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Biden shares message of unity and action during Juneteenth celebration at historic Black church

Biden shares message of unity and action during Juneteenth celebration at historic Black church

CNN10 hours ago

Former President Joe Biden celebrated Juneteenth on Thursday at a historic Black church in Texas, calling for Americans to come together to push the country forward.
'I don't come here today to only commemorate the past. I come here because we know the good Lord isn't done with us yet,' Biden said, adding, 'We have work to do. We need to keep pushing America forward.'
'We're the United States of America,' Biden said. 'There's nothing, nothing beyond our capacity when we act together.'
Biden's remarks at the historic Reedy Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Galveston, Texas, come nearly four years after he made Juneteenth a national holiday — the first federal holiday established since Martin Luther King Jr. Day in 1983. Biden said he was 'very proud' to sign the bipartisan legislation.
'It made me proud. Proud that we were united,' Biden said. 'Proud, despite all our differences, we can still come together for things that matter most.'
Juneteenth is a celebration of the end of slavery, commemorating the day Union Army Maj. Gen. Gordon Granger rode into Galveston and told a group of slaves that the Civil War had ended and they were free — more than two years after President Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation.
'Juneteenth is a day of liberation, a day of remembrance and a day of celebration,' Biden said. 'Juneteenth represents both the long and hard night of slavery and subjugation and the promise of joyful morning to come.'
'Our federal holidays say … who we are as Americans,' Biden later added. 'What we celebrate says what we value.'
President Donald Trump — who has not signed a proclamation this year observing Juneteenth — took to social media on Thursday to criticize the number of non-working holidays in the United States.
'Too many non-working holidays in America. It is costing our Country $BILLIONS OF DOLLARS to keep all of these businesses closed,' Trump wrote in a Truth Social post, adding, 'It must change if we are going to, MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!'
Trump's post comes as he continues to make the elimination of diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs a centerpiece of his second administration, ordering a ban on DEI programs in federal agencies on his first day in office.
Without mentioning Trump by name, Biden reflected on the nation's history and the current political climate.
'We need to be honest about our history,' Biden said on Thursday, pointing to 'efforts to erase history from our textbooks and our classrooms.'
Biden's administration — which came in the aftermath of widespread protests against racial injustice following George Floyd's killing in 2020 — embraced diversity and DEI efforts. Biden ran alongside the first Black, South Asian and woman vice president in 2020, and he had the most racially diverse presidential Cabinet in US history. Biden also nominated Ketanji Brown Jackson to become the first Black woman Supreme Court justice.
Biden also signed legislation to rename nine military bases that were named after Confederate leaders. The Trump administration has since moved to restore the names of each of the bases.
Biden's Thursday remarks come two months after his office announced that the former president, 82, has been diagnosed with an 'aggressive form' of prostate cancer that spread to his bones.
Late last month, the former president struck an optimistic tone when he spoke publicly for the first time about his cancer diagnosis, telling reporters: 'We're going to be able to beat this.'
He similarly ended on an energized chord Thursday, telling the churchgoers in Galveston, 'Let's get the hell to work and get more done.'

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Celebrating Juneteenth Amid Resurging Fascism 160 Years Later
Celebrating Juneteenth Amid Resurging Fascism 160 Years Later

