Tag: General News

  • Why Black Country Matters, And Not Just Because Of Beyoncé

    Professor and author Alice Randall reminds us that 20 to 30 percent of 19th-century cowboys were Black and brown. (Alice Randall. Credit: John Partipilo photo)

    By Aaron Foley

    The ascendance of Beyoncé the country music singer — following the rise of Beyoncé the dance music preservationist, Beyoncé the diaspora, and Beyoncé the feminist — has been criticized as everything from a marketing ploy to claims of inauthenticity, all while pointing to the pop music star as an unwanted interloper in Nashville’s otherwise lily-white space.

    But critics unaware of entertainment history should know that singers of her stature are never the first to traverse across genres — and would also be surprised to learn that Nashville isn’t the sole determinant of who can make it in country music.

    “There has never been one way that people entered the country music sphere — that’s a misconception,” says Alice Randall, author of the forthcoming “My Black Country: A Journey Through Country Music’s Black Past, Present, and Future.” “Some of them come up playing on the road. In the more recent era, we have Lil Nas X; people come up on TikTok and come up on Instagram. And truly, in this era, people are being discovered on these television competitions. So these are the real roads to country.”

    20 to 30 percent of 19th century cowboys were Black and brown. 

    ALICE RANDALL, AUTHOR

    Randall is a professor at Vanderbilt University and the author of several novels. “My Black Country” is a nonfiction work following her efforts to bring more attention to overlooked Black figures in country music, tracing a path from early pioneers like DeFord Bailey and Herb Jeffries, to her own career in the genre as a songwriter. Randall made history as the first Black woman to co-write a song to hit No. 1 on a Billboard country chart, Trisha Yearwood’s “XXX’s and OOO’s.”

    The book, out April 9, will have a companion soundtrack with new music from Black artists who have touched all subgenres of country, including Rhiannon Giddens and Rissi Palmer. The goal of both the book and music is to course-correct the narrative of just who can break through country’s gatekeepers — or perhaps argue whether there should be any gatekeepers at all.

    “A lot of people have a lot of misconceptions, and they’re the same kind of conversation that happened when Lil Nas X entered into the world of country and people were saying, ‘Why is he wearing those jeans? Why is he wearing that hat?,’ and not knowing that 20 to 30 percent of 19th century cowboys were Black and brown. A lot of people just aren’t knowledgeable about the actual history of cowboys in America, are not knowledgeable about the actual history of cowboy singing in America and the long roots of Black people in country music within and without Nashville.”

    Beyoncé joins a handful of Black artists who found success in other genres before reaching milestones in country; the song “Texas Hold ‘Em” currently sits atop Billboard’s Hot 100. A simultaneously released single, “16 Carriages,” Randall says, falls in line with more traditional country songs of the past.

    “It is a song that is in conversation with other country songs. For example, it’s in conversation with ‘16 Tons’ [Tennessee Ernie Ford], ‘Will the Circle Be Unbroken’ [various artists but notably The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band], ‘Strawberry Wine’ [Deana Carter], and my own ‘XXX’s and OOO’s,’” she said. 

    “And what I mean by that is that it’s a country labor song. ‘16 Tons’ is about the world of coal mining, but this is about working, making money in the world of music. But it’s a labor song. It’s rural elegiac. It is concerned with everyday difficulties. I saw Mama praying. I saw Daddy grind. The mother is involved with the religious world. The father is involved with the work world, and the daughter is having to define a life for herself independent of these two and independent of their limitations, because there’s later a line in which she sees the father lying and the mother crying. So it’s rural. It’s elegiac. It’s complex, haunting. That’s what I love about ‘16 Carriages.’

    Ray Charles turned heads with the “Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music”album, which sat at the top of the albums chart for 14 weeks. Charley Pride became a Black icon of the genre and one of three Black musicians allowed membership at the Grand Ole Opry. Lionel Richie wrote and produced with country artists after notching hit after hit with The Commodores and his own solo career. Darius Rucker came to prominence leading the jam band Hootie and the Blowfish before embarking on a solo country career.

