Tag: General News

  • Eva Mendes, make your mark

    CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DAY: Gabby Barrett, 24; Kevin Connolly, 50; Matt Lucas, 50; Eva Mendes, 50.

    Happy Birthday: Look, observe and act. What you do will make a difference. Set your sights high and be relentless in getting things done this year. Refuse to let temptation sidetrack you. It’s OK to change your mind, reinvent yourself or change direction if you do so with heart and integrity. The universe is waiting; make your mark and see what happens. Your destiny lies within. Your numbers are 8, 15, 23, 28, 32, 36, 44.

    ARIES (March 21-April 19): The suggestions you offer may not fly initially, but if you are patient and polite, your words will gain value, and someone with insight will recognize what you bring to the table. Self-improvement will boost your morale and lead to compliments and opportunities. Romance is favored. 2 stars

    TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Expand your interests, learn something new and keep up with the times. How you master your skills to accommodate what’s trending will help you stay on top of your game. Keep your private and professional lives separate. 5 stars

    GEMINI (May 21-June 20): What you want to achieve will require more than intellect. Doing work yourself will ensure success. Expect someone you think you can count on to let you down. Don’t believe everything you hear. Get what you want in writing. 3 stars

    CANCER (June 21-July 22): You’ll make gains if you give your all. Rely on your track record, what works for you, and your ability to persuade others to do and see things your way. Don’t hold back; promote and present what you want to offer. 3 stars

    LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Examine relationships. Adjusting how you divvy your time will allow you to take the path that stimulates you most. Don’t feel obligated to put someone else’s needs ahead of yours. If you’re happy, you’ll be more inclined to bring joy to others. 3 stars

    VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Initiate the changes you want to make without hesitation. It will be at your expense if you stop to accommodate someone else. Take a rain check, offer an alternative or promise to return once you’ve handled pressing matters. Put your needs first. 5 stars

    LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Put your head down and don’t look up until you complete what you are doing. Concentration and determination will help you outmaneuver any challenge you face. Be good to yourself and refuse to let anyone interfere with your plans. 2 stars

    SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Pay attention and don’t act prematurely. Gather facts, evaluate your situation and recognize the best place to channel your energy. Don’t let anger take over when intuitive tactics and knowledge are your passages to success. 4 stars

    SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Keep an open mind, but don’t let anyone push you in the wrong direction. Being able to say no will empower you to take charge and do what’s best for you. Worry less about what others think and more about looking out for your best interests. 3 stars

    CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Make changes that help you build equity. You’ll discover you have more to work with than anticipated. Sell off what you don’t need and invest in yourself and your quality of life. Leave nothing to chance or in someone else’s hands. 3 stars

    AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Dial it down a notch and give yourself a chance to breathe. If you act in haste, you’ll have a mess to clean up and questions to answer. Research and relying on experts will help you avoid taking on more than you can handle. 3 stars

    PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Rely on yourself and lend a helping hand, and you’ll open a door that leads to opportunities. Voice your opinion; your words will resonate with someone who will become instrumental in your journey forward. Don’t hold back; be the one to make things happen. 4 stars

    Birthday Baby: You are reliable, empathetic and direct. You are innovative and intriguing.

    1 star: Avoid conflicts; work behind the scenes. 2 stars: You can accomplish, but don’t rely on others. 3 stars: Focus and you’ll reach your goals. 4 stars: Aim high; start new projects. 5 stars: Nothing can stop you; go for gold.

    Visit Eugenialast.com, or join Eugenia on Twitter/Facebook/LinkedIn.

    Want a link to your daily horoscope delivered directly to your inbox each weekday morning? Sign up for our free Coffee Break newsletter at mercurynews.com/newsletters or eastbaytimes.com/newsletters. 

    Source

  • 3 Black Nutrition Experts Inspiring Healthier Lives One Recipe At A Time

    From vegan jackfruit burgers to keto cheese-based waffles, these gurus are inspiring folks to reclaim their health and manage chronic illness. (Credit: Art By Alexa Imani Spencer/Photos from IG @TheHangryWoman, @TurnipVegan, @FlourishHeights)

    by Alexa Spencer

    You may be familiar with the saying, “Let thy food be thy medicine, thy medicine shall be thy food.” The mantra speaks to the power of plants, especially when preventing and managing chronic illnesses. 

    Poor nutrition contributes to the development of many chronic conditions, including heart disease, hypertension, Type 2 diabetes, and some cancers. Black Americans are particularly at risk for these illnesses due to racist policies that leave their communities without access to fresh and affordable healthy food. 

    However, Black nutrition gurus nationwide show us that when quality fruits, vegetables, grains, and proteins are available, the results are life-saving and delicious. Whether you’re looking to manage your chronic disease or just want to cook delicious, healthy meals, these nutrition enthusiasts are a good place to start:

    1. Mila Clarke Buckley

    Mila Clarke Buckley is the creator of Hangry Woman, a platform where she showcases diabetes-friendly recipes, such as low-carb cheese shell breakfast tacos and chaffles — a keto-friendly, sugar-free cheese-based waffle. 

    Buckley also offers one-on-one diabetes support as an integrative nutrition health coach. Her cooking and coaching are inspired by her personal health journey. In 2020, she discovered she had latent autoimmune disease in adults (LADA) after living with a Type 2 diabetes diagnosis for four years. 

    You can learn more about her experiences as a Black woman living with LADA, diabetes management, and self-care on her podcast, Your Diabestie Podcast.

    2. Valorie Agyeman

    Valorie Agyeman is a D.C. and NYC-based dietitian who provides medical nutrition therapy for women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), a reproductive condition that can be managed with vitamin D and omega 3s.

    She founded Flourish Heights, a platform for women’s health and nutrition, where women can create a healthy relationship with food while exploring taboo topics such as periods, hormone nutrition, body literacy, and more. 

    Check out Agyeman’s latest snack recipes on Instagram, and get more tips for hormone balance on The Flourish Heights Podcast.

    3. Todd Anderson

    No-meat cheesesteak egg rolls. Fully loaded mushroom lover’s pizza. Homemade dairy-free Captain Crunch cereal. Todd Anderson, a.k.a Turnip Vegan, has creative recipes for vegans or those looking to break into the plant-based lifestyle.

