Press Secretary Leavitt Rejects Facts: Unauthorized Immigrants Do Not Receive Subsidized Health Care Coverage
The claim, is misleading. Federal law has long prohibited unauthorized immigrants from receiving federally subsidized health care coverage — a restriction that has been in place since 1996. What Democrats are actually pushing to restore are health care benefits for individuals with lawful presence in the U.S., such as DACA recipients and asylum-seekers, not undocumented immigrants.
The Conviction and Its Weight
On October 3, 2025, Combs was sentenced to 50 months in federal prison after being found guilty of violating the Mann Act by transporting women across state lines for prostitution. The case was built on painful testimony and evidence of abuse. For the women involved, the trial was an act of courage and accountability. For Combs, it marked a dramatic turning point in a life once defined by music, business, and cultural influence.
The Pardon Question in Trump’s Second Term
Donald Trump’s return to the presidency has reignited discussions of clemency. In his first term, Trump issued pardons and commutations to a wide range of figures, including musicians, entrepreneurs, and political allies. Whether he would consider the same for Combs is uncertain. The charges in this case—rooted in coercion and harm—carry a different moral weight than prior celebrity pardons.
Still, the idea of a pardon is not only about politics. It is also about what a second chance might mean, both for Combs and for those who have been harmed by his actions.
Beyond Transactional Relationships
If Combs were to receive clemency, it would come with a heavy responsibility. Freedom would not erase the pain inflicted, but it could offer an opportunity to live differently. To approach women, colleagues, and communities not as objects of transaction or control, but as people worthy of respect, dignity, and equality.
The heart of the matter is whether Combs can use this moment—whether inside prison or beyond it—to rebuild his life on different terms. Fame and wealth once defined his power. But renewal could come only from humility, accountability, and a genuine transformation in how he relates to others.
A Hope for Renewal
The accusations and evidence presented against Combs were devastating. Yet even in the shadow of those truths, the possibility of change remains. If a pardon were ever to be granted, it would not absolve him of the past. But it could serve as an invitation: to live in a way that honors rather than exploits, to build trust rather than tear it down, and to finally use his influence to protect rather than to harm.
The path forward is not guaranteed, nor is it easy. But it is possible—and perhaps that is the most important question clemency forces us to ask.
PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP ~ OCTOBER 3. 2025
BRIEFING SCHEDULE ~ OCTOBER 3, 2025
The claim, however, is misleading. Federal law has long prohibited unauthorized immigrants from receiving federally subsidized health care coverage — a restriction that has been in place since 1996. What Democrats are actually pushing to restore are health care benefits for individuals with lawful presence in the U.S., such as DACA recipients and asylum-seekers, not undocumented immigrants.
The fight over the continuing resolution is not about undocumented immigrants. It’s about whether American citizens and lawfully present residents will continue to have affordable access to care.
Meanwhile, the real stakes in the shutdown and budget fight lie with American citizens and legal residents who depend on existing health programs:
Medicare: Benefits will continue, since Medicare is a mandatory program. Seniors and people with disabilities will still receive coverage, though some administrative services may slow down because of furloughed federal staff.
Medicaid: Coverage for low-income citizens and some lawful immigrants continues, but Republican proposals under consideration could add stricter eligibility checks, impose work requirements, or reduce reimbursements — potentially pushing vulnerable people off the rolls.
Affordable Care Act (ACA): Millions who rely on marketplace subsidies face steep premium hikes if the enhanced tax credits enacted during the pandemic expire without congressional action. For many, that could mean losing affordable coverage.
Uninsured Citizens: Already outside the safety net, the uninsured would face even greater barriers if Medicaid is tightened and ACA subsidies lapse. More people could remain without coverage or delay care due to cost. In short, the continuing budget resolution is not about expanding benefits to undocumented immigrants. It is about whether millions of citizens and lawfully present residents will keep affordable access to Medicare, Medicaid, and ACA coverage — or see their costs rise and protections erode.
GOP misleads with claim that Democrats shut down government to provide health care to “illegal immigrants.”
Sidebar: MYTH vs. FACT MYTH: Democrats shut down the government to give “illegal immigrants” free health care. FACT: Federal law has prohibited undocumented immigrants from receiving federally subsidized health coverage since 1996. Democrats seek to extend benefits only to lawfully present individuals such as DACA recipients and asylum-seekers.
MYTH: Medicare benefits are at risk in the shutdown.
