Sunday, February 15, 2026

THE CASH STUFF FOR FEB. 19, 2026

BISHOP BARBER AND REV. JESSE JACKSON AT DEMONSTRATION

NC TRIBUTES TO REV, 

JESSE JACKSON, WHO 

DIED AT AGE 84

By Cash Michaels

Contributing writer


“…[H]e called forth a rainbow coalition of people to challenge economic and social inequality from the pulpit [for two historic] presidential runs. He dared to keep hope alive whenever the nation struggled with being who she says she is and ought to be,” said Bishop William J. Barber II, president of Repairers of the Breach, in tribute to his mentor, the Rev. Jesse Louis Jackson Sr., who in recent years, marched and was arrested with Bishop Barber.

Rev. Jackson, renowned civil rights leader, disciple of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., founder of the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition and known best for inspiring generations of young, Black and poor people with the phrases “I am somebody” and “Keep hope alive,” passed away Tuesday, Feb. 17th, after a prolonged chronic neurological illness. He was 84.

In a statement from Chicago, Rev. Jackson’s family said, “His unwavering commitment to justice, equity, and human rights helped shape a global movement for freedom and dignity. A tireless change agent, he elevated the voices of the voiceless - from his Presidential campaigns in the 1980s to mobilizing millions to register to vote - leaving an indelible mark on history.”

Bishop Barber’s heartfelt tribute was one of many from North Carolinians who personally knew Rev. Jackson, or worked with him during the course of his civil rights career, or pioneering runs for the White House in both 1984 and 1988 that helped pave the way for the election of Barack Hussein Obama in 2008 as the first Black president of the United States.

In October, 1988, Rev. Jackson’s Rainbow/PUSH Coalition held its first national convention at the Raleigh Civic and Convention Center where Jackson announced his second bid for the presidency. Even though Jackson was a native of Greenville, South Carolina, he had strong ties to North Carolina having graduated from N.C. A&T State University in Greensboro. The co-chairs of Rev. Jackson’s campaign in North Carolina were former Raleigh Mayor Clarence Lightner - to this day the only Black mayor in Raleigh history - and then Rep. Dan Blue, Jr.

Jackson ultimately came in second to Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis in the ’88 Democratic primaries, and should have at least been considered as a vice presidential nominee. He chose party unity instead. Many of North Carolina's black political leadership then felt that Rev. Jackson could have won North Carolina if the moderate wing of the NC Democratic Party, then led by Gov. Jim Hunt, hadn’t gotten behind Sen. Al Gore of Tennessee.

Still, Rev Jackson remained engaged, speaking out on behalf of the poor, and traveling the world as a champion of justice.

“I have spent the last 25 years, not as a perfect servant, but as a public servant,” he once told an audience. “My name has become known because I have served. That’s why I want to be president — to serve the American people.” 

On Tuesday, the NC Democratic Party paid tribute to Rev. Jackson.

"The North Carolina Democratic Party joins the nation in the mourning of Reverend Jesse Jackson,” said NCDP Chair Anderson Clayton in a statement. “Jackson was a tireless advocate for voting rights, a courageous voice who marched alongside Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and a voice who refused to be silent in the face of injustice.”

“We express our deep sadness at his passing and hope to uplift his memory by honoring his legacy.  We honor him by continuing the fight for equal rights, by standing up for dignity and justice for all and by protecting the sacred right to vote for which he so fiercely advocated.”

One of Rev. Jackson’s strongest North Carolina supporters during his 1984 presidential campaign, former Congressman G. K. Butterfield, also paid tribute to his good friend.

“In 1984, Rev. Jesse Jackson energized African American voters in North Carolina that led to a generation of informed voters. I was a Jackson Delegate to the Democratic Convention in San Francisco,” Rep. Butterfield said in a statement.
During Jackson’s presidential campaign, there was a significant increase in voter registration that resulted in African Americans being elected to municipal and county offices across North Carolina.”
History should record that Rev. Jesse Louis Jackson challenged America to be politically inclusive and provide greater protection to the most vulnerable,” Butterfield continued.Rest in peace, my friend. The world is better because you served humanity.”

One of today’s young NC political leaders also took time this week to honor the legacy of Rev. Jackson.

We have lost a champion for equality and justice,” said Rep. Deborah Ross (D-NC-2). “Now is the time to honor his legacy by redoubling our efforts and our energy.”

Rev. Jackson let his mark on the civil rights and social justice movements in a manner that will never be forgotten.

Rev. Jackson was a man of his times as he was personally compelled by his birth and upbringing in “Jim Crow” South Carolina to engage in a life-long struggle to eradicate the presence and vestiges of racial discrimination and undemocratic segregation,” said civil rights attorney and NCCU School of Law Professor Irving Joyner.