    In “All About Plantz & Mushrooms,” Anderson’s latest cookbook, he shares more than 50 vegan recipes, from cashew mushroom curry noodles to extra crispy cajun mushroom sandwiches. His mission as a content creator, author, and mushroom lover: to “keep the vibes up!” 

    While Anderson doesn’t evangelize a plant-based diet, research shows that there are benefits. A vegan lifestyle can lower the risk of heart disease by lowering cholesterol levels and reduce the chances of developing certain cancers, such as colon cancer.

    Follow Anderson’s journey and access recipes on his website.



    Source

  • Halo Composer Announces Republican Bid for Congress

    Marty O’Donnell voiced support for President Donald Trump and his America First platform.

    The composer for the Halo video game franchise has announced his intention to run for Congress as a Republican candidate for Nevada.

    Marty O’Donnell announced his congressional run on X, which included a link to his website that has a notable Halo motif.

    “I never wanted to be a politician and I still don’t. I’ve had two successful careers and have started a few small businesses. I’ve also worked for some big corporations. I was ready to retire and spend more time with my family – which I’ve done for the past 3 years. I think they’re ready for me to find something else to do,” he wrote Monday.

    “I’m tired of seeing the leaders of our country being influenced by the toxic divisions that are tearing apart our families and society. It’s time for me to step up and do my civic duty. To give back and try and change things for the better. If not me, who? If not now, when?” he added.

    • Introducing Next Level Foundational Energy from Dr. Jones Naturals starting at 30% off! This cutting-edge dietary supplement is designed to elevate your energy levels and support your overall well-being.

    O’Donnell also voiced his support for former President Donald Trump and his America First platform.

    “America enjoyed a secure border and no inflation in the Trump administration four years ago,” O’Donnell said. “I have voted for President Trump twice and will vote for him a third time this fall. But no matter who is elected this November, if I have the privilege to serve, I plan to work with them. That’s what voters expect and that’s what I’ll do.”

    O’Donnell also lambasted the open border that’s resulted in millions of illegal aliens coming into the country under Joe Biden, saying one of the government’s most basic duties is to secure the border.

    “One thing the federal government should certainly be responsible for is the security of our borders. Instead, we see millions of people coming in without any accounting for who they are, what they intend to do, or what they’re bringing with them,” he wrote. “And they’re being given access to all sorts of handouts at our expense. At a minimum, the federal government and the state governments should be working together to enforce existing laws and secure the border. Seeing our government at war with itself is unacceptable.”

    The composer is planning to run in Nevada’s third congressional district against incumbent Democrat Susie Lee.

    Halo was first released in 2001, and its theme by O’Donnell and Michael Salvatori went on to become one of the most successful and recognizable video game tracks of all time.

    Read O’Donnell’s full statement:

    I never wanted to be a politician and I still don’t. I’ve had two successful careers and have started a few small businesses. I’ve also worked for some big corporations. I was ready to retire and spend more time with my family – which I’ve done for the past 3 years. I think they’re ready for me to find something else to do.

    I’m tired of seeing the leaders of our country being influenced by the toxic divisions that are tearing apart our families and society. It’s time for me to step up and do my civic duty. To give back and try and change things for the better. If not me, who? If not now, when?

    It’s easy to look at the economy and realize that something has gone horribly wrong. Working people, the middle class, and small businesses have been losing ground over the past 20 years. The goose that lays the golden eggs for our country has been kicked around and squeezed to the point where laying more golden eggs is almost impossible. Consider that since 2000 the cost of food has risen more than double the rise in average household income. The cost of a home has risen 6 times and the amount of government spending 5 and a half times. The S&P 500 has gone up 9 times more than the rise in average household income. To everyone who works and is trying to do the right thing for their family, to everyone who is young and wonders why their lives are worse than their parents: you are not wrong.

    And yet, who have we allowed to have the most influence over our government? Big corporate executives and big union bosses. Big tech, big pharma, big media, big whatever – all trying to control big government in Washington DC. This needs to stop. Our government spends money on the wrong things and spends way too much.

    One thing the federal government should certainly be responsible for is the security of our borders. Instead, we see millions of people coming in without any accounting for who they are, what they intend to do, or what they’re bringing with them. And they’re being given access to all sorts of handouts at our expense. At a minimum, the federal government and the state governments should be working together to enforce existing laws and secure the border. Seeing our government at war with itself is unacceptable.

    For my whole life, in every place I’ve ever lived, I’ve seen people working to provide for their family. Values like self-sacrifice, faith, integrity, fidelity, and valor are simply part of who these people are. They do these things not because the government tells them to, but because they know the right things to do – moral obligations that are freely chosen, not mandated by a government.

    It doesn’t take a village to raise a child, it takes a family, and it takes families to make a village.

    The sad reality is that many children in our country are suffering. Years of ridiculing and demeaning old fashioned “family values” have taken a toll. Our society’s strength, fundamentally linked to the vitality of the family structure, has been eroded. I want to champion the traditional family as critical for a child’s development and success. The data proves this. However, my approach will be inclusive, recognizing all who step up to provide for their children. I’m not worried about the government being a safety net. I want the government to stop being an impediment.

    I’m ready to go to DC and see if I can help bring back sanity and civility to the public discourse on these issues and all the other issues that face our great nation. We need bold leaders for such a time as this.




    Source

  • Experts Advocate More Funding For Research In Africa

    WACREN

    Stakeholders in the education sector have advocated for more funding on research and development in Africa, adding that without research, the continent will not be able to make much progress.

    The Chief Executive Officer of the West and Central African Research and Education Network (WACREN), Dr. Boubakar Barry, stated this when fielding questions from newsmen in Abuja.

    Barry was speaking ahead of the 9th Annual Conference, organized by WACREN, scheduled for March 7 and 8, 2024 where stakeholders in research and education in Africa will gather to deliberate on “Charting the Course: Forging Future-Ready Higher Education and Research Communities.”

    The conference, hosted by the Nigerian Research and Education Network (NgREN), a flagship of the National Universities Commission (NUC), is expected to draw participants from across the globe.

