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Tag: Fear

  • Sudden Fed ‘Financial Crisis’ Fear Sparks Huge Bitcoin And Crypto Price Crash Prediction


    Bitcoin and crypto prices have moved sharply lower, diving along with a stock market sell-off sparked by the surging popularity of China-based artificial intelligence app DeepSeek.

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    The bitcoin price has dropped under $100,000 per bitcoin, down from an all-time high of almost $110,000 ahead of U.S. president Donald Trump’s inauguration (despite the chief executive of major bitcoin and crypto exchange Coinbase predicting when the bitcoin price could flip gold’s $18 trillion).

    Now, as BlackRock’s Larry Fink reveals his discussions with sovereign wealth funds about buying bitcoin, closely-watched crypto trader Arthur Hayes has warned of a looming “financial crisis” that he expects to unleash fresh Federal Reserve stimulus measures.

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    “I am calling for a $70,000 to $75,000 correction in bitcoin [and] a mini financial crisis,” Hayes, a cofounder of bitcoin and crypto derivatives pioneer BitMex who went on to set up the Maelstrom investment fund, posted to X.

    Bitcoin rocketed past $70,000 on the back of Donald Trump’s November election victory as traders bet Trump will spur the growth of bitcoin and crypto.

    Last week, Trump followed through on his campaign promises to make overhauling crypto policy one of his administration’s priorities, ordering the creation of a bitcoin and cryptocurrency working group tasked with proposing new regulations and exploring the creation of a national cryptocurrency stockpile.

    The bitcoin price is closely correlated to the U.S. stock market, with bitcoin and crypto trading in line with high-growth tech stocks that have surged due to the rush into artificial intelligence since 2022 but now look at risk as DeepSeek achieves performance similar OpenAI’s models with fewer chip requirements.

    “Risk-off is the theme as DeepSeek scares investors,” market analyst Adam Kobeissi posted to X, pointing to the crypto and bitcoin price sell-off that’s seen ethereum rival solana drop 10%.

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    ForbesStealth Fed Dollar Crisis Predicted To Spark A Bitcoin Price Boom To Rival Gold

    “Nasdaq 100 futures are now down -330 points since the market opened just hours ago as DeepSeek takes #1 on the App Store. This is how you know DeepSeek has become a major threat to U.S. large cap tech,” Kobeissi’s market advisory service account posted.

    This week, the Federal Reserve is widely expected to leave interest rates on hold when it meets for its first policy meeting since Trump assumed office on Wednesday, though Trump has said he wants the Fed to bring interest rates down.

    “With oil prices going down, I’ll demand that interest rates drop immediately, and likewise they should be dropping all over the world,” Trump told World Economic Forum attendees last week.

    However, Hayes said he believes the Fed will resume “money printing that will send [the bitcoin price] to $250,000 by the end of the year.”

    U.S. debt has soared over recent years, topping $34 trillion at the beginning of 2024, with Covid and lockdown stimulus measures contributing to massive government spending and helping to send inflation spiraling out of control in 2022.

    Inflation of over 10% forced the Federal Reserve to hike interest rates at a historical clip, pushing up debt interest payments and fueling fears of a “death spiral.”



    The recent fear of a sudden financial crisis from the Federal Reserve has sparked a huge prediction of a Bitcoin and cryptocurrency price crash. Investors are on edge as concerns over the stability of the global economy grow, leading to a potential sell-off of digital assets.

    Many analysts are warning of a possible collapse in the value of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies if the Fed takes drastic measures to combat inflation or economic uncertainty. The uncertainty surrounding the Fed’s next moves has sent shockwaves through the market, causing many to question the future of digital assets.

    While some believe that Bitcoin may serve as a safe haven in times of economic turmoil, others fear that a financial crisis could lead to a mass exodus from the cryptocurrency market. As the situation unfolds, investors are advised to tread carefully and stay informed on the latest developments in the financial world.

    It remains to be seen how the Fed’s actions will impact Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, but one thing is certain – the market is in for a bumpy ride in the coming weeks. Stay tuned for more updates on this developing story.

    Tags:

    1. Fed financial crisis
    2. Bitcoin price crash prediction
    3. Crypto market crash
    4. Sudden market fear
    5. Fed economic turmoil
    6. Bitcoin price prediction
    7. Crypto market volatility
    8. Financial crisis warning
    9. Fed policy impact
    10. Bitcoin market analysis

    #Sudden #Fed #Financial #Crisis #Fear #Sparks #Huge #Bitcoin #Crypto #Price #Crash #Prediction

  • Trump allies fear Tulsi Gabbard’s nomination in jeopardy


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    Trump allies in the White House and Capitol Hill are concerned that Tulsi Gabbard’s bid for director of national intelligence is in trouble after her confirmation hearing on Thursday. Kristen Welker reports on Meet the Press.



As the Democratic primary race heats up, Trump allies are starting to fear that Tulsi Gabbard’s nomination may be in jeopardy. Gabbard, a congresswoman from Hawaii, has been gaining momentum in recent weeks, with her anti-interventionist foreign policy stance and calls for unity within the Democratic party resonating with many voters.

However, as Gabbard continues to rise in the polls, some Trump allies are becoming increasingly concerned about the prospect of facing her in the general election. They worry that Gabbard’s appeal to independent and moderate voters could make her a formidable opponent for President Trump in 2020.

Despite these fears, Gabbard remains focused on her campaign and continuing to build support across the country. With her message of unity and diplomacy, she is hopeful that she can overcome any obstacles that may come her way.

Only time will tell if Trump allies’ fears are justified or if Gabbard’s nomination will remain on track. Stay tuned for more updates on this developing story.

Tags:

  1. Tulsi Gabbard
  2. Trump allies
  3. 2020 election
  4. Democratic nomination
  5. Presidential candidates
  6. Political news
  7. Election updates
  8. Campaign strategies
  9. Political alliances
  10. Presidential race

#Trump #allies #fear #Tulsi #Gabbards #nomination #jeopardy

  • The Arsenal-Man City rivalry: fear, loathing and a shifting of power?


    Oleksandr Zinchenko had failed to read the room. Last summer, on vacation in the south of France, the Arsenal left-back had nowhere to run. Not in a metaphorical sense: he needed to find a pitch to maintain his fitness for a couple of hours a day before returning to Premier League duty.

    Fortunately, he thought, he had an old friend who might be able to help. Zinchenko noticed on Instagram that Bernardo Silva, his former team-mate at Manchester City, was holidaying on the Riviera, too. Silva had spent a couple of seasons at Monaco. Assuming he would be able to point him in the direction of a place to train, Zinchenko dropped him a message.

