Tag: Truth Reign Unfiltered Commentary

  • Marinated in Hate — The Truth About the GOP’s Next Generation

    Marinated in Hate — The Truth About the GOP’s Next Generation



    “These are the children of MAGA — marinated in the stew of a sick society.”

    — Steve Schmidt, The Warning Podcast









    What’s done in the dark don’t stay there long.”

    – Beautiful Truth


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  • Vengeance, Not Justice: Trump’s Crusade Against Letitia James

    Vengeance, Not Justice: Trump’s Crusade Against Letitia James





    Letitia James is the same woman who once held Trump accountable for inflating his assets — a case that resulted in a historic civil fraud ruling. Now, the same man she exposed is using his Department of Justice to drag her through the mud with the same type of charges.

    They call it irony. I call it intent.

    Trump fired Erik Siebert, the U.S. attorney who refused to bring charges, and replaced him with Lindsey Halligan — his former personal lawyer. Halligan’s only qualification? Loyalty.

    That’s the same kind of loyalty that’s turned the DOJ into a weapon and the Constitution into a casualty.

    And now, the White House is defending the takedown of a black woman prosecutor as “restoring justice.” That’s not restoration — that’s retaliation.






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  • ICE Agency Who Serves as a Domestic Weapon

    ICE Agency Who Serves as a Domestic Weapon

    The agency that claims to defend America — by terrorizing Americans.











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  • Black Women Were Sold Education and Lost Stability

    Black Women Were Sold Education and Lost Stability



    “White America told us to get the education, the degrees, the certifications — and when we did, they shut the doors we built our futures on.”








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  • The Politics of Contradiction: Kash Patel vs. Civil Rights

    The Politics of Contradiction: Kash Patel vs. Civil Rights









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  • Trump’s Aid Rescissions: Plundering Congo’s Wealth and Calling It “Diplomacy”

    Trump’s Aid Rescissions: Plundering Congo’s Wealth and Calling It “Diplomacy”

    How Trump’s aid rescissions exposed the cost of minerals and the myth of generosity




    Trump’s Aid Rescissions: Plundering Congo’s Wealth and Calling It Diplomacy is more than a headline — it’s the reality of what happened in July, when Donald Trump signed off on a $9 billion rescissions package that gutted humanitarian aid, development funds, and health programs across more than a dozen countries.

    And who caught the worst of it? Africa. Food, clean water, and healthcare on the chopping block. And while those cuts hit the poorest communities, America is still making sure its hand is in Africa’s pocket — grabbing cobalt, lithium, and gold out of Congo and Rwanda. That’s not generosity. That’s exploitation dressed in a suit and tie called policy.

    In today’s commentary, we explore how Trump’s lifeline cuts diplomacy on a global scale.

    “You can’t slash the lifeline and still call it diplomacy.”

    Trump cut aid with one hand — and stretched the other toward Africa’s minerals. You don’t starve the people and then feed off their land. That’s not democracy. That’s theft with a receipt.

    America just locked in new mineral rights in Congo, tying the deal to Rwanda under the banner of peace. But peace hasn’t come. Civilians in eastern Congo are still being killed, displaced, and terrorized by armed groups.

    And let’s talk about proof: in North Kivu, the M23 rebel group slaughtered civilians just weeks after the signing. The UN documented at least 319 deaths between July 9 and 21, 2025 — right after the so-called peace accord. Massacres, abductions, even rapes. A deal signed in Washington didn’t stop the violence in Congo’s villages. It just gave cover for business as usual.

    And here’s the truth nobody at the signing table wants to admit: M23 insurgents still control one of the planet’s largest sources of coltan — the ore that powers phones, laptops, and even aerospace technology. In Rubaya, 15% of the world’s coltan is dug out by impoverished locals earning just a few dollars a day, only to be hauled away and sold for more than $300 a kilo. That’s the mine America and its allies talk about securing in peace deals, while rebels plunder it to fund war and Rwanda quietly backs them from the shadows. A contract in Washington didn’t dislodge M23 from the hills. It just gave the illusion of progress while Congo’s people kept paying the price.

    It wouldn’t be fair for me to put the entire responsibility on President Trump. The Congolese government has written itself into this deal as well. President Félix Tshisekedi opened the doors, and Rwanda’s Paul Kagame signed on — both calling it partnership, while their own people remain trapped in poverty, digging minerals with bare hands and buried futures. That’s not leadership — that’s betrayal.

    THE BIGGER CONTRADICTION
    How can America fly halfway across the world to mine the land, but slam the door when the people from that land come looking for safety?

    Those rescissions didn’t just reduce numbers off a budget. They ripped out lifelines for — food programs, clean water, medicine, and small business support. You’re not cutting waste. You’re cutting futures.

    And when America pulls back, China steps in — and we all know nothing China gives comes free. Every loan, every road, every port has a chain attached.