FACT: Medicare is a mandatory program. Coverage continues for seniors and people with disabilities, though some administrative services may slow due to furloughs.
MYTH: Medicaid is unaffected.
FACT: While Medicaid funding continues, GOP budget proposals could impose stricter eligibility checks, work requirements, or reimbursement cuts — which would risk coverage for millions of low-income Americans.
MYTH: The Affordable Care Act (ACA) subsidies are permanent.
FACT: Pandemic-era enhanced subsidies are set to expire without congressional action. If not renewed, millions of Americans will face steep premium hikes or lose affordable coverage.
MYTH: Uninsured citizens are unaffected.
FACT: Cuts to Medicaid or the loss of ACA subsidies would leave even fewer affordable options, worsening the crisis for uninsured Americans.
Bottom line: The fight over the continuing resolution is not about undocumented immigrants. It’s about whether American citizens and lawfully present residents will continue to have affordable access to care.
A lawsuit, led by New York Attorney General Letitia James, challenges a new Department of Justice rule that bars U.S. states from aiding survivors who can't immediately prove their immigration status.
A coalition of 20 state attorneys general, led by New York Attorney General Letitia James, has indeed filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration. The lawsuit challenges a recent Department of Justice (DOJ) rule that prohibits states from providing aid to survivors of sexual assault and domestic violence who cannot immediately prove their immigration status.
Details of the Lawsuit: The lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court for the District of Rhode Island and addresses the DOJ's new restrictions on funding under the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) and the Victims of Crime Act (VOCA). These restrictions are said to require states to verify survivors' immigration status before offering essential services. This rule could negatively impact not only undocumented immigrants but also lawful residents and U.S. citizens who may lack immediate access to necessary documentation.
Attorney General James emphasized that survivors often do not have their legal documents accessible due to various controlling tactics employed by abusers. The lawsuit argues that these restrictions endanger public safety by preventing vulnerable individuals from seeking help. The attorneys general are requesting the court to block this rule, asserting that no victim should be denied assistance based on their immigration status.
Context Of Rule That Bars Aid to Some Sex Abuse and Rape Survivors: The DOJ's new rule is set to take effect on October 31, 2025, and the lawsuit underscores concerns about the implications of such restrictions on public safety and the well-being of survivors.
With a self-satisfied expression, Dr. Oz appeared to approve of the President’s behavior, smirking as Trump engaged in name-calling, ridicule, and verbal denigration of public servants.
What should have been a moment of leadership became instead an unsettling display of hostility. The Oval Office—an emblem of national dignity—was reduced to a stage for disparagement. Rather than fostering collaboration or respect, the scene reflected a troubling lack of regard for both the office of the presidency and the American people represented by those officials.
The Trump Administration’s decision to embrace such behavior was not only unprofessional but disgraceful—beneath the dignity of the presidency and harmful to the spirit of democratic governance.
Bottom line: It would be factually accurate to say many international legal experts, United Nations officials, and rights groups describe United States support for Israel during both the Trump and Biden administrations as complicity in actions that amount to starvation warfare.
Beyond legal nuance, the moral and ethical and political reality is stark: the United States, through both the Trump and Biden administrations, appears to be financially complicit in the policies and practices of starvation warfare carried out by Israel in Gaza and in the displacement linked to non-Israeli owned real estate. To state otherwise would be to deny what is plainly visible: that U.S. actions have enabled, sustained, or excused practices that are devastating an entire civilian population.
The situation in Gaza represents one of the most severe humanitarian crises in recent history.
The obvious and moral and ethical facts are that the USA via the Trump Administration and Biden Administration appears to be complicit with these actions of starvation warfare by Israel in Gaza and non-Israeli owned real estate.
This has been described by experts as a form of “starvation warfare.”
This sustained support raises serious questions of state responsibility and complicity in internationally wrongful acts, particularly when such support occurs alongside well-documented warnings from humanitarian and legal bodies.
The deliberate deprivation of basic necessities constitutes a grave violation of international law and human dignity
The most recent credible figure I found is: 65,062 Palestinians killed in Gaza since the conflict began (according to Gaza’s Health Ministry)
Another data point: As of 5 September 2025, 361 Palestinians (including 130 children) had died from malnutrition in Gaza, per a WHO public health report, according to the World Health Organization
As a female architect and urban designer, I know the power of land, planning, and design. I also know that these tools can either uplift or erase people. I am not against wealth — I am blessed. But my commitment is to policies and real estate visions that expand opportunity, improve education, build true economic advancement, and create generational wealth for women and other marginalized communities who are more than qualified yet consistently overlooked.
