Malcolm X, 100th birthday, Black liberation

The Enduring Fire: Revisiting Malcolm X’s Vision For Black Liberation On What Would Have Been His 100th Birthday

On what would have been his 100th birthday, we remember a man whose evolving vision of self-determination and liberation remains a powerful and necessary voice in our ongoing pursuit of a more just and equitable world.


Born Malcolm Little on May 19, 1925, the man who would evolve into the globally influential Malcolm X and later El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz remains a pivotal figure in the ongoing pursuit of Black liberation. 

As we approach what would have been his 100th birthday, his incisive critique of systemic racism and his unwavering call for self-determination strike with profound urgency in today’s deeply divided racial landscape.

From a childhood scarred by the overt white supremacy that resulted in the burning of his family’s Michigan home (and the suspected Klan murder of his father, Earl Little) to his transformative engagement with the Nation of Islam (NOI) and his eventual embrace of Sunni Islam, Malcolm’s journey offers enduring insights for a world still grappling with the pervasive realities of racial injustice.

Malcolm’s early years were a stark testament to the virulent racism embedded within American society. The Little family’s eviction from their Lansing home due to a discriminatory restrictive covenant and the authorities’ indifference to the arson that destroyed their dwelling laid bare the systemic devaluation of Black lives. These foundational traumas, compounded by the state’s subsequent removal of the children following his mother Louise’s descent into mental illness, forged within young Malcolm a keen awareness of racial oppression.

His time incarcerated, commencing in 1946, became an unexpected catalyst for intellectual growth. Under the influence of a fellow inmate known as “Bimbi,” Malcolm embarked on a rigorous program of self-education. During this period, his newfound brother introduced him to the teachings of Elijah Muhammad and the NOI. Shedding the surname “Little,” which he viewed as a vestige of slavery, he adopted “X,” symbolizing the lost ancestral name and the forging of a new identity rooted in Black consciousness. Initially dismayed by the NOI’s limited growth, with a nationwide membership of around 400, Malcolm spearheaded an intensive recruitment drive with Elijah Muhammad’s blessing, leading to a significant surge in membership.

As a charismatic minister and the national voice of the NOI, Malcolm X articulated a powerful challenge to the prevailing racial order. His potent oratory, advocating for Black self-defense “by any means necessary,” contrasted sharply with the nonviolent strategies of the mainstream Civil Rights Movement. 

The NOI’s rapid expansion, reaching approximately 40,000 members under his influence and supporting 49 temples, demonstrated the power of his message to many Black Americans who felt marginalized and excluded from the promises of equality. The establishment of Muhammad Speaks, the NOI’s newspaper, further disseminated his uncompromising critique of white supremacy.

However, Malcolm’s intellectual and spiritual evolution continued. His transformative pilgrimage to Mecca in 1964 marked a profound shift in his understanding of race and Islam. Witnessing Muslims of diverse backgrounds worshipping harmoniously led him to embrace Sunni Islam and adopt the name El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz. 

Simultaneously, he founded the Muslim Mosque, Inc. (MMI) in March 1964, a religious organization grounded in traditional Islam, and the secular Organization of Afro-American Unity (OAAU) in June 1964, advocating for Pan-Africanism and Black self-determination, drawing inspiration from the unified political voice of the Organization of African Unity (OAU).

Malcolm’s ideological evolution did not dilute his commitment to Black liberation but broadened its scope. He began to frame the struggle for racial justice in the United States within a global context of anti-colonialism and human rights. His efforts to bring the grievances of African Americans before the United Nations reflected this expanded worldview. As he stated after his Hajj, he witnessed in Mecca “pilgrims of all colors from all parts of this earth displaying a spirit of unity and brotherhood like I’ve never seen before.”

The experience informed his belief that a “bloodless revolution” in America was possible.

Today, nearly six decades after his assassination on February 21, 1965, Malcolm X’s legacy carries a renewed and vital significance. In an era marked by persistent and often stark racial disparities, his demand for genuine equality and self-determination reverberates with pressing urgency. For instance, data from the Bureau of Justice Statistics in 2021 indicated that Black individuals accounted for approximately 33% of the incarcerated population in state and federal prisons, despite making up only about 13.6% of the U.S. population. This stark overrepresentation underscores the systemic issues Malcolm so vehemently critiqued.

