I am. That’s why I’m here. And I will never apologize for who I am.”

The campaign was directed and photographed by Gabriel Moses, known for his distinctive visual style. Timberland’s Chief Marketing Officer, Maisie Willoughby, described the effort as both a tribute and a cultural statement.

“As we head into FW25, Timberland continues to lean into its legacy while pushing culture forward,” she said. “The Advice of an Icon campaign is a bold tribute to unapologetic self-expression and timeless craft. At its core is the Original Yellow Boot, a global icon that has shaped style, work, and street culture for over 50 years.”

With its mix of legendary figures and contemporary voices, Timberland aims to bridge generations while reinforcing the enduring legacy of its signature boot.

RELATED CONTENT: Timberland Celebrates Black Cowboys With Black Pioneer Collection

Dr. Bernice King, Martin Luther King, charlie kirk

Bernice King On Charlie Kirk Comparisons To Her Father: ‘I Get Tired, Y’All’

King believes that political leaders need to do more than selectively quote her father, Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, if they want to effect change.


Dr. Bernice King, the youngest daughter of civil and human rights icons Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Coretta Scott King, has had a busy week responding to the willful misinterpretations of both slain Christian Nationalist Charlie Kirk and her father, and understandably, she recently expressed her frustrations on social media.

One day after Kirk was killed, allegedly by Tyler Robinson, a 22-year-old white man from Utah whose family are Mormons and Donald Trump supporters, in response to criticism of political violence in America, King placed the concept of political violence in America in its proper context.

“We need to stop the lie of ‘There’s no place for _____________ violence in this country.’ Because, clearly, there is a place. Historically and presently, this nation has been a place for policy violence, mass violence, genocidal violence, gun violence, economic violence, and other forms of violence,” King wrote.

She continued, “And, so, here we are. A day after Charlie Kirk was shot and killed. 24 years after 9/11. A day when people across the globe, including in Sudan, Gaza, Congo, Tigray, Yemen, and Ukraine, suffer the devastation of political violence. A day when the National Guard patrols the streets of D.C. A day when low-income, Black communities in Memphis are besieged by environmental injustice. A day to more urgently begin praying with our actions and with our collective call and work for true peace, which, as my father said, ‘is not merely the absence of tension; it is the presence of justice.’”

Unfortunately, there would be more misrepresentations of her father’s work that King would have to address.

As The Grio reported, after a photo posted by Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL), which put Kirk in conversation with her father, Abraham Lincoln, John F. Kennedy, and Jesus of Nazareth, spread on social media, Bernice King once again expressed her frustration with flagrant misrepresentations of her father in relation to Kirk.

“There are so many things wrong with this. So many. I get tired, y’all,” King wrote in response to Rep. Luna’s post.

The right has been busy trying to turn Kirk into a martyr for the cause of free speech, ignoring the mountain of racist, sexist, homophobic, and xenophobic statements he has made throughout his career as a far-right firebrand.

Despite their attempts to portray him as a scion of free speech, the organization he founded, Turning Point USA, maintains a “professor watch list,” which is itself antithetical to the idea of free speech. Furthermore, some of his acolytes are now keeping a student or employee watch list via the Expose Charlie’s Murderers” website so they can target outspoken critics of Kirk.

As it relates to the inclusion of Jesus of Nazareth in the photo circulated by Rep. Luna, many white evangelicals (and some Black ones) have been actively engaging in the sanitization of Kirk’s legacy, wherein they have attempted to paint him as a man of God, ignoring his history of bigoted statements.

However, as John Fugelsang, the author of “Separation of Church and Hate: A Sane Person’s Guide to Taking Back the Bible from Fundamentalists, Fascists, and Flock-Fleecing Frauds,” plainly laid out in an op-ed for Avid Reader Press, placing Kirk in conversation with the Son of God himself is a continuation of the way that the right has been invested in misrepresenting what Jesus had to say about Christianity.

“The parable of the Good Samaritan is Jesus specifically rejecting the idea of limiting compassion to one’s own group. A despised foreigner is the character who fulfills God’s command to ‘love your neighbor as yourself.’ Jesus wraps this up with the command: ‘Go and do likewise.’ This directly refutes any charming argument that Christians should prioritize care for ‘their own.’ Jesus called for his followers to sacrifice themselves at the expense of others,” Fugelsang argued.

Fugelsang’s argument in his op-ed is also related to the position King stated in the preamble to her statement, which is that although she has sympathy for Kirk’s children, political leaders need to do more than selectively quote her father if they actually want to effect change in the United States of America.

“It saddens me that Charlie Kirk’s children will likely one day view the video of their father being shot. No child anywhere should lose a parent in such a hateful, callous way,” King wrote.

She continued, “It will require much more than quoting my father for the United States to evolve from our current conundrum of multi-faceted violence, tragic apathy, and degrading policies.”

RELATED CONTENT: Bernice King Honors Father’s Legacy At Cincinnati’s Black Family Reunion

counterfeit, luxury items, Miami

Miami Couple Arrested For Selling Over $500K Of Counterfeit Luxury Items From Home

A Miami couple faces felony charges for selling fake Louis Vuitton out of their home.


