Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

A Native American Tribe Is Stepping Up In A Big Way To Support The Alabama Tornado Victims

A Native American Tribe Is Stepping Up In A Big Way To Support The Alabama Tornado Victims
TAMI CHAPPELL/AFP/Getty Images

A tornado ripped through southeastern Alabama this week and killed 23 people. Natural disasters often bring out the best in people. People band together in wonderful ways. Chief among them in Alabama is the Poarch Band of Creek Indians tribe. They are making a $184,000 donation to cover funeral costs for those who died. The tribe doubled its donation after another group who had committed to donating money to victims families pulled out.

They posted this statement on Facebook.


The statement reads...

"The Tribe is making a $184,000 donation to the East Alabama Medical Center Foundation to assist in the burial of the victims from last Sunday's devastating tornado in Lee County, AL. It is at times of greatest need that we often see our communities coming together to help one another, this is one of those times. Our thoughts and prayers are with all of those affected."

According to CNN...

"The money will be donated to the East Alabama Medical Center Foundation so that none of the money is spent on administration costs."

And the Lee County coroner Bill Harris stated...

"My goal was to be able to provide what the families wanted" for "this casket or this service without having to scrimp because they didn't have the money. These folks have stepped up for a community need, and I appreciate that."

The destruction from the tornado was devastating.

People thanked the Poarch Band of Creek Indians for their donation.




Many people's hearts were warmed.



In times of crisis it's important to band together to help. The Poarch Band of Creek Indians is doing just that.

More from

Zelda Williams, the daughter of late actor Robin Williams, implored fans to stop sending her AI videos of her dad.
Kevin Winter/Getty Images

Zelda Williams pleads: Stop AI videos!

In 1993, Robin Williams sat down with The Today Show and vented his frustration at Disney for breaking what he thought was a simple promise.

Williams said on the NBC show:

Keep ReadingShow less
Taylor Swift
BBC Radio 2

Taylor Swift Shuts Down 'Offensive' Speculation That She'll Stop Creating New Music Now That She's Getting Married

The response to her new album may not be exactly what she expected, but Taylor Swift says she has no plans of slowing down.

In fact, she says the mere suggestion is "shockingly offensive."

Keep ReadingShow less
screenshot of 8 News Now report of police traffic stop
8 News Now — Las Vegas/YouTube

Nevada Police Official Who Taught Policing Classes Fired After He's Caught On Video Calling Cop Gay Slur During Traffic Stop

One of Nevada's top cops—who provided training for law enforcement across the state—gave a master class in how not to act during a traffic stop when he was pulled over for distracted driving in a state vehicle on August 18.

Chief investigator for the office of Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford, William Scott Jr.—a retired Las Vegas Metro Police Department (LVMPD) captain—did almost everything a person shouldn't do: arguing, name dropping, threatening retaliation, getting out of his vehicle to confront the traffic officer, and verbally berating and mocking the officer while using a homophobic slur.

Keep ReadingShow less
Stephen Miller
Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

Stephen Miller's Cousin Reveals Family Disowned Him After He Became The 'Face Of Evil' In Resurfaced Viral Post

White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller's cousin, Alisa Kasmer, publicly disowned him in a post she shared over the summer that has resurfaced as President Donald Trump's immigration crackdown—which Miller orchestrated—accelerates.

Kasmer, Miller’s cousin on his father’s side, reminisced about their childhood, describing him as an “awkward, funny, needy middle child who loved to chase attention” but was “always the sweetest with the littlest family members.” She once regarded him as “young, conservative, maybe misguided, but lovable and harmless.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Stephen Miller
@aoc/Instagram; Fox News

AOC Hilariously Reacts After Fox News Makes Stephen Miller Watch Her Brutal Takedown Of Him

After New York Democratic Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez criticized White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller during an Instagram livesteam, Fox News played the video for Miller, only for Ocasio-Cortez to laugh at the awkwardness of it all in her follow-up response.

During her livestream, Ocasio-Cortez said “one of the best ways that you can dismantle a movement of insecure men is by making fun of them," urging her followers to mock MAGA men. She then called Miller "a clown" and suggested he—the architect of President Donald Trump's immigration policies—takes out his anger on others because he's "like, 4 feet 10 inches."

Keep ReadingShow less