    Barry stated that the regional conference is an opportunity for knowledge exchange, networking, and partnerships, especially in the face of the multifarious challenges confronting Africa.

    He further emphasized that through insightful presentations, panel discussions by subject-matter experts, and participants’ interactions, research and education networks and their communities are expected to determine a clear path to a more sustainable future and prepare to tackle emerging challenges and realities.

    “Having been tested but fortified by the challenges posed by the rippling effects of COVID-19, Research and Education Networks (REN) and the higher education fraternity need to bring the lessons of the past to define a sustainable future.

    “This year’s Conference is unique as it serves as the forum for all stakeholders in our ecosystem to chart the course of our common future with a common resolve. We hope for highly interactive events where various stakeholders will deliberate on matters of community interest for the development of research and education in our part of the world.

    “As critical stakeholders in advancing digital connectivity and fostering collaboration across Nigeria’s research and education landscape, NgREN is proud to spearhead initiatives that empower academic and scientific communities in the Nigerian University System,” he said.

    Also speaking, the Secretary-General of the Committee of Vice-Chancellors of Nigerian Universities (CVCNU), Prof. Yakubu Ochefu, underscored the importance of the Open Science Platform, disclosing that it is a global initiative directed at producing best practices on how to conduct research, store research, and share research with a community of stakeholders ranging from students to other professionals and the rest of society.

    He disclosed that as part of deliverables from a workshop held last year to set an agenda for the conference, CVCNU would be presenting a draft model of the Open Science Policy for Nigerian Universities at the event.

    Ochefu noted that CVCNU was collaborating with the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund) to deliver on a project called TERAS (Tertiary Education, Research, Applications & Services), in the Science Platform, aligning with the policy guidelines.

    Experts Advocate More Funding For Research In Africa is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

    Source

  • Democrats make play for veteran and military support as Trump homes in on GOP nomination

    By JAMES POLLARD (Associated Press/Report for America)

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Highway signs welcome drivers entering North Carolina to “the nation’s most military friendly state,” and veterans here know they’re being courted. But in a state where camouflage-colored appeals have become commonplace, recent efforts by progressive groups to cut into what has long been a reliably red constituency face an early test on Super Tuesday.

    Among the 16 states and one territory casting ballots in Tuesday’s 2024 presidential primaries and caucuses are some with the nation’s highest rates of active-duty service members and largest populations of veterans: Texas, California, Virginia and North Carolina. But Tar Heel State veterans interviewed in the runup to the primary season’s biggest voting day varied in their politics, even if they agreed that their military service informed their opinions.

    Ryan Rogers, who fought in Afghanistan and Iraq, says the Biden administration mishandled the August 2021 attacks on Kabul’s airport that killed at least 60 Afghans and 13 U.S. troops. The right-leaning independent voter from eastern North Carolina fears the blasts signaled a weakness that could endanger U.S. troops overseas.

    “I don’t care what side you’re on,” he said. “You better be strong.”

    But Ric Vandett, a 78-year-old Vietnam veteran from Hickory, won’t vote for President Joe Biden’s predecessor, Donald Trump. The left-leaning independent voter said he cannot forget Trump’s refusal to acknowledge defeat in the 2020 election, which he blames for the Jan. 6 attacks on the U.S. Capitol.

    “We came extremely close to a major constitutional crisis on Jan. 6,” he said. “I’m afraid to see that happen again.”

    Recent statements by Trump have fueled Democrats’ sense that there’s an opening among voters with strong military ties, even if that gap hasn’t surfaced during his march toward the GOP nomination.

    Ahead of South Carolina’s Republican primary, Trump said he “would encourage” Russia “to do whatever the hell they want ” to NATO countries that don’t meet defense spending targets. He also questioned why the husband of rival Nikki Haley wasn’t joining her on the campaign trail, though Michael Haley was then deployed with the South Carolina Army National Guard.

    Haley responded that Trump knows “nothing about” serving the country. Trump handily defeated Haley in South Carolina, just like every state primary and caucus to date. Her only win came on Sunday in Washington, D.C.

    Trump benefited from the bloc’s support in the 2020 general election. AP VoteCast found that about 6 in 10 military veterans said they voted for Trump then, as did just over half of those with a veteran in the household.

    Among voters in this year’s South Carolina Republican primary, AP VoteCast found that close to two-thirds of military veterans and people in veteran households voted for Trump over Haley.

    Still, progressive groups are citing Trump’s unorthodox foreign policy and past comments to argue that he’s no friend to Americans in uniform. Any significant departure from the more conservative constituency of veterans and military families could spell trouble for Trump in a November rematch with Biden.

    The Democrats will have to work for that support, according to Cal Cunningham, North Carolina Democrats’ 2020 nominee for U.S. Senate and an Army reservist who served in Iraq and Afghanistan. Winning over this community is always challenging, Cunningham said, because people with military experience tend to value a culture more aligned with the “hierarchical” GOP than the “egalitarian” Democrats.

    Their ability to do so could help determine which candidate receives North Carolina’s 15 electoral votes this fall.

    “It’s going to be part of where the presidency is won and lost,” Cunningham said.

    Trump’s weekend rally in Greensboro was protested by Common Defense, a progressive organization founded in 2016 to engage veterans as more than just “political props.” The group said Trump’s “alarming disregard for the core tenets of democracy” goes against their oaths.

    The Biden campaign has also ratcheted up attacks over Trump’s history of disparaging remarks about the armed forces.

    “I call them patriots and heroes. The only loser I see is Donald Trump,” said Biden, angrily wagging his finger during the South Carolina Democratic Party’s fundraising dinner, in reference to reports that his predecessor described the American war dead at a French cemetery as “losers” and “suckers.”

    VoteVets, a liberal political action committee, is planning a $10 million to $15 million push targeting veterans and military families in key battleground states, according to co-founder Jon Soltz. A 60-second ad invoking former President Ronald Reagan to attack Republicans over blocking Ukraine aid will hit airwaves soon, Soltz said.