President Trump’s words expose how land is being treated as spoils of war and commerce. He described Gaza as a potential “Riviera,” Ukraine’s seized territories as “oceanfront property,” and even downtown Washington near the White House as a zone ripe for transformation. These statements reveal a worldview where real estate is a battlefield, not a foundation for thriving communities.
But the process is familiar here in America. Policies rooted in warfare, land seizure, eminent domain, and short-sale takeovers have long displaced the poor in the name of progress. These patterns — what I call the “Caucasian process” of redevelopment — prioritize wealth extraction while excluding the very people most in need of opportunity. To me, as both a designer and a woman, this is morally indefensible.
True urban vision must not be about spectacle, ballrooms, or elite corridors of power. It must be about human dignity — about ensuring that every project, every development, every piece of “prime property” contributes to justice, education, equity, and shared prosperity.
This is not just about Gaza or Ukraine. It is not just about Washington DC. It is about the soul of how we design our cities and who we allow to belong in them.
America, wake up. The war is here — in policy, in planning, and in who gets to dream of a future.
Last night upon arrival to the White House, Boris Epshteyn. Esq., born August 14, 1982, was seen with President Donald J. Trump. Attorney Epshteyn has emerged as one of President Trump's "chief attack dogs and reliable talking heads on television" states The New York Times.
In July, 2016. Attorney Epshteyn became Donald Trump’s "TV Attack Dog" when Donald J. Trump lashed out at Khizr Khan, the father of an American Muslim soldier killed in Iraq.
Background On Boris Epshteyn: "Boris Epshteyn is an American Republican political strategist, attorney, and investment banker. Epshteyn previously worked on John McCain's 2008 presidential campaign that was unsuccessful.
Epshteyn is, since January 2025, the personal senior counsel to President Donald Trump. Epshteyn was previously a strategic advisor on Donald Trump's 2020 presidential campaign and has remained a close advisor to Trump in his inter-presidency Epshteyn was the chief political commentator at Sinclair Broadcast Group until December 2019. Epshteyn was also a senior advisor to Trump's 2016 campaign for President of the United States."
I’ve learned firsthand that dignity is not a grant. Equity is not a loan. Justice is not a favor. And our future should never be determined by whether we win access to public funds. For far too long, entire communities have waited for rescue, watching funds pass them by while their neighborhoods erode. But today, we are building without waiting—and without compromise.
We are designing a resilient, privately funded clean energy and digital infrastructure enterprise that does more than survive change—it thrives in it. Our work is rooted in a commitment to generate long-term value for communities often overlooked and to do so without the burdens of debt traps, bureaucratic delays, or politically motivated handouts. What we’re building is not just infrastructure. It’s a new social architecture. A model for how communities can grow in power, ownership, and connectivity—on their own terms.
When the Great Bill passed, many of the lifelines people depended on were quietly removed. Programs vanished. Promises shrank. Funding was rerouted to already privileged hands. Yet rather than despair, we chose to dig in and design. Across the DMV and beyond, our team is launching ultra-fast EV stations, clean-energy mobile hubs, digital access lounges, and affordable housing systems that operate entirely outside the realm of federal subsidy. We are not mourning the end of an old model. We are ushering in the beginning of something new.
At the heart of our mission is the reimagining of three core pillars: affordable housing, energy access, and digital equity. The housing we develop is not “low-income” in the way the world has defined it. It’s beautiful, efficient, modular, and rooted in human dignity—designed for families who deserve more than just a roof over their heads. Our 350kW+ EV stations aren’t placed in already-affluent neighborhoods. They’re positioned where progress has too often skipped, offering clean energy where it’s needed most. Our community lounges are more than charging sites; they are safe, smart, connected spaces for youth to learn, parents to work, and entrepreneurs to thrive.
These projects are not acts of charity. They are investments in generational wealth—engineered not to extract, but to empower. There’s a deep difference between infrastructure that enriches banks and infrastructure that restores people. We are focused on the latter.
My calling to this work comes from personal fire. I remember the sting of skipping prescriptions I couldn’t afford. I remember passing through neighborhoods that seemed permanently paused in time—forgotten by policy, untouched by progress. I remember building with little more than blueprints, belief, and borrowed time. And I remember the shift when I realized I didn’t need anyone’s permission to design solutions for the people I love.