Furthermore, the ongoing national conversations surrounding racial bias in policing, as evidenced by numerous high-profile cases, echo Malcolm’s condemnation of police brutality following the assault on Johnson Hinton in 1957. His assertion of the right to self-defense in the face of state-sanctioned violence finds contemporary force in movements advocating for police reform and accountability.

The debates surrounding the teaching of Black history and the pushback against initiatives promoting diversity, equity and inclusion highlight the continued relevance of Malcolm’s insistence on historical truth and the need for Black-led institutions, a key tenet of the OAAU. His emphasis on education as a means of empowerment and the importance of African Americans controlling their own narratives remain crucial elements in the fight against systemic racism. As he articulated at the OAAU founding conference, rejecting pejorative terms and embracing self-defined identities are essential for genuine progress.

The increasing awareness of global Black solidarity and the interconnectedness of struggles against oppression worldwide also aligns with the Pan-African vision of the OAAU. Malcolm’s understanding that the fight for Black liberation in America was intrinsically linked to the liberation struggles on the African continent continues to empower contemporary movements advocating for racial justice on a global scale.

Malcolm X’s enduring legacy lies in his intellectual courage, unwavering commitment to justice, and capacity for transformative growth. He was a leader who challenged not only the external forces of oppression but also the internal limitations imposed by systemic racism. 

On what would have been his 100th birthday, we remember a man whose evolving vision of self-determination and liberation remains a powerful and necessary voice in our ongoing pursuit of a more just and equitable world.

Inshallah.

RELATED CONTENT: SHOCKING VERDICT: Memphis Cops Found ‘Not Guilty’ In Tyre Nichols Beating

Rickey Henderson, baseball

Jose Alvarado Suspended 80 Games By MLB, Tests Positive For Performance-Enhancing Substance

The Philadelphia Phillies reliever is ineligible for the playoffs when he returns from suspension


Major League Baseball has suspended professional baseball player Jose Alvarado after testing positive for a performance-enhancing substance.

The relief pitcher, who plays for the Philadelphia Phillies, recently tested positive for exogenous testosterone. According to Oxford Academic, the product increases lean body mass and decreases body fat, and could improve physical performance and strength. Performance-enhancing substances are not allowed in the league. Alvarado’s suspension is for 80 games without pay.

The Phillies released a statement about the suspension:

“It’s disappointing for sure,” Phillies president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski said. “There’s no question about that. We’ve had other issues come up at various times. I end up treating it like an injury because you need to replace somebody for 80 games and then hopefully into the postseason.”

The team also stated that they are in support of the league’s decision.

When the relief pitcher returns to the league after serving his suspension, he will not be eligible to play in the postseason if the team makes it in.

The Phillies are currently in second place in the National League East with a 28-18 record, a half game behind the New York Mets in the division. Alvarado, having a good year thus far, has a record of 4-1 with a 2.70 ERA and seven saves while appearing in 20 games.

“I’ve had plenty of players be injured and miss postseasons and clubs have won world championships and all that,” Dombrowski added. “It’s not ideal by any means. It’s not something you want to see happen, but you just have to deal with it.”

Dombrowski had stated that Alvarado tested positive some time ago, but tested negative in two follow-up tests. He also said that Alvarado accepted the punishment and has no plans to appeal.

The executive said he was informed by Alvarado that he was taking the substance for “weight-loss reduction,” and he believes what he was told by the pitcher, but ultimately, he is responsible for his actions.

Alvarado is in the final year of a three-year, $22 million contract. He has the option to renew for $9 million for 2026.

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Grace Vandercruze, wealth-building

From Ashes To Assets: 5 Wealth-Building Essentials From The Wall Street Exec Who Went From Homeless To Millionaire

Losing everything can happen without warning


By Grace Vandecruze

The afternoon I stood across the street and watched our Brooklyn home burn down, I witnessed more than the destruction of property — I saw the beginning of my financial awakening. As a college student and one of seven children, my mother’s words cut deeper than the flames: “We don’t have insurance. None.” That moment taught me the most expensive financial lesson of my life: preparation determines preservation.