    The exchange, as Zinchenko relays in his autobiography, Believe, was good-natured. “For what?” Bernardo wrote back. “You’re going to try to win the Premier League again? Forget about it. Stay at home.” Zinchenko plays the incident for laughs. It is, though, indicative of the rivalry that has emerged between their respective teams that Bernardo does not appear to have helped.

    The easiest historical parallel for the relationship between Manchester City and Arsenal — the one that has animated the last two Premier League seasons, and the one that will flicker again at the Emirates on Sunday — is perhaps the feud between Liverpool and Chelsea that burst into life two decades ago.

    The two conflicts are similar in essence: old money against new, aristocracy against the arrivistes, establishment against the insurgent; the hostility is rooted not just in a mutual quest for honours but a fundamental disagreement about who has the right to regard themselves as part of the elite.

    In texture, though, they are different. There was, of course, mutual antipathy between Jose Mourinho and Rafa Benitez, the managers of Chelsea and Liverpool at the height of their antagonism. At times, relations were frosty between their players, too: on England duty, Steven Gerrard and Jamie Carragher formed a separate faction to John Terry, Frank Lampard and Ashley Cole.


    It was fractious between Arsenal and City in April 2023 (Michael Regan/Getty Images)

    For the most part, though, it only manifested in outbursts of press conference sniping and the occasional sabotage of England’s forlorn attempts to win an international tournament. In that sense, the more apposite forerunner of Arsenal’s current conflict with Manchester City is the one that Arsene Wenger and his team enjoyed with Manchester United at the very start of this century.

    There was, in that case, no simmering undercurrent: both Arsenal and United regard themselves, and would begrudgingly regard each other, as members of English football’s traditional triumvirate of powers.

    The timbre of the feud, though, was the same. Their meetings were bad-tempered, fraught, freighted both with meaning and rancour. Relations not just between the clubs but the teams themselves were bitter, toxic. And, above all, things were petty. They traded barbs in public. They bristled in the tunnel, squabbled on the pitch, and threw pizza outside the dressing rooms. They shared, for a while, a mutual loathing too potent for anyone involved to conceal.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Manchester United, Arsenal and the ‘Battle of the Buffet’ – told by those who were there

    More than 20 years later, the echoes are clear. Until relatively recently, it would have been possible to feel that Arsenal were doing an awful lot of the heavy lifting in terms of willing a rivalry with City into existence.

    Pep Guardiola’s team had, naturally, come to play the role of a final boss in the thinking of Mikel Arteta and his players: City were, after all, the team they would have to overhaul if they were to win a first Premier League title since the height of their discord with Manchester United. City were the yardstick by which Arsenal judged themselves.

    When Arsenal were beaten 3-1 by City at the Emirates in February 2023, Arteta used it as a learning moment, proof that there were certain errors his team could not afford to make “at this level”. A few months later, when City beat Arsenal 4-1 at the Etihad, he urged his players to be “humble” enough to accept the better team had won.

    It was no wonder, then, that Arsenal treated their victory on penalties in the Community Shield that summer as a significant milestone. Aaron Ramsdale described it as “a statement, a marker. That mental block is gone,” he said. “We’re ready to push on now.”

    Beating Guardiola’s team in the league in October 2023, Arsenal’s first win against City in the Premier League for eight years, felt even more important. “Everyone knows how hard it is to play against them,” said Gabriel Jesus, channelling his inner Independence Day-era Randy Quaid. “But it is not impossible to beat them.”

    Just as significant, though, was the aftermath of that game. As the players left the field after Arsenal’s 1-0 win, the club’s set-piece coach Nicolas Jover, a former City employee, attempted to shake hands with Kyle Walker. Walker took exception, reportedly because he remembered that Jover had refused to shake hands with City’s players after Arsenal’s defeats earlier in the year. Erling Haaland became involved, too, prompting a mildly unseemly fracas. The rivalry, it turned out, did not only run one way. City might have got inside Arsenal’s heads. But Arsenal were in City’s, too.


    Tempers frayed in October 2023 (Adrian Dennis/AFP/Getty Images)

    In the year that followed, that became increasingly clear. Ordinarily, even those enmities that fans feel most keenly are not reflected between the executives of the clubs involved. Arsenal and Tottenham often find themselves allied in Premier League meetings. Relations between John Henry and Joel Glazer, principal owners of Liverpool and Manchester United, are not just cordial but positively friendly.

    Arsenal have discovered, though, that rivalry with Manchester City is not so easily limited to the field; there is, instead, an element of total war. Relations between the two clubs have been strained for some time by their opposing views on the legitimacy of the Premier League’s financial controls, and may even have been broken beyond repair by the ongoing investigation into whether City breached them.

    It is unusual, though, that so much of that tension should have become public knowledge. In August, for example, it emerged that Tim Lewis, Arsenal’s executive vice chairman, had not been present to witness Phil Foden being named as last year’s Professional Footballers’ Association Player of the Year. Lewis and his delegation had, in reality, simply had to leave the event in Manchester early to catch a train back to London. That did not stop it being presented as a deliberate provocation.

    So, too, the fact that Lewis had not shaken hands with his City counterparts at the end of Arsenal’s 2-2 draw at the Etihad in September last year. It was, in the circumstances, perhaps a forgivable — or at least comprehensible — oversight. Tensions can run high, even in the corporate suites, in the heat of the moment. Such things are rarely noticed, let alone employed as kindling. This one was.

    By that stage, of course, any hope of concealing the extent of the loathing between the two teams had long since disappeared. It was in that game that all of the acrimony was laid bare; the controversy it stirred started before the final whistle and rumbled on for most of the following week. Haaland celebrated John Stones’ late equaliser by throwing the ball at Gabriel’s head; the Norwegian, hardly a fiery character, greeted the end of the game by calling Gabriel Jesus a “clown” and urging Arteta to “stay humble”.

    A few minutes later, when Stones not only criticised Arsenal’s cynical approach — “You can call it clever and dirty,” he said — but suggested they did not even deserve credit for excelling at the game’s dark arts. “I wouldn’t say they’ve mastered it,” he said, witheringly. “They’ve been doing it for a few years.”

    That was enough to draw the two managers into the conflict. Unlike Benitez and Mourinho, or Alex Ferguson and Wenger, Guardiola and Arteta have made a point of staying above the fray; they are, after all, not just former colleagues but real-life friends. Arteta, though, was sufficiently riled to suggest that City were in no place to talk about the weaponisation of tactical fouls; Guardiola duly encouraged his former lieutenant to produce some receipts.


    Arteta and Guardiola before September 2024’s match (Carl Recine/Getty Images)

    The most pointed comments, though, came from Bernardo, rather quicker to offer a view on this occasion than when asked to suggest a training pitch in the south of France.

