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Hindustan Times
26 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Who is Sade Perkins? Ex-Houston official removed for 'all white' comment on Camp Mystic
Sade Perkins, a former member of Houston's Food Insecurity Board, is being 'permanently removed' by Houston Mayor John Whitmore after her allegedly racist comments on Camp Mystic, a summer camp near Hunt, where multiple girls went missing amid the Texas floods. Sade Perkins, former member of Houston Food Insecurity Board. (Photos: Sade Perkins on TikTok/ sades_world8)(TikTok) Perkins' comments, posted on TikTok, went viral, with many accusing her of racism. On Monday, the Houston Chronicle reported that Mayor Whitmore is taking steps to remove her permanently from her position in the city's Food Insecurity Board. On Saturday (July 5), Perkins posted a video on her TikTok handle where she pointed out that the Camp Mystic is an "all white" conservative Christian Camp. The comments came amid Camp Mystic becoming the national headline after multiple campers went missing as the Guadalupe River surged overnight on Friday (July 4), leading to floods in multiple camps in Kerr County. On Monday, Camp Mystic confirmed the deaths of 27 campers and staff members in the devastating flood. Who Is Sade Perkins And What Did She Say? Sade Perkins has been working in Houston's Food Insecurity Board, a body that is responsible for making recommendations to the city authorities about the issues of food insecurity in the city of Houston. She was appointed to the board by former Houston Mayor, Mayor Sylvester Turner in 2023. Her term in is the board has expired in January 2025, as per the board's website. What Did She Say About The Missing Girls? Perkins posted a video on her TikTok account, which has over 9,000 followers, alleging that the national attention the missing Camp Mystic girls received was because they were white and Christian, as Camp Mystic is an "all white" and conservative Christian summer camp. Also read: Ex-Houston official says flood-hit Camp Mystic, where girls went missing, is 'all-white' 'I know I'm probably going to get cancelled for this, but Camp Mystic is a whites-only, girls' Christian camp,' Perkins. 'They don't even have a token Asian, they don't have a token Black person. It is an all-white, white-only, conservative Christian camp. If you ain't white, you ain't right, you ain't getting in, you ain't going. Period.' 'If this were a group of Hispanic girls out there, this would not be getting this type of coverage that they're getting. No one would give a f---,' she added. 'And all these white people, the parents of these little girls, would be saying things like, 'They need to be deported, they shouldn't have been here in the first place.'' Perkins added that she has a "big problem" with it.


Deccan Herald
35 minutes ago
- Deccan Herald
China's rare earth materials supply curb, US tariffs to hit auto sales in July: FADA
Several automakers have already reported adverse impact on their production and the situation is likely to aggravate if the Chinese curbs are not eased.


Mint
an hour ago
- Mint
Federal troops' show of force at MacArthur Park, Los Angeles; Mayor calls it a 'political stunt'
A number of federal officers in tactical gear, backed by 90 California National Guard members and a convoy of 17 Humvees, stormed Los Angeles' MacArthur Park on Monday (July 7) in a surprise immigration operation that left residents stunned and officials outraged. For roughly an hour, troops swept through the mostly empty park — located in a dense immigrant neighborhood west of downtown — in what officials described as a show of protection for immigration enforcement agents. It remains unclear if any arrests were made. 'This morning looked like a staging for a TikTok video,' said Los Angeles City Council President Marqueece Harris-Dawson. 'If Border Patrol wants to film in LA, you should apply for a film permit like everybody else — and stop trying to scare the bejesus out of everybody.' Mayor Karen Bass condemned the show of force as 'a political stunt,' visibly shaken as she described the impact on families in the park. 'What I saw in the park today looked like a city under siege, under armed occupation,' Bass said. 'The world needs to see the troop formation on horses walking through the park… where the children play.' She added that a frightened 8-year-old boy attending a nearby day camp told her he feared ICE agents. The raid took place in a neighborhood long known for its vibrant immigrant community — dubbed by officials as the 'Ellis Island of the West Coast' for its concentration of Mexican, Central American, and Asian families. Councilmember Eunisses Hernandez, whose district includes the park, said the area was targeted 'precisely because of who lives there and what it represents.' Health outreach workers reported being confronted at gunpoint by federal officers while working with homeless residents. Vendors and locals fled the area as helicopters circled overhead and mounted units swept soccer fields. 'It's terror and, you know, it's ripping the heart and soul out of Los Angeles,' said Betsy Bolte, a nearby resident who rushed to the scene. 'I am still in shock, disbelief, and so angry and terrified and heartbroken.' President Donald Trump, who deployed thousands of troops and active-duty Marines to Los Angeles last month, has accelerated efforts to fulfill his pledge of mass deportations. Monday's raid follows a wave of immigration arrests and a hardline stance against so-called 'sanctuary cities.' 'This is not about going after dangerous criminals,' said California Governor Gavin Newsom. 'This is about destroying the fabric of this state.' Newsom called the military deployment a 'spectacle' that undermines California's values and autonomy. Legal advocates say the raid felt more like a media stunt than a serious enforcement action. 'This was a reality TV spectacle much more so than an actual enforcement operation,' said Chris Newman, legal director for the National Day Laborer Organizing Network. 'The ghost town-ification of LA is haunting, to say the very least.' Federal officials claimed the troops were there to protect immigration officers from potential unrest, not to make arrests — though they admitted the operation might 'look like' a military maneuver.