I learned that losing everything can happen without warning — and without a safety net, rock bottom has no floor.

Suddenly, we were a family of nine without shelter, income, or options. We entered a smelly, overcrowded homeless shelter. I remember the shame I felt calling it home and the unbreakable promise I made to myself: This is a chapter, not my story’s end.

In today’s volatile economy, many are experiencing their own financial fires. Mass layoffs. Bank collapses. Market downturns. People who’ve done everything “right” are waking up to news that their company is restructuring, their 401(k)s have plummeted, and the job they believed was secure has vanished.

It’s not just challenging — it’s financially traumatic. And I understand this trauma intimately.

From those desperate days in that Brooklyn shelter, I channeled my determination into action — earning my CPA, graduating from Wharton Business School, and ultimately becoming a trusted investment banking expert who has advised on more than $25 billion worth of insurance industry transactions. Today, I’m the founder of Grace Global Capital, serve on multiple corporate boards, and have even facilitated a major sale to Warren Buffett himself. Just as I’ve summited 25 mountain peaks across three continents — including Mt. Kilimanjaro — I’ve climbed from sleeping in a New York City homeless shelter to ringing the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange through unwavering resolve and calculated steps forward.

If you’ve lost a paycheck, watched your emergency fund evaporate, or find yourself calculating and recalculating how to stretch your resources, you’re experiencing your own version of a financial fire. It may feel like the ground is crumbling beneath you, but I am living proof that you can rebuild stronger than before. Here are the wealth-building essentials that transformed my journey from homeless to millionaire:

1. Make the Hard Financial Decisions Early — Cut Losses, Not Hope

When everything went up in smoke, denial wasn’t an option. We faced reality immediately, which taught me this wealth principle: Your first loss is your best loss.

FINANCIAL TIP: Create a 30-day financial triage plan. If your income has disappeared, implement a zero-based budget immediately, where every dollar has a specific purpose. Cut expenses by at least 30% within the first week. Research shows that those who reduce expenses within 14 days of income loss preserve twice as much wealth as those who wait 30+ days. Prioritize keeping assets that appreciate (education, essential property) over depreciating liabilities (luxury items, subscriptions). Get more strategies in my free Uplift guide to have a financial comeback.

2. Never Let Circumstances Define Your Financial Identity

My grandmother’s wisdom sustained me: “Never plan based on circumstances.”

In that homeless shelter — a place that felt like financial rock bottom — I made a decision that changed everything: This is my situation, not my destination. I refused to internalize poverty as my financial identity.

FINANCIAL TIP: Create a “wealth vision statement” with specific numbers and timeframes. While managing current hardship, allocate 30 minutes weekly to high-value financial planning. Even with limited resources, begin building credit through secured cards or becoming an authorized user on a family member’s account. Your credit score is your financial reputation — protect it fiercely during transitions.

3. Develop a Dual Income Strategy — Survive Now, Thrive Later

In that shelter, I created a two-track plan. Track one: immediate income. Track two: long-term wealth building. I tripled down on education while working part-time. I leveraged every free resource — soup kitchens, donated clothes — turning humility into opportunity.

FINANCIAL TIP: Apply the 70/30 income rule during recovery: Use 70% of earned income for immediate needs, and reserve 30% to rebuild your financial foundation. Create multiple income streams immediately — even small ones. Identify three marketable skills you can monetize within 48 hours without additional certification. The gig economy offers fast onboarding for delivery services, freelance platforms, and virtual assistance that can generate cash flow while you rebuild your career.

4. Strategic Vulnerability: When Asking for Help Becomes an Investment

This season will challenge your pride. But I learned quickly — financial survival outweighs saving face.

Standing in line at a soup kitchen taught me something powerful about wealth building: Sometimes receiving creates opportunity for future giving. Every resource accepted became fuel for my future financial impact.

FINANCIAL TIP: Create a “resource maximization plan” targeting specific forms of assistance with clear exit timelines. If unemployed, immediately apply for all benefits — each day of delay costs an average of $400 in lost benefits. Simultaneously, build your professional network by requesting 15-minute virtual coffees with three connections weekly. Research shows that 65% of professional rebounds come through secondary connections, not primary ones.