Today, I still build—not just for myself, but for every child dreaming of excellence and every parent working double shifts with no clear way forward. I want affordable housing that honors working-class excellence. I want clean-energy sites that serve every zip code, not just luxury lots. I want spaces that reflect the brilliance and beauty of the communities they serve. This isn’t just about innovation. It’s about restoration.
So what should we do after the Great Big Bill? We must start by refusing dependency. Grants can be helpful, but they can also create stagnation. The invitation now is to act—not to wait. We must build from the blueprint of what is right, not what is reimbursed. Ethical partnerships are key. We do not work with lenders who exploit. We align only with investors and collaborators who understand that people are not margins—they are the mission.
Most importantly, we must center the next generation. The children watching us today are not just our legacy; they are the future landlords, architects, engineers, and caretakers of this rebuilt society. Everything we construct now must prepare them for an abundant tomorrow. Let our infrastructure be their inheritance—not their obstacle.
There’s another truth rising alongside this movement: Black women are becoming the new infrastructure pioneers. We’ve always known how to lead—from pulpits, from community kitchens, from the front lines of healthcare and education. Now we’re leading in steel, concrete, power grids, and digital innovation. We are buying land. We are closing deals. We are drawing site plans. We are no longer asking to be included. We are leading the way.
When you see a Black woman overseeing a clean energy facility or engineering a housing complex, understand this is not exceptional—it is essential. And it is long overdue.
To those in power—Congress, the White House, the courts—we say this: don’t just observe us. Partner with us. Fund what works. Remove outdated roadblocks that choke community-led innovation. Expand the definition of infrastructure to include digital access, energy equity, education, and belonging. This is not a rebellion. This is an invitation. And the invitation is divine.
We believe in a future where everyone has a stake, not just a side. Where the wealthy can invest with conscience and still thrive, and the struggling can rise with dignity and not debt. We believe that infrastructure—when designed with love—can transform more than roads. It can transform lives.
Let us agree, as a nation, that no child should be locked out of learning because they lack a signal. That no elder should freeze in winter because aid was slashed. That no worker should be one paycheck from eviction while nearby towers sit empty. That intelligence is not the inheritance of the elite, and that opportunity should never be limited by birthright.
Let us agree that dignity, equity, and infrastructure are not separate goals—but shared foundations.
We rise—not by tearing down the powerful, but by lifting up the neglected. We are not building against anyone. We are building for everyone. This is resilience. And it is by design.
Why do heads of states justify starving parts of their communities? Why do governments restrict lifesaving healthcare while defending access to abortion? Why do politicians legislate in ways that knowingly lead to preventable suffering or death?
Because the value of human life has been subordinated to money and self-interest.
IS STARVATION IN GAZA: A WEAPON OF INTENTIONAL GENOCIDE?
Speaking at one of his Scottish golf courses in Turnberry, Trump weighed in on illegal crossings being made across the English Channel, applauding UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s efforts to curb illegal migration.
US President Donald Trump on Monday disagreed with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s claims that there was no starvation in Gaza. Speaking to reporters during a visit to Scotland Trump said “based on television...those children look very hungry.”
IS BLOCKING ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE ABORTION SERVICES AS WELL AS ABORTION HEALTH CARE SERVICES INTENTIONAL GENOCIDE ?
Debates about offering people food and health care when they have apparent physical needs for food and health care are absurd.
Politicians debate and legislate while children and women are dying from hunger as well as dying by way of abortions and the lack of health care. What are the roots of such intellectual arguments? The answer is money. Whereas, the value of lives is less valued by governors of nations, states and government administrations.
Blocking access to healthcare and marketing access to healthcare that ends the life of a human being by way of abortion are sides of the same coin. Some one may end up dead. So, what is really at the root of what is going on?
A provision in a Congressional tax bill instructs the federal government to end Medicaid payments for one year to abortion providers that received more than $800,000 from Medicaid in 2023, even to those like Planned Parenthood that also offer medical services like contraception, pregnancy tests and STD testing?
WHAT IS REALLY AT THE ROOT OF WHAT IS HAPPENING TO THE UNBORN, CHILDREN, YOUTH AND WOMEN ON EARTH? WHY HAVE HEADS OF STATES AND PRIME MINISTERS JUSTIFIED STARVING SECTORS OF THEIR COMMUNITIES?
