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Deprogramming From the ‘Woke’ Cult: Former Social Justice Warrior Overcomes Fear to Speak Up – The Epoch Times

For Keri Smith, deprogramming from what she calls the cult of wokism didnt happen overnight.

But the behavior of her former friends within the social-justice world during the 2016 presidential election, with their support of violence, censorship, and gaslighting, certainly sped up the process, setting off a parade of red flags.

Social-justice warriors (SJW) were advocating for acts of aggression against supporters of former President Donald Trump, contradicting what she said she understood the essential nature of liberalism to be.

It was the first indication that I might not really understand what was going on in the world, Smith told The Epoch Times.

Today, Smith fosters conversations with guests on her YouTube channel, Deprogrammed with Keri Smith, to examine and unpack the SJW belief system and its permeation into all spheres of power and influence, including pop culture.

I want to understand the belief system better for myself, to untangle all of it, she said. What did I believe about it that was true? What did I believe about it that was false?

Approaching the topic from all angles, Smith interviews a range of people, including comedians, artists, academic scholars, and authors, as well as others like her who have abandoned their wokeist ideologies.

Smith said she first encountered social-justice theories in the late 90s when she was a biological anthropology and anatomy major, with a minor in womens studies, at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, when most people hadnt heard of critical race theory.

She also worked with Amnesty International, the international nongovernmental human rights organization, which held a seminar on dismantling racism, she said.

These have become very common nowadays, she said. We learn the new concepts they push, like racism and sexism are prejudice plus power. Looking back on it now, I realize what was happening was that this was a belief system that I was getting pulled into.

But at the time, it didnt seem like a belief system; it seemed like progressivism. I thought I was learning how the world works and learning how to end oppression.

But slowly, like a cult, words and definitions are changed, she said.

Because if you want to control people, you have to control the way they think. And to control the way they think, you have to control their language, she said. Its a cult that is very obsessed with language.

New phrases are created, such as white privilege, toxic masculinity, and white fragility, she said.

Like many of her peers, she left college bringing with her the ideology that had framed her worldview.

It gave me a lens through which to see the whole world, she said.

She called it a mutated form of Marxism that took wealth and replaced it with power, and switched out the oppressor and the oppressed with the current identity groups.

Instead of distributing wealth to equalize society, the new, mutated Marxism calls for a redistribution of power among the identity groups, she said.

Then everything will be utopia, she said.

Smith went into the entertainment industry, managing comedians in Los Angeles, and eventually established her own company with a co-manager in music.

Most of the comedians I worked with were woke, she said. They had the same belief system as me, and they talked about social justice in their comedy. I really thought, Were making the world a better place through laughter.

Smith produced a show called Totally Biased with W. Kamau Bell on FX that aired from 2012 to 2013.

I think that was possibly one of the first overtly woke late-night comedy shows, she said. Of course, now almost all of them are overtly woke.

Behind the scenes, the woke often butted heads with people on the traditional left, such as Chris Rock, who was an executive producer on the show.

There was a lot of conflict between the old guard and the new guard, she said. Writers would debate in the writers room whether a joke was punching up or punching down.

Someone had pitched a joke about former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and his weight, she said, but it was ultimately decided that they couldnt use it because it was fat-shaming.

Her career in entertainment managing comedians carried on into the 2016 presidential election, when Smith said she began to see inconsistencies in the narrative.

It wasnt a fast process, she said. It was just as slow as it was getting into a cult. Thats how slow it is getting out of a cult.

She found herself going down a rabbit hole on YouTube watching videos of Trump supporters being attacked by people on the left.

There was one video where this mob surrounded this woman, a Trump supporter, and threw eggs at her, she said. There was another where they were chasing these guys down the street and throwing bricks at them. They bloodied this guys head. This was jarring to me.

It was during this time that Micah Johnson shot and killed five police officers and injured nine others in Dallas, after a protest organized by Next Generation Action Network in response to the killing of two black men in Louisiana and Minnesota.

Media reports were quick to say Johnson was angry about black men getting shot by police.

And people in my social-justice echo chamber were celebrating this, making tongue-in-cheek remarks like, Well, some old white men are going to have to die, she said. That was a shock to my system.

Still, when Trump won, Smith admitted she was one of the people crying that night.

Then I started to try to figure out why I didnt see it coming, she said. What happened? Why did he win?

Her initial investigation began with trying to figure out how to keep him from winning again.

For the first time, she said she started listening to people on the right, interacting with their content, and watching different comedians and political commentators.

In doing that, I started to get pushback from my cult, she said.

This came in the form of being shut down with arguments such as, Trump won because of racism and sexism, period, she said.

When she explored the matter further, she was told her white privilege was coming through, and [she needed] to sit down and shut up, she said.