    Soltz, a U.S. Army officer in the Iraq War, said the GOP lost its status as “the party of the military” during the Trump era. Anyone who claims to support service members “just can’t vote” for someone with a “ridiculous amount of deferments” who “trashes” the likes of the late U.S. Sen. John McCain, he said.

    Some veterans who oppose Biden say Trump has better defended the country’s priorities despite past comments. Rogers, the Afghanistan and Iraq veteran, didn’t like Trump’s description of McCain as “not a war hero,” but said he’s voting “on a strong America” and not “what comes out of the man’s mouth.”

    “I’ve been the guy on the ground,” he said. “I’ve lost Marines because of decisions.”

    The modern GOP has grown skeptical of foreign entanglements. So have many former military members, according to John Byrnes, a senior adviser for a conservative advocacy group called Concerned Veterans for America.

    Ken Deery, a Charlotte resident whose Army career took him from Missouri to Germany in the 1980s, said he sought to defend the “American way” against the Soviet Union. That dream — affordable home ownership and education, for example — isn’t possible nowadays, he said.

    “We’ve got global wars starting up all over the place. Any one of these could blossom into a world war,” said Deery, who described himself as libertarian. “And that’s all on Biden’s watch.”

    Biden supporters say they trust his administration more to navigate the wars in Russia and Gaza than Trump — who as president bucked tradition by currying favor with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

    Liberal veterans also point to 2022 legislation that extended health care services to millions who served at military bases exposed to toxic “burn pits,” but who had often seen their disability claims denied. Considered the largest expansion of benefits in three decades, the law added hypertension to the list of ailments presumably caused by exposure to chemicals used during the Vietnam War.

    For Sandra Williams, who spent most of her five years with the Army in Georgia, it “means a lot” that Biden pushed that to the forefront. She said the law opened up medical services for several relatives.

    Williams plans to back Biden and disagrees that Trump has the country’s best interests at heart. She said the United States “almost turned into a laughingstock” and “lost our credibility” under Trump.

    What’s certain is that veterans do tend to vote. According to the Census Bureau, they cast ballots at rates 8 percentage points higher than non-veterans in the last presidential election.

    Those votes should not be taken for granted, cautioned Allison Jaslow, CEO of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America. In a survey of over 2,500 members, the non-partisan organization found that nearly three-fourths of respondents were dissatisfied with democracy.

    Jaslow said veterans are so politically engaged because they want their sacrifices “to be worth it.” She said some politicians claim they’re “for the troops” but lack “the guts” to fully debate the cost of going to war.

    “I think it’s fair for the average veteran to feel like our service was taken for granted,” she said.

    ___

    Pollard is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

    Source

  • Women On Quarters: Who They Are And Why It Matters

    Althea Gibson kisses the cup she was awardedafter winning the French International Tennis Championships in Paris in 1956.

    Bettmann // Getty Images
    Written by Abby Monteil

    United States currency today shows an extremely limited sample of the American people, traditionally depicting a static set of Founding Fathers, presidents, national memorials, and government buildings. On the other hand, women and people of color have been largely left off of the dollars and cents until very recently.

    This reality has cultural implications, since who is chosen to be put on the currency sends a message about which figures are respected and remembered for their contributions, as Smithsonian curator Ellen Feingold pointed out in an essay written for Politico.

    To commemorate the 100th anniversary of the 19th Amendment, which gave white women the right to vote, the U.S. Mint launched the American Women Quarters Program. The program celebrates the contributions of women in the U.S. by featuring them on quarters. It began in 2022 and will come to an end in 2025. Below, the 20 honorees as of January 2024 are listed in order of issuance, including the 10 released from 2022 and 2023, as well as the 10 set to come out in 2024 and 2025. But who are these women on your quarters?

    Stacker explored the fascinating lives and achievements of the 20 remarkable women celebrated by the American Women Quarters Program. However, while introducing women onto U.S. currency is a step toward recognizing women in U.S. history, it’s by no means a pioneering one. Many other countries have long had women figures on their currency, from Australia to Mexico. It’s also worth recognizing that the U.S. Mint adheres to a binary understanding of sex and gender, making the proper inclusion of gender-expansive people difficult.

    It remains to be seen if the U.S. Mint will meet demands to overhaul its currency further to celebrate underrecognized historical figures. In the meantime, meet the women on your quarters—from Maya Angelou to Maria Tallchief—and learn why they matter.

    Maya Angelou reads a poem during the inauguration of Bill Clinton.

    Larry Morris / The Washington Post via Getty Images

    Maya Angelou

    Writer, performer, and activist Maya Angelou began the U.S. Mint’s roster and made history in 2022 as the first Black woman to appear on a U.S. quarter. She rose to prominence after publishing her classic 1969 autobiography “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings.”

    She published over 30 other works, including memorable poems like “Still I Rise” and “On the Pulse of Morning,” reading the latter at President Bill Clinton’s 1992 inauguration. Angelou is also remembered for her civil rights work alongside Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., and she worked on the Southern Christian Leadership Conference staff. In 2010, President Barack Obama awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

    Sally Ride on board the Space Shuttle Challenger.

    Bettmann // Getty Images

    Sally Ride

    A pioneer in space exploration, Sally Ride became the first American woman to walk in space, as well as the first to make two trips to space. Ride served as a mission specialist during the 1983 Space Shuttle Challenger STS-7 mission, in which she helped retrieve two communications satellites and conducted scientific experiments.

    In 1984, she completed her second mission aboard the Challenger, using the shuttle’s robotic arm to release the Earth Radiation Budget Satellite. After resigning from NASA in 1987, she focused on breaking down barriers for young women in STEM with her own company, Sally Ride Science. The company created immersive educational science, technology, engineering, and math programs for elementary and middle school students, encouraging more women to reach for the stars.

    Wilma Mankiller poses beside a lake.

    Peter Turnley // Getty Images

    Wilma Mankiller

    In 1985, Wilma Mankiller became the first woman principal chief of the Cherokee Nation. Before her election, she founded the Cherokee Nation’s Community Development Department, overseeing the creation of community water systems and the restoration of houses.

