'TELL IT LIKE IT IS' Talk Show Video

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Nursing Loan Cap Overhaul Sparks Alarm Across Healthcare Sector Ahead of July Federal Rule Change

Advanced Nursing Programs Face New Federal Borrowing Limits as Educators Warn of Workforce Strain, Rural Care Gaps, and Reduced Access to Graduate Training

A sweeping federal student loan policy change set to take effect July 1 is triggering growing concern across the healthcare and higher education sectors, as nursing organizations, educators, and state officials warn the move could deepen America’s already severe nursing shortage and disrupt access to care in underserved communities.

Under the new U.S. Department of Education rule, most graduate nursing programs—including Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) and Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) degrees—will no longer qualify as “professional degree” programs for federal loan purposes. The reclassification sharply lowers the amount graduate nursing students can borrow through federal loan programs, placing nursing alongside standard graduate degrees rather than medicine, law, or dentistry.

The change is poised to reshape the economics of advanced nursing education at a moment when hospitals, clinics, and rural healthcare systems are already struggling to recruit and retain qualified providers.

Healthcare advocates say the policy could disproportionately affect nurse practitioners, certified registered nurse anesthetists, clinical nurse educators, and other advanced-practice professionals who increasingly serve as frontline providers in communities facing physician shortages.

“This is not just a higher education issue—it’s a healthcare access issue,” nursing advocates argue, warning the new borrowing caps could discourage enrollment in graduate nursing programs and constrict the future healthcare workforce pipeline.

Wallace Community College Selma Marks 60 Years of Impact With Naming of James M. Mitchell Student Center

Historic anniversary celebration highlights Wallace Community College Selma’s six decades of educational leadership, workforce development, and economic influence across Alabama’s Black Belt region.


Wallace Community College Selma is preparing to celebrate a major milestone in Alabama higher education history as the institution commemorates 60 years of service, workforce development, and community leadership with a special anniversary event and dedication ceremony honoring the legacy of James M. Mitchell.

The celebration, officially titled “A Legacy Continues: Naming the James M. Mitchell Student Center & College 60th Anniversary,” will take place on the campus of Wallace Community College Selma at 3000 Earl Goodwin Parkway in Selma, Alabama, on May 28, 2026.

The historic event will formally dedicate the James M. Mitchell Student Center and recognize the College’s decades-long role in advancing educational access, workforce readiness, economic opportunity, and regional development throughout Alabama’s Black Belt.

Founded in 1966, Wallace Community College Selma has become one of the region’s most influential educational institutions, serving generations of students through academic transfer programs, career technical education, adult education initiatives, workforce certification training, and dual enrollment opportunities.

College officials say the anniversary celebration is intended not only to honor the institution’s past, but also to reinforce its long-term vision for the future.

Federal Court Blocks Alabama GOP Redistricting Push Ahead of 2026 Midterms, Reshaping House Battlefield

Three-Judge Panel Says State’s Proposed Congressional Map Was “Tainted by Intentional Race-Based Discrimination” as Republicans Prepare Supreme Court Appeal


A federal court ruling Tuesday delivered a major setback to Alabama Republicans and intensified the national battle over congressional redistricting ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, potentially affecting control of the U.S. House of Representatives.

In a sharply worded decision, a three-judge federal panel blocked Alabama from implementing a Republican-backed congressional map that would likely have restored the GOP’s advantage in the state’s delegation. The court instead ordered Alabama to continue using a map featuring two majority-Black, Democratic-leaning districts — a configuration viewed as more compliant with the Voting Rights Act.

The ruling marks the latest chapter in one of the nation’s most closely watched voting-rights disputes, as courts, lawmakers, and advocacy groups continue grappling with how race and political power intersect in congressional redistricting.

“Ultimately, we cannot see our way clear to requiring Alabamians to cast their votes in the 2026 elections under a districting plan tainted by intentional race-based discrimination,” the panel wrote in its opinion.

The decision represents a potentially significant political blow for Republicans, who had hoped the revised map could help secure an additional GOP-friendly congressional seat in Alabama during an election cycle expected to determine control of Congress.

The case stems from Alabama’s effort to revive a 2023 congressional map containing only one Democratic-leaning district after recent Supreme Court action reopened portions of the state’s redistricting fight. Republicans argued the revised political and legal landscape justified returning to the earlier configuration.

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Congressional Pay Freeze Faces Constitutional Reckoning as Federal Judge Questions Decades of Blocked Raises

A federal court ruling challenging Congress’ repeated rejection of automatic cost-of-living increases could reopen the politically explosive debate over lawmaker salaries, inflation, and public trust in Washington.

A federal court ruling has reignited one of Washington’s most politically toxic financial debates: whether members of Congress deserve higher pay after nearly two decades without a salary increase.

