HORRIFIC: 31-year-old viral influencer Ashlee Jenae was found dead in her Tanzania hotel room after her white husband, Jon McCann, allegedly strangled her then hung her lifeless body to stage a suicide.
This cold-blooded monster allegedly murdered her right after proposing on her birthday during their luxury vacation.
He then kept posting on social media like nothing happened while Ashlee had him plastered all over her Instagram and he never once acknowledged her on his.
Her parents only found out through passport emergency contacts.
You propose to a woman on her birthday trip, then strangle her and stage her murder as a suicide the same week? Pure evil.
Jon McCann has allegedly been arrested pending charges.
Students are walking out of class to protest against ICE. Protesters across the U.S. are calling for “no work, no school, no shopping” as part of a nationwide strike on Friday to oppose the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown.
Black women are DYING because doctors don't believe them. Christina Brown had to grab doctors' hands to make them feel her breast lump. Serena Williams nearly died after childbirth. Dr. Janell Green Smith didn't survive hers. The burden shouldn't be on Black women to become hyper-vigilant medical experts. The responsibility is on healthcare systems, medical training, and providers to LISTEN, BELIEVE, and ACT. Black women's pain is real. Black women's lives MATTER! https://t.co/Bq5a4M6c9l
Mockler: The monetization of this presidency of the office is unprecedented. I could almost get over the Trump shoes, the Trump watches, the Trump phone, the Trump NFTs. But when Trump coin came out… Now, Melania has a movie that is quite literally bombing, but she made a lot of profit off of it. And Jeff Bezos is getting favorable contracts. This is not the United States of America that I grew up in
Abdulrahman Ibrahim Ibn Sori was an African prince spent 40 years enslaved in America.
Born in the late 18th century in what is now Guinea, Abdulrahman was the son of a powerful ruler of the Futa Jallon region. He was educated, multilingual, and trained in leadership. While traveling during a military conflict, he was captured, sold into the transatlantic slave trade, and eventually taken to the United States.
Abdulrahman spent more than 40 years enslaved in Mississippi, working on plantations despite his royal background. For decades, he tried to explain who he was, but few believed that an enslaved Black man could be a prince.
Everything changed when a visitor recognized him and helped carry his story beyond the plantation. His case eventually reached international attention and involved diplomatic efforts that extended as far as Morocco. Through negotiations and pressure from foreign officials, Abdulrahman was finally granted his freedom in 1828.
After gaining his freedom, he traveled across the United States raising money in an attempt to free his wife and children, who were still enslaved. Although he never succeeded in freeing all of them, his story became one of the earliest documented cases of international diplomacy being used to challenge American slavery.
Abdulrahman Ibrahim Ibn Sori’s life reminds us that slavery did not erase identity, lineage, or dignity—even when it tried to.
Mockler: He's trying to paint the peaceful protesters as lawless people. You know who's actually lawless? ICE. A Republican appointed judge, came out and said that ICE has violated 96 court orders. He said they violated more court orders in January than most agencies have throughout their entire existence.