    Mankiller tripled membership in the Cherokee Nation during her time as chief, saw lowered infant mortality rates, and doubled Cherokee employment. She also worked with the federal government to pioneer a self-government agreement between the Cherokee Nation and the Environmental Protection Agency. Mankiller was inducted into the National Women’s Hall of Fame in 1993 and was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1998.

    Nina Otero-Warren poses for a portrait.

    Michael Ochs Archives // Getty Images

    Nina Otero-Warren

    Nina Otero-Warren was the first Hispanic woman to run for U.S. Congress and a leader of New Mexico’s women’s suffrage movement. In 1918, as the first female superintendent of public schools in Santa Fe, New Mexico, Otero-Warren emphasized the importance of using Spanish to make the suffrage movement accessible to Hispanic women.

    In her education work, she promoted bicultural education, citing the importance of preserving Hispanic and Native American cultures within New Mexico. Her legacy persists today, as activists work to offer ballots in more languages and raise awareness of the growing legislation spreading across the nation that attempts to limit teaching about race, racism, and multicultural history in schools.

    Anna May Wong poses in a publicity shot for ‘Limehouse Blues’.

    John Kobal Foundation // Getty Images

    Anna May Wong

    Anna May Wong became the first Asian American to appear on U.S. currency thanks to the quarters program. She was Hollywood’s first Asian American movie star, appearing in silent films, theater productions, and on television. Wong dealt with racism and harassment throughout her Hollywood career, eventually prompting her to go to Europe and star in several English, German, and French films during the late 1920s.

    Wong’s legacy remains salient today, as the #OscarsSoWhite and #TimesUp movements advocate for more conscious, authentic diversity in film and urge accountability for perpetrating gender-based discrimination and sexual harassment or assault in the workplace and beyond.

    Bessie Coleman poses with her bi-plane.

    Michael Ochs Archives // Getty Images

    Bessie Coleman

    A talented pilot, Bessie Coleman also made history as the first African American and first Native American woman pilot and the first African American to earn an international pilot’s license. After being refused admission into U.S. flying schools, Coleman traveled to France and eventually received her international pilot’s license in 1921 from the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale.

    She became known for her daring feats at air shows, performing loop the loops and figure eights. Coleman toured the U.S. as her fame grew, giving flight lessons and encouraging young African Americans and women to pursue aviation. Her legacy remains an important example, given the meager 9.5% of U.S. pilots who are women today, according to 2022 Federal Aviation Administration data.

    Ventris Gibson, Janet Yellen, and Douglas Emhoff at a press event for the American Women Quarters Program.

    Jason Connolly-Pool // Getty Images

    Edith Kanakaʻole

    Throughout her life, Hawaiian composer, chanter, educator, and Kumu Hula Edith Kanakaʻole was dedicated to celebrating and promoting the preservation of Native Hawaiian culture. Kanakaʻole did this by composing Hawaiian chants known as “oli,” choreographing hula dances, and teaching these practices to others. She also helped create the first Hawaiian language program for public school students.

    In the 1970s, she designed and taught college courses on undertaught subjects like Hawaiian chant and mythology, ethnobotany, and Polynesian history. During a time when the Hawaiian language was banned in Hawaiian schools, Kanakaʻole’s efforts were ahead of her time.

    Eleanor Roosevelt speaking before the Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee on the United Nations charter.

    Bettmann // Getty Images

    Eleanor Roosevelt

    Eleanor Roosevelt held many titles: first lady, writer, and chairperson of the United Nations Human Rights Commission, just to name a few. Roosevelt became active in politics in the 1920s, promoting women’s political engagement through organizations like the Women’s Trade Union League and the League of Women Voters.

    As first lady, she was known for her hands-on approach, visiting relief projects nationwide to lend her support. She remained politically active later in life, notably when former President Harry Truman appointed her to the United Nations. Roosevelt worked on drafting the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which the U.N. General Assembly adopted in 1948.

    Douglas Emhoff, Ventris Gibson, and Janet Yellen at a press event for the American Women Quarters Program.

    Jason Connolly-Pool // Getty Images

    Jovita Idar

    Mexican American journalist, activist, teacher, and suffragist Jovita Idár used her writing and organizing efforts to fight for a better future for her fellow Latino Americans. Idár was exposed to the power of journalism from a young age; her parents ran the progressive, Spanish-language newspaper La Crónica, which exposed injustices toward Mexican Texans in the early 20th century. This encouraged her to pursue activism.

    She helped organize the First Mexicanist Congress in 1911, which galvanized the Mexican American civil rights movement. She also founded the League of Mexican Women—one of the first Latina feminist organizations—and became its first president. Idár was passionate about education, launching El Etudiante, a weekly bilingual education newspaper for teachers, encouraging them to help bilingual students preserve their cultures. Idár used journalism to advocate for Latino Americans in several other publications, including El Progreso, El Eco del Golfo, and La Luz.

    Maria Tallchief poses for a portrait.

    Bettmann // Getty Images

    Maria Tallchief

    Part of the Osage Tribe, Maria Tallchief is widely recognized as America’s first prima ballerina. Tallchief danced and worked for prestigious companies like the New York City Ballet throughout her career. Even as she gained acclaim, she refused to erase her heritage, opting to keep the Tallchief name rather than following the trend of adopting a Russian-sounding name to blend into the ballet world.

    After retiring from dancing full-time, Tallchief sought to empower Native Americans by speaking to them and others about Native arts and education. She also helped raise funds for the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian. Tallchief died in 2013, but her legacy continues to inspire ballet dancers of color—particularly Indigenous dancers—in the U.S. However, the art form remains predominantly white and is often unwelcoming to ballerinas of color.

    Patsy Mink speaking at microphones.

    Bettmann // Getty Images

    Patsy Takemoto Mink

    Patsy Takemoto Mink made history as the first woman of color elected to the House of Representatives, the first Asian American congresswoman, and the first Asian American to run for president of the U.S.

    Born in Hawaii, Mink’s career took off when she was elected to the House of Representatives in 1964. Throughout her time in politics, she championed education and women’s issues, most notably pioneering the passage of the Women’s Educational Equity Act, which provided $30 million per year in educational funds to promote gender equality and job opportunities for women upon its enactment in 1974.