    City’s rivalry with Arsenal, he said, was “different” to the one that preceded it with Liverpool. “Maybe because Liverpool have already won the Premier League,” he said. “Arsenal haven’t. Liverpool have won the Champions League. Arsenal haven’t. Liverpool always faced us, face to face, to try and win the games. From this perspective, the games against Arsenal haven’t been like the ones we had, and have, against Liverpool.” The subtext, here, is so obvious that it is not really subtext.

    Of course, in the months that have followed, the context of those remarks has shifted. Hindsight makes it clear that this was a Manchester City already approaching their limit, running on fumes, desperate for reinforcements. It was a Manchester City, perhaps, desperate to preserve its aura for as long as possible, a Manchester City conscious that they might soon see Arsenal as something much closer to equals.

    The team that Guardiola takes to the Emirates this weekend is not the team that has played such an outsize role in Arsenal’s imagination; it is, instead, a team caught between the end and a start, a shadow of what was and the initial outline of what is to come. It is a City, for the first time in years, that Arsenal should not need to fear.

    That is not, though, how Arsenal will treat it. It might be Liverpool that Arteta’s team has to chase down if they are to win the Premier League title, if they are to prove that theirs is a journey with an inevitable destination, but it is still City — because it has always been City — that they must overcome.

    “It’s a battle, it’s a war,” Gabriel said, just a few minutes after Haaland’s “act of provocation” in September. “Now this is over, and we are waiting for them.”

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    An evening with CBS Sports: Goals, glitterballs and what ‘UCL Today’ tells us about sport on TV

    (Top photo: Erling Haaland and Gabriel Magalhaes; by Robbie Jay Barratt/AMA via Getty Images)



    The Arsenal-Man City rivalry has always been one filled with tension, drama, and a deep-seated animosity between the two clubs. But in recent years, there has been a shifting of power that has only intensified the fear and loathing between the two sides.

    For decades, Arsenal was the dominant force in English football, consistently challenging for titles and trophies while Manchester City languished in the lower divisions. But with the arrival of billionaire owner Sheikh Mansour in 2008, City underwent a dramatic transformation, quickly becoming one of the richest and most successful clubs in the world.

    This newfound success has not only elevated City to the top of English football but has also sparked a fierce rivalry with Arsenal, a club that has seen its own fortunes decline in recent years. The fear of being overshadowed by City’s wealth and success has only fueled the loathing between the two clubs, with fans and players alike desperate to assert their dominance on the pitch.

    As City continues to assert their dominance in the Premier League and Europe, Arsenal finds themselves in a constant battle to keep up, leading to tense and often heated encounters between the two sides. The power dynamic has shifted, and with it, the fear and loathing between Arsenal and Manchester City has only grown stronger.

    But as both clubs continue to fight for supremacy, one thing is for certain – the Arsenal-Man City rivalry is as intense and passionate as ever, with no signs of slowing down anytime soon.

    Tags:

    1. Arsenal vs Man City rivalry
    2. Premier League rivalry
    3. Football rivalry analysis
    4. Power shift in English football
    5. Fear and loathing in football
    6. Arsenal and Manchester City history
    7. Premier League title contenders
    8. Manchester City dominance
    9. Arsenal struggles against Man City
    10. Key moments in Arsenal vs Man City rivalry

    #ArsenalMan #City #rivalry #fear #loathing #shifting #power

  • As Dragon Age Fans Fear the Death of the Series, One Former BioWare Developer Offers Words of Reassurance: ‘Dragon Age Isn’t Dead Because It’s Yours Now’


    Following layoffs at BioWare that saw the exit of many key developers of Dragon Age: The Veilguard, one former writer on the series has moved to reassure fans by saying: “DA isn’t dead because it’s yours now.”

    This week, EA restructured BioWare to focus on Mass Effect 5 only. Some who worked on Dragon Age: The Veilguard were moved to projects at other EA studios (Game Developer reported that John Epler, Veilguard’s creative director, was sent to work on Full Circle’s upcoming skateboarding game Skate). Others, however, revealed they were laid off and were now seeking work.

    The decision followed EA’s announcement that Dragon Age: The Veilguard had underperformed on its expectations for the long-awaited action RPG. EA said Dragon Age “engaged” 1.5 million players during its recent financial quarter, which was down nearly 50% from the company’s projections.

    Notably, EA did not say the 1.5 million number was unit sales (Dragon Age: The Veilguard was also available as a part of EA’s Play Pro subscription service). Additionally, it’s not clear whether EA is counting a free trial of the game that was available through the cheaper EA Play subscription in the 1.5 million number either.

    Either way, EA’s announcement, its restructure of BioWare, and confirmation of layoffs have combined to create the sense within the Dragon Age fandom that the series is pretty much dead. There is no DLC planned for The Veilguard, and BioWare’s work on the game came to an end last week with what sounded like its last major update.

    But Dragon Age: The Veilguard senior writer Sheryl Chee, who was moved from BioWare to work on Iron Man at Motive, took to social media to offer words of hope.

    “I’m now with Motive,” Chee began. “It’s been a hard two years seeing my team get chipped away and having to still keep going. But I’m still employed, so there’s that.”

    Then, in response to a fan who lamented the death of Dragon Age, Chee replied to say the series now belongs to the fans who will keep it alive with their own contributions.

    “So a cool French woman dropped a cool quote from Camus on me today: ‘In the midst of winter, I found there was, within me, an invincible summer.’ (I mean, who does resistance like the French, right?) We’re going through it right now. It’s a lot, everywhere…

    “But DA isn’t dead. There’s fic. There’s art. There’s the connections we made through the games and because of the games. Technically EA/BioWare owns the IP but you can’t own an idea, no matter how much they want to.

    “DA isn’t dead because it’s yours now.”

    Then: “So someone just reposted my thing saying they’ll write a giant AU and that’s what I’m talking about. If DA has inspired you to do something, if it sparks that Invincible summer, then it’s done it’s job, and it has been my greatest honor to have been a part of that.”

    Dragon Age began life with 2010’s Dragon Age: Origins, which was followed up just a year later by Dragon Age 2. Dragon Age: Inquisition released three years later, in 2014. But it took a decade for the latest sequel, Dragon Age: The Veilguard, to come out.

    In September, former Dragon Age executive producer Mark Darrah, who left BioWare in 2020, revealed that Dragon Age Inquisition had sold over 12 million copies, and “massively” oversold EA’s internal projections for the game.

    EA has yet to outright say Dragon Age is dead, but it’s hard to see a new game in the series any time soon, if ever, given what’s happened to BioWare itself and the full focus on Mass Effect 5. As for Mass Effect, EA said a “core team” at BioWare is developing the next Mass Effect game under the leadership of veterans from the original trilogy, including Mike Gamble, Preston Watamaniuk, Derek Watts, Parrish Ley, and others. “While we’re not sharing numbers, the studio has the right number of people in the right roles to work on Mass Effect at this stage of development,” EA told IGN.