    But Black women’s achievements in the genre have been few and fleeting, even though they have always been there — even before the current crop of Giddens, Palmer, and Mickey Guyton, the latter two of whom having gained more attention in the wake of the Black Lives Matter movement. Randall points to Lil Hardin Armstrong, a granddaughter of an enslaved woman who became a songwriter and bandleader in jazz and married Louis Armstrong. Randall informs readers that Hardin Armstrong was an uncredited musician on Jimmie Rodgers’ “Blue Yodel #9,” considered one of the foundational songs in the entire country genre.

    “She played on every bar of it. So did Louis Armstrong. So there were three musical geniuses that played on the record. One was Louis Armstrong, one was Lil Hardin Armstrong, and one was Jimmie Rogers. Two thirds of the people playing on the records were Black people. And the only person who played on every bar of the record was a Black woman.”

    One of the things in Black country is that it connects us to Black genius. It reconnects us to God. It connects us to nature when it is at its best.

     ALICE RANDALL, AUTHOR

    What Beyoncé is doing with her country music is “deconstructing the genre, making things visible that have been invisible, reconstructing it with her own genius in relation to her own audience, but also in relation to existing country songs,” Randall says. And in this case, it does take an artist with her reach to call attention to the Black artists who have contributed to the genre — and music fans from the Beyhive to the Opry should take notice.

    “We should engage all Black brilliance, beauty, and wisdom everywhere we find it. Joy is radical, and I am a radical, joyful woman. And when I listen to this new Beyoncé song, I feel very joyful listening to ‘Texas Hold ‘Em,’” Randall says. “I also say I like to evade cultural redlining.. So Rissi Palmer’s, ‘Summerville,’ Rhiannon Giddens’ when she was singing with the [Carolina] Chocolate Drops, Ray Charles’ entire ‘Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music,’ Aaron Neville’s ‘The Grand Tour.’ These are songs you can stretch out in and rediscover your love of the planet in.

    “One of the things in Black country is that it connects us to Black genius. It reconnects us to God. It connects us to nature when it is at its best,” Randall adds.

    This post was originally published on New York Amsterdam News.

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  • Blaze Journalist Gives Update On Biden Regime Arresting Him For Filming On Jan 6th: More Journalists Will Be Arrested By The Biden DOJ


    Journalist Steve Baker was arrested by the FBI last month after reporting extensively on J6 anomalies, pipe bomb found at DNC.

    Blaze Media Investigative Journalist Steve Baker joins The Alex Jones Show fill-in host Owen Shroyer to give an update on his legal proceedings after he was taken into custody by the FBI for his reporting on Jan 6.

    Baker, who attended J6 as an independent journalist, has been reporting on the anomalies surrounding the government’s official narrative of what happened that day, including dispelling false narratives spewed by Capitol Police regarding the timeline of events and the mysterious pipe bomb found at the DNC.





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  • Unwholesome Practice: FG To Push For New Legislation To Regulate Healthcare Sector

    The Federal Government has mulled plans to push for new legislation to regulate the healthcare sector in the country.

    The Minister of State for Health, Dr. Tunji Alausa, disclosed this on Friday during a courtesy call on the Governor of Ogun State, Dapo Abiodun, in Abeokuta.

    Alausa decried the unwholesome practice where untrained individuals are allowed to operate in the health sector.

    According to him, 60 percent of the nation’s healthcare is controlled by the private sector.

    Alausa pointed out that inadequate supervision of hospitals, laboratories, and diagnostic centres in the country, creates room for illegal practices such as organ harvesting.

    To this end, he said the Federal Government would be setting up a Health Facility Regulatory Commission to regulate standard of health care across the country.

    The minister: “We will be pushing for a new regulation to regulate the healthcare sector as more than 60 percent of the nation’s healthcare is in the hands of the private sector without adequate supervision.

    “You see hospitals, laboratories, and diagnostic centres being run without anybody checking on what they are doing and these are some of the places where illegal practices like organ harvesting are taking place.

    “What we are going to do at the federal level, is to set up a Health Facility Regulatory Commission that will start regulating the standard of health care across the country and we expect the states to set up their own regulatory bodies as well.”

    Alausa also disclosed that the Federal Government is in the process of starting a programme that would increase the production of healthcare providers, starting with the admission of 10,000 medical students every year, while admission for nurses would increase from 28,000 to 68,000, annually.