5. Build Wealth Resilience Through Mental Capital

Riding the train to school each day, I memorized Maya Angelou’s “And Still I Rise.” I studied wealth patterns during my commute. I programmed my mind with financial truths that my environment couldn’t provide.

FINANCIAL TIP: Financial trauma affects decision-making. Combat this by implementing a 24-hour rule before making any financial decision over $100. Track your financial progress daily — even increases of $5 matter psychologically. Studies show that people who document small financial wins are 58% more likely to achieve larger financial goals. Convert anxiety into action by learning one new wealth-building concept daily.

I know what it’s like when your financial foundation burns down completely. I’ve navigated both trauma and transformation.

If you’re facing financial devastation right now, understand this isn’t your financial finale. Your comeback begins the moment you shift from victim to visionary. While you may not see the summit from the valley, every strategic step moves you closer.

Today, I help others climb. As a Wall Street executive, trauma-informed wealth expert, and founder of Grace Global Capital LLC, I’ve transformed that painful experience into purpose. After putting myself through school and earning my MBA in finance from The Wharton School, I’ve advised over $25 billion in financial transactions, advised Fortune 100 firms, and teach the same wealth strategies used by billionaires.

Remember this: Wealth isn’t just for the privileged few — it’s a human right. Your current financial situation is a moment, not your financial destiny. And I’m living proof that no matter where you start, with strategic action and unwavering belief, you can rise beyond what you’ve lost to create what you truly deserve.


Grace Vandecruze is a Wall Street executive, trauma-informed wealth expert, and founder of Grace Global Capital LLC. She is the author of “Homeless to Millionaire” and creator of the Wealth Wisdom Accelerator course, empowering others to transform financial trauma into lasting wealth.

Get more actionable strategies in my free guide, UPLIFT: The Financial Comeback Guide With the Exact Steps that Took Me from Homeless to Millionaire Get your free copy at https://upliftwithgrace.com/

Tuskegee, HBCU, campus fashion

HBCUs Fight Erasure With New Digital Archive: ‘There Were So Many Stories That Needed To Be Told’

The program will help HBCUs build their own digital archives of images, records, and more.


A new partnership between Getty Images and Ancestry.com will preserve the legacy of HBCUs through visual artifacts.

Funded by Getty’s HBCU Grants program, the partnership will work with 10 HBCUs to source and preserve images, documents, and other records a part of this unique history. According to Inside HigherEd, the initiative will also digitize these findings for the schools’ own archival collections.

The Grants program started in 2021 to help preserve HBCU photography. However, a lack of resources to digitize these images, and a greater need to preserve beyond these visual elements, led to the program’s expansion.

Cassandra Illidge, executive director of the HBCU Grants Program at Getty Images, took this mission upon herself to make a reality.

“There were so many stories that needed to be told,” explained Illidge. “There’s so much material that still needs to be uncovered for research purposes, for licensing, for storytelling.”

Lincoln University, an HBCU in Pennsylvania, became the first institution to join the endeavor. The university has 700 photos in the archive, but wants to feature other material, including documents dating back to its charter in 1854. Although the U.S. Census did not thoroughly maintain the history of Black Americans in the past, the HBCU kept “impeccable records” of students.

“We’re not just talking about Black history, we’re talking about American history,” explained Harry Stinson III, interim vice president of institutional advancement at Lincoln. [The images and records] show “what African Americans have been able to achieve when given the space and the opportunity to learn and to thrive.”

Students in the Getty-Ancestry.com project will also acquire skills in archival work, and receive a stipend sponsored by Denny’s. By sourcing, dating, and uncovering more information behind these images and documents, they will be contributing to the history of these institutions.

The program’s expansion also comes when the Trump administration is pushing back against DEI initiatives. President Donald Trump has ordered to shut down the teachings or promotions of histories that do not align with his vision of America, instead opting for a “patriotic education” of children.

However, this initiative will promote HBCU’s uncensored history as they detail the plight of Black Americans seeking an education in this country. Participating schools will also keep full copyright ownership of all materials submitted.