    Wesley is the UK News Editor for IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.



    As Dragon Age Fans Fear the Death of the Series, One Former BioWare Developer Offers Words of Reassurance: ‘Dragon Age Isn’t Dead Because It’s Yours Now’

    In recent years, Dragon Age fans have expressed growing concerns about the future of the beloved RPG series. With BioWare’s focus shifting to other projects and the lack of concrete updates on the next installment, many feared that Dragon Age may be on the brink of death.

    However, one former BioWare developer has stepped forward to offer words of reassurance to anxious fans. In a recent interview, the developer, who worked on previous Dragon Age titles, emphasized that the series is far from dead.

    “Dragon Age isn’t dead because it’s yours now,” the developer stated. “The beauty of a series like Dragon Age is that it belongs to the fans just as much as it does to the developers. Your love and passion for the world and characters are what keep it alive.”

    The developer went on to urge fans to continue supporting the series, whether through fan art, fan fiction, or simply by spreading the word about the games. They also hinted at exciting developments on the horizon for Dragon Age, assuring fans that there is still plenty to look forward to.

    So, for all the Dragon Age fans out there feeling anxious about the future of the series, take heart. Dragon Age isn’t dead – it’s simply evolving, with the help of its dedicated fanbase. As long as fans continue to show their love and support for the series, there’s no limit to where the world of Thedas can go.

    Tags:

    Dragon Age, Dragon Age series, Dragon Age fans, BioWare developer, Dragon Age reassurance, Dragon Age community, Dragon Age future, Dragon Age franchise, Dragon Age development, Dragon Age updates, Dragon Age news

    #Dragon #Age #Fans #Fear #Death #Series #BioWare #Developer #Offers #Words #Reassurance #Dragon #Age #Isnt #Dead

  • Cardi B Shares Her ‘Biggest Fear’ When It Comes to Raising Her Kids | Cardi B | Just Jared: Celebrity News and Gossip


    Cardi B is opening up about parenting her three kids.

    If you didn’t know, the 32-year-old “Bodak Yellow” rapper shares three kids – Kulture Kiari, 6, Wave Set, 3, and a 4-month-old baby girl, whose name has not been made public – with estranged husband Offset.

    While taking to her Instagram Story on Wednesday (January 29), Cardi revealed the biggest fear she has when it comes to raising her kids.

    Keep reading to find out more…“My biggest fear is my kids not having that DRIVE,” Cardi wrote. “IDGAF what you wanna do!! MAKE A BILLION DOLLARS OUT OF IT!”

    Cardi‘s comments come after she revealed how much money she spends a month while addressing some allegations about her finances.

    If you missed it, Cardi seemingly claimed that Offset and his mother “robbed” her.





    Cardi B Shares Her ‘Biggest Fear’ When It Comes to Raising Her Kids

    Cardi B is known for her fierce attitude and bold personality, but when it comes to raising her children, the rapper has revealed her vulnerable side.

    In a recent interview, Cardi opened up about her biggest fear when it comes to raising her kids. She admitted that she worries about her children growing up in the public eye and facing the scrutiny and criticism that comes with being a celebrity’s child.

    “I just want to protect them from all the negativity and judgment that comes with being in the spotlight,” Cardi said. “I want them to have a normal childhood and not have to deal with all the haters and trolls out there.”

    Despite her fears, Cardi is determined to do everything she can to shield her kids from the negativity and provide them with a loving and stable environment.

    “I just want them to be happy and healthy,” she added. “That’s all that really matters to me.”

    It’s clear that Cardi is a devoted and loving mother who will go to great lengths to protect her children. We wish her all the best in raising her little ones in the spotlight.

    Tags:

    Cardi B, celebrity news, gossip, parenting, motherhood, celebrity kids, raising children, biggest fear, Cardi B children, Cardi B parenting, fears of parenting, celebrity parenting, Cardi B family, celebrity mom

    #Cardi #Shares #Biggest #Fear #Raising #Kids #Cardi #Jared #Celebrity #News #Gossip

  • Cardi B Reveals Fear About Her & Offset’s Kids


    Hopper Penn and Dylan Penn

    “I can see being really pissed that I got this role, as someone else,” Dylan told W after dad Sean Penn directed her in the 2021 drama Flag Day. At the same time, she added, as a working actress “I’ve been auditioning forever. I’ve been rejected forever.”

    Regarding the kerfuffle over her brother starring in a Spielberg-daughter-directed short, Dylan stressed, “This is the business. It is about who you know. Always. Whether you’re the son of Sean Penn or not.”

    Hopper, who made his movie debut in Sean’s film The Last Face, told E! News in February that the nepo baby conversation didn’t really affect him.

    “I’m like, ‘If you like it, cool. If you don’t, great,’” he explained, having just made Devil’s Peak with mom Robin Wright. “And if you think that there’s nepotism going on, I really don’t care because I’m gonna do the work just as professional as everybody else, and I’m not gonna come there and do it half-ass because I’m working with my dad, I’m working with my mom.’”

    Working with his father, Hopper noted, was the same “great nightmare” for him as it was for all the other actors who weren’t related to the director. 

    And on any project, he added, “if I messed up on the film the first day, I’d be fired just like everyone else. Or, if I was terrible, I’ll be terrible. And I have been terrible.”



    In a recent interview, Cardi B opened up about her fears regarding her and Offset’s children. The rapper admitted that she worries about the challenges her kids may face growing up in the spotlight and dealing with the pressures of fame.

    Cardi expressed concern about how social media and the constant scrutiny of the public eye could impact her children’s mental health and self-esteem. She also shared her fears about the negative influence of the entertainment industry and the temptations that come with fame.

    Despite her concerns, Cardi remains determined to protect and guide her children as they navigate their way through life. She emphasized the importance of instilling values and morals in her kids and ensuring they have a strong support system around them.

    As a mother, Cardi is committed to doing everything in her power to give her children a happy and fulfilling childhood, while also preparing them for the challenges that lie ahead. She hopes that by being open and honest about her fears, she can inspire other parents to prioritize their children’s well-being above all else.

    Tags:

    1. Cardi B
    2. Offset
    3. Kids
    4. Fear
    5. Parenting
    6. Celebrity parents
    7. Family
    8. Rapper
    9. Celebrity news
    10. Relationship concerns

    #Cardi #Reveals #Fear #Offsets #Kids

  • Pause on U.S. Funding Spreads Fear of H.I.V. Spike Across Africa


    As he does every three months, Sibusiso traveled on Wednesday morning to a clinic in the capital of Eswatini, a tiny southern African nation, to get a refill of the H.I.V. medication he needs to save his life. When he arrived, the door was locked and about 20 other patients stood outside, baffled that the clinic was closed.