    On the Sectoral Approach Programme launched by President Bola Tinubu, the minister explained that one percent of the consolidated fund was for Basic Health Provision, 55 percent for Primary Healthcare Centres, and 45 percent for National Health Insurance, while five percent goes into Emergency Services.

    Responding, Abiodun assured Alausa that his administration would not hesitate to replicate any Federal Government action aimed at eliminating quackery in the health sector.

    “Let me assure you that in terms of the regulation that would allow for tighter regulatory functions over medical practitioners to prevent quackery, we will not hesitate to replicate at the state level.

    “We are one of the two states that have put in place a board for alternative medicine because we realized that a lot of our people, especially pregnant women are patronizing traditional birth attendance. We regulate and certify them to ensure we have some form of oversight in their activities,” the governor stated.

    Unwholesome Practice: FG To Push For New Legislation To Regulate Healthcare Sector is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

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  • Fact Check: Joe Biden, Hillary Clinton quoted from gospel song 17 years apart. It’s not nefarious

    A social media post claimed clips of President Joe Biden and then-Sen. Hillary Clinton saying similar words 17 years apart shows that their words are “all scripts and copied, all fake.”

    The Jan. 24 Instagram post toggled between clips of speeches by Biden and Clinton, who used similar phrases such as “come too far from where we started” and “nobody told me the road would be easy.” 

    One commenter on the Instagram post said, “Check it out on how criminals sound the same.” Others accused Biden of “plagiarism…again,” a reference to a 1987 speech in which Biden was accused of lifting words from a British politician.

    The Instagram post was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)

    The clips shared in the Instagram post omitted the portions of Biden’s and Clinton’s speeches that explain why their words were so similar: They each are quoting from the lyrics of a gospel song.

    Longer footage from the Biden and Clinton speeches shows that.

    On Jan. 8, Biden was speaking at a political event at Mother Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina, where nine church members were killed in a 2015 racially motivated massacre.

    Near the end of his speech denouncing white supremacy, Biden quoted from the James Cleveland gospel song, “I Don’t Feel No Ways Tired.” 

    “Folks, my fellow Americans, this is a time of choosing, so let us choose the truth. Let us choose America. I know — I know we can do it together. And as the gospel song sings, ‘We’ve come too far from where we started. Nobody told me the road would be easy. I don’t believe he brought me this far to leave me.’ My fellow Americans, I don’t think the good Lord brought us this far to leave us behind.”

    On March 4, 2007, Clinton, then a New York senator running for president, spoke at First Baptist Church in Selma, Alabama, on the 42nd anniversary of Bloody Sunday, the day in 1965 when Alabama state troopers attacked civil rights demonstrators at the Edmund Pettus Bridge.

    Near the end of her speech, Clinton, who spoke about voting rights, also quoted from Cleveland’s song.

    “We have to stay awake. We have a march to finish. On this floor today, let us say with one voice the words of James Cleveland’s great freedom hymn, “I don’t feel no ways tired. I come too far from where I started from. Nobody told me that the road would be easy. I don’t believe he brought me this far to leave me.”

    Biden has quoted from the gospel song on several occasions when talking to predominantly Black audiences: a January 2023 event honoring Martin Luther King Jr.; a February 2023 Black history month reception; a 2023 Juneteenth concert; and at a 2020 Souls to the Polls event in Philadelphia.

    We rate the claim that video of Biden and Clinton speeches prove their words “are all scripted and copied” False. 



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  • Oakland A’s owner John Fisher speaks as team plays weekend games in Las Vegas

    LAS VEGAS – The A’s are no strangers to spending a weekend during spring training in Las Vegas as part of Big League Weekend. But this is their first visit since the franchise announced its intention last year to relocate to the desert.

    For this weekend, they are giving a glimpse of their intended future by transforming into the Las Vegas A’s, playing a two-game spring training series at Las Vegas Ballpark, home of their Triple-A affiliate, the Aviators.

    Team owner John Fisher and president Dave Kaval have not been visible to Bay Area media in recent months, but they made themselves available in Las Vegas before the series opener Friday night and addressed the unveiling of new renderings of their stadium planned on Las Vegas Boulevard in a portion of the site currently occupied by the Tropicana hotel-casino.