“This amazing material that’s coming from HBCUs is just another line of history that we can share with the world,” added Illidge. “Regardless of administration, or any other changes, we’re not changing our goals and mission.”

Ancestry and Getty Images urge more HBCUs to join the program.

RELATED CONTENT: HBCU Week NOW Launches Effort To Build Digital Collection Of Commencement Speeches

Kimora Lee Simmons., reality TV, Back In The Fab Lane

Kimora Lee Simmons To Return to Reality TV With ‘Back In The Fab Lane’

The show will detail her life as a fashion company owner and mom of five.


Fans of Kimora Lee Simmons are in for a treat. The fashion designer and media personality is returning to reality television with Back In The Fab Lane, a reboot of her hit show, Life in the Fab Lane.

Simmons recently announced that her over a decade-long break from the screen is officially over. The new project, per E! News, will feature Simmons as she leads her fashion empire and manages life as a single mother of five children.

Simmons has been married twice, the first time to hip-hop impresario, Russell Simmons, the father of her two oldest children.

Back in the Fab Lane will put a spotlight on her two adult daughters, Ming and Aoki Lee Simmons, as they follow in their mother’s footsteps in fashion modeling. Her daughters also starred in the original series that aired from 2007 to 2011.

Ming, 25, and Aoki, 22, appeared in the promotional video for the reboot.

“Guess who’s bizzack,” captioned the reality star.

Simmons transitioned from model to brand owner with Baby Phat in 1999. Now, she continues to run the women-focused company, which re-launched in 2023 for “Gen-Z” shoppers.

And, of course, there’s doing that as a mom.

“Between dealing with the whims of her top-model daughters Ming, 25, and Aoki, 22, cheering on her 13-year-old son Kenzo and 15-year-old son Gary during championship games, and celebrating her own major milestones with her youngest Wolfe, 10, Kimora’s world is even more fabulous and outrageous than ever before,” the description added.

Produced and premiering on E!, the show will reportedly air in December. It will also feature Simmons as she continues to revive Baby Phat for a new generation of fashionistas.

RELATED CONTENT: Kimora Lee Simmons Establishes Scholarship Fund for Fashion Students

memphis, Memphis Tennessee, history

Memphis Curators Work To Preserve Thousands of Photos Highlighting Black Life

The 75,000 images chronicle ordinary Black life, capturing decades of Black weddings, graduations, and more.


In Memphis, an archive of 75,000 photographs offers an intimate look at Black life in the city over four decades—featuring not only glimpses of icons like B.B. King, Mahalia Jackson, and W.C. Handy, but more importantly, everyday moments like weddings and graduations.

Andrea and Rodney Herenton, who purchased the collection of photos by Hooks Brothers Studios, donated it to the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art and the National Civil Rights Museum.

“It’s a priceless inheritance,” Andrea Herenton told the New York Times, adding that the collection would help “inspire and live and breathe and teach and connect the past to the present,” by entering the public.

The collection may also help untether Memphis to its connection to outsiders as the city where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr was assassinated.

“People still found their way through tribulation. That is the strength of this community, despite the poverty, despite the historical challenges,” Russell Wigginton, president of the National Civil Rights Museum, located at the site of King’s assassination, the Lorraine Motel, told the Times. “There’s no party like a Memphis party. There’s nothing like when people are in community here, trust me.”

Community is the common theme of the photographs captured by the studio opened by Henry A. Hooks Sr. and Robert B. Hooks on Memphis’ famed Beale Street in 1907. At the time, the location was a hub for Black residents in a city that was still in the grips of Jim Crow segregation.

“It’s just so unique in terms of being such a long-term visual documentation of one community, one city. It documents you,” Ernestine Jenkins, a professor of art history at the University of Memphis, said after she produced a photo of her mother’s class photograph from 1937, which was taken by the Hooks brothers.

Jenkins continued, “It documents your family. It documents your community. It documents your region. It documents Memphis.”

According to C. Rose Smith, an assistant curator at the Brooks Museum, said the photos highlight “thinking about the beautification of a Black subject, and how the Hooks brothers may have even manipulated lighting to make sure they’re able to render Black skin tones correctly.”