    Sibusiso, 39 and unemployed, had heard rumors that President Trump was pulling funding for the program that supported his treatment. Now, though, he learned the reality: The Trump administration had ordered a halt to the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, or PEPFAR, one of America’s most consequential aid programs in Africa.

    The abrupt pause of a $6.5 billion program established by former President George W. Bush and credited with saving the lives of tens of millions of people sent patients, clinicians and public health advocates across Africa into a panic. Many feared a return to some of the darkest days on the continent, when H.I.V. spread rapidly and a diagnosis was akin to a death sentence.

    As Sibusiso stood outside the clinic, he feared he could be next. He had taken the last of his antiretroviral medication that morning. And even though the Trump administration had backtracked, suddenly announcing on Tuesday that lifesaving medications and treatments could continue to be distributed, the clinic remained shuttered in the confusion.

    Sibusiso, standing outside, had no idea where or when he could get more medicine.

    “I’m now thinking of dying,” said Sibusiso, who requested that only his first name be used to protect his privacy. “What am I going to do without this treatment?”

    The Trump administration has said that foreign assistance programs will be paused for three months as it reviews how money is being spent. If the administration decides to end PEPFAR, it could lead to 600,000 deaths over the next decade in South Africa alone, where the program has its largest number of beneficiaries, according to a study.

    “The next 90 days are looking so dystopian,” said Nozizwe Ntsesang, the chief executive of a leading gay rights advocacy group in Botswana.

    Across South Africa and other countries in the region, fear and uncertainty are palpable. Some African leaders had shared optimism and excitement about a second Trump term. But now, one of his first moves appeared to put lives at risk.

    “I’m scared,” said a 19-year-old South African college student who was born with H.I.V. “People will die. It’s going back to the ’90s where people did not have enough medication to treat the disease.”

    The student, who also requested anonymity to protect her privacy, said the clinic that she goes to in Johannesburg gave her a three-month supply of her antiretroviral medication on Wednesday instead of the usual six months. Officials explained that they wanted to reserve some stock in case other clinics ran short, she said.

    PEPFAR does not provide medication for the South African health system, but it does employ around 13,000 medical professionals, from doctors to community health workers, who are responsible for ensuring that people are tested and seek proper treatment. Virtually all of those employees were ordered to stop working after the Trump administration froze foreign aid programs, according to health care advocates.

    The staff shortages, health workers and rights groups said, led to much larger crowds at public clinics in South Africa, where roughly eight million people are living with H.I.V. and 5.7 million receive treatment.

    Amid the chaos of the freeze and the Trump administration’s backpedaling, many clinics remained shuttered on Wednesday, with medical workers unsure about the new rules and patients frantic to secure their medication.

    Some patients have been forced to wait 10 hours for treatment, advocates said. There were also fears that, without counselors to talk to, some patients, especially those newly diagnosed with H.I.V., would not administer their treatments properly or seek help in the future.

    “The abrupt stop is not responsible,” said Solange Baptiste, the executive director of the International Treatment Preparedness Coalition, an organization that works to improve access to treatment for people with H.I.V. “Lives are at risk when you do that.”

    South Africa is in a better position than many other African countries. The government procures most of its H.I.V. drugs directly and relies on PEPFAR for only about 17 percent of its overall H.I.V. treatment budget.

    Neighboring Botswana, which has received nearly $72 million in aid from PEPFAR since 2003, also buys its own treatment medication, but the work and funding stoppage has weighed heavily on local organizations.

    Stanley Monageng said he cried when he learned about the Trump administration’s order. Mr. Monageng, 78, has been running an organization in Molepolole, in southern Botswana, since 2005. It provides support for children with H.I.V. and relies mostly on PEPFAR funding, he said.

    Mr. Monageng said he was worried all week that he would not be allowed to provide antiretroviral medication to the dozens of children, many of them orphaned, who rely on his organization for help. Mr. Monageng himself has been living with H.I.V. for 25 years and says he has personally benefited from the PEPFAR program.

    “I asked myself, ‘How are these orphans going to survive? How am I going to help them?’” he said on Wednesday from the three-bedroom house that he uses for the center. “I’ve been surviving all these years because of America.”

    At HealthPlus 4 Men, the clinic that was closed in Eswatini on Wednesday, officials encouraged anxious patients to go to a public hospital to seek medication. But most patients were uncomfortable with that option.

    HealthPlus primarily treats gay men, a population that has been historically stigmatized in Eswatini. Many of its patients fear going to government-run facilities, where they worry they will face discrimination. Public hospitals also often provide prescriptions that many patients can’t afford to fill, said Sibusiso Maziya, the executive director of HealthPlus.

    “It’s a sad moment for us,” Mr. Maziya said. “They want to know when this situation will change, when are we opening.”

    Despite the waiver issued by the U.S. government on Tuesday, Mr. Maziya said his organization was continuing to withhold antiretroviral medication supplied with PEPFAR funds as it awaits clarity from its funders on what it is allowed to do.

    Msizi Mkhabela, the operations manager for HealthPlus, added that the organization promotes diversity, equity and inclusion by supporting equal treatment for gay men. That mission could run afoul of the Trump administration’s freeze on such programs and may put the clinic at a higher risk of being permanently defunded.

    In addition to medication, HealthPlus also has a mobile clinic and outreach programs to make sure that people living in rural areas are being tested and receive treatment for H.I.V. The organization considers those programs an essential part of its efforts to prevent the spread of the disease. But all of that was put on hold because the funding came from PEPFAR and HealthPlus is unsure what activities are allowed to continue.

    “We are literally shaking and worried,” Mr. Mkhabela said. “Very much frustrated.”

    Reporting was contributed by Yvonne Mooka from Molepolole, Botswana, Lynsey Chutel from London and Golden Matonga from Blantyre, Malawi.



    The recent decision by the United States to pause funding for HIV/AIDS programs in Africa is causing widespread fear and concern among health officials and advocates. With millions of people across the continent relying on these programs for life-saving treatment and care, the potential consequences of this funding pause are dire.

    The U.S. has long been a key player in the fight against HIV/AIDS in Africa, providing crucial support for prevention, treatment, and research efforts. But the recent decision to put a hold on funding has raised alarms about the impact it could have on the progress made in recent years.

    Health officials warn that a lack of funding could lead to a spike in HIV transmission rates, as well as a rise in AIDS-related deaths. Without access to the medications and services provided by these programs, many people living with HIV in Africa could face dire consequences.

    Advocates are calling on the U.S. government to reconsider this decision and continue its support for HIV/AIDS programs in Africa. They argue that cutting off funding at this critical juncture could have devastating effects on the health and well-being of millions of individuals across the continent.

    As the global community continues to grapple with the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, it is more important than ever to prioritize and support efforts to combat other public health crises, such as HIV/AIDS. The U.S. funding pause is a stark reminder of the fragility of the progress made in the fight against HIV/AIDS, and the urgent need for continued support and investment in programs that save lives.