What are the roots of such intellectual arguments? The answer is money.
The value of human lives is being discounted by governors, prime ministers, and government administrations around the world.
Two Sides of the Same Coin Blocking access to healthcare and marketing access to healthcare that ends the life of a human being by way of abortion are two sides of the same coin.
Either way, someone ends up dead.
WHAT IS REALLY GOING ON? GOING ON? Are the issues rooted in human beings loving themselves and loving money more than, specifically, children, youth and women. Are the issues rooted in human beings not seeing that blocking health care is as destructive as aborting a child?
What Is Really at the Root of All of This? At the core, the crisis is not only political—it is moral and spiritual.
Leaders have become comfortable with policies that trade life for convenience, power, or money. Humanity is loving self and wealth more than it loves children, youth, and women.
Yes—blocking healthcare can be as destructive as abortion, because in both cases, policies result in preventable deaths.
At its core, what we are witnessing is humanity’s failure to love—especially to love children, the unborn, women and the vulnerable more than power and money.
The same hearts that rationalize withholding food and healthcare also rationalize policies that end life in and out of the womb. Both are systems of control, built on profit, political gain and fear of scarcity. a prominent saying related to fear is "what one fears may overtake you and/or happen," Mr. Job states this thought: Job 3:25 states: "For the thing which I greatly feared is come upon me, and that which I was afraid of is come unto me."
This is not a time of scarcity The abundance of trade among nation-states reveals the fact that this is not a time of scarcity.
Warning We must not let our empirical beliefs nor non-empirical beliefs guide humanity toward more manifestations of death or play a role in shaping experiences and potentially drawing unwelcome circumstances into reality.
Until leaders and societies reclaim the fundamental truth that every life—born or unborn, rich or poor—is sacred and equally valuable, starvation, abortion, and systemic neglect will remain tools of policy, not moral failures to be repented of.
All The Kings Men
Now, the cracks are no longer deniable.
The wall has crumbled. And no matter how many horses are armored in law, no matter how many kingsmen march in suits and legislation, the fragments of violated children, silenced survivors, and complicit systems lie scattered on the ground.
President Donald J. Trump’s visit to The Federal Reserve today is but a ceremonial stop along a larger fault line. For while executive orders are signed and economic optics are managed, the real collapse is cultural—and spiritual. The repeated deflection toward identity politics, chemical castration rhetoric, and transgender fear-mongering is not accidental. It’s strategic. It’s distraction. It’s protection of something far older and far darker.
We are not just witnessing a political fall. We are witnessing the fall of empathy. The fall of accountability. The fall of institutions once trusted to protect, now exposed for their complicity in shielding predators and silencing pain.
The nursery rhyme warns us: some breaks cannot be fixed by power alone.
So now we ask—not what the king's men will do next—but what we will do. Because healing, unlike power, does not ride in on horseback.
The world may soon discover why the idea of chemical castration is repeatedly injected by President Trump while talking about unrelated topics.
Why is someone else's Trangender self-identity often the focus of conversations among the Trump administration and others in society?
Pedophilia, hebephilia and ephebophilia, rape and pornography has for far too long been swept under the rugs of cultures throughout the world as though innocent and not-so-innocent people are not being harmed. Generation after generations of individuals are being almost forced to protect those that led them down paths that they had no idea about.
It is unfortunate that American society is being forced to deal with these topics beyond the offices of therapists. Yet it is what it is. Ours is a society that embraced pedophilia, hebephilia and ephebophilia, rape and pornography for monetary gain and the worst of appetites and goals.
Difficult to hear about these things, yes. Difficult to be empathetic and not to be curious perhaps, yes. It is also difficult determining how to move forward constructively within a cultural society that was built upon approving the practices of pedophilia, hebephilia and ephebophilia, rape and pornography.
Hiding, not healing and pointing fingers at others and ourselves is not advantageous.
This is the moment to start and sustain stopping the madness. Pedophilia, hebephilia and ephebophilia, rape and pornography.
Parents and guardians are openly determining the sexuality of minors, young adults and even mature adults by why of the intoxicating drugs termed pedophilia, hebephilia and ephebophilia, rape and pornography.
As President Trump sacrifices the memory of his long-time associating and perhaps complicity with less than honorable people some have lost their focus on what truly matters, which are the victims and practitioners that want different lifestyles. Lives void of pedophilia, hebephilia and ephebophilia, rape and pornography.
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