    “This is the next era of baseball stadium,” said Kaval. “In the same way Camden Yards ushered in a whole new trend, we think our ballpark here on the Las Vegas Strip can do the same thing …. We’re at probably at the biggest intersection in the American West, Las Vegas Boulevard and Tropicana. That’s very exciting in terms of eyeballs and pedestrian traffic and tens of thousands of hotel rooms right around it. It’s amazing.”

    The team principals were excited to show off three-dimensional renderings of the proposed $1.5 billion stadium, which they hope to open in time for the 2028 season. Prior renderings released last summer were scrapped and there are other issues to sort before construction can begin: A teachers’ union hopes to put the $380 million in public funding for the stadium to a vote, and the A’s must have construction plans approved.

    “I think we’re all the same, we’re eager to see progress,” Fisher said. “… We know we’ve been working hard on that and we’ve been communicating with the agencies. But until we’re actually able to present something to the market, to the community, to the county, etc., people were always going to ask the question, ‘What’s next?’”

    Fisher raised some eyebrows Friday by saying his family “is prepared to fund all the private equity” to build in Vegas, after three days ago telling the San Francisco Chronicle that equity investors would be needed to finance $500 million.

    While continuing to work on important issues such as where the team will play next season and what to do with their half-ownership in the Oakland Coliseum, one of the main topics of discussion was developing an outreach program with the Las Vegas community in a way that their professional sports cohorts in town have done. It started with donating money to every Little League program in the state.

    “The Golden Knights have set the bar at a level we all aspire to achieve,” Fisher said. “Making the Stanley Cup Final in their first year and winning Stanley Cup in the sixth year is pretty incredible. Hats off to them. Also, with what they and the Raiders have done, and the Aces, in connecting and engaging in the local community is an example we seek to follow.”

    Kaval pointed out the Aces announced this week they had sold out their tickets for the entire season coming off winning the league championship last season.

    One of the main reasons for their success, at least in the Knights’ and Aces’ cases, has been their success in competing for and winning championships. In that regard, the A’s, who have lost more than 100 games in back-to-back seasons for the first time in their history, have some work to do before their proposed Vegas debut in 2028.

    Meanwhile, there are still things to do as they seek to sort out plans for the intervening period.

    Kaval said the team continues to negotiate with the African American Sports and Entertainment Group to purchase their half of the aging Coliseum facility while at the same negotiation with the city and county to extend their lease to play in their current home for three seasons while the new Las Vegas stadium is built.

    “We’re meeting with the city and the county again next week,” Kaval said. “We’re having regular meetings discussing the extension and potentially playing there in the three interim years and that’s still a very viable option.”

    But it’s not the only option as the team is still considering playing in minor league stadiums in Sacramento or Salt Lake City, though even moving to Sacramento could mean forfeiting their NBC Sports regional TV contract that will pay them about $70 million this season.

    “I don’t think there’s any preferred option,” Kaval said. “We want to make sure we’re thoughtful about how we make a decision. We’re working with a lot of stakeholders. We have broadcast partners. We have the league. We have ourselves. We have the union. All of those people have to coalesce around a decision that makes sense. And obviously we have to come up with a decision in the summer, because that’s when the schedule comes out.”

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  • What Do The New COVID-19 Guidelines Mean For Your Health?

    The new guidance for COVID-19 — which is combined with other respiratory illnesses — no longer suggests 5-day isolation periods. (Photo by Luis Alvarez via Getty)

    by Alexa Spencer

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announced new COVID-19 recommendations on March 1. The list of guidelines includes an end to five-day at-home isolation periods for people who test positive for the virus.

    The updated guidelines — called Respiratory Virus Guidance — offer a “unified approach” to addressing respiratory illnesses, rather than a COVID-19-specific guidance. All recommendations now apply to COVID-19, RSV, and the flu.

    The question remains: Could the relaxed guidelines have a negative impact on frontline workers and communities of color? These groups are historically vulnerable to COVID-19 exposure and poor health outcomes if the virus is contracted.

    “If we continue to make sure that we have the levels of vaccine coverage that we’ve had before, we will be in good standing,” says Dr. Reed Tuckson, the former commissioner of public health for the District of Columbia. Tuckson is a co-founder and board member of the Black Coalition Against COVID.