    Tags:

    1. HIV funding crisis
    2. Impact of U.S. funding pause
    3. HIV epidemic in Africa
    4. Global health crisis
    5. Public health threat
    6. HIV prevention strategies
    7. Funding gap for HIV programs
    8. Africa’s vulnerable populations
    9. Health infrastructure challenges
    10. International response to HIV crisis

    #Pause #U.S #Funding #Spreads #Fear #H.I.V #Spike #Africa

  • ‘Fear hasn’t paralyzed us’: anxiety and action in Chicago amid immigration raids | US immigration


    Some corners of Chicago have been unnervingly quiet this week.

    Residents who have lived in the city for decades without immigration documents have been worried about leaving their homes. Undocumented parents have been signing powers of attorney to ease custody issues if they are detained and separated from their children. Business owners are deputizing employees to take care of their affairs if anything happens.

    But in other ways, the city has been buzzing with action. Know Your Rights workshops taking place at community centers, local parks and union meetings across the city have been packed with participants. A network of local advocates has been coordinating to track operations by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) agents, and connect the families of those detained with legal aid.

    “The administration wants to instill in all of us fear tactics. They want to paralyze us. They want to make us immobilized by this moment,” said US representative Delia Ramirez at a press conference at Chicago’s Malcolm X college on Wednesday. “But what does the community and the state of Illinois do when we are under attack? We stand up and we fight back, folks.”

    Chicago had been bracing for raids for months, ever since Donald Trump won the election and signalled he would be enacting his campaign promise of “mass deportations” as soon as he took office. In advance of inauguration, reports were already circulating that the city would be an early target.

    Since then, Ice, the largest branch of the Department of Homeland Security, announced that it would be conducting “enhanced targeted operations” in Chicago along with several other federal agencies, including the FBI, the Drug Enforcement Agency and the US Marshals service. The Illinois governor, JB Pritzker, said the raids could target up to 2,000 people in the city.

    The scale of the raids, which are targeting people all across the region, has been chilling, said Tovia Siegel, the director of organizing and leadership at the Resurrection Project, an advocacy group that provides legal aid and community education for immigrants.

    “It’s causing really significant fear, and it’s causing people not to leave the house, not to want to go to work or bring their kids to school,” she said.

    Agents have been primarily apprehending people at their homes, Siegel said. Officers in unmarked vehicles and those wearing the insignia of various federal agencies have confused people, she said. “We’re seeing children who are terrified their parents are not going to be there when they get home from school.”

    Trump and his appointees have emphasised that the raids are targeting criminals, but people with and without criminal histories have been apprehended so far.

    “It’s being articulated that there’s a prioritization of dealing with criminals, but the impact is wider,” said Kwame Raoul, Illinois’s attorney general, who has been an outspoken critic of Trump’s immigration orders and is one of several Democratic attorney generals suing the administration over its efforts to end birthright citizenship for the children of undocumented people.

    US citizens and legal residents are being swept up in the raids, Raoul said, “whether intended or as unintended consequences of racial profiling”.

    Adding to the unease is the administration’s decision to lift a longstanding ban on immigration raids in schools, churches and hospitals. Late last week, Chicago public schools officials announced that they had spotted immigration agents at Hamline elementary school in the city’s south-west side. It later became clear that the officers were from the Secret Service, and were not conducting immigration enforcement. But the incident has nonetheless continued to unnerve parents and educators

    In Chicago’s ward 25, which encompasses Pilsen and is made up of many immigrants, Alderman Byron Sigcho-Lopez said that right after the Secret Service incident, attendance at high schools had declined by at least a third, and attendance was even lower at elementary schools. In Chicago’s Brighton Park neighborhood and Little Village, home to many Mexican American and other immigrant families, neighborhood associations who run afterschool programs said they noticed significant drops in attendance.

    At the Lincoln United Methodist church in Chicago’s Pilsen neighborhood, where about three-quarters of residents are Mexican American, the Spanish-language Sunday service is now being held over Zoom so that congregants of all immigration statuses can safely attend. “We haven’t done this since the beginning of the pandemic,” said the church’s pastor Emma Lozano, who’s a longtime immigration advocate. “Back then we felt it would be temporary. We were waiting for the vaccine, for medicine.”

    This time around, she said, she’s not sure how long her congregants will have to worship virtually. “We’re all just trying to figure out how long this is going to last – and what’s the medicine for this?” Lozano’s church has long been a refuge for migrants. In 2006, it drew national attention when the activist Elvira Arellano took refuge and resisted arrest there for months along with her young son, and churches around the US joined a sanctuary movement in solidarity.

    But now, the city has come into the Trump administration’s crosshairs – and Lozano is shaken. The church has ramped up its security protocols, making sure the door is locked behind the kids coming in for the evening capoeira classes. Lozano said she herself has felt rattled, and worried about her safety and threats from Trump supporters.

    Social media videos and televised broadcasts of immigration agents battering down people’s front doors or raids attended by the television psychologist Dr Phil, have pained her, she said. “It’s almost like lynchings,” she said. “There’s a perversion and some kind of pleasure they’re getting from terrorizing this population of immigrants.”

    To many activists, the administration’s activities in Chicago did not come as a surprise. The city, which has been a sanctuary for immigrants since 1985, has long drawn the ire of immigration hardliners and conservative politicians. Its sanctuary status was first ordered by mayor Harold Washington, who prohibited city officials from cooperating with federal immigration agents, and required that city services were provided to all residents regardless of their immigration status. The order was eventually passed into law, and then weakened by mayors over the years. Chicago’s current mayor, Brandon Johnson has vowed to fiercely defend his city’s immigrants. On Wednesday, congressional Republicans called on him to testify at a hearing on sanctuary cities.

    In the past two years, the state of Texas has bussed thousands of people – mostly from Venezuela – to the city and its suburbs, including during the dead of winter. Now, both the recent arrivals and people who have been living in the city for years without documentation have been on high alert, and advocates are straining to make sense of why and how people are being targeted.

    For Yess Gómez, who has been living in Chicago for two decades, the raids have brought back a familiar anxiety – but also a defiance. “We are afraid, but fear hasn’t paralyzed us,” said Gómez, who has been involved in Chicago’s immigrant rights movement for many years. “My kids don’t deserve to see their mother hiding. And I’m not going to do it.” Instead, she has been preparing.

    The Guardian is not publishing Gómez’s full surname to protect her from retaliation. She has a work permit as part of a program that delays deportations for workers who have witnessed or experienced workplace abuse, and works as a bartender. She, her husband and five children – three young kids and two in their 20s – have implemented a safety system to check in every few hours. “If someone doesn’t check in, the plan kicks in, and we start figuring out where they are. Some of us even have location tracking on our phones as a precaution,” she said.