    Mink was also one of the key authors and sponsors of Title IX, which prohibits sex-based discrimination in education programs. She ran in the Democratic presidential primary in 1971, basing her campaign on her “humanism” and anti-war activism.

    Mary Edwards Walker portrait wearing suit and Medal of Honor.

    Library of Congress/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images

    Mary Edwards Walker

    Dr. Mary Edwards Walker remains the only woman in U.S. history to receive the Medal of Honor. During the Civil War, Walker became the first woman Army surgeon for the Union army. Working in the face of wartime danger and rampant sexism toward women doctors at the time, she often crossed enemy lines to deliver medical care. In 1864, she was captured and held prisoner for four months by the Confederate Army as a spy.

    Beyond her medical prowess, Walker was a strong proponent of women’s rights, testifying in front of the House of Representatives to support women’s suffrage in 1912 and 1914. The activist also bucked gender conventions of the time, regularly wearing pants and advocating for “dress reform” throughout her life. Her refusal to conform to gender norms resulted in her arrest in New Orleans in 1870 for wearing masculine clothes.

    Portrait of Paul Murray.

    Bettmann // Getty Images

    Pauli Murray

    An undersung figure in the Civil Rights Movement, Pauli Murray was nevertheless a highly influential activist, author, and legal scholar. They broke barriers throughout their lifetime, co-founding the National Organization for Women in 1966 and writing the book “States’ Laws on Race and Color,” which Thurgood Marshall touted as “the bible” of the Civil Rights Movement. It often is cited as the foundation for the landmark Supreme Court case Brown v. Board of Education, in which the court ruled segregation unconstitutional. Additionally, Murray became the first Black American to receive a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School in 1965.

    While Murray was recognized as part of the U.S. Mint’s American Women Quarters program, it’s important to note that they were gender-nonconforming and self-identified as a “he/she personality.” Because language for their gender identity did not really exist during their lifetime, it is impossible to know how Murray would have wanted to be described using today’s language.

    Zitkala-Ša poses for a portrait.

    Bettmann // Getty Images

    Zitkala-Sa

    Writer and activist Zitkála-Šá, also known as “Red Bird,” used her artistic talents to advocate for the preservation of Native American culture, as well as improved health care, legal and voting rights, and education for Native Americans.

    A member of the Yankton Sioux tribe, Zitkála-Šá was influenced at an early age by her experiences at a residential Quaker school designed to forcibly assimilate Native American children into white European culture and religion. As an adult, she published work about Dakota history and culture and sought to humanize her people at a time when Native Americans were often erased and cast as “savages.”

    Meanwhile, Zitkála-Šá’s advocacy for Indigenous people to receive U.S. citizenship played a key role in the passage of the Indian Citizenship Act of 1924, which endowed full citizenship rights to all Native Americans. She also worked hard to secure suffrage for Indigenous people, urging white women to use their newly achieved right to vote to advocate for the same rights for Native Americans.

    Celia Cruz performs on stage.

    Frans Schellekens/Redferns // Getty Images

    Celia Cruz

    Widely recognized as the “Queen of Salsa,” Cuban American singer Celia Cruz played a major role in developing the new sound of the genre. Drawing on her Afro-Cuban heritage to shape and popularize salsa as it is known today, Cruz rose to stardom as part of the popular Cuban orchestra La Sonora Matancera. After the orchestra was exiled to the U.S. following the Cuban Revolution in the 1950s, she became a fixture of the New York City salsa scene.

    During her career, Cruz recorded over 80 albums, winning four Grammy Awards and three Latin Grammys. She was known for her trademark interjection, “¡Azúcar!,” which held deeper meaning as a reference to the enslavement of Africans on Cuban sugar plantations.

    Ida B. Wells poses for a portrait.

    Chicago History Museum // Getty Images

    Ida B. Wells

    Black investigative journalist and activist Ida B. Wells played a key role in documenting and speaking out against the lynching of Black people. Following the lynching of a friend and his two associates, Wells published a series of articles investigating the crime. She eventually brought her anti-lynching campaign to the White House, speaking to President William McKinley in 1898.

    She also became one of the few Black women in the country at the time to own and edit a newspaper, the Memphis-based publication Free Speech. Although she was not credited as an official founder, Wells helped start the NAACP and other civil rights organizations, such as the National Association of Colored Women’s Club. In 2020, Wells received a posthumous Pulitzer Prize for her vital reporting work.

    Juliette Gordon Low poses for a portrait.

    Bettmann // Getty Images

    Juliette Gordon Low

    Known to some as “Daisy,” Juliette Gordon Low founded Girl Scouts of the United States of America in 1912. Low was inspired to start the organization after meeting Boy Scouts founder Sir Robert Baden-Powell in England and learning more about the country’s Girl Guides program. Low’s Girl Scouts set itself apart by teaching young girls leadership and outdoor skills and preparing them for homemaker roles.

    From its inception, the Girl Scouts was open to girls with disabilities, immigrants, and girls from various ethnic, religious, and socioeconomic backgrounds. Low herself was a hard-of-hearing person, and historians have speculated that she may have also had a learning disability. As of 2017, Girl Scouts is the largest organization for girls, totaling over 50 million members throughout its history.

    Vera Rubin poses for a portrait.

    Linda Davidson/The Washington Post via Getty Images

    Vera Rubin

    Trailblazing astrophysicist Vera Rubin is regarded as the “mother of dark matter.” Despite the lack of representation and opportunities for women in science, technology, engineering, and math in the mid-20th century, she collaborated with fellow astronomer and instrument designer Kent Ford to analyze over 60 galaxies.

    During her research on galaxy rotation in the 1970s, Rubin discovered clear evidence that convinced astronomers around the world of the existence of dark matter—a form of matter composed of particles that don’t absorb, reflect, or emit light and can’t be detected through electromagnetic radiation. Her research affirmed the theory that dark matter is abundant throughout stars and galaxies. In 1993, Rubin was awarded the National Medal of Science for her contributions.

    Janet Yellen and Douglas Emhoff inspect a series of dies used in the production of the new American Women Quarters Program.