  As a teenager, he tackled that “Jim Crow” battle in South Carolina and it propelled him to continue that struggle in Greensboro, throughout the America and around the world. In his teenage and early adult life, he was a leader on the football field where courage, wisdom and inspiration were necessary to his success, skills which provided the leadership that he was able to showcase in later in the many Civil Rights battles that he fought. His success as a leader speak for themselves and can’t be disputed or diminished. “  

  Prof. Jackson concluded, “At this moment, we celebrate and honor his life’s efforts and cherish what he meant to African Americans and to everyone in this nation.”

“Our father was a servant leader - not only to our family, but to the oppressed, the voiceless, and the overlooked around the world’s’ said the Jackson family. “We ask you to honor his memory by continuing the fight for the values he lived by.”

Rev. Jackson is survived by his wife, Jacqueline; their children - sanity, Jesse, Jr., Jonathan. Yusef, Jacqueline; daughter Ashley Jackson, and grandchildren.

Go to www.rainbowpush.org or www.jessejacksonlegacy.com for details of final arrangements for Rev. Jackson.


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 OFFICIALS WARN OF FAKE 

VOTER REGISTRATION

OFFICIALS

By Cash Michaels

Contributing writer


Now that early voting has begun across North Carolina, state election officials warn residents of gimmicks and scams that could compromise the integrity of their vote for the March 3rd primaries or November 3rd general elections. One of the most prominent scams is the fake voter registration official.

According to the NC State Board of Elections (NCSBE), “Investigators…are looking into allegations of misconduct by individuals conducting voter registration drives, including that they are impersonating state or county government election officials.”

So far, those reports have been coming from Brunswick, Buncombe, Chowan, Haywood, Nash, Scotland, and Wake counties.

And there are reports of some of those fake voter registration officials actually going door-to-door supposedly “re-registering” people to vote.

NCSBE officials are very clear that it is not their practice to go door-to-door to re-register voters. It is not a crime for someone to come to your home to talk about voting, but it is a crime for them to portray themselves as a state or county government official if they’re not.

If ever someone comes to your door posing as a voting registration official, always ask to see their proper identification and make note of it so that it can be confirmed.

It is also a crime to falsify a voter registration form.

According to the NCSBE, “[False] voter registration applications turned into county boards of elections are missing required voter information or include inaccurate information, such as a wrong date of birth or a voter identification number different from what’s on file in the state election system. It is a Class I felony to falsify a voter registration form."

The practice has been going on for years, NCSBE officials say, and always picks up around election time.

NCSBE officials say the only time you’ll ever need to update your voter registration is if you move to a new county. Only then are you required to re-register your voter registration.

If you change your name, address within the same county or party affiliation, you “should submit a new voter registration application to update [your] voter record.” All of that can be done by mail or online.

Unless you are already at an officially designated early voting polling place, if you ‘re filling out voter registration forms (like during a voter registration drive), NCSBE officials advise that you keep those forms and deliver them to your county board of elections yourself. If everything is in order, your forms will be certified and you should receive notification in the mail that is addressed specifically to you afterwards that your voter registration is complete.

If there is something wrong with that notification card regarding the information contained about your voter registration information, call the state Board of Elections at (919) 814-0700 and ask for Investigations immediately to report it. 

“The State Board will investigate all credible allegations of voter registration fraud by individuals or organizations,” said State Board Executive Director Sam Hayes. “When workers involved in voter drives falsify or alter information on registration forms, it can cause problems for innocent voters at the polls. This is unacceptable and hurts voter confidence.”

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ST. AUG  STARTS NEW

ERA OF LEADERSHIP,

FRESH BEGINNINGS

By Cash Michaels

Contributing writer


On February 4th, the Board of Trustees of St. Augustines University (SAU) proudly announced “…a renewed standard of leadership, accountability, and stewardship as the University prepares for the 2026–2027 academic year.”

        Under the leadership of new Board Chairwoman Sophie Gibson - the first woman ever to lead the historically black Episcopalian institution - the board “…has taken deliberate actions to strengthen governance, ensure leadership continuity, and establish a clear framework for institutional renewal grounded in responsibility, transparency, and long-term sustainability,” stated a release from the school last week.

This new vision is in stark contrast to the well-publicized chaos SAU has experienced in recent years, with resulted not only in the school not able to pay its bills, but finding itself the target of several lawsuits from both former employees, and high-end vendors (including the federal government) for millions of dollars.

The ability of SAU to be able to manage this mounting adversity was called into question as the school lost its permanent academic accreditation (which SAU  is presently in court fighting to regain) and the loss of a lion’s share of its student enrollment - from a average 1500 per academic year to as few as 200 students (if not less in the past two years, yielding a 2025 graduating class of just 25), and eliminating on-campus teaching to online instruction.