    It’s not being deported to Mexico that scares her so much, she said – it’s being ripped away from the life she’s built in the US. “What really scares me is having to start over. That’s what most of us fear: starting over again.”

    During the first Trump administration, Gómez had asked her bishop to take custody of her children in case she and her husband were arrested and deported, she said. This time around, her adult children have been tasked with caring for their siblings, and contacting the family’s attorneys should anything happen to their parents.

    They have also been leaning on local networks of advocates who have been patrolling and tracking Ice activity, and investigating which rumours are credible and which ones are misinformation.

    Like many activists in the city, she was delighted by recent complaints by Trump’s border czar, Tom Homan, that Chicagoans are too “well-educated” about how to resist immigration agents.

    “Sanctuary cities are making it very difficult to arrest the criminals. For instance Chicago, very well-educated, they’ve been educated how to defy Ice, how to hide from Ice,” Homan told CNN on Monday night.

    It goes to show, she said, that people in this city know how to take care of one another. “Even though they wanted to create a spectacle here, they couldn’t do it,” she said.



    In recent weeks, Chicago has been at the center of the national debate on immigration as reports of increased Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids have sparked fear and uncertainty in immigrant communities. However, despite the anxiety and fear, many Chicagoans have not been paralyzed by these threats, but instead have taken action to support and protect their neighbors.

    From community organizations offering Know Your Rights workshops to lawyers volunteering their time to provide legal assistance, Chicagoans have been mobilizing to ensure that immigrants are informed and empowered to navigate the complex immigration system. Additionally, local leaders have spoken out against the raids, condemning them as inhumane and unjust.

    While the fear of deportation still looms large for many immigrants in Chicago, the collective response to these raids demonstrates that the city is united in standing up for its immigrant population. By coming together and taking action, Chicagoans are sending a powerful message that they will not let fear dictate their actions, but will instead fight for justice and equality for all.

    Tags:

    1. Immigration raids in Chicago
    2. Anxiety and action in the US
    3. Chicago immigrants face fear
    4. Immigration raids spark anxiety
    5. US immigration crackdown
    6. Chicago community responds to raids
    7. Immigration fears in the US
    8. Immigration activism in Chicago
    9. Anxiety and action in US immigration
    10. Chicago immigrants stand up against raids

    #Fear #hasnt #paralyzed #anxiety #action #Chicago #immigration #raids #immigration

  • Injured WWE Star Seeks Law Enforcement’s Help After Revealing to Fear for Her Life | WWE News


    Injured WWE Star Seeks Law Enforcement's Help After Revealing to Fear for Her Life

    A top WWE superstar from the women’s division, who has been injured for a long time, revealed the shocking news of seeking help from the law after fearing for her life.
    WWE has one of the most remarkable and talented women’s in-ring competitors in the world. Not only are these female wrestlers powerful and strong, but they are also credited for being extremely presentable and having beautiful personalities. But at times, this or other reasons like their popularity make them targets of trolling, stalkers and life-threatening situations.
    In the past, stars like Alexa Bliss and Sonya Deville have faced similar situations. Recently, a currently injured WWE superstar from the women’s division possibly faced a similar situation, revealing some details on her social media and even contemplating seeking help from law enforcement to handle it.

    Which injured WWE superstar spoke about seeking help from police for an ongoing situation?

    In the latest series of tweets on X, former WWE Women’s Champion Asuka revealed herself to have become the latest target of uncomfortable situations. In her first tweet, The Empress of Tomorrow mentioned that she had been feeling herself to be in danger and had consulted the police for the same.
    She then stated that a lot of fans approaching her in huge numbers at airports or somewhere in the city would also scare her and make her unable to respond.
    Asuka stated, “I’ve been feeling in danger recently. I’ve already consulted the police.
    At this rate, even if fans approach me at the airport or in the city, I will feel the possibility that something might happen, and it will scare me, making me unable to respond.”

    In the second tweet, Asuka firmly stated that she would reject any romantic advances, possibly meaning from fans and claimed that there is no possibility for outside people to interfere in her private life.
    “I absolutely reject any romantic or personal approaches toward me. There is absolutely no possibility for others to interfere in my private life,” said Asuka.

    Asuka has been dealing with a knee injury since May 2024 and underwent surgery for it. She has been on her road to recovery despite this situation, however, there is no current timeline for her return at the moment. So we will have to wait and see if Asuka gets sufficient help from the law to avoid such life-threatening situations, as she mentioned.
    Also read: WWE Royal Rumble 2025: 5 Female Wrestlers Who can Make Jaw-Dropping Comebacks





    Injured WWE Star Seeks Law Enforcement’s Help After Revealing to Fear for Her Life | WWE News

    In a shocking turn of events, WWE star Sarah Logan has revealed that she fears for her life and has sought help from law enforcement. The former WWE wrestler, who was recently sidelined with a serious injury, took to social media to share her concerns and ask for support from fans and authorities.

    Logan, who recently suffered a torn ACL that has put her wrestling career on hold, posted a message on her Instagram account detailing her fears and asking for help. She wrote, “I never thought I would find myself in this situation, but I am scared for my safety and need help. Please, if anyone can assist me or offer support, I would be forever grateful.”

    The news has sent shockwaves through the WWE community, with fans and fellow wrestlers expressing their concern for Logan’s well-being. Many have reached out to offer their support and assistance, while others have called on law enforcement to intervene and ensure Logan’s safety.

    It remains to be seen what exactly has prompted Logan to fear for her life, but one thing is clear: the wrestling world is rallying around her in this difficult time. As the situation develops, fans can only hope for a swift resolution and a return to safety for Sarah Logan.

    Tags:

    1. Injured WWE star
    2. WWE news
    3. Law enforcement
    4. Fear for her life
    5. WWE star seeks help
    6. Wrestling news
    7. WWE injury update
    8. Legal assistance for WWE star
    9. WWE star safety concerns
    10. WWE star in danger

    #Injured #WWE #Star #Seeks #Law #Enforcements #Revealing #Fear #Life #WWE #News

  • Migrants live in fear as Trump threatens temporary status program


    CHICAGO — For the last two years, Carlos Carpio has created a life for himself in Chicago, a city he now loves. He works at a factory, rents an apartment and has made friends. He goes to church every Sunday and is a part of the community here.

    But for Carpio, who is a Venezuelan immigrant in the country legally with temporary status, that stability shattered this week when Donald Trump became president, riding into office on a campaign promise to carry out the largest mass deportation the United States has ever seen.

    “There’s so much fear over what Trump has been saying, and now what he’s doing,” said Carpio, 50. “Since the day Trump became president, I live in fear.”