I started to see all of these think pieces from my social justice echo chamber saying that all Trump supporters are Nazis and that we should not feel empathy toward them, she said. It was all very jarring and it made me start investigating what it was I really believed.

It was at about this time that she said she encountered Jordan Peterson, a clinical psychologist, best-selling author, and public speaker whos known for his lectures on personal responsibility and self-empowerment through self-searching.

There is a lot of gaslighting that happens when you start leaving a cult, in which youre wondering, Am I the only person seeing this? Is something wrong with me? she said. He helped me to understand that I wasnt crazy. He helped me put the pieces together to give words to what it was seeing in my social-justice world.

Smith wrote him a letter, and to her surprise, he read the letter on his show, while not naming Smith as the author, she said.

She was still worried she would be identified, she said, because she was still representing social-justice comedians at the time.

He told me that I needed to get over my fear, and he was right, she said. But getting over your fear takes a long time. It took six months, but I eventually got to the point where I was more afraid of what would happen if I didnt say something about what I was seeing around me than I was afraid of what would happen if I did say something.

She wrote an essay titled On Leaving the SJW Cult and Finding Myself, which she publicly shared, leading to what she called The Great Unfriending.

I was getting attacked online by people I thought were my friends, she said. There was this one feminist critic who did this whole tweet thread about her formerly feminist friend turning into an alt-right, red pill troll.

She said one friend even attempted an ideological intervention, which failed, she said.

From there, she began Deprogrammed with Keri Smith, on which she interviewed her most recent guest, comedian Alex Stein, whos infamous for signing up for public comment in local city council meetings, where he then takes on the character of a concerned citizen who begins by making reasonably normal statements before escalating into awkward personal confessions and belligerent rants to make the politicians nervous.

Its amazing how culturally dominant social-justice ideologies have become in the last few years, she said.

Smith said even those in the knitting world have been affected.

As documented in a series of articles by Kathrine Jebsen Moore, Smith said, the ideology has infiltrated the Instagram knitting community, where a knitter in Seattle named Karen Templer had posted a blog about her excitement about a trip to India.

Templer was attacked by a mob of people who said she was an imperialist and a racist who was using colonialist language, Smith said.

Initially, her followers defended her, Smith said, but after the social-justice knitters (SJK) increased their attacks, everyone turned on her.

She offered the demanded apology, but it wasnt good enough because it never is for social-justice warriors, she said.

It only got worse, Smith said.

Those who took a stand against the SJK got attacked themselves, accused of protecting white fragility and privilege, and banned from knitting festivals.

One gay, HIV-positive knitter, Nathan Taylor, author of Guys Knit, posted a poem asking for kindness, Smith said, which caused the SJK to turn on him.

He was physically confronted at one knitting convention, she said. Like me, he was in the social-justice world, but then he was seen as a heretic. The SJW hate those the most.

This knitting saga made its way to the late-night platform for social-justice battle cries, The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, Smith said.

On his show, Colbert did a segment on the social media site for knitters, Ravelry, which had banned Trump-supporting knitters like Deplorable Knitter, who made MAGA hats, Smith said.

He introduced the segment by saying that Ravelry issued a statement saying it was banning all white supremacy from its platform, meaning it was banning all Trump supporters, she said. The audience cheered for that kind of censorship. They cheered at the characterization of Trump supporters as white supremacists.

Smith began interviewing canceled knitters who survived the woke mob, she said, and garnered a following from the knitting community.

How woke ideologies can infect even the most seemingly harmless hobby community of knitting is a testament to how pervasive the self-righteous trance can be, Smith said.

However, theres a solution, she said.

Its on an individual level, she said. I think whats driving this is individuals who are not living consciously enough to understand what theyre a part of.

The social-justice world operates on resentment and fear, Smith said.

The SJW themselves are fueled by programmed anger, while those in their sphere are afraid to speak out against them, she said.

What they are afraid of is real, she said. They are afraid of losing their friends, their jobs, their good name, their families, and their sense of security. All of these are very real things to be afraid of losing.

But eventually one must realize theres more to be afraid of if one doesnt speak up, she said.

If people dont speak up in the early stages of an authoritarian belief system, an evil belief systemand I do call it eviltheres going to come a time when youre not allowed to speak at all, she said.

Smith gets messages from people who left the social-justice world thanking her for her show because it helped them feel empowered, which she said is what Peterson did for her.

She said Peterson taught her that onthe individual level, one must overcome ones fear and not be afraid to carry that message.

You dont have to have a podcast or shout it from a soapbox, she said. Just dont be afraid in your daily life to say what you really think. Then maybe one day youll get a message from someone saying, Thank you, I feel comfortable saying this now knowing Im not alone.