Black America Web

time20 minutes ago

  • Black America Web

Celebrating Juneteenth Amid Resurging Fascism 160 Years Later

Source: MARK FELIX / Getty Juneteenth offers a time of celebration and reflection as we consider what it means to be free amid resurgent fascism in America. While the current political moment may feel unprecedented to some people, 160 years after the Black people in Galveston, Texas, learned of emancipation, Black Americans are still fighting for freedom, liberation, and self-determination. This year's Juneteenth celebrations take place against the backdrop of a federal government covered in fascism and hostile toward these core tenets of a free society. Despite the persisting attacks on multiple fronts, Black organizers and communities see opportunity in celebrating this moment as we continue to push onward. Brianna Brown, co-director of the Texas Organizing Project (TOP), noted that Juneteenth serves as a poignant reminder of Black resistance and resilience. 'Celebrating freedom 160 years after General Order No. 3 signifies our commitment to a legacy of resistance and vision,' Brown said. 'It reminds us that liberation didn't arrive solely because Union soldiers came to Galveston. It came because enslaved Black people never stopped dreaming, resisting, and moving toward freedom.' Brown said that Juneteenth offers an opportunity for Black Americans to write a new chapter, even as we combat re-emerging forms of white supremacy, such as book bans, state violence, voter suppression, and anti-Black curriculum, to name a few. Akinyele Umoja, an African American Studies professor at Georgia State, echoed Brown's sentiment about the importance of recognizing the role enslaved Black people played in their emancipation. Umoja pointed to what W.E.B. Dubois called the general strike of enslaved Black people, which in part led to emancipation. 'I understand and appreciate folks in Texas really embracing it as emancipation or Jubilee day, because I do think that was an important mark for our people coming out of chattel slavery,' Umoja said. 'Particularly recognizing in the role that our ancestors played in that, whether it was what Dubois called the great general strike when Black people refused to work or escape after the Emancipation Proclamation over the Union line.' Reflecting on the legacy of Juneteenth and independence, he noted the small community in Mexico that has celebrated Juneteenth since the news spread 160 years ago. Source: The Washington Post / Getty 'I found out a few years ago that some Juneteenth is celebrated in Mexico amongst descendants of Black Seminoles who escaped over into Mexico to escape enslavement once Texas became a white settler state,' he said. 'So, it gave me even more significance. I see it as an important mark of that struggle that our ancestors had.' During the interview, Umoja drew a throughline from settler colonialism, slavery, and apartheid in the United States as a part of the foundation of American fascism to the current attacks on justice and equity by the Trump administration and broader MAGA movement. For Umoja, commemorating Juneteenth—and the critical struggle of our ancestors and compounding harms over the 160 years post-end of American chattel slavery—offers another opportunity to discuss reparations and restitution for generational harm endured by Black Americans who are descendants of enslaved people in North America. 'For us now, what's important is for us to have a free discussion in our community about what freedom is, what liberation is,' he said. 'It might be tied to questions like, what type of health care we receive, and the economic system we want to have? What does education look like? What does the curriculum look like? All of these different questions should come up in our community. We should have the right to have those discussions free of interference from folks who are descendants of people who benefited from our enslavement, the captivity, and people who might have benefited from us being segregated and isolated.' The extractive violence and terror currently being inflicted by the Trump administration are in some ways reminiscent of the generational terror Black people endured before and after emancipation. Hooded individuals, deputized by the law, snatch people away from their loved ones with little to no recourse, no trial, and no due process. Understanding the connection of our struggle with the broader threat posed by the resurgent project of American fascism also demands that we embrace intentional solidarity. TOP's work in organizing and building power for Black and Latino Texans demonstrates the interconnection of liberation. Brown described solidarity as a practice that requires courage and commitment—a necessity for communities impacted by systemic oppression to survive, thrive, and ultimately win. 'The solidarity we build isn't about feel-good moments,' she said. 'It's forged in the trenches of struggle, through strategic collaboration, and in the understanding that our liberation is interconnected. We name anti-Blackness and anti-Latino racism.' Source: Kayla Oaddams / Getty As Brown notes, solidarity doesn't require grinning and being silent. Organizations like TOP recognize that multiple issues often affect our communities at the same time. Survival and self-determination require a focus on creating a world that is not only suitable for ourselves but also for our friends, neighbors, and the broader community. 'We balance it by refusing to treat our lives like policy silos,' Brown said. 'At TOP, we understand our people don't wake up saying, 'Today I care about democracy. Tomorrow, maybe healthcare.' Our folks live lives that are profoundly connected and intersectional. That's why we fight with both people power and political power on issues that put food on the table and protect our right to shape the future.' The emancipation of formerly enslaved Black people 160 years ago set the stage for generations of discourse about how we collectively challenge fascism and tyranny in any form. But all the collective proclamations and orders issued during and after the Civil War, as well as the Reconstruction era amendments, failed to secure our place in this country. And yet, as we witness the chaos and cruelty of the current administration—from targeted ICE actions on communities to the planned robbery of our social safety net to enrich the broligarchy—some wonder whether this is a time for Black people just to fall back and let others handle the fight. But American fascism and state violence have never let us live in peace. To quote the late organizer and movement steward Ella Baker, 'we who believe in freedom cannot rest until it comes.' Freedom and liberation require more than words, orders, and proclamations. Each moment of joy and success has required a sustained endurance and committed resistance that refused to accept the white supremacist status quo. 'Joy is both our inheritance and our fuel,' Brown said. 'Systems of oppression try to make us small, exhausted, and forgetful of our worth. Joy reminds us that we are worthy of more. It tells us we belong. Joy shows us that freedom isn't just about tearing down walls, it's also about building lives filled with dignity.' SEE ALSO: Survivors Remember Emanuel AME Church Massacre Victims On 10th Anniversary Kendrick Sampson's BLD PWR Teams Up With SisterSong And GBEF For Houston Juneteenth Event SEE ALSO Celebrating Juneteenth Amid Resurging Fascism 160 Years Later was originally published on