    Dr. Reed Tuckson/Photo courtesy of Dr. Reed Tuckson

    He says Black people and professionals were able to close major vaccine disparity gaps when the primary series was released. During that time, vaccines were administered at no-cost. Today, COVID-19 shots are available for free under insurance plans when the provider is in-network. For uninsured people, the federal government’s Bridge Access Program covers the cost, but the program is set to end on December 31.

    Tuckson also says combining recommendations may be helpful.

    “They decided to simplify things so that it just makes more sense for people to actually be able to implement the guidance. The context is that the flu season and the RSV season have now all become one with the COVID season,” he told Word In Black in a phone interview.

    The CDC’s core respiratory illness prevention steps include: 

    • Staying up-to-date with vaccinations for COVID-19, RSV, and the flu. 
    • Covering coughs and sneezes, washing and sanitizing hands often, and cleaning frequently touched surfaces. 
    • Bringing in fresh outside air, purifying indoor air, and gathering outdoors.

    Regarding isolation time, the Respiratory Virus Guidance recommends that people with symptoms of a virus isolate at home until they’re fever-free without the use of medicine for 24 hours. Similarly, they recommend one isolate until any other symptoms improve within the same time period. 

    Some people find it concerning that the CDC is ending the official five-day isolation period for COVID-19 and allowing people to leave home before all of their symptoms are completely cleared up. Tuckson says the CDC still wants infected people to isolate if they’re sick.

    “You still want to be cautious. And I would recommend personally that if you’re still feeling unwell, don’t go to work, don’t be around others,” he says. 

    Mandy Cohen, director at the CDC, shared similar sentiments.

    “We still must use the commonsense solutions we know work to protect ourselves and others from serious illness from respiratory viruses—this includes vaccination, treatment, and staying home when we get sick,” Cohen said in a statement. 

    But The People’s CDC, a “coalition of public health practitioners, scientists, healthcare workers, educators, advocates and people from all walks of life working to reduce the harmful impacts of COVID-19,” disagrees. In a March 4 op-ed published on Reckon, the group wrote that the CDC’s rollback of the 5-day isolation protocol ignores the dangers of long COVID, and “that intra-office transmission of COVID-19, a result of already insufficient workplace protections, leads to repeated episodes of short staffing levels.” 

    The coalition wrote that instead, “we need mandated universal paid sick leave and funding for long COVID-19 prevention and treatments, among other population interventions. We do not need more people spreading COVID-19 at work.”

    According to the CDC, the updated guidelines are in response to a drop in hospitalizations and deaths associated with COVID-19. Compared to January 2022, weekly hospital admissions have decreased by more than 75% and deaths by more than 90%, the agency reported. 

    In the first week of 2024, 35,097 people were hospitalized, the CDC COVID-19 tracker shows. Limited federal data is available on the number of people who die from the virus-19. According to data collection by BNO News, 1,652 Americans died in the week between February 25 and March 3. 

    In addition to rates of poor health outcomes related to COVID-19, the CDC’s new guidance considered the cost of extended isolation, which included the fact that people with limited sick time may experience a financial loss.

    “The bottom line is that when people follow these actionable recommendations to avoid getting sick, and to protect themselves and others if they do get sick, it will help limit the spread of respiratory viruses, and that will mean fewer people who experience severe illness,” Dr. Demetre Daskalakis, director at the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, said in a statement. 

    The CDC also recommends that people get vaccinated and utilize testing. Shortly after the agency announced its new guidance, the White House announced an end to its free at-home COVID-19 test program. In the past, every household could order four tests by visiting COVIDtest.gov. As of Friday, March 8, that option will be suspended.

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  • Police arrest man with hammer trying to enter Capitol Building

    A man trying to enter the U.S. Capitol was arrested Friday after police found a hammer in his backpack, according to Capitol Police.

    Christopher Snow, 33, was being screened at the Capitol Visitor Center Friday afternoon and “became combative” after a police officer spotted the hammer as his bag went through an x-ray machine and “attempted secondary screening to look inside of the bag,” Capitol Police said in a press release.

    “Several officers immediately intervened to stop the suspect,” the release continued. “A struggle ensued. [Capitol Police] officers deployed a Taser to stop the individual and take him into custody. A hammer was found inside the bag.”