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Matt McGregor covers news from North and South Carolina for The Epoch Times. Send him your story ideas:matt.mcgregor@epochtimes.us

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Deprogramming From the 'Woke' Cult: Former Social Justice Warrior Overcomes Fear to Speak Up - The Epoch Times

Alliance City Schools honor roll for 4th quarter 2021-22 – The-review

ALLIANCE CITY SCHOOLS

Fourth quarter

Alliance Intermediate School

Honor Roll

Fourth grade Owen Blevins, Levi Braisted, Grace Craven, Ava Doak, Reef Hurford, Katherine Kline, Alexander Krug, David McPherson, Logan Poyser, Katherine Simbro, Vaidren Vogler, Natalie Blount, Damean Bryant, Isabella Conner, Cooper Duchon, Lilyana Elke, Connor Gandee, Briaunna Greiner, Trevor Kelly, Elizabeth Thompson and Autumn Wineman.

Fifth grade Genisa Bennett, Eizec Blackwell, Violet Bryant, Paige Carpenter, Dominic Falconer, Aralynn Grosschmidt, Reese Hays, Vanessa Hinojosa, Charles Jackson, Rhyan Johnson, Aundrea Jones, Julia Leone, ZayMeer Massey, Alexzander Maxon, Evan McMahon, Jaymes Smith, Christopher Soliday, Deandre Spencer, Adalynn Yost and Owen Zupanic.

Merit Roll

Fourth grade James Allmon, Luke Archibald, Madison Beckett, Brooklyn Bodo, Imanni Brown, Jaden Carpenter, Quemelia Carter, Abigail Datz, DArtagnan Drain, Paige Elliot, Elena Faulk, Emilia Fox, Desilu Garcia, Gavyn Gibson, Tanner Hall, Macey Hall, Logan Harton, Kaidyn Huntsman, Leliann Johnson, Natalia Kelly, Jordan Kuntzman, Kendalynn Ludt, Gabriel Lundsford, Ivana Mann, Lorena Melchor-Arroyo, Aylamae Miller, Conner Moore, Christopher Percy, Jaxon Phillips, Charis Poindexter, Rosalie Principe, Chloe Reese, Jocelyn Rich, Paizlee Ritchie, Emalee Rosenberger, Isabella Schrader, Malynna Sibert, Dalilah Stephenson, Daniel Tomasek, Anthony Waguespack, Paul Ward, Jaden West, Avante Wilkes, Ashlyn Wood and Ling Yuan.

Fifth grade Claire Barker, Lucianna Bieber, Orianna Carchide, Isabella Christner, Tristan Clark, Gregory Cunningham, Jayden Curlutu, Eli Cutlip, Gavin Davis, Allison Kline, Kamora Lilly, Erin Alexander, Camryn Catania, Gideon Cox, IvyOnna Edwards, Peyton Graham, Ziggen Grimm, Graham Lohnes, Rebecca Lucas, Brinley Mann, Mason Marshall, Charlee Martin, Ashley McPherson, Remy Moats, Delilah Moff, Alfert Nicholson, Ki-Anne Nordguest, Matthew Owens, Chase Patrick, Kason Perry., Chace Petersberger, Novalea Pisoni-Kennedy, TayLynn Richardson, Eric Riley, Amirah Rios, Brooklyn Schuette, Elisheba Selassie, Yahshua Selassie, Aaliyah Stickler, Brett-Logan Stutchell, Jaelyn Stuller, Chase Taylor, Liam Turner, Promise Turner, Kathleen Underwood, Nevaeh Vanpelt, Kiersten White, Zaylen Williams and Kennedy Wise.

Alliance Middle School

Honor Roll

Sixth grade Addison Brady, Jackson Braisted, Kendyl Brown, Chase Brunoni, Jordan Bugara, Elayna Bugara, Gianna Caserta, Cyrus Craven, Kendell Davis-Clark, Sydney Day, Gracelyn Durenda, Kara Eversdyke, Austin Fernandez, JasAnique Fisher, Cooper Fontaine, Gavin Fontaine, Mayla Garcia, Reagan George, Landon Green, Kruiz Grimes, Paris Harris, Jayla Hatcher, Xavier Hickman, NaJaeha Hill, Karli Holden, Chandler Hollis, Corie Horning, Stella Jackson, Madeline James, Brooklynn Jewell, Jace Jones, Aidan Kern, Izabella Kinney, Piper Kirkpatrick, RiellyAnne Lemmon, Gage Lyons, Casey Minor, Gabriel Minor, Liam Monk, Maddilynn Mozden, Troy Nichols, Audryna Nickson, Andrew Pennington, Elizabeth Poindexter, Kyra Polite, Ariah Ritchie, Dominic Robinson, Brooklyn Rodriguez, Jacob Schuette, Menen Selassie, Marcell Sines, Kayla Smeltzer, Carson Smith, Shaylee Todd, Audrina Wait, Sophia White and Calissa Ziegler.