A couple is facing felony charges after authorities uncovered a $500,000 counterfeit luxury goods operation inside their home in Miami Gardens.

On Sept. 9, Yuri Velazquez-Garcia, 33, and Mayrelis Marquez Plans, 32, were arrested on felony counterfeiting charges tied to more than $20,000 in goods, CBS News reports. Authorities say over 500 counterfeit items were found at their home, which had been transformed into a mini luxury boutique.

“You were arrested for selling counterfeit goods or services over $1,000,” Miami-Dade County Judge Mindy Glazer said during their Sept. 10 hearing.

The investigation began in July when an investigator found an Instagram post advertising a home as a Louis Vuitton storefront, with handbags, clothing, and shoes displayed for sale. Authorities traced the address to Northwest 185th Street, confirming Velazquez-Garcia owned it.

Surveillance later revealed activity consistent with counterfeit sales, along with social media accounts linking Velazquez-Garcia and Marquez-Plans to the nationwide shipping of fake goods. In August, an undercover agent conducted controlled buys at the home, where Marquez-Plans escorted them into the counterfeit boutique before Velazquez-Garcia offered items for sale, according to reports.

In one instance, the agent purchased a handbag valued at $7,550 and a $1,070 shirt for just $180 cash. During a second visit, the agent bought a bathing suit, belt, cap, and shirt with a combined MSRP of $3,435 for $250 cash. A Louis Vuitton manager later verified that all of the items were counterfeit.

With a search warrant, authorities seized more than 500 counterfeit items from the home, merchandise that would have been worth over $500,000 if authentic.

“If the items were real, they would’ve been over half a million dollars,” a state attorney said.

Velazquez-Garcia and Marquez-Plans were booked on felony counterfeiting charges involving goods valued at $20,000 or more. Each was held on a $5,000 bond, which they later posted.

RELATED CONTENT: Georgia Woman Found and Extradited After Scamming Dollar General Stores With Fake $20s

Kentanji Brown, Brett Kavanaugh, justices, Supreme Court

An Evening With ‘Lovely One’ Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson In Charlotte: Recap

The crowd erupted when the Justice took the stage to read an excerpt from her best-selling memoir, paying homage to her first and middle names--Ketanji Onyika--meaning “Lovely One.”


On a brisk September night, members of Charlotte, North Carolina’s, elite gathered at the newly revamped Carolina Theatre to hear from the first Black woman to ever sit on the Supreme Court, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson. 

The sold-out crowd could be heard whispering about how much they already loved her 2024 book, “Lovely One: A Memoir,” while others patiently waited in line to purchase it before doors opened. Lovers of politics, who currently fight for our rights, like North Carolina Democratic Congresswoman Alma Adams, took their seats as Secret Service agents could be seen scanning the onlookers. It wasn’t long before Brown-Jackson’s childhood best friend, Sunny Schleifer Binder, took the stage to introduce the historymaker.

The crowd erupted when the Justice took the stage to read an excerpt from her best-selling memoir, paying homage to her first and middle names–Ketanji Onyika–meaning “Lovely One.” For roughly five minutes, she read a section of the book that discussed her journey growing up in Miami and the honor it was to be raised by two HBCU-educated parents. Born in 1970, just five years after the Voting Rights Act of 1965 was signed into law, Brown-Jackson spoke about her early love for theater and debating, admitting that at a young age, she wanted to be the first Supreme Court Justice to perform on Broadway.

The program was put on by the Harvey B. Gantt Center for African-American Arts + Culture, in collaboration with The Gambrell Foundation and the Arts + Science Council. The audience became engaged in the conversation, moderated by Gantt himself. Gantt is known for his philanthropic work in addition to being the first African American student of Clemson University in 1963 and Charlotte’s first Black mayor in 1983. 

The two historymakers chatted about her journey to becoming the first Black woman justice in the Supreme Court’s 236-year history, succeeding retired Justice Stephen Breyer, for whom she worked as a law clerk. “The vision precedes the passage,” she said as she discussed how she served on every level of federal court. Graduating from Harvard University, Brown Jackson talked about her days as an undergrad, where she met her husband, Patrick, in an era during which she found herself struggling to fit in.

But it was one particular moment she shared with the audience that made some tear up, in addition to thunderous applause. The mother of two reminisced about one day walking on campus, feeling slightly down due to being away from the warm Florida weather, and celebrating her 18th birthday in the cool fall temperatures of Cambridge, Massachusetts. And out of nowhere, a Black woman started walking toward her and whispered “persevere” to her and scurried away. She took that as a sign that she was exactly where she needed to be, remembering words from her aunts of angels always being around her without knowing. 

And remembering a famous quote from renowned author Toni Morrison, after fighting to have a Confederate flag removed. “The function, the very serious function of racism is distraction. It keeps you from doing your work…” the novelist once said. 

It’s words such as Morrison’s that helped Brown Jackson realize that not only did she earn her seat on the Supreme Court, but she deserved it. “I have a seat at the table now and I’m ready to work,” she told the audience.

“And I feel that.”

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