Cuts to Fed Staff Pay, CFPB Funds Blocked from Trump Tax Bill
Cuts to Fed Staff Pay, CFPB Funds Blocked from Trump Tax Bill

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DAVID MARCUS: Your social media feed is being hijacked to divide MAGA supporters
DAVID MARCUS: Your social media feed is being hijacked to divide MAGA supporters

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DAVID MARCUS: Your social media feed is being hijacked to divide MAGA supporters

As our society buries itself deeper and deeper into the cave of social media, we are seeing a growing divide between what happens in our real world and what we see on platforms like X and TikTok. A bombshell new report from the National Contagion Research Institute shows much of this is being directed by our foreign enemies. It also shows one of their top goals is to infiltrate and divide the MAGA movement. According to NCRI, Russia and Iran have been employing tens of thousands of bots to inject extreme rhetoric into American social media discourse, and perhaps more importantly, to artificially inflate the influence of content creators who push radical and divisive agendas. To quote one NCRI analyst, "If you talk to Republicans right now, more than 80% of them support the war against Iran. But if you go on Twitter [X] you get the sense that there is a civil war raging." This manipulation of social media by our enemies is far more insidious than most Americans realize, so let's walk through how this kind of information operation, the technical name for propaganda, works. Imagine, for example, that there was an obscure comedian, or Instagram model who began to "just ask questions," about why Jews run everything, or why black people commit crimes. Even better, they might post about how they aren't allowed to ask these very questions and insinuate that neither are you. At this point, according to the report, Russian and Iranian bot armies will begin to follow these radical accounts, massively pumping up their numbers. It will like and share the most divisive content, and work behind the scenes to make this person famous. On platforms that monetize interaction, this can mean very large payouts for creators, as spy bots mindlessly watch their videos over and over, and the beauty of it is that the content creator never even has to know they are getting paid off. When we talk about influencers being bought and paid for by foreign foes, it may not mean a duffle bag full of cash in a bus station locker, simply by using thousands of bots to juice the numbers, the social media companies themselves facilitate the payouts. Perhaps the most obvious way we can see this malign foreign influence online is in the incredible amount of casual racism and antisemitism, supposedly being posted by Americans, that we see on X. These hate posts range from straight-up Nazi apologism, to memes about fatherless black homes, or weird eugenics IQ graphs, and if their prevalence in the algorithm accurately reflects the level of racism in America, then this is a deeply racist country. Only it isn't. Because X does not accurately reflect our society, instead countries that despise America are infusing hate into the platform and propping up the handful of real people willing to push racism and division. What the Russian and Iranian bot farms hope we will believe is that America is full of secret racists who will only say their true beliefs through their anonymous personas, but this is absurd, America knows IRL, that that kind of racism is buried in our past. The question becomes, what can we do to fight back against this massive information operation aimed at our minds? Liberals have long taken the exact wrong approach, which is to try to protect the end user from malicious content. This always adds up to censorship, one way or the other. The better approach, at least as far as the government is concerned, is to target the bot farms and countries that back them. This can be done through cyberattacks, sanctions, any number of measures. There is also a role for the social media industry to play here. We are hearing growing calls for X to use a flag to identify the country of origin of its accounts. This would immediately help users see through the foreign operations. The silver lining in all of this, as the report shows, is that making the leap from influence on a social media screen to influence in the real world is not as easy as we might have once imagined. These foreign-backed influencers have few outlets they can go to off of social media. Sure, Piers Morgan may put on anyone with 250k followers no matter how awful they are, but Main Street America isn't seeing it. As a free society, America is by definition vulnerable to informational attacks, and as citizens in that free society all of us bear a responsibility to process the unfettered flow of information we have access to in responsible ways. Make no mistake, your social media feed is under direct foreign attack. So far, the attacks haven't done too much damage, but keeping it that way, first and foremost, starts with all of us.

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