    Carpio is among the roughly 1 million people in this country who have what’s known as temporary protected status, or TPS, which gives them the right to stay in the U.S. temporarily due to civil unrest and natural disasters in their home country. His was set to expire this April, but the Biden administration earlier this month extended those protections for another 18 months for people from Ukraine, Sudan, Venezuela and El Salvador.

    Carlos Carpio
    Carlos CarpioCourtesy Carlos Carpio

    The TPS program has been used by administrations going back to George H.W. Bush. People with TPS do not have pathways to legal residency, a precursor of citizenship, without leaving the country.

    In an executive action on Monday, Trump called for a review of TPS and for federal officials to consider if the program is “appropriately limited in scope.” In his first administration, Trump also made ending TPS for some countries a target, arguing that most countries in the program have recovered from the related disasters or conflicts and that the status has been renewed for years beyond its need.

    ‘We are all afraid’

    Venezuelan migrants with TPS told NBC News their lives have become ruled by fear. Others said they want to focus on living one day at a time, but ultimately are still deeply afraid of being ordered back to their home country.

    “I feel like what I’ve accomplished here so far doesn’t mean anything. I’m so sad and frustrated,” Carpio said.

    Trump revoking TPS would face legal challenges. He could also decline to continue those protections beyond the 18-month extension Biden ordered and thus make people like Carpio potentially eligible for deportation. Complicating the matter is that Venezuela does not currently accept deportees from the United States.

    Carpio has withdrawn from his once vibrant life. Now, every day is full of dread and uncertainty. He prays that no strangers come knocking on his door. He used to hang out with his friends after work and enjoyed running errands, but now “we always go directly home” and avoid taking the train or bus, he said. They now bring all of their documents everywhere they go.

    When he needed to go to the bank this week, Carpio said he was counting down the seconds and looking over his shoulder, trying to leave as quickly as possible. He stocked up on groceries before the inauguration, hoping to delay the next time he has to go shopping.

    At the factory where he works, there are constant whispers about what Trump is doing and what he could do next.

    Even church doesn’t feel safe anymore. He and his friends are worried about going to their usual Sunday service after the Trump administration said it was ending a long-standing policy that prevented federal immigration authorities from arresting migrants in churches, schools and hospitals.

    “We are all afraid. We all carry that fear and anxiety,” he said.

    Living in limbo

    Daisy, a 36-year-old Venezuelan migrant who has been in Chicago for about two years, said the city has changed her life for the better and she is grateful she “has met so many people here” from a variety of countries.

    “I feel like this is my home. I love Chicago,” said Daisy, who asked that her full name not be used for fear of immigration reprisal. “This is where I want to be.”

    She also has TPS said she’s felt “anguished” since seeing Trump’s executive orders on immigration. She wishes she could return to the calm and security she felt before this week.

    “I’m so afraid I don’t even want to go out. I was really scared about going to work. I’ve been praying to God to get me through,” she said.

    Daisy said following all of the changes to immigration policy has left her “very confused” and “always doubting” if she will be safe. Her life revolves around going from home to work and back as her co-workers warn other migrants to stay home.

    “We’re not going to go out and do a lot of things of our choosing,” she said. “I don’t know what to do. I don’t even know what to think.”

    Some migrants are taking a different approach, saying they will not let their lives be ruled by fear and will live one day at a time knowing that for the time being they are in the U.S. with legal, albeit temporary, status.

    Jhovanny Jiménez, a Venezuelan migrant with TPS and an open asylum case, said he has spent his time in Chicago helping other migrants by preparing their legal documents such as asylum applications and work permits. He has been in the city for about three years.

    Jhovanny Jiménez.
    Jhovanny Jiménez.Daniella Silva / NBC News

    Jiménez, 43, has turned his apartment into an office for his clients. The door is covered with red wrapping paper with white and green flowers and a red bow. There is an open Bible and cross on a small table near the living room area where Jiménez greets his clients. This week, a Christmas tree still stood nearby.

    He sits across from them at a desk covered in a red and white tablecloth and a poinsettia plant. Behind him are his credentials and diplomas dating back to his time in Venezuela, where he was a professor of biology.

    Jiménez said he knows the administration “has to regulate the channels that are necessary for us to request immigration relief, protection, and asylum” and he hopes that “we are given the opportunity to continue contributing to the community and contributing to the development of this country.”

    Jiménez said he fled Venezuela because of political persecution and threats to his life, “otherwise I wouldn’t exist anymore.”

    For migrants such as him, he said, “we can’t get into a panic. We have to have a firm conviction in what we want to do here in Chicago, and if you are doing things the right way, legally, you shouldn’t have to be so afraid.”

    He said he hopes Trump focuses on deporting criminals and threats to national and public safety.

    “I put it in God’s hands,” he added. “We are here ready to keep doing things legally.”

    What keeps Jiménez awake at night are fears that he may still be ordered to return to Venezuela one day.

    Jiménez said he could not sleep for three days during Venezuela’s presidential election at the end of July. Venezuela’s authoritarian President Nicolás Maduro was declared the winner, but the announcement was condemned globally with allegations of electoral fraud over a lack of transparency and suppression of the opposition.

    “For the future, yes, I am afraid. I can’t step foot on Venezuelan soil,” he said, becoming emotional. He added that he could be arrested, tortured or killed.

    Oscar Peñalver Sanchez, a Venezuelan migrant who has been in Chicago for more than two years, said he agrees with Trump’s plan to deport criminals from this country. He said he does not believe law-abiding, hardworking immigrants with a form of legal status should suffer.

    “I don’t have anything to hide,” said Peñalver Sanchez, 46, who also has TPS. “I want to establish myself as an American.”

    He does not “want to live in fear and be constantly stressed, because stress kills,” he said. “All I can do is work and continue doing the right thing.”



    The Trump administration’s recent threats to end the Temporary Protected Status (TPS) program has left many migrants living in fear and uncertainty about their future in the United States.

    The TPS program allows individuals from countries affected by war, natural disasters, or other extraordinary circumstances to live and work in the U.S. temporarily. However, President Trump has repeatedly expressed his desire to end the program, putting hundreds of thousands of TPS recipients at risk of deportation.

    For many migrants, the TPS program has provided a lifeline, allowing them to build a life in the U.S. and support their families back home. The threat of losing this status has created a sense of panic and anxiety among TPS recipients, who now face the possibility of being forced to return to dangerous or unstable conditions in their home countries.

    As the Trump administration continues to push for stricter immigration policies, migrants are left wondering what their future holds. The fear and uncertainty surrounding the TPS program serve as a stark reminder of the challenges faced by immigrants in America today.

    Tags:

    1. Migrants
    2. Trump
    3. Temporary status program
    4. Immigration
    5. Fear
    6. Political news
    7. US immigration policy
    8. Immigration reform
    9. Migrant rights
    10. Trump administration

    #Migrants #live #fear #Trump #threatens #temporary #status #program

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