Seventh grade Garrett Adkins, Natalie Austin, Evan Bell-Vaughn, Connor Bryant, Cameron Cagna, Bianca Carchide, Darrell Carter, Caitlin Cheatham, Grady Duchon, Charles Ekey, Connor Gafford, Messiah Geiselman, Evan Grandy, Rylen Grimm, Samuel Hays, Kevin Holden, Ethan Jackson, Stacia Jones, Jacob Joseph, Zachary Jurina, Sarah Leforte, Melody Lin, Amilyah Lloyd, Grace McGeehen, Jacob Miner, Emma Monday, Taryn Moore, Nevaeh Nuzum, Graham Oyer, Miya Oyster, Gianna Phillips, Alyssa Pierson, Samuel Pinon, Peyton Rodriguez, Gavin Schrader, Zoei Tenney, Silas Tritico, Lilliana White and Jackson Yost.

Eighth grade Kadence Adkins, Cainen Baker, Andalyn Barker, Arabella Barnes, Zellie Barnes, Khyla Blair, RaZariah Brown, Destiny Carchide, Jeffrey Carlile, Madalyn Davis, Bo Davis, Mackenzie Delcol, Carl Dennison, Ava Dickey, Aubrey Doty, Grady Fast, DiAngelo Fisk, Adelheid Fountain, Taylor Franks, Jordi Gonzalez-Summers, Jayden Haidet, Alexander Hartman, Jaszlyn Hawkins, Tasia Hendershot, Gabrielle Heslop, Emily Hightland, Jazmyn Hines, Khloe Holden, Justin Hooper, Audrey Howell, Richard Jackson, Savannah Jewell, Kaycie Jurina, Carter Keenan, Ariel Kelly, Sander Kern, Owen Kisner, Gavin Leone, Avery Lewis, Veda Lyons, Lincoln Masters, Leland Maynard, Michoel McGrath, Alyrik McKenney, Kaelyn Nicholson, Hayden Oyster, Cole Pasco, Ashlynn Pennington, Lincoln Reese, Gabriella Richer, Loric Richmond, Makenna Root, Aylah Salyers, Sophia Schuette, Miriam Selassie, Ally Sherwood, Aaron Syme, Bryce Szekely, Quiana Tucker, John Valencia, David Wang, David Wineman, Emery Worley and Alan Yoho.

Merit Roll

Sixth grade Vincent Bailey, Bailey Brasseur, Lily Bugara, Daniel Burse, Caleb Cardoza, Vito Carter, Mason Casten, Sarah Edwards, Houston Fountain, Aidan Green, Kenyon Guin, Gabriel Hamilton, Bella Harper, Lynnsie Hathaway, Mathias Hill, Joshua Huff, Mason Johnson, Alivia Kelly, Nevaeh Kelly, Victoria Leasure, Caleb Lega, XZavior Lilley, Aubrie Lunsford, Tristan Mayo, Ryan McDonald, Rose McDonald, Jayda McEldowney, Beneditt Melchor Arroyo, Monserratt Meza Magana, Saleena Neira, Christopher Parrish, Kathy Pew, Mariska Reynolds, Sevyn Riley, Hayden Spencer, Romy Spolar, Christopher Stanley, Krissen Swift, Zamiya Thomas, Makenzie Thomas, Aiden Wagner, Shyanne Ward, Marquell Williams and DeElle Williamson.

Seventh grade Adrianna Akerblad, Tera Angel, Ryder Bandy, Audra Bandy, Caden Bartes, Ashlyn Blatt, Serena Brookshire, Amir Burt, Annalee Cowart, Cicero Davis, Cassandra Dickson, Cara Geiselman, ZaiMarri Good, Royhal Hawkins, Kameron Hawkins, Bailey Haynam, Juliya Hill, Ava Huff, Aliya Kelly, Azavion King, Nevaeh Madden, Delaney Mergenthaler, Kendal Mitchell, Zackery Morris, Madison Mugnaini, Madalyn Mutchler, Skylir Percy, Declan Phillips, Rylee Pisino, Keyvaya Porter, Mason Prologo, Angelee Risden, Isabel Robinson, Samiyah Rowe, Danica Shepherd, Aaden Vega and Tere Wilkes.