    Jason Connolly-Pool // Getty Images

    Stacey Park Milbern

    Queer Korean American disability justice activist Stacey Park Milbern advocated for the inclusion of people of color and transgender and gender-nonconforming people in the disability justice movement. Following her move to the San Francisco Bay Area, a then-24-year-old Milbern founded the Disability Justice Culture Club as a place where queer disabled people of color could organize and find community. In 2014, President Barack Obama appointed her to the President’s Committee for People with Intellectual Disabilities.

    The activist went on to co-produce the impact campaign for the Netflix documentary “Crip Camp,” which tells the story of how a ’70s New York summer camp helped launch the disability rights movement. Although Milbern died in 2020 at 33 from surgery complications, she forged a legacy of championing intersectional disability justice across the U.S.

    Althea Gibson competing in tennis match.

    Bettmann // Getty Images

    Althea Gibson

    During an era when tennis was still segregated and overwhelmingly considered a “white” sport, Althea Gibson shattered barriers. The prodigious athlete became the first Black tennis player to compete in the U.S. National Championships, now known as the U.S. Open, in 1950. She later won the event in both 1957 and 1958.

    During that same two-year period, Gibson won back-to-back Wimbledon championships, where she was the first Black player to win, predating Arthur Ashe’s historic win by over a decade. However, her achievements weren’t limited to tennis: In 1967, she became the first Black American woman to compete on the Ladies Professional Golf Association tour.

    Story editing by Eliza Siegel. Copy editing by Lois Hince.

    Source

  • Texas approves state park land swap negotiations with SpaceX despite criticism

    Texas Parks and Wildlife Commission announced Monday it authorized the state to pursue land swap negotiations with Elon Musk’s SpaceX to start despite meeting widespread criticism.

    The commission said it authorized the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (TPWD) to pursue “the acquisition of approximately 477 acres for a new state park” located near the Laguna Atascosa National Wildlife Refuge. In exchange, Texas would give about 43 acres of land from Boca Chica State Park in Cameron County to SpaceX.

    The commission said that the land swap “would create a tenfold return,” allowing the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department to begin planning for a new state park that would give the public access to fishing, kayaking, hiking and other outdoor activities.

    “This is an exciting opportunity to acquire land that has been of interest to us and the conservation community for many years,” said Texas Parks and Wildlife Department Executive Director David Yoskowitz.

    “We look forward to working with Cameron County, city and state officials as well as the public to develop a shared vision for Bahia Grande that enhances conservation and expands recreational opportunities for all Texans, both now and in the future,” Yoskowitz said.

    The 43 acres it would give to SpaceX are “noncontiguous,” with the commission noting that most of the acres “do not connect to each other or to areas offering public access at Boca Chica State Park.”

    “These smaller, noncontiguous tracts do not provide beach access and are dotted among private properties or immediately adjacent to SpaceX’s facilities, meaning they aren’t readily available for public use and provide less cohesive wildlife habitat than offered by a connected and consistently managed tract of conservation land,” the announcement reads.

    Musk moved SpaceX’s state of incorporation from Delaware to Texas last month after an unfavorable court ruling in the state court.

    The Texas Tribune reported there were four hours of public testimony during the department’s meeting in Austin that held the vote on Monday, with many members of the public opposing the exchange. Some expressed concerns  about the exchange limiting access to the beach in Boca Chica State Park and potentially harming endangered species in the area, according to The Texas Tribune.

    The Lone Star Chapter of Sierra Club issued a statement last week opposing the land swap proposal.

    “To be clear, this action only gives TPWD staff the ability to consider and negotiate making this land swap — including after potential environmental assessments. Nevertheless, it is the only opportunity at the state level for the public to give feedback,” the statement said ahead of the vote.

    “Because the land swap will ultimately result in the expansion of SpaceX in the Rio Grande Valley, and SpaceX has a history of being a bad neighbor, wreaking havoc on the communities and habitat nearby, we are opposed to this potential land swap,” the statement added.

    The Hill has reached out to SpaceX for comment.

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

    Source

  • Federal Court Rules In Favor Of Texas Arresting Illegals!


    Decision will likely move on to the Supreme Court

    A federal appeals court ruled in favor of Texas Republican Governor Greg Abbott on Monday after a lower federal court previously blocked the state from arresting illegal aliens under Senate Bill 4.

    “BREAKING HUGE NEWS Federal appeals court allows Texas immigration law to take effect. Law enforcement officers in Texas are now authorized to arrest & jail any illegal immigrants crossing the border,” Abbott wrote on X.

    The 5th US Circuit Court of Appeals issued a stay of the previous judgment for seven days, allowing the Biden administration to appeal the decision to the Supreme Court if desired.

    Perhaps the Supreme Court will rule in favor of Texas aspiring to secure its border, delivering yet another blow to Democrats following Monday’s SCOTUS ruling allowing Donald Trump to remain on all 2024 Primary ballots.

    • URGENT! Keep Alex Jones in the fight against the NWO! Please pray & contribute at DefendJones.com today!

    The decision was widely celebrated by Americans fed up with Biden’s open borders:





    Source

  • ‘Hungry People Don’t Steal Doors, Windows’ — Minister Condemns Looting Of FCTA’s Warehouse In Abuja

    … As FCTA To Deploy Security Agents To Government Warehouses

    The Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA) has announced plans to deploy security operatives to all government-owned warehouses in Abuja.

    The Minister of State of the Federal Capital Territory, Dr Mariya Mahmoud, made this known in a statement issued on Monday by her Special Adviser on Media, Austin Elemue.

    The decision followed Sunday’s invasion of a warehouse located in Gwagwa-Tasha, belonging to the Agriculture and Rural Development Secretariat of the FCTA, by hoodlums.

    The incident took place amid the ongoing food crisis ravaging the nation.

    Mahmoud, during her visit to the warehouse on Monday, expressed disappointment with the incident, describing it as not driven by hunger but criminal minds.

    “This is really a bad situation. And it is not something that the Administration will take lightly. All those that are involved must be brought to book. We have to do something. And also, this is a sign that we need to reinforce the security situation around all our warehouses because you just have to keep food.

    “But the way this thing happened is beyond hunger. This is a criminal act. Somebody who is hungry cannot move out to remove all the roofings that are here. All the doors, all the windows, and also the gates.