Smith said the immediate goal, to have a collection of images ready for the exhibition’s anticipated 2026 debut.

To that end, Smith has been working with the Memphis community to identify people in the photos and the stories behind the photographs, visiting several senior citizens and alumni gatherings, finding some who had been photographed by the brothers.

RELATED CONTENT: Community ‘Devastated’ After Blaze Leaves Lasting Damages To Memphis’ Clayborn Temple

Georgia, white woman, Black boyfriend

Black Woman Promoted In Akron Fire Dept, White Captain Passed Over — Now He’s Suing For Discrimination

A white 27-year veteran of the Akron Fire Department filed a lawsuit against the city claiming he was unfairly passed over for a promotion in favor of a 49-year-old Black woman.


Stop me if this sounds familiar: A 58-year-old white man is suing the city because a Black woman got the job.

Michael Haas, a 27-year veteran of the Akron Fire Department, has filed a lawsuit against the City of Akron and its fire department, claiming he was unfairly passed over for a promotion in favor of 49-year-old Sierjie Lash, a Black woman who was appointed Captain.

According to WKYC, Haas alleges that the city’s “Rule of Five” policy — which lets leadership choose from the top five candidates after interviews — was weaponized to discriminate against him based on his age, race, and gender.

Haas is also arguing that Lash’s disciplinary record was expunged so that she could be considered for the role, citing a 30-day unpaid suspension in 2023 for off-duty coaching, in his lawsuit that was overturned as further evidence of Lash’s supposed preferential treatment while white candidates like himself received penalties for similar conduct.

According to Signal Akron, Lash was previously Akron’s first Black woman deputy fire chief, and Haas’ lawsuit is nearly singularly focused on her; her name appears 72 times across the lawsuit’s 34 pages.

Spectacularly, Hass alleges in his lawsuit that AFD’s Chief Leon Henderson retaliated against him to benefit Lash based in part on the fact that they’re both Black.

Per the lawsuit: “In considering how to promote Lash to district chief, Henderson conferred with Natko and Clarence Tucker about how to skip Haas and other qualified candidates in favor of Lash” because of her race and gender, according to the complaint. The suit also accuses Tucker, who is also a Black man, of having some kind of “discriminatory bias” toward Lash.

Haas’ lawsuit also requests a permanent injunction which requires the firing or demotion of supervisors whom he is accusing of engaging in discrimination against him and who he says retaliated against him instead of investigating his claims including Henderson, Assistant to the Mayor for Emergency Management Joseph Natko, and Tucker, the Deputy Mayor for Public Safety.

Hass’ attorney, Bryan Spitz, would only tell Signal Akron that “We are very confident in our complaint. We are committed to obtaining justice in this matter and for all employees.” Meanwhile, the City of Akron’s spokesperson declined to comment on an open piece of litigation.

In addition to the injunction against Henderson et al, Hass wants to be given “one of the positions to which he was entitled,” all negative documentation in his personnel file to be expunged, and a sum of more than $25,000 in damages he feels he is owed.

Although there seems to be an uptick in cases like these, a 2019 article in Scientific American set forth that, in actuality, reverse discrimination, that is, discrimination against white people, is not becoming more common, despite their feelings.

RELATED CONTENT: Scholarship Programs For Underrepresented Minorities Under Attack For ‘Discriminating Against White Males

Joe Biden, homebuyers, homes, money

Former President Joe Biden Diagnosed With Aggressive Prostate Cancer

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reports that approximately 13 out of every 100 men will develop prostate cancer during their lifetime.


Former U.S. President Joe Biden, 82, has been diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer that has spread to his bones, according to a statement released by his office on Sunday. The diagnosis followed a doctor’s visit last week, prompted by urinary symptoms.

Doctors determined Biden’s cancer is an aggressive form, characterized by a Gleason score of 9 out of 10. According to Cancer Research UK, this high-grade classification indicates rapid potential spread of cancer cells. Biden and his family are currently reviewing treatment options, with his office noting the cancer’s hormone sensitivity, suggesting potential manageability.