Eighth grade Mason Alexander, Owen Barrington, Cierra Blake, Brodee Bugara, Zachary Butt, Nancimarie Buzzelli, Elizabeth Buzzelli, Michael Chamberlain, Wesley Csaki, Matthew Earley, Trevhn Fagan, Ian Felmly, Izabel Ford, Hayden Fotheringham, Heaven Fox, Sophia Ganni, Katelyn Garvin Phillips, Jacob Hamilton, Ravhan Hawkins, Madyson Kline, Kenadi Lawson, Kyra Lilly, Natilee Luckner, Collin Mason, Kaiden Nordquest, Alauna Polozzi, Aubrei Robinson, Carter Roller, Laela Roosa, Keion Rose, Olivia Rubin, Tajh Ruckman, Janyia Scott, Hines Shepherd, Mark Sherer, Nathaniel Short, Jaycee Sizemore, NaKarieon Smith, Karmah Snyder, Marissa Spencer, James Stanley, Alexis Sudimak, Stanley Vaughn-Pearson, Chloe Weisenburger, Audriana Yoho and Jessalynn Ziegler.

Alliance High School

Honor Roll

Ninth grade Elizabeth Anderson, Vincent Anderson, Cassidy Bruce, Adam Burse, Kaitlyn Cameron, Kaia Canavan, Jaden Carter, Andrew Chunat, Lydia Clair, Lorah Courtwright, Austin Craig, Benjamin Craig, AngelLynn Cutshall, Brooke Fiegenschuh, Adrian Firestone, Jaleel Hawkins, Cheyanne Hendershot, Jenna Heslop, Avery Horning, Lillian James, Michaela Jenkins, Kamden Jones, Meleah Kerns, Madalyn Lake, Lawrence Lun, Savanna Martin, Kennedi Masters, Eliza McDonald, LaRon Nicholson, Nicholas Otto, Mia Pasco, Royale Person, Emma Pierson, Malaki Pisino, Apollo Prince, Kylee Puckett, Blake Pue, Nathan Stansbury, Devin Stephenson, Xian Tang, Michael Watters, Brady White and Evan Winans.

10th grade Louie Antonosanti, Joslyn Barnes, Olivia Barnes, Kacie Bench, LaKesha Black, Jaylyn Blair, Davin Blake, Jadyn Brooks, Natalicia Brown, Marijaine Broxon, Casey Brunner, Maddux Bryant, Paige Bryant, Elizabeth Burns, Nathan Butt, Jayla Callock, Gabryelle Christner, Jayce Crockett, Lillian Daniels, KVaughn Davis, Seth Dillon, KatieLynn England, Anna Eversdyke, Emmerson Frank, Kevin Frazier, MarZae Gantz, Andrew Gentry, Samuel Gress, Coen Grimm, Kylie Haba, Ramhir Hawkins, Trinity Hickman, Aidan James, Zyler James, Emily Johnson, Sylivia Johnson, Saniya Jones, Maddyson Lineberger, Jillian Lohnes, Aubreeana Lott, Alisa McDermott, Eva Miller, Saniya Mincy, Cayden Monk, Kellynn Paaloalo, Jayda Patrick, Emily Pittman, Luke Poindexter, Diyanara Porter, Elizabeth Recchiuti, Caroline Reich, Lanaya Richer, Domonik Roar, Hunter Robinson, Karma Rowles, Lucius Rowser, Matthew Scott, Alea Simbri, Ella Smith, Julius Smith, Payton Smith, Dariana Thomas, Andrew Tookey, Elijah Truongchu, Bruce Underwood, Lily Walker, Adam Zumbar and Brendan Zurburgg.

11th grade Bailey Adkins, Julia Aldea, Destiny Allen, Mason Armstead, Mariah Babbo, Morgan Bailey, Olivia Bertolini, Rome Biggers, Camden Blake, Kaitlyn Bondoni, Moriah Brokaw, Sierra Brown, Carter Bugara, Lilly Caldwell, Brooklyn Campbell, Kiernan Canavan, Conner Chambers, Kaylee Cherry, Jaylon Craig, Jacob DeLeon, Samantha Dennison, LaKasja Edwards, Haely Ellsworth, Tyler Fincher, Mianna Ford, Isabella Guappone, Destiny Hall, Hailey Hane, Aurora Harper, Xnai Hatcher, Mackenzie Heslop, Gabrielle Hill, Megan Hippely, Riley Horning, Tamra Jackson, Destiny Jancel, Jimothy Jancel, DeOvion Jones, Kylie Kearns-Peterson, Richard Kelly, Sarah Kidd, KeSean Kilgore, Zachary Kinser, AaLiyah Kirby, Samantha Kisner, Nicholas Krahling, Kasey Lam, Elliott Lanzer, Lorelai Lauter, Austin Leech, Jenna Leone, Alexander Lucas, Mavry Maistros-Rutherford, Kayla Marteney, Payten Mathes, Cassidy Mauck, Ava McLaughlin, Tyion Miles, Cameryn Mullaly, Dylan Nastari, Camden Nicholson, Dymond Oesch, Moises Pinon, Tabitha Poindexter, Alexis Pospisil, Akayla Poteet, Jayson Reed, Emma Reese, Ramsey Reith, Kashius Risden, Holden Robinson, Donovan Romeo, Autumn Ronske, Bridgette Runion, Jordan Schwartz, Vincent Sears, Marzjay Sines, Tiara Smith, Allison Stephenson, Chase Strebel, Jolene Stuchell, Abiegail Thoamas, Corzon Thomas, Rylan Thomas, Maddyn Thompson, Joseph Venables, Kylee Waffler, Kelly Wang, Gracie Weaver, Austin Weisenburger, Aiden Yacklin, Brianna Yoder and Elizabeth Ziegler.