    “You can’t serve justice with one hand while stealing with the other.”

    WHITE AMERICA’S SELECTIVE OUTRAGE
    The hypocrisy is deafening. These same voices screaming, “Why are we sending money over there?” but scrolling on smartphones powered by Congolese cobalt and driving cars that run on African lithium. You can’t whine about foreign aid while living off the benefits of foreign extraction. That’s not principle. That’s convenience. And White America has mastered selective outrage — silence when it benefits them, and shouting to the rooftops when it doesn’t. So, I’m asking the question: What exactly do you believe and stand for?

    WHY AMERICANS SHOULD CARE
    Let me make this microscopic simple for the people in the back: if you think this is Africa’s problem, you’re not just late. You’re four centuries behind, and the cost has been millions of lives and billions of stolen wealth. The proof is in your pocket — that phone, that laptop, that car battery. None of it runs without Africa’s cobalt and lithium.

    And until Congo has leadership willing to pull an Ibrahim Traoré move — rejecting Western strings and prioritizing people over contracts — the cycle won’t break. America will keep prospering. Congo will keep bleeding.

    There’s no need trying to twist logic into a pretzel. If you possess it, you’re part of it.

    This isn’t immigration policy. This is exploitation — with a passport.

    So when aid gets cut and minerals keep flowing, don’t fool yourself into thinking it’s not your problem. If you touch it, you’re tied to it.

    BEAUTIFUL TRUTH’S LAST WORD
    This is my truth — I’m not on the outside looking in — I’m tied to this too. I’ve got a phone in my hand and a car in my driveway, built with the same minerals dug out of somebody else’s suffering. So no, I’m not exempt. The difference is this: for years, the truth was buried under silence. Nobody told us. Nobody taught us. Nobody warned us.

    But that silence has been shattered. We’re awake now. We’re pulling receipts. We’re refusing to swallow lies whole. The era of blindly trusting the official story is over — unless it comes with facts, proof, and truth to back it up.



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  • Trump’s Double Standard Mortgage Practices

    Trump’s Double Standard Mortgage Practices

    Trump’s Finger at Lisa Cook Turns Back on Him

    Source: Based on CNN reporting on President Trump’s blocked attempt to fire Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook, alongside ongoing coverage of Trump’s financial fraud case in New York.

    Source: MSNBC Facebook Video (September 2025) Watch here.


    Donald Trump is at it again — pointing fingers at Lisa Cook while ignoring the fraud stamped on his own record. This time, it’s about mortgage allegations. But here’s the truth: Trump himself has already been found guilty of real estate fraud. The latest documents show Cook’s disclosures match the rules — making Trump’s attacks look even more political. Interest rates might sound good on the surface, but when Trump’s behind it, the play is never about you. It’s about him.

    “Even when the deal looks sweet, you have to ask — who’s cashing in on the back end?”

    The Short Game — Relief Now
    Lower interest rates sound good, no doubt. Families with car notes, student loans, and mortgages would finally feel some relief. More buyers could step into the housing market, and Trump could stand in front of cameras bragging like he handed America a gift.

    But don’t get fooled. Trump doesn’t give without taking more back. When he says he’s cutting rates for you, what he really means is he’s cutting rates for him.

    The Long Game — Trump First
    Trump’s empire breathes debt. Cheap loans keep his businesses afloat. Lower rates mean more time to refinance, restructure, and keep the Trump brand standing.

    So when he targets Lisa Cook, it’s not about protecting Americans. It’s about rigging the Federal Reserve so he controls the scoreboard. Rates cut when he needs headlines. Rates cut when it props up his empire. Rates cut when it makes him look like a savior — even if working families pay the price in the end.

    That’s not leadership. That’s self-interest dressed up as policy.

    The Hypocrisy — Accuse Her, Excuse Him
    Trump is swinging at Lisa Cook over mortgage allegations. No charges. No conviction. Just smoke — and the receipts prove it.

    In 2021, Lisa Cook told her lender the Atlanta property was a vacation home. On her federal clearance form, she called it a 2nd home. And she never claimed a tax break as primary. That’s not fraud— that’s disclosure.

    Meanwhile, Trump himself has already been found guilty in New York of inflating property values to get sweeter loans. That’s not an allegation. That’s on paper, signed and sealed.

    So if we’re going to call Cook’s mortgage paperwork fraud, then we better start lining up half of Wall Street and every White developer from Florida to New York. But they won’t. Because this isn’t about rules. It’s about power — and Trump’s obsession with stacking the Federal Reserve for his own game.

    The Record — Credentials Over Checkboxes
    Let me set the record straight. Lisa Cook isn’t some DEI hire Trump can wave off like a checked box.

    She’s a Spelman grad, a Marshall Scholar at Oxford, and holds a PhD in economics from UC Berkeley. She’s taught at Harvard and Michigan State, advised presidents, and helped shape international policy.