In a preliminary opinion that could reshape congressional compensation policy, U.S. Court of Federal Claims Judge Eric Bruggink ruled that lawmakers may have violated the Constitution by repeatedly blocking automatic cost-of-living adjustments (COLAs) tied to congressional salaries.

The case centers on a 1989 federal law designed to allow congressional pay to rise gradually with inflation unless lawmakers explicitly voted otherwise. Since 2009, however, Congress has repeatedly blocked those increases amid fears of political backlash from voters frustrated with Washington dysfunction and economic inequality.

The current base salary for rank-and-file members of Congress remains fixed at $174,000 annually — a figure that has not changed in over 15 years despite cumulative inflation significantly eroding its real purchasing power.

Judge Bruggink’s ruling argues that Congress’ repeated votes to stop the automatic raises may conflict with the Twenty-seventh Amendment to the United States Constitution, which prohibits changes to congressional compensation from taking effect until after an intervening election.

The opinion marks a major legal victory for a bipartisan coalition of current and former lawmakers seeking compensation for missed salary increases dating back years.

Among the plaintiffs is Steny Hoyer, who argued the ruling confirms that Congress’ long-running practice was unconstitutional.

Legal analysts say the decision could eventually expose the federal government to substantial retroactive compensation claims from lawmakers who served during the frozen-pay period. Some estimates suggest longtime members could potentially be owed hundreds of thousands of dollars in delayed compensation.

South Carolina Republicans Defy Trump, Preserve Clyburn Seat in Major Redistricting Setback for GOP

A dramatic Senate revolt in Columbia halted an effort backed by President Donald Trump to redraw congressional lines and weaken Democratic Rep. Jim Clyburn’s district before the 2026 midterms.

A coalition of South Carolina Republicans broke with Donald Trump and effectively blocked a controversial congressional redistricting push that could have dismantled Democratic Rep. Jim Clyburn’s district ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.

The procedural defeat in the South Carolina Senate represents a rare and highly public rebuke of Trump-backed political pressure inside a Republican-controlled state legislature, underscoring growing tensions within the GOP between establishment lawmakers and MAGA-aligned political forces.

The proposed redistricting effort aimed to redraw South Carolina’s congressional map in a way that would likely eliminate or significantly weaken Clyburn’s district — currently the only Democratic-held congressional seat in the state.

A motion to end debate and fast-track the proposal failed Tuesday in a 24-20 vote after 12 Republican senators joined Democrats in opposition. Shortly afterward, the Senate voted to adjourn until June 10, effectively ending any realistic chance of approving new district maps before the 2026 election cycle.

The outcome marks a major setback for Trump allies who had intensified pressure on South Carolina Republicans in recent weeks to accelerate the redraw effort before early voting timelines complicated the process.

Just weeks earlier, Henry McMaster had called a special legislative session amid growing demands from the White House and Republican operatives seeking to capitalize on recent court rulings and favorable political conditions for GOP-led redistricting efforts nationwide.

However, divisions inside the state Senate ultimately derailed the plan.

Trump Administration Pushes Sweeping Federal NDA Policy in Escalating Crackdown on Government Leaks

Draft proposal from the Office of Personnel Management would require federal workers to sign broad non-disclosure agreements as the White House intensifies efforts to control internal disclosures and media access.

The Office of Personnel Management has circulated a draft proposal that could require federal employees across multiple agencies to sign sweeping non-disclosure agreements (NDAs), marking the latest escalation in the Donald Trump administration’s aggressive campaign against government leaks and unauthorized disclosures to the media.

According to the draft agreement, federal employees would be prohibited from disclosing what the administration defines as “Confidential Government Information,” with the restrictions potentially extending even after employees leave public service.

The proposal states that unauthorized disclosures disrupt agency operations, damage national interests, and “erode public trust” in government institutions. Under the draft framework, former federal employees who signed the agreements could be required to obtain written authorization before discussing information later designated as confidential by the government.

The proposed policy would apply broadly across federal agencies that choose to adopt the agreement, potentially impacting thousands of civilian employees, contractors, and administrative personnel throughout the federal workforce.

The draft language also outlines potential legal and financial consequences for violations, including possible restitution tied to profits, royalties, or compensation received through disclosures, interviews, books, or media appearances involving restricted information.

The proposal represents one of the most expansive attempts in recent history to formalize internal leak prevention measures across the federal government.

From Reagan to Trump: How the GOP’s Conservative Revolution Transformed Into a Populist Political Movement

What began as Ronald Reagan’s vision of limited government, nationalism, and cultural conservatism ultimately reshaped the Republican Party into the populist, anti-establishment force that propelled Donald Trump to power.


The transformation of the Republican Party from the optimistic conservatism of Ronald Reagan to the populist nationalism of Donald Trump represents one of the most significant political evolutions in modern American history.