12th grade Maria Allenbaugh, MaKayla Beckett, Robert Beckley, Olivia Bell, Kierra Benning, Allenna Bertram, Alatris Billiter, Shannon Bowman, Baila Bugara, Patrick Burse, Thomas Butt, Aidan Cagna, Olivia Chiporo, Mallory Chunat, Trevor Collage, Jaccob Collins, Rayahana Collins, Jane Cook, Carli Cooper, Alexandra Corke, Jackson Cottrill, Dareyell Davis, Valencia Davis, Serenity Dennison, Caroline Denny, Garrett Dickey, CaliAnn England, Kalen Evans, Allen Ferrall, Trinity Ford, Addison Gazdacko, Olivia George, Samantha Gotter, Reese Grisez, Lee Hall, Harlie Harris, Jazzlyn Hatcher, BriOnna Hill, Blake Hood, Taryn Hosick, Emma Huff, Alexis Hunt, Isaiah Jackson, Kayleigh Jenkins, Kelly Johnson, Brock Jordan, Chloe Jordan, Laci Keppel, Olivia Knipp, Jordan Kress, Bryce Lee, Hannah Liebhart, Dominick Longobardi, Wyatt Madison, Samantha Martin, Hanna Mazzei, Brooke McDermitt, Misty McMasters, Brendon Mercer, Brittany Mergenthaler, Nicholas Mikes, Kiera Miles, Jane Miller, Celine Monastra, Ryin Motry, Sonya Murphy, Dyanna Myers, Jenna Natale, Elijah OConnor, Thomas Pasco, Rylin Pauli, Sydney Peterson, Morgan Piotrowski, Micholas Reed, Bergen Rhome, Alyssa Risley, Zachery Roberts, Cole Rowley, Curtis Royster, Brandon Ruckman, Autumn Schillig, Allana Scobee, Jenna Scott, Kierra Scott, Alizaha Seabolt, Keagan Serrano, Ethan Shank, Joseph Shannon, Caden Summer, Madeline Summers, Cade Ulbricht, Rhiannon Underwood, Sydney Vanderkar, Skyler Vaughn, Rhyan Walton, Henry Wang, Ethan Weisent, DAundre Williams, Nathaniel Woerther, Shyanne Yeager and Cecilia Zucchero.

Merit Roll

Ninth grade Clifton Barthol, Kaidence Betz, Alexis Blaire, Cade Blatt, Drake Brown, Tryfena Ditter, Carter Fast, Austyn French, Brooklyn George, Jace Gibbons, Sydney Haynam, Rayven Hickman, Cheyenne Johnson, April Joy, Logan Kager, Caulder Lambdin, Khaleena Mastrodonato, Abigail Mozden, Adilyn Mozden, Auden Palver-Vaughn, Raygan Paxon, Mariah Pearce, Zayne Pearce, Liam Phillips, Jasmine Postiy, Laila Prather, Logan Ramsety, Paige Rhodes, Shaun Richer, Alayjah Smith, Sammy Smith, Jacob Spurlock, Chance Thompson, Kathleen Thompson, Austin Ward, Kevyon Wells, Aliza Williams and Brandon Williamson.

10th grade Landon Blevins, Audrey Blyer, Garrett Brown, Ryan Bruni, Wyatt Brunoni, Deegan Carlile, Rayden Carver, Cayden Daniel, Campbell Dosa, Aaron Farmer, Benjamin Fiegenschuh, Natalie Ganni, Aierona Gross, DaMontrell Gulley, Christopher Hall, Kahviaughn Hawkins, Keagan Hudson, Breanna Hull, Marcella Jackson, Jackson Kirby, Madelyn McNeal, Emilee Reikowsky, Josalyn Root, Morgan Sheen, Nathan Simms, Dirk Solomon, Kaden Strait, Jayden Torrez-Reyes, Destiny Weisenburger and George Wright.

