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Southtown letters: Different takes on freedom over the Fourth of July weekend

Southtown letters: Different takes on freedom over the Fourth of July weekend

Almost every July 4, the owners of Hobby Lobby, ultra-Evangelicals all, take out full-page ads in many major newspapers trying to convince us that this country was meant to be a Christian nation.
They'll publish numerous 18th century quotes from various 'believers' suggesting that these statements prove their claim. Their feeble efforts fall flat, because the physical historical record dictates otherwise. For example:
While Christians would no doubt love to enact a law mandating their 'faith' as the only 'true' religion, that was never part of the original vision. Wishful thinking obviously makes the religious right feel better about themselves,but telling the truth should also.
This Fourth of July arrived under the weight of a democracy in distress. We are witnessing an erosion of rights, the normalization of injustice and an emboldened effort to silence the very voices democracy was meant to empower.
Recent actions by the Trump administration — and the systems that have allowed it — do not reflect American liberty. They reflect fear. They reflect control. They reflect a democracy that is no longer guaranteed.
Despite this, as a director at the iCan Dream Center, I dream that our students might live in an America that will not reduce rights like Free Appropriate Public Education, individualized education program procedural safeguards and equity in special education.
At iCan Dream Center, our teachers and practitioners work with young people whose voices have been historically ignored: students with disabilities, youth of color, those shaped by trauma, poverty, and systemic neglect.
After all, what is patriotism if not the radical belief that every student, regardless of ZIP code, diagnosis, category of disability or citizenship, is worthy of learning, safety, protection and joy?
This weekend is not a time for performative patriotism. It is a time to question who our systems serve and who they exclude. It is a time to stand beside those our democracy fails. It is a time to dream for equity in education.
So, this Fourth of July, while fireworks fill the sky, I remain grounded in educational justice for all youth here in the southland and beyond.
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The Trump administration has begun garnishing wages of student loan borrowers in default. These are the benefits businesses can offer employees to help with their debt
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The Trump administration has begun garnishing wages of student loan borrowers in default. These are the benefits businesses can offer employees to help with their debt

A few years ago, it seemed like the dream of widespread student debt forgiveness was alive and well. And although the hopes of millions of borrowers across the country have since been dashed, there are moves that employers can make to help workers toiling under the burden of defaulted loans and garnished wages. Student loan borrowers were able to take advantage of a repayments pause when the COVID pandemic began in 2020, but that expired in September of 2023. That same year, the Supreme Court struck down then-President Biden's decision to cancel up to $20,000 in debt for qualified borrowers. And in May of 2025, a five-year reprieve for student loan borrowers who were in default on their loans expired. That means that collections are now in play, and the Department of Education can garnish wages, tax refunds, and federal benefits. 'Resuming collections protects taxpayers from shouldering the cost of federal student loans that borrowers willingly undertook to finance their postsecondary education,' the Department of Education (DOE) wrote in a statement late April. 'There will not be any mass loan forgiveness.' This isn't just a problem for an unlucky few. Around 20.5% of student loan borrowers have a payment that's past due by 90 days or more, according to a TransUnion analysis. And around 5.3 million defaulted borrowers will get a notice from the Treasury Department that their wages could potentially be garnished, according to a May statement from the DOE. Workers of all ages have already been struggling for years with student loan repayment. But the latest move from the Trump administration has made the issue even more urgent. 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Melania Trump wears polka dots, white shirt dress during Fourth of July week
Melania Trump wears polka dots, white shirt dress during Fourth of July week

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Melania Trump wears polka dots, white shirt dress during Fourth of July week

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