    Capitol Police Captain Andrew Pecher said the officers “did what they were trained to do and stopped this man from getting into the U.S. Capitol,” per the release.

    “Great work from the officer who spotted the hammer, to the officers who quickly took the suspect into custody,” he added.

    According to officials, Snow is being charged with assault on a Police Officer.

    The incident comes less than two months after Capitol Police announced they investigated over 8,000 threats to members of Congress last year, up from 7,500 threats in 2022, but down from 2021.

    “With the political conventions, member campaigns, and many issues being debated on Capitol Hill, this is going to be a very busy year for our special agents,” Assistant Chief Ashan Benedict said. “Our team is dedicated to putting all of our resources into protecting the Congress while we continue to grow in order to keep up with our expanding mission.”

    Copyright 2024 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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  • Afghan War Vet SLAMS Biden’s Arrest of Gold Star Father During SOTU


    ‘The insult of last night could not have been more extreme as Steve was hauled out of the chambers and arrested for demanding that his son and the sacrifice of others be remembered.’

    A US military veteran injured in combat took Joe Biden to task after the puppet president had a Gold Star father arrested following an outburst during Thursday’s State of the Union address.

    In a video message posted to X Friday, retired Army Captain and Republican Nevada US Senate candidate Sam Brown slammed Biden for Thursday night’s arrest of Steve Nikoui, whose son, Marine Lance Cpl. Kareem Nikoui, died during Biden’s botched withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021.

    “Last night we heard from the Commander-in-Chief as he delivered his State of the Union Address, but we also heard from a grieving Gold Star father, Steve Nikoui as he demanded that the President of the United States as well as the entire nation never forget the sacrifice of his son, Lance corporal Kareem Nikoui, and the 13 who bravely gave their life during the disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan.”

    Brown went on to say the pain of losing a loved one in the military was made all the worse by Biden having Nikoui removed and arrested.

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    “My heart breaks for him and his family and for all Gold Star families across the nation who grieve the loss of their loved ones during these last couple of decades of warfare,” Brown said, adding, “But the insult of last night could not have been more extreme as Steve was hauled out of the chambers and arrested for demanding that his son and the sacrifice of others be remembered.”

    Brown concludes by asking the public to remember the 13 service members who died at Abbey Gate outside the Kabul Airport:

    Marine Corps Staff Sgt. Darin T. Hoover;
    Marine Corps Sgt. Johanny Rosario;
    Marine Corps Sgt. Nicole L. Gee;
    Marine Corps Cpl. Hunter Lopez;
    Marine Corps Cpl. Daegan W. Page;
    Marine Corps Cpl. Humberto A. Sanchez;
    Marine Corps Lance Cpl. David L. Espinoza;
    Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Jared M. Schmitz;
    Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Rylee J. McCollum;
    Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Dylan R. Merola;
    Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Kareem M. Nikoui;
    Navy Petty Officer Third Class Maxton W. Soviak; and
    Army Staff Sgt. Ryan C. Knauss.

    Nikoui, who was an invited guest of  Rep. Brian Mast (R-Fla.), was arrested after interrupting Biden’s SOTU address to shout “Remember Abbey Gate,” and, “United States Marines! Kareem Mae’Lee Nikoui!”

    According to the Los Angeles Times, “He was removed from the chambers and arrested for ‘crowding, obstructing, or incommoding,’ according to a statement from the Capitol Police.”

    Following the arrest, Rep. Mast wrote on X, “For the last three SOTU speeches, Joe Biden REFUSED to say the names of the 13 U.S. servicemembers who were killed by his disastrous Afghanistan withdrawal. I couldn’t support this effort more. Say their names!”

    Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) pointed out Mr. Nikoui not only lost his son but also his older son who “then took his own life on the grave of his brother who was KIA.”

    “Biden’s ‘leadership’ has destroyed American families. We do not need American troops getting involved in more endless foreign wars simply to lose a generation of sons, brothers, and uncles,” wrote Rep. MTG.

    Nikoui received a warm welcome at a local pub following his release.





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  • Missing 13-Year-Old Boy Rescued In Ebonyi

    The rescued child and his father

    One Goodluck Onwe, 13, has been re-united with his family in Anambra after being rescued in Ebonyi State. He had earlier been declared missing.