11th grade Ian Arnold, Katrina Asano, Paige Ashworth, Alexis Bailey, Dylan Bell, Eric Bennett, Jailyn Billings, Devon Bing, George Black, Lucien Castaneda, Galvin Cooper, Amileyon Cooper, Shyann Craig, Jainell Denham-Carter, Timothy Dennison, Ciara Diuk, Daniel Downes, Veronic Draper, Chloe Fagan, Brooklyn Fletcher, Levi Fortune, David Hawkins, Olivia Hershberger, Landon Johnson, Alijah Kelly, Katryna Kelly, MacKenzie Kuntzman, Keane Monnett, Jonathon Morrison, Ethan Phillips, Zaynah Pinter, Paxton Reed, Onnez Roseboro, Jacob Schreckengost, Chester Smith, Devonte Sumpter, Caprice Thomas, Rebecca Torrez, Austin Trusty, Neleh Wagner, Trenton Watson, Julia Williams, TraSean Williams, ExZiriaun Williamson and Emylee Yeager.

12th grade Justin Adams, Harry Amick, Kimberly Baumgarten, Brennan Bell, Ryan Bench, Gage Berlin, Hunter Berlin, Haylee Bruce, Amaira Burden, Cade Chance, Jeffery Clay, Natalie Clemens, Cameron Davis, Derrick Davis, Destiny Downes, Giovanni Fisk, Makaela Fotheringham, Stephen Gales, Dylan Galloway, Orah Green, Quentin Griffin, KahJionah Hawkins, Amerikas Howell, Esabella Huffman, Kyle Kidd, Makayla Korosy, Jermaine Lawson, Eric Lemasters, Kadin Maley, Tomas McGrath, Ashley Miletta, Tyeshaun Moore, Aiya Muhammad, Chelsea Mylius, Dakota Peloso, Andrew Poindexter, Latray Porter, Jenna Potwora, Jack Quinn, Allen Roberts, Kaylea Sheen, Jordan Simms, Ty Slaven, Curtis Taylor, JayRon Thomas, Rustina Torrez, Jackson Vaughan, Jackson Wagner, Elijah Welsh, Travel Wilkes, Tyrell Wilkes, Joshua Wise and Elijah Zelenak.

Parkway Learning & Development Center

Honor Roll

Ryland Spaulding

Merit Roll

Timothy Richardson, Alex Messenheimer, Mia Keppel, Faith Palyash, Jahnayi Cameron, Brooklyn Grove, Dominic Marazza and Andrew Sweebe.

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Alliance City Schools honor roll for 4th quarter 2021-22 - The-review

Barack Obama Surprises Danish Girl Choir After Hearing Them From Sidewalk

A Danish girls' choir met a "completely unexpected" VIP audience member on the sidewalkBarack Obamaat their latest rehearsal in Copenhagen on Sunday.

A video of the encounter (which was first posted by the choral group UngKlang as an Instagram story) was shared by Reddit user DingoDamp, and it has since gone viral. It had received 132,000 upvotes on Reddit at the time of writing. See the video originally shared on Instagram here.

The caption of the Reddit post said: "Former U.S. President Barack Obama came across a choir of Danish girls practicing their singing in their apartment with their balcony doors open. He kindly asked them if they would keep singing for him to enjoy."

The choir was rehearsing on a balcony opposite Hotel d'Angleterre, where Obama was staying while in town for the 2022 Copenhagen Democracy Summit and other engagements, when the former president stepped out from the hotel's basement.

In a post on Instagram sharing another view of Obama looking up at the balcony, the choir wrote: "Today our rehearsals started out completely unexpected and amazing! We have just started rehearsing for our upcoming projects, after which we hear a little street noise from the balcony. Suddenly, former President Obama steps out of D'Angleterre's basement and catches sight of us." See the Instagram post shared by UngKlang here.

According to the post, looking up at the group in "amazement," the former president said: "Hello, what are you doing?"

When the choir replied: "We're singing," Obama said: "Oh, let me hear," according to the post, which shows him waving to the group and gesturing with his hand to one of his ears.

The choir sang a portion of Hans Christian Andersen's "In Denmark I Was Born," after which a "very impressed" Obama reportedly said: "Wow, that was fantastic" asking the group about who they are and what they do, as per the Instagram post.

Obama wished them a good day before being driven away, according to the choir, who said it took an hour "before we had fallen to the ground again" following the encounter.

On Friday, Obama delivered remarks at the Copenhagen Democracy Summit during a session titled "Democratic Organizing in the Digital Age," discussing the "challenges to democracy around the globe" and "the importance of a positive vision for democracy" as well as how the next generation of leaders can "chart a better course," the Obama Foundation said.

He told attendees at the event, which was dominated by discussions on Russia's invasion of Ukraine and China's future global role, they will "have to fight" for democracy in an age of political upheaval and looming global crises.

