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Trump's disastrous Big Ugly Bill is an assault on the working poor
Scoop USA Newspaper
|ScoopUSA Media, Volume 65 - Number 29
I invite you to take a moment and reflect on the last time you received a medical bill in the mail. Think about the times an invoice from routine bloodwork from an annual physical or charges from a past hospital visit that wasn't fully covered by your insurance found its way into your monthly budget and disrupted your latest travel plans or opportunities to save for your future.
If that resonates with you in 2025, consider yourself fortunate. For 1 in 5 Americans and almost half of the children in this country, healthcare costs are more than a minor interruption in summer plans; they are the difference between eating and going hungry and in, some cases, life or death.
When Senator Joni Ernst told her constituents that “we are all going to die” in a heated town hall about the millions of Americans who would lose health care coverage under the budget she supported, she wasn't lying. Health economists from the University of Pennsylvania estimate that the original House bill's health provisions would lead to 51,000 preventable deaths per year. The current Senate bill before the House increases the Medicaid cuts to over $1 trillion.
In the bill that passed in the Senate this week, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office found that nearly 12 million more Americans could become uninsured by 2034.
To put this into context, let’s break it down by the numbers.
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MÁS HISTORIAS DE Scoop USA Newspaper
Scoop USA Newspaper
White Fragility: Why it's so hard for white people to talk about racism
I recall having a conversation with my Irish bonus parent—my stepmother, though she was more like a mother.
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ScoopUSA Media, Volume 66 - Number 24
Scoop USA Newspaper
The Worst of-Best of Times
Lord, Help Us To Give Thanks, Be Grateful To You At All Times, And Give You Praise For All Things. Amen.
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ScoopUSA Media, Volume 66 - Number 24
Scoop USA Newspaper
PA Youth Wave
The GCEA program continues to grow. This year, more schools across more counties participated, and 165 more student poll workers were honored than last year.
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ScoopUSA Media, Volume 66 - Number 24
Scoop USA Newspaper
Civics
43rd Ward, Mayor Cherelle L. Parker who leads the 50th Ward, PA State Rep. Amen Brown, who leads the 60th Ward, PA State Senator Tina Tartaglione, who leads the 62nd Ward, City Councilman Michael Driscoll, who leads the 65th Ward, and Register of Wills for Philadelphia John Sabatina, Sr., who leads the 56th Ward.
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ScoopUSA Media, Volume 66 - Number 26
Scoop USA Newspaper
City Council Report
Philadelphia City Council May 28, 2026
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ScoopUSA Media, Volume 66 - Number 24
Scoop USA Newspaper
YouthBuild Philadelphia Charter School launches new evening program
YouthBuild Philadelphia Charter School (“YouthBuild Philly”) announced “YB Flex,” a new evening program launching in Fall 2026.
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ScoopDigital, Vol. 7, No. 18
Scoop USA Newspaper
Transforming storytelling in education: Colin Kaepernick and Lumi AI visit Philly students
CEO of Lumi and former NFL player Colin Kaepernick met with Philadelphia student creatives and congratulated them for using his AI platform to convey complex stories at the Philadelphia School District.
1 min
ScoopUSA Media, Volume 66 - Number 25
Scoop USA Newspaper
Praise and Worship Why I Belong
Lord, We Give You Thanks And Praise For Our Membership In The Body Of Christ. Amen.
1 mins
ScoopDigital, Vol. 7, No. 18
Scoop USA Newspaper
Medgar Wiley Evers
Medgar Wiley Evers was born in 1925 in Decatur, Mississippi, to parents James and Jessie Evers.
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ScoopDigital, Vol. 7, No. 18
Scoop USA Newspaper
Don't look back: Your future is waiting for you
There comes a moment in life when we all have to make a decision: either continue looking behind us at what hurt us, broke us, disappointed us, and nearly destroyed us—or gather the courage to move forward toward healing, growth, purpose, and peace.
3 mins
ScoopUSA Media, Volume 66 - Number 24
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