A mother watched her 1-year-old son, Kohen Wiley, take his first breath and, tragically, his last. Vellesiya Wiley’s pain is unimaginable, and her call for answers must be heard. We stand with this family in demanding transparency, accountability, and #JusticeForKohenWiley.
Immediately after the conviction, Karmelo Anthony’s father reached out to me and asked for help assembling a new legal team to fight for his son’s future. From that moment, we have been working nonstop to bring together experienced appellate and civil rights attorneys to review every aspect of this case and pursue relief through the courts.
Today’s filing, formally replacing prior counsel and placing this new team on the record, is the first step in that process.
We remain committed to ensuring that Karmelo receives a full and fair review of his conviction and sentence, consistent with both the evidence and the law.
This is not about headlines; it is about due process, accountability, and the pursuit of justice for a young man whose life now depends on what happens on appeal.
Texas is planning to transfer 5,000 disabled students in Houston to "hub" campuses, which will potentially segregate them from the students in their neighborhood schools.
The state made this decision without any meaningful input from communities.
Families in Texas are demanding a pause before this major restructuring proceeds, and a federal civil rights investigation is underway.
When I was a kid, the highlight of my day in school was passing the special education classes and dapping them up and chatting with them in-between the bell. It was always a high point. No matter how bad things were, they never failed to brighten up my day and I hope they felt the same about me. The thought of our nation's schools losing these meaningful interactions makes me so upset.
I'm not an expert on disability education, but I know the implications of rounding up a certain group of vulnerable people and concentrating them into a centralized institution where their interactions and personal agency are limited.
The maximum amount a person can donate to a candidate is $3500.
Miriam Adelson just donated another $25 million.
Citizens United didn’t give corporations “free speech.”
It let billionaires buy elections and legally bribe politicians.
End Citizens United.
Most people know about Rosa Parks and her courageous act of defiance that sparked the Montgomery Bus Boycott and helped lead to a court ruling ending bus segregation in Montgomery.
But fewer people know about Sarah Mae Flemming of Columbia, South Carolina.
72 years ago, Flemming was assaulted by a bus driver after she sat in a section reserved for white passengers. She fought back in court, and in a groundbreaking ruling, a federal appeals court ruled that bus segregation could no longer be justified under the doctrine of “separate but equal.”
Flemming's victory helped pave the way for the legal challenge that ultimately ended bus segregation in Montgomery and across the South.
The Pentagon is the only place in America where you can fail 8 audits in a row, admit you’ll fail the next few & still get handed more money than you asked for.
But let a family need help buying groceries and suddenly it’s a lecture about hard work, responsibility & bootstraps.
The deeper story isn't Jim Jordan.
It's the deportation-industrial complex.
A major ICE contractor allegedly routed $250,000 to a Jordan-aligned super PAC. Whether this specific contribution is ultimately ruled legal or illegal is almost beside the point.
Look at the incentive loop:
→ Congress expands detention funding.
→ Private prison companies win larger contracts.
→ Those contracts generate profits.
→ Profits fund political spending.
→ Political spending helps elect politicians who promise even more detention.
Then the cycle repeats.
GEO Group and its subsidiaries have spent years testing the limits of federal contractor donation rules while collecting hundreds of millions in ICE-related contracts.
Watchdogs have repeatedly filed complaints.
The FEC has repeatedly deadlocked.
The money keeps flowing.
The real question isn't whether one check bought one vote.
The real question is whether we've built a system where detention has become an economic development strategy.
More detention.
More contracts.
More profits.
More political money.
At some point, "public policy" starts looking suspiciously like a revenue model.
ICE hit & run over Black woman with car—just peacefully waving American flag.
"She didn't know there was a vehicle behind her, and was not out to block traffic," said witness.
"He didn't warn her, didn't honk, and didn't slow down."
"If you strike a pedestrian—that is a crime under any situation under New Jersey law."
This is the 2nd or 3rd time that same red Challenger has tried to run somebody over—according to witness.
Man driving is a contract worker at the Delaney ICE for profit prison run by GEO Group in Newark, New Jersey.
Durga Advocate for Justice does have an account on this platform—so posting this video here first to help them raise awareness.
Video is safe to watch, contains additional eyewitness commentary, and does not show any graphic content.
Today marks 62 years since James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner disappeared near Philadelphia, Mississippi, while doing the dangerous work of Freedom Summer: voter registration, education, and civil rights.
They had gone to see the burned remains of Mt. Zion Baptist Church, where members of the Ku Klux Klan had beaten worshipers days earlier. After being arrested and released that night, they were kidnapped and killed by members of the Klan. Their bodies were found weeks later.
Their lives were taken because they believed democracy should include Black people, because they believed voting rights were worth risking their safety for, and because they understood that justice requires courage.
As we honor them, we must also recommit to protecting the right to vote, confronting hate, and continuing the work of freedom with disciplined love and nonviolence.
#JamesChaney #AndrewGoodman #MichaelSchwerner #MLK #FreedomSummer
How we beat back the corporate takeover of America:
1. Break up corporate monopolies
2. Continue building union power
3. End Citizens United and get big money out of politics
Let’s keep working to unrig the system.
AI is Rejecting Black Job Applicants Before a Human Ever Sees Them | @salhistorian
A Stanford study found that thousands of applications may have died inside the software before the interview stage.
https://t.co/7uqZQ4Gj18
At the G7, the CEOs of the big AI companies sat at the table like heads of state, alongside presidents and prime ministers.
This is the nightmare scene.
Governments need to have a response to the state-like power of these companies, whether it’s by taking ownership shares, breaking them up into smaller entities, or imposing a regulatory structure that controls their power over citizens.
California cops repeatedly tasered a 61-year-old Black man with a medical condition, believing he was on drugs, before arresting him on false charges that were eventually dismissed.
Now Aerin Robinson – whose medical condition causes him to jerk erratically – is preparing to sue the Burbank Police Department for the second time in three years.
https://t.co/ZjTb6BhZhj
@realister CEOs of corporations will hop on to the next “adventure” whenever the shit they cause hits the fan. ZERO risk involved.
You’re thinking of founders of small and medium enterprises, who are decidedly not capitalists.
Morty: Capitalism gives everyone a chance to get rich if they just work hard enough.
Rick: Oh my god, Morty! Capitalism doesn't work if everyone wins. It needs poverty to function. Someone has to take the low-paying jobs so the profits keep flowing upward. If everyone had real financial security, no one would take those positions and the system would collapse.
Morty: But Rick, that's just how the market works. Some people earn more because they provide more value.
Rick: Tell that to the kid assembling your iPhone overseas for pennies while some CEO makes millions off it. Capitalism doesn't reward work, it rewards ownership. You don't climb the ladder by working hard, you climb it by owning the ladder. The workers collectively produce infinitely more value than some shareholder living in the Bahamas.
Morty: Okay, but isn't it about freedom People can still move up if they make good choices. Look at people who came from nothing and became successful, like entrepreneurs or celebrities.
Rick: Those are exceptions, idiot. That's why they're on TV. For every one person who makes it out, millions stay stuck because they never had the same luck, connections, or safety nets. The system needs those stories so people believe it's fair.
Happy Father’s Day to the fathers, father figures, mentors, and men of Omega who lead with love, sacrifice, presence, and service.
#OmegaPsiPhi#OfficialOPPF#FathersDay