"We will have to nurture it, we will have to demonstrate its value again and again in improving the lives of ordinary people," the former president said.

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Barack Obama Surprises Danish Girl Choir After Hearing Them From Sidewalk

Obama on DACA anniversary: Lets treat Dreamers like the Americans they are – The Hill

Former President Obama said that the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program was still vulnerable to politicians who choose to ignore its remarkable benefits to the U.S.

In an emailed statement on the programs 10th anniversary, Obama said that while the program was always meant to be temporary, Dreamers had to live through the cruelty of the previous administrations attacks and legal challenges to the program, their families and their communities.

The former president added that he is renewing his call for Congress to offer Dreamers a path to citizenship.

Lets honor these Dreamers and everything theyve done to strengthen our country. Lets treat them like the Americans that they are. And lets do everything we can to help build a common sense immigration system that honors our heritage as a nation of laws and a nation of immigrants, he said.

DACA was implemented during the Obama administration in an effort to protect undocumented immigrants who arrived in the United States as minors after the then-presidentslegislative attempts to modernize the immigration system failed.

Since then, DACA has seen several challenges. The Supreme Court ruled against the Trump administrations efforts to end the program on procedural grounds in 2020. Next month, a case over DACA will head to court in Texas, where the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals will hear arguments against the program.

According to Obama, many of the undocumented immigrants who came to the U.S. when they were very young did not know they were undocumented until they applied to college or tried to enlist in the military.

And not only did a piece of paper suddenly stand in the way of their aspirations, it added a threat of deportation to a country they might not know, with a language they might not speak, he said.

He added that the Obama administration made it possible for them to apply for work authorization and protection from deportation through DACA.

Obama said that the program recipients were able to stop living in fear and instead live freely in the only country they know.

It lifted the shadow of deportation from people of extraordinary promise. And the resultsfor them and for us allcannot be denied, he added.

He added that these Dreamers now face increasing challenges and that only a quarter of the undocumented students graduating high school this year are eligible for DACA under existing rules.

More than 800,000 people have received DACA since the programs inception, including 200,000 people who served as front-line workers during the COVID-19 pandemic, Obama said.

A White House officialtold The Hill that it will host more than 20Dreamers on Wednesday for discussions on preserving DACA protections.

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Obama on DACA anniversary: Lets treat Dreamers like the Americans they are - The Hill

Sasha Obama Shows Off Silver Belly Button Piercing in Cropped Sweatshirt While Getting Gas in L.A. – Life&Style Weekly

Sasha Obama keeps proving shes got such a stunning and unique style sense. The former first daughter rocked a colorful mismatched outfit while filling her car up with gas in Los Angeles, and managed to show off her silver belly button piercing in the process.

The 21-year-old wore a cropped, tie-dyed sweatshirt along with a low-slung skirt with a black waistband and green, blue, orange and purple pattern blocks along with a knee-high slit. Sasha opted for comfy footwear, donning a pair of blue and pink Nike trainers while adding several beaded necklaces.

While she looked fantastic, the college coed never cracked a smile. Thats probably because all grades of gas were more than $7 per gallon at the location she stopped at, and it likely cost a pretty penny to fill up her black SUV.

The youngest Obama daughter has been getting praise for her fashion sense as she grew into a stylish teen while her father Barack Obama, was president from 2008 through 2016. The year after her dad left office, music superstar Drake posted a snapshot of Sasha to his Instagram page calling her a style popper.

It helped that she was wearing a baseball cap featuring the logo from his OvO brand along with her sunglasses and blue shirt. But getting a fashion compliment from Drake in such a public manner earned Sasha major style points!

Just like her older sister, Malia Obama, 23, Sasha is now living in the City of Angels, after transferring to the University of Southern California in 2021 despite starting her college career at the University of Michigan. Also like her sibling, Sasha has a handsome boyfriend.

Shes been spotted out with commercial directorClifton Cliff Powell Jr., whose father is a veteran Hollywood actor. Her mom, former First Lady Michelle Obama, gushed to Ellen DeGeneres during an April stop by her daytime talk show that both of her daughters are doing well as grown, independent adults and are just amazing young women. The world first got to known Malia and Sasha as young 10- and 8-year-old girls when their dad won his bid for the White House in 2008.

They loved the Jonas Brothers. Now they are bringing grown men home, Michelle jokingly noted, adding, Before it was just, like, pop bands. Now they have boyfriends and real lives. While Sasha has Cliff, Malia has been dating her British boyfriend, Rory Farquharson, since they met at Harvard in 2017.

Scroll down to see more photos of Sasha during her fashionable gas station run.

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Sasha Obama Shows Off Silver Belly Button Piercing in Cropped Sweatshirt While Getting Gas in L.A. - Life&Style Weekly