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Category: mississippi

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  • Community groups helped shield youth from gun crimes. US funding cuts have put them at risk again

    Mississippi’s Operation Good engaged teens in a range of programs, protecting them from violence – but that work is now in jeopardy

    Most days, Fredrick Womack and his team can be found scattered throughout Jackson, Mississippi, talking to groups of young Black men and teens – whether they’re working, which bills need to be paid at home and if any brewing conflicts are at risk of turning violent. Through these conversations with young men, who are both perpetrators and victims of much of the city’s violence, Womack hopes he can help steer them in a different direction.

    Womack, 51, is the co-founder of the non-profit Operation Good, which, in addition to this work on the streets, hosts a youth summer program and trash cleanups, and helps teen boys find odd jobs, like cutting lawns, so they can earn a few dollars instead of resorting to crime for income. It also offers critical resources for the community, like buying school clothes for kids and paying utility bills for families that can’t afford them through its It Takes a Village program. “That is the main underlying factor for violence,” Womack said, “people living in impoverished situations.”

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  • Ryan Coogler attends Sinners screening in Mississippi town where film is set

    Director, composer and actor appeared at event in Clarksdale attended by hundreds after community petition

    Hundreds of people packed inside a local auditorium on Thursday to see the hit film Sinners, set in their community and steeped in Mississippi Delta culture.

    The special screening of the blockbuster horror film included an appearance by director Ryan Coogler and was made possible by a community petition.

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  • Trump is jailing immigrant families again. A mother, father and teen tell of ‘anguish on a daily basis’

    Family incarceration has been revived after Biden – and Jade, Jason and Gabriela are speaking out about their distressing treatment in Texas

    When Jade and her family first arrived at the detention facility in Karnes county, Texas, she wasn’t really sure what to think.

    “I guess I was confused and scared,” said the 13-year-old. Her parents were doing their best to reassure her that everything would be OK, but she knew they were in danger of being deported.

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  • Trump is jailing immigrant families again. A mother, father and teen tell of ‘anguish on a daily basis’

    Family incarceration has been revived after Biden – and Jade, Jason and Gabriela are speaking out about their distressing treatment in Texas

    When Jade and her family first arrived at the detention facility in Karnes county, Texas, she wasn’t really sure what to think.

    “I guess I was confused and scared,” said the 13-year-old. Her parents were doing their best to reassure her that everything would be OK, but she knew they were in danger of being deported.

    Continue reading…

  • Mississippi orders deletion of race and gender databases in state libraries

    Library commission says state ‘in dire shape’ and has ‘had a reconsideration of everything with regard to’ Doge

    The Mississippi library commission, which offers services such as specialized research assistance to libraries in the state, has ordered the deletion of two research collections: the race relations database and the gender studies database. The collections were stored in what’s called the Magnolia database, which is used by publicly funded schools, libraries, universities and state agencies in Mississippi.

    The commission’s executive director, Hulen Bivins, confirmed the deletion to the Guardian, and said: “We may lose a lot of materials.”

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  • US prepares for deadly floods with many National Weather Service offices understaffed

    Dangerous weather comes after Trump administration job cuts left nearly half of offices with 20% vacancy rates

    Donald Trump on Friday approved an emergency declaration for Kentucky as the central US braces for what experts in the region have warned could be a “generational” flooding event, as severe spring storms that have killed at least seven continue to wreak havoc.

    Millions are affected across a swath of the US stretching from Texas to Ohio, and the powerful storm system that has raged for two days is expected to stall over the country’s midsection, the National Weather Service (NWS) said, fueling further deluges and possible tornadoes in areas already drenched from thunderstorms bringing heavy rains.

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  • ‘Detention Alley’: inside the Ice centres in the US south where foreign students and undocumented migrants languish

    Foreign nationals caught up in Trump’s immigration dragnet are transported sometimes thousands of miles away to an isolated network of lockups and courts

    Behind the reinforced doors of courtroom number two, at a remote detention centre in central Louisiana, Lu Xianying sat alone before an immigration judge unable to communicate.

    Dressed in a blue jumpsuit that drooped from his slight frame, he waited as court staff called three different translation services, unable to find an interpreter proficient in his native Gan Chinese.

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  • The 5 most miserable cities in America

    The 5 most miserable cities in America

    It’s a dismal time to be an American — and there’s data to prove it. The United States continued its decline in the annual World Happiness report rankings, landing at 24th place, the country’s worst performance to date.

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  • The top places in the US where everyone is moving

    Three people and a moving truck
    The Census Bureau published new estimates about net domestic migration for counties.

    • New Census Bureau data showed what moving looked like across the country last year.
    • Among big counties, two Georgia locations had the highest share of net movers coming in.
    • Losing population due to people moving out was common in California, Illinois, and Iowa.

    Tons of Americans are moving to Dawson and Jackson counties in Georgia, based on new data.

    The Census Bureau released on Thursday data showing net domestic migration — or how many people moved into a county from elsewhere in the US minus those who left that county — for the 3,144 counties and county-equivalents in the US, alongside new population estimates. The data covered the year between July 1, 2023, and June 30, 2024.

    You can hover over the map below to see what those net moving rates looked like after taking into account a county’s population. The adjusted figure allows for better comparison between locations of varying sizes.

    Many of California’s counties experienced negative net domestic migration. That was also the case for Iowa and Louisiana. Maine had the opposite experience, with all of its counties experiencing more people moving in than out domestically.

    More counties in Tennessee, Virginia, and Florida had positive net domestic migration than negative.

    Business Insider looked at rates for the counties with populations of at least 20,000 people and identified which ranked the highest for positive and negative net domestic migration. Rates were adjusted by 2023 populations.

    Among the large counties with more people moving in than out domestically, Dawson and Jackson counties in Georgia took the top two spots. Almost of the top 10 were places in the South.

    Other Southern counties ranked highly among the big counties with negative net domestic migration rates per 1,000 people. The top three were all in Mississippi. A few other places in the South were among the top 10 for negative rates.

    Do you have a story to share about moving? Contact this reporter at mhoff@businessinsider.com.

    Read the original article on Business Insider