Indivisible Philadelphia

Indivisible Philadelphia

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A local group formed to resist Trump's corrupt, authoritarian agenda.

31/05/2026

This Account is falsely reporting another nationwide rally on June 14. REPORT IT immediately

30/05/2026

BREAKING🚨 A high school senior just took $10,000 from CBS on live TV — and then used his acceptance speech to call out the network for whitewashing genocide and selling out real journalism.

At the News & Documentary Emmys in New York, 18-year-old student journalist Santiago Campos walked on stage to accept the Mike Wallace Memorial Scholarship, funded by CBS News and named after the legendary 60 Minutes bulldog.

He thanked the network for the “generous gift” toward his education. Then, with CBS executives in the room, he pivoted: “I want to also acknowledge how the recent direction of the outlet stains the legacy of Mike Wallace, the namesake of this scholarship.” The room erupted in applause.

Campos didn’t stop there. He talked about “corporate elites” seizing control of the “pipes through which our information flows,” making journalism that truly serves people “harder to come by, yet ever more crucial.” And he put a name to what so many viewers have seen from Bari Weiss–era CBS: segments that won’t say “genocide” when talking about Gaza, platforms handed to election deniers and fascists in the name of “balance,” silence in the face of blatant lies.

“If at any time you hesitate to utter the word ‘genocide’ or remain silent in the face of blatant lies,” he said, “remember to ask yourself: Who is this for? I hope you choose us.”

The most stunning part may have been the response in the room. Veteran CBS anchor Scott Pelley, who handed him the award, wrapped him in an embrace and told him, “God, we need young people like you right behind us… I know that Mike Wallace is looking down at you with pride at this very moment.”

It was a tiny crack in the corporate mask: a legend of broadcast news effectively blessing a kid for calling out his own bosses’ capitulation.

Campos isn’t some random hothead. His winning work was a deeply reported story on immigration enforcement and the fear tearing through his own community. He’s already been honored by the National Press Club for coverage of how U.S. policy hits real families. In other words, he did the work, earned the mic, and then used those few seconds not to flatter power, but to confront it.

That’s what real journalism is supposed to look like: tell the truth, especially to the people signing the checks. An 18-year-old just modeled more courage in a two-minute speech than some network executives have shown in an entire career.

The question he asked CBS — Who is this for? — is the question every newsroom in America should have to answer, out loud.

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30/05/2026

This is what Trump's done to the people's house: A third of it is rubble. Another third is a cage match. What a metaphor.

28/05/2026

The Return Board for the 2026 Primary and Special Election will meet on Friday, May 29th at 12:00 P.M. at 11311 Roosevelt Blvd. for a sufficiency review of the remaining provisional ballots.

Affected voters may attend and provide testimony or public comment about their provisional ballot. Testimony or evidence may also be sent by email.

View the affected voter list and hearing details here: bit.ly/26p-pb.

28/05/2026

This is what he dreams up between posting Lies and Slop AI

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https://indivisiblePhiladelphia.com/, https://bsky.app/profile/indivisiblephl.bsky.soc