The diagnosis comes nearly a year after Biden withdrew from the 2024 presidential election amid growing concerns about his health and age. As the oldest person to hold the U.S. presidency, Biden faced significant scrutiny, particularly following a widely criticized debate performance against current President Donald Trump. He was subsequently replaced on the Democratic ticket by Vice President Kamala Harris.

Prostate cancer is the second most common cancer among men, according to the Cleveland Clinic. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reports that approximately 13 out of every 100 men will develop prostate cancer during their lifetime. Age is identified as the most significant risk factor.

News of Biden’s diagnosis elicited expressions of support from both Democratic and Republican lawmakers. Democratic House Representative Ro Khanna conveyed his prayers via X, formerly Twitter, highlighting Biden and former First Lady Jill Biden’s resilience. Republican House Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, a frequent critic of Biden, also offered her prayers.

Biden has maintained a relatively low public profile since leaving the White House. He delivered a keynote address at a Chicago conference for the Advocates, Counselors, and Representatives for the Disabled in April. He participated in a BBC interview in May, his first since leaving office, where he acknowledged the difficulty of withdrawing from the 2024 race.

During an earlier May appearance on The View, Biden refuted claims of cognitive decline during his final year in office. He has long advocated for cancer research, notably relaunching the Cancer Moonshot initiative in 2022 to significantly reduce cancer deaths by 2047. The former president’s advocacy is also deeply personal, as he lost his eldest son, Beau, to brain cancer in 2015.

RELATED CONTENT: St. Louis Legend Jenifer Lewis Awarded Honorary Doctorate, Tells WashU Graduates To Prioritize Mental Health

Newark Mayor Ras Baraka, governor endorsement

Newark Mayor Ras Baraka Says Feds Tried To Humiliate Him With Second Mugshot After Arrest At ICE Protest

Baraka says second mugshot was payback for opposing ICE policies.


Newark Mayor Ras Baraka, a Democrat, said he believes federal prosecutors tried to humiliate him by forcing him to give fingerprints and take a second mugshot during his May 15 processing. His arrest and trespassing charges stemmed from his attendance at a press conference outside an immigration detention center alongside members of Congress.

According to The Guardian, Baraka made those claims as part of a procedural hearing in magistrate judge André Espinosa’s courtroom that covered scheduling for discovery in the case, which lasted approximately 15 minutes.

There was some apparent confusion over whether Baraka had already been fingerprinted and processed. After the judge closed the proceedings, he stated that Baraka still needed to be processed by the U.S. Marshals Service — a directive that puzzled Baraka, who responded that he had already completed processing following his arrest.

Judge Espinosa said that “agents” processed Baraka, but not the marshals, which Baraka accepted by saying “Let’s go,” and motioning that he would go willingly with the marshals.

Later, after the hearing, Baraka delivered an explanation to his supporters outside the building as to why it took him so long to come out of the building.

“They’re trying their best to humiliate and degrade me as much as they possibly can,” the mayor said. “I feel like what we did was completely correct. We did not violate any laws. We stood up for the constitution of this country, the constitution of the state of New Jersey.”

According to Rahul Agarwal, one of Baraka’s attorneys, the defense will argue to dismiss the charges because it is a “selective prosecution” and Baraka was arrested by federal agents on private property, before adding that the mayor was the only one arrested during the protest.

For context, Baraka has been outspoken against Donald Trump’s immigration policy and the opening of an ICE detention facility in Newark. Given those facts, many expressed their views that the arrest and subsequent charges against Baraka are forms of political retribution for his principled stances.

In a conversation with The Nation, Baraka positioned his actions not as a protest, but merely the attendance of a press conference, while expressing his disdain for The GEO Group

The GEO Group is a private prison company that owns Delaney Hall, the site where Baraka was arrested, and has a 15-year, $60 million a year contract with ICE, the subject of a legal dispute in New Jersey related to ICE’s outsourcing of its practice of mass detention to private prison groups like GEO.

“We were not protesting,” Baraka told the outlet. “I came down there to attend a press conference. The dispute is with GEO. It always has been with GEO. I do not think people are seeing what’s happening here clearly enough. We are moving fast into authoritarianism.”

The mayor continued, “We can’t acquiesce to that. I think this is an opportunity for states to become labs of democracy to try everything that we have not tried before. We need to figure out a way to build a democracy outside these folks and their push to dismember democracy in this country.”