    The lad was seen wandering the streets of Abakaliki before he was rescued on the 4th of February 2024 by operatives of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps of Ebonyi State.

    Our correspondent gathered that the young boy was staying with a relative in Abakaliki but ran away from home with an intent to return to his parents who reside at Peter Okonkwo Street, Aguleri in Anambra East Local Government Area of Anambra State.

    The Public Relations Officer of NSCDC, Anambra State Command, SC Edwin Okadigbo, told our correspondent that NSCDC Anambra State Command was contacted by the Ebonyi State Command to trace the origin and parents of the child.

    According to him, “In response, the command made an effort to locate his parents for identification and collection. After a detailed verification process, the boy has been handed over to Mr Onwe Sabastine, his father.”

    Meanwhile, the state Commandant of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps, Anambra State Command, Comdt Olatunde Maku, has advised parents/guardians to adopt parenting of a child with love and understanding.

    In his words, “Parenting is not an easy job. It involves responsibilities that seem to change every day. The daily tasks and roles one performs as a parent are bound to change as the child gets older.

    “Parents should adapt the parenting of a child with love and understanding, without unnecessary display of authority over their children which instills fear in them to always run away from home.”

    Missing 13-Year-Old Boy Rescued In Ebonyi is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

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  • Fact Check: Erewhon, a trendy California grocer, didn’t open in New York. Video creators said it was a spoof

    Executives at Erewhon, an upscale organic grocery store chain in California with a devoted following, have talked about expanding east to New York City.

    But a social media video has misleadingly convinced some Brooklyn, New York, residents that the trendy store already opened its doors there.

    A Jan. 30 Instagram post claimed to show an Erewhon store in Brooklyn’s Bushwick neighborhood. “The Bushwick Erewhon finally opened this week,” a narrator in the video said.

    “It’s beautiful inside, but the prices are crazy,” said the narrator, who led viewers on a tour inside the store, showing $10 cereal, $7 oat milk, $12 cartons of eggs and a $20 beet, ginger and spinach smoothie.

    The video is from Hotspot NYC, an Instagram account that bills itself as “Yelp for hot people.” An account by the same name also shared the video on TikTok, where it had more than 27,000 likes.

    This post was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)

    But Erewhon has not opened in New York. There are no Erewhon locations outside of California, the company’s website shows. None of the chain’s 10 locations match the building and location seen in the Instagram video. And the video’s creators said it was a fake. 

    The store’s exterior sign is the first signal in the video that something is amiss. The Erewhon sign moves slightly at the video’s beginning, an indication that it was added digitally.

    Some commenters on the post believed the video was real, but others accurately said it showed a City Fresh Market in Bushwick.

    “Bushwick and (Erewhon) being in the same sentence doesn’t make any sense. Gentrification has gone wild,” one commenter said, with more than 4,300 people liking the remark.

    Other evidence in the Instagram footage: a menu board at a cafe inside the store reads, “City Fresh menu board.” And when the narrator holds up what he said was a $20 beet smoothie, the real store sign reading “City Fresh Market” is visible in the background.

    We found other images online that show the City Fresh Market storefront with the same buildings in the background as seen in the video.

    Erewhon does sell a $21 smoothie, but it doesn’t list the Cap’n Crunch cereal seen in the video among its available products.

    The New York Times wrote about the video, saying it had amassed more than 1 million views on Instagram and 600,000 on TikTok. The City Fresh Market’s manager, Dulce Simono, told the newspaper she has tried, but failed, to get the TikTok video removed.

    The Times interviewed Stanley Vergilis, Hotspot’s founder, and Joey Cannizarro, its social media manager. They said the video was intended to show the Bushwick store’s prices were overpriced, similar to Erewhon’s, and that they use the videos to call attention to their business. 

    The Times reported that Cannizarro, a Bushwick resident, had visited an Erewhon location in California and “noticed some items cost about the same as similar products sold at his local City Fresh,” and the video was intended to highlight Bushwick’s gentrification. 

    Hotspot’s website and social media accounts don’t clearly state they are producing digitally altered videos.  

    We rate the claim that the video shows an Erewhon grocery store in Brooklyn Pants on Fire! 



    Source