    “As you have heard from people around, the youth of the environment or the community, are suspected to have instigated this incident. So, this is a very sad event. And we are not happy about it”, she said.

    Mahmoud explained that the incident occurred when the administration was restocking its warehouse to meet up with the directive of President Bola Tinubu to distribute palliatives to all six area councils in the FCT.

    She further stated that the FCTA would find and prosecute those behind the ugly incident, noting that the administration would renovate the warehouse in due time.

    “We did distribution about twice. And then about to do the third one, where these trucks were here to offload these food items, and then they were attacked, even injured some people on duty.

    “This is not showing that we are good ambassadors of the nation. So definitely we are going to take action about this event that has happened. We have to reconstruct, not even renovate this warehouse, all the offices, and then the gates that are damaged”, she stated.

    ‘Hungry People Don’t Steal Doors, Windows’ — Minister Condemns Looting Of FCTA’s Warehouse In Abuja is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

    Source

  • McConnell weighs endorsing Trump. It’s a stark turnaround after the Jan. 6, 2021, attack

    By LISA MASCARO (AP Congressional Correspondent)

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Senate leader Mitch McConnell is the highest-ranking Republican in Congress who has yet to endorse Donald Trump’s bid to return to the White House — having once called the defeated president “morally responsible” for the Jan. 6, 2021 Capitol attack.

    But that’s potentially about to change.

    McConnell’s political team and Trump’s campaign have been in talks over not only a possible endorsement of the former president but a strategy to unite Republicans up and down the party’s ticket ahead of the November election, according to a person familiar with the situation and granted anonymity to discuss it.

    How, when or where McConnell would endorse Trump is less head-spinning than the idea that it could happen at all: A stunning rapprochement for two men who have not spoken since McConnell enraged Trump by declaring Joe Biden the legitimate winner of the 2020 presidential election.

    But a fast-moving series of events ahead of Super Tuesday’s elections have been set in motion by McConnell’s own sudden announcement he would step down as leader next session and as Trump is on track to move closer toward the GOP nomination.

    Taken together, it lays bare the lengths that McConnell, the longest-serving Senate leader and an ever calculating politician, will go as he works to win back Republican control of the Senate in what could be among his final acts in power.

    “I still have enough gas in the tank to thoroughly disappoint my critics, and I intend to do so with all the enthusiasm which they have become accustomed,” McConnell said last week in announcing his decision to step aside as leader for the next session.

    Not long ago, it appeared Trump would have few fans politically lining up behind his bid to return to the White House, particularly from the halls of Congress.

    In the aftermath of the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol, key Republicans, including McConnell, signaled unequivocally they were done with Trump.

    In a scathing speech during the Senate impeachment trial on charges Trump incited the insurrection at the Capitol, McConnell decried Trump’s intemperate language and the “entire manufactured atmosphere of looming catastrophe” and “wild myths” about a stolen election.

    “The leader of the free world cannot spend weeks thundering that shadowy forces are stealing our country and then feign surprise when people believe him and do reckless things,” said McConnell after the mob siege.

    Still, McConnell declined to vote to convict Trump of the impeachment charges in the Senate trial, saying it was for the courts to decide, since the defeated president by then was out of office. “He didn’t get away with anything yet,” McConnell said in the February 2021 speech.

    Trump is now charged in several cases including a federal indictment of conspiring to defraud the U.S. and obstruct an official proceeding related to the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol by supporters trying to stop Congress from certifying the 2020 election. Trump has appealed claiming immunity.

    The first sign that McConnell was leaving the door open to reuniting with Trump came in early 2023 when he was asked about Trump’s potential return to the presidential campaign. At the time, McConnell suggested he would support the Republican Party’s eventual nominee, declining to name names or mention Trump.

    But endorsements matter to Trump, who has assigned key campaign staff in charge of roping in support from elected officials in what has become a two-way political street. The GOP leaders are also relying on Trump to support — or at least not attack — their own nominees for the House and Senate.

    As McConnell is weighing his decision to endorse Trump despite his concerns over Jan. 6, he is watching core Republican voters flock to the former president. And he is wary of being the one to try to stand in their way.

    It’s not just McConnell but the other Republican leaders on Capitol Hill who have all quickly fallen in line as Trump emerges ever so close to again becoming the party’s nominee at the top of their party ticket this November.

    Republican Speaker Mike Johnson traveled to Mar-a-Lago last month to meet with Trump at his private club about House races as the new speaker works to keep his slim GOP House majority.

    The other House Republican leaders endorsed Trump as the former president’s team pushed for backing ahead of the Iowa, New Hampshire and other early contests. Senate Republican leaders did the same.

    And Republican Sen. Steve Daines of Montana, the chairman of the Senate GOP campaign arm who is a friend, hunting and fishing partner to the president’s oldest son, Don Trump, Jr., had told others as far back as 2022 he hoped Trump would run again. He became the first member of Senate GOP leadership to endorse him.

    When Daines traveled to Mar-a-Lago for his own visit in February 2023, he told Trump the most important thing he could do for Trump was deliver a Senate majority to confirm Cabinet nominees and approve conservative policies, according to another person familiar with the situation and granted anonymity to discuss it. Daines remains close to Trump, and the two speak often, the person said.

    “I’m encouraging the Republican Party to unite behind President Trump,” Daines said in a recent statement to the media, including AP.

    McConnell’s past political distaste for Trump appears to be no match for the GOP leader’s desire to win back a Senate majority for Republicans one more time as he prepares to exit the leadership stage.

    The two have traded harsh words since even before McConnell’s 2021 speech, with Trump deriding the now 82-year-old as an “Old Crow.”

    But in recent weeks Trump has refrained from name-calling McConnell, or using racial slurs against McConnell’s wife, Elaine Chao, the former Trump Transportation Secretary, who resigned in the aftermath of the Jan. 6 attack.

    While representatives for McConnell and Trump had restarted the conversation, first McConnell had his announcement last week about stepping aside as GOP leader.

    Once that project was done, the person said, McConnell’s team could turn its attention to this next one.

    Source