Baraka concluded, “The reality is we’ve been fighting for a long time to, as Dr. King said, to make America live up to what is written on paper. That’s really what this is about. And there are people who want to renege on that promise because it doesn’t benefit them individually. There are many of us in this country who disagree with that, who believe that everybody who resides here, who comes here, should have an opportunity to participate in the greatest idea in the history of the world.”

RELATED CONTENT: Authoritarian Overreach? Trump’s Homeland Security Arrests Newark Mayor Ras J. Baraka After Protesting Secret ICE Facility

student loan, black borrowers

Student Loan Defaults Spike As Trump Ends Pause On Late Payment Tracking — Black Borrowers Hit Hardest

Black student loan debt carriers are overrepresented relative to their share of the population.


Student loan delinquencies have surged, according to the New York Federal Reserve’s latest household debt report released May 13, following the Trump administration’s decision to end the Biden-era pause on reporting missed payments.

According to the Fed, a serious federal student loan delinquency occurs when a borrower misses payments for 90 days or more. That rate jumped from 1% in the first quarter of 2024 to nearly 8% in the same period of 2025, coinciding with the resumption of delinquency reporting.

Daniel Mangrum, a research economist at the New York Fed, noted the increase in his comments on the report in a news release.

“Transition rates into serious delinquency have leveled off for credit card and auto loans over the past year,” Mangrum said. “However, the first batch of past due student loans were reported in the first quarter of 2025, resulting in a large jump in seriously delinquent borrowers.”

During the height of the pandemic in 2020, student loan payments and delinquency tracking were paused and borrowers were given a one-year transition period after the payments resumed in late 2023, which offered them some protections, but the renewal of the student loan reporting has helped to get the rate of consumer debt to its highest level in five years.

Black people who owe student loan debt are overrepresented, relative to their share of the population.

According to the Education Data Initiative, Black college graduates owe an average of $25,000 more than white college graduates; four years post-graduation, Black students owe an average of 188% more in student loan debt than white graduates; and Black student loan borrowers are the most likely to struggle financially due to student loan debt as their average payments are $258 a month.

In addition to this, half of all Black student loan borrowers indicated that their student loan debt exceeds their net worth, while 52% of Asian and white borrowers reported the inverse of that relationship, yet another figure that points at the socioeconomic conditions that color any discussion about finances and wealth in the United States of America.

According to Donna Rasmussen, the executive director of the Consumer Credit Counseling Service of Northern Illinois, the average federal student loan debt amount, including both private and federal student loans, is approximately $38,500.

Rasmussen also pointed to competing raises in the cost of living for many as a reason why they opted to stop paying their student loans.

“I think also they were prioritizing different essential items at that time. Rents have increased to a crazy amount. Car insurance, all the things have increased,” Rasmussen told ABC 7 Chicago. “We hear a lot from people who will say, ‘We’d rather be in debt than homeless.’ So, they’re prioritizing their food, their car payments. They’re not going to lose their house if they don’t make their student loan payment.”

Rasmussen continued, detailing what usually happens once a borrower is officially considered in default on a student loan, “Well if you haven’t made a payment in 90 days, then you probably should know that you’re in default. You will get a notice, either in the mail or in your email, giving you options about what to do. With this student loan debt, they’re not required to go to court. You’ll get a notice that your wages are going to be garnished.”

According to The Detroit Free Press, in order to avoid this outcome, borrowers are being encouraged to contact the Education Department’s default resolution group to make a monthly payment, to enroll in an income-driven repayment plan, or to sign up for loan rehabilitation. However, due to the Trump administration’s haphazard budget cuts, some are having difficulties accessing the Education Department for relief.

Despite the cuts in employment at the Education Department, which are currently adversely affecting student loan borrowers, the Education Department is still warning the public to be wary of scammers who will attempt to prey on their desperation, and to contact their loan servicers for assistance.

“If you are contacted by a company asking you to pay “enrollment,” “subscription,” or “maintenance” fees to help you get out of default,” the Education Department states on its website, “you should walk away. Your loan holder will help you with your defaulted loan for free.”

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