For decades, Reagan was viewed as the defining architect of modern conservatism — championing free markets, strong national defense, tax cuts, anti-communism, and traditional American values. Yet political historians increasingly argue that many of the structural and cultural forces unleashed during the Reagan era inadvertently laid the groundwork for Trump’s rise more than three decades later.

While Reagan and Trump differed sharply in tone, temperament, and governing style, both leaders tapped into a similar emotional current inside the American electorate: frustration with elites, distrust of Washington institutions, and fears surrounding national decline.

Reagan’s presidency in the 1980s fundamentally reshaped the Republican coalition. His message appealed not only to traditional conservatives but also to blue-collar Democrats, suburban voters, evangelical Christians, and Americans who believed the country had grown weak economically and geopolitically following the turbulence of the 1970s.

The Reagan era also accelerated the rise of conservative media ecosystems, talk radio influence, and personality-driven politics — trends that would later become central pillars of Trump’s political ascent.

Voter Frustration Reaches Boiling Point as Americans Demand Accountability Ahead of Critical Election

Growing concerns over congressional dysfunction, constitutional accountability, judicial reform, and political division are fueling calls for higher voter turnout and renewed civic engagement across the United States.


As the United States moves closer to another consequential election cycle, frustration with Washington appears to be reaching a historic inflection point. Across political lines, many Americans say their anger is no longer centered solely on partisan politics, but rather on what they view as a systemic failure of elected officials to fulfill their constitutional responsibilities.

From stalled legislation and budget battles to intensifying concerns over executive authority and judicial power, voters increasingly describe the current political climate as one marked by dysfunction, division, and declining public trust in federal institutions.

Political analysts note that voter turnout could become one of the defining forces shaping the nation’s future, particularly as public confidence in Congress remains near historic lows. Many voters argue the upcoming election is not simply about Republicans versus Democrats, but about whether constitutional checks and balances are still functioning as intended.


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James Thomas, Owner JWT Communications

James Thomas, Owner JWT Communications
James W. Thomas Radio Broadcaster | Media Executive | Creator & Host of “TELL IT LIKE IT IS” James W. Thomas is a seasoned radio executive, broadcaster, and media strategist with more than 25 years of experience in broadcasting, media sales, and multi-platform programming. He is the creator and host of the talk program “TELL IT LIKE IT IS,” a news-sports-talk platform built on the philosophy: “Be Informed. Not Influenced.” Thomas began his radio career in Detroit, where the foundation for TELL IT LIKE IT IS was developed at WWJ Newsradio 950 (CBS Radio) in 2000. At WWJ and later with Radio One Detroit, he earned a reputation as both a dynamic on-air personality and a high-performing Senior Account Executive, delivering strategic media solutions across radio, television, and digital platforms. His work combined consultative advertising strategy, strong community relationships, and a deep understanding of broadcast marketing. In 2008, Thomas expanded his leadership role at Clear Channel Radio (now iHeartMedia) in Beaumont, Texas, where he continued to drive revenue growth, client acquisition, and team mentorship while strengthening his broadcast presence. Since 2009, Thomas has served as General Manager and On-Air Host at WTLS Radio in Alabama, where he oversees all station operations including programming, sales, marketing, budgeting, regulatory compliance, and long-term strategic development. Under his leadership, WTLS has strengthened its multi-platform media presence and community engagement. As host of “TELL IT LIKE IT IS,” Thomas delivers compelling News-Sports-Talk programming built on research, preparation, and meaningful conversation. His show features interviews with political leaders, policy experts, athletes, and community voices while providing analysis of national and regional issues affecting listeners. In addition to his broadcasting leadership, Thomas maintains active professional involvement within the media and entertainment industry. He is a: Member – SAG-AFTRA (Screen Actors Guild – American Federation of Television and Radio Artists) Regional EMMY® Awards Judge – National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences (NATAS) Certified Radio Marketing Consultant (CRMC) – Radio Advertising Bureau Certified Digital Marketing Consultant (CDMC) – Radio Advertising Bureau Content Creators Certified Radio Marketing Consultant (CRMCCC) – Radio Advertising Bureau These certifications recognize advanced expertise in broadcast marketing strategy, audience development, digital media integration, and revenue growth for media organizations. From Detroit to Texas to Alabama, James W. Thomas has built a respected career defined by leadership, credibility, and a commitment to informative, engaging media. TELL IT LIKE IT IS BE INFORMED. NOT INFLUENCED.

The Marine Corps Scholarship Foundation

The Marine Corps Scholarship Foundation
Founded in 1962, The Marine Corps Scholarship Foundation is the nation’s oldest and largest provider of need-based scholarships to military children. For 54 years, we’ve been providing access to affordable education for the children of Marine and Navy Corpsman attending post-high school, under-graduate and career technical education programs. In that time, we have provided more than 37,000 scholarships worth nearly $110 million.

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