    In 2022, she was confirmed to the Federal Reserve Board, and in 2023 reappointed to a full 14-year term running through 2038. That’s not diversity optics — that’s credentials and credibility.

    The only reason she’s in Trump’s crosshairs is because her record and her term make her a roadblock to him rigging the Federal Reserve to serve himself.

    The Bigger Risk — Breaking the Federal Reserve
    The Federal Reserve was built to stay independent to keep politics out of your money. That’s why markets trust it and why the dollar still means something in the world.

    But if Trump gets his way, that wall comes down. The Federal Reserve turns into his personal ATM. Rates slashed when he needs headlines. Rates hiked when he wants payback. That’s not stability. That’s chaos. And when that chaos comes, it won’t hit Trump. It’ll hit you — your mortgage, your credit card, your groceries.

    What Can We Do?
    Don’t get lost in the headlines. This fight over Lisa Cook isn’t just about Trump. It’s about whether your mortgage, your savings, and your children’s future becomes chips on somebody else’s table.

    The American people have to demand independence — from the courts, from Congress, from anyone who claims to represent us. The Federal Reserve isn’t supposed to work for a president. It’s supposed to work for the people. And if we don’t protect that, then every paycheck, every loan, every grocery bill becomes fair game for political power plays.

    In politics, blame-shifting doesn’t change the truth. Trump can point at Lisa Cook all he wants, but the fraud that stains him won’t wash off with accusations against her.





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  • Black Women Want to Be White?

    Black Women Want to Be White?

    The Double Standards Behind the Accusation.


    Disclosure: This commentary was originally published on NewsBreak. I’ve chosen to republish it here on Truth Reign Unfiltered so it can live without platform filters, edits, shadow bans, or bias.


    BuzzFeed reports that Serena Williams is once again facing public scrutiny after posting selfies showing a slimmer, more toned frame many claimed means she is “trying to be White.” But this isn’t just about Serena — it’s part of a pattern.


    Why do White Americans care so much about what black women do?”

    White America has been borrowing from black culture for as long as we have existed. From our music to our style, from the way we speak to the food we make, we’ve created the blueprint. And time after time, those same creations are stripped from us, rebranded, and sold back to the world without our name on them. We innovate — they imitate.

    This was never just about hair or body shape. For us as black people — myself included — it has never been about appearance, but about how they try to control our every move. The problem is, their words rarely match their actions. Their language is only a cover for something much bigger. They can dress it up as aesthetics or standards all they want, but putting lipstick on a pig doesn’t make it anything other than a pig. At the end of the day, it isn’t about beauty or presentation — it’s about power.

    They say imitation is the highest form of flattery — but flattery feels hollow when it comes with erasure.”

    Serena herself recently spoke out in an exclusive with People, confirming that she chose to use a GLP-1 weight-loss medication after diet and exercise alone weren’t enough. She lost over 31 pounds and said the treatment helped her feel physically lighter and mentally stronger. For her, this wasn’t about bending to outside pressure — it was about doing what worked for her body and her health.

    And that’s the point. Serena’s weight loss wasn’t a performance for the public. It was a choice for herself, her health, and her peace of mind. The problem is, people keep confusing her personal journey with their expectations of her body. She doesn’t owe anyone a role in their story of strength or symbolism — she owes herself the freedom to live how she chooses.

    Let me be perfectly clear — this has nothing to do with Serena Williams wanting to be White. Changing our hair has always been part of who we are as black women, something I know from my own life. It’s self-expression, creativity, and versatility — not a surrender of identity.

    Make no mistake — White people didn’t create fairness. What they created, perfected, and practically patented was the double standard. They will criticize us relentlessly, then turn around and praise the same things when they come from them. We’re called ghetto for speaking in our natural rhythms, but when those same cadences are echoed by White influencers, it’s suddenly trendy and authentic.

    And let me sit this right here — Jordan Peele’s Get Out wasn’t just a horror film. It was a mirror. A warning. A metaphor for how White America consumes blackness — craving our physicality, talent, and essence, but wanting it detached from us. That’s what this feels like: not just borrowing, but rewriting the origin story, erasing the source, and keeping the profit.

    Not all movies are made for entertainment. Even during slavery, our people had to become creative with words and actions — singing psalms, spirituals, and coded songs as tools of survival and escape. Peele’s film, in my opinion, is cut from that same cloth. It’s not just storytelling; it’s a reminder to be careful about who you align yourself with, and a warning about what lies beneath the surface.

    And that brings me back to Serena. Somehow, Serena was celebrated when she fit their approved image of dominance in sports. Now that she’s chosen a new chapter, they question if she still belongs.

    The burden of being watched, judged, and second-guessed for every choice is one that black women know all too well.

    So maybe the question isn’t why Serena made the choices she did. The real question is why does White America care so much when we make them?



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