In the midst of all of those problems, were concerns about securing adequate loan funding to address outstanding debts, and how much of SAU’s valuable downtown property would have to be relinquished in order to satisfy the obligations.

And at the root of it all were serious questions about SAU’s Board of Trustees leadership and the direction they were taking the institution.

That has now changed with the election of SAU Chair Sophie Gibson, and her stated commitment to putting SAU’s troubled past behind it, and building fresh and strong toward a brighter future.

“We are building a Board with the experience and discipline required for this moment,” says Chair Gibson. “Our focus is on restoring stability, rebuilding trust, and positioning SAU for sustainable success. We welcome continued engagement from our students, faculty, staff, alumni, donors, faith partners, community leaders, institutional partners, and supporters of all kinds as we work together to secure a strong future for this historic institution.”

In December, the SAU Board appointed Dr. Jennie Ward-Robinson as the interim president not only to “…ensure executive leadership continuity during a period of institutional transition,” but to reestablish SAU “as a model for effective board-president collaboration.”

The SAU Board of trustees stress that the institution “remains operational and accredited,” albeit with remote classes which began on January 14th.

SAU has now secured long-term financial assistance from then non-profit group Self-Help, in addition to other financial partners, representing “…an important turning point for Saint Augustine’s University—one grounded in transparency, responsible stewardship, and a renewed commitment to serving students and preserving and strengthening SAU’s 159-year legacy.

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Monday, February 9, 2026

THE CASH COMMENTARY FOR FEB. 12, 2026


                                                                 CASH MICHAELS

                                         NO CODE OF COMMON DECENCY

               by Cash Michaels 


Do you know how many columns I’ve past up not writing about Donald Trump’s racism? Plenty! Why? Because as a subject, it’s too easy. Shooting crabs in a barrel. The master hatemouther is always saying something or doing something that makes you shake your head wondering when will it all end, and it gets to the point where, if you’re not careful, the ignorant white supremacist moronic musings of a brain half-filled will be all you write about. 

        Life is too short.

And yet, the felonious clown who just can’t get 2020 out of his head is the president of the United States, so it’s really damned hard to ignore him if you’re in the news business.

But it’s because Trump is POTUS, you have to wonder just how much damage has he done and is doing to the office that actually belongs to all of us when he runs his filthy mouth or does his dirty deeds. As American citizens, we’re all supposed to have a common expectation of decency from the office of the president, if not from whoever is occupying it.

That’s really all we ask. If you’re going to lead us, please do so with a code of common decency and respect for the fact that this is a diverse country of human beings who work hard, are law-abiding citizens, and strive to earn the opportunity to enjoy the fruits of liberty and justice.

Common decency - that’s the key. That’s what assures each of us that of all people, our elected leader is the last one who will exploit our physical, cultural and religious differences, and will be the first to protect them if ever they’re ever threatened or called into question.

And one of the reasons we’ve always counted on that common decency is because of the rule of law, that long ago established code of civilized behavior that all of us are supposed to follow, and count on to give our elected leader the authority to protect us, and assure us that our citizenship, and inalienable right to it, will never be threatened without a forceful, civil response.

When you have a leader who upholds these values, you have a leader who, by his (and hopefully one day her) very presence, commands our highest and deepest respect, because that leader adds value to our living, and to the nation we all call home.

The kind of common decency I’m talking about takes real courage and honor, because that leader must insist on putting our constitutional values first, especially those that state that all men (and women) are created equal.

But what happens when your leader has no code of common decency, has no respect or regard for the rule of law or the Constitution?

Then you have Donald Trump. A man whose very existence is transactional. A man who has no higher value beyond himself and his desires, along with what else he can do to uplift himself and his legacy.

When you have a leader like that in the highest, most powerful office in the world, take away his common code of decency, and you have a monster, someone whose very nature is contrary to all that is natural and normal.

All that is decent.

If you've spent the last few days trying to understand what would possess a leader to post a crass, sophomoric video attempt to disgrace a former president and his wife - a former First Lady - as laughing primates in the jungle, and then show no remorse for such a racist, despicable, deplorable act of hatred and mental disorder, I've given you the reason.

No common code of decency.

You see, it’s way too easy for me to call Donald Trump a racist. This is a monster of his own making (with a little help from his Ku Klux Klan daddy, Fred Trump). To just call Trump a racist and leave it at that would wrongly suggest that he knows better.

Hell no, he doesn’t! He’s not capable. He's that blind.

Remember, Trump has told us himself. He only sees the world as winners or losers. And he justifies counting himself among the winners because of the color of his skin, the wealth that he’s amassed and the power that he wields. It’s really as simple, and as dangerous, as that.

Trump sees GOD’s audacity to create a sacred rainbow of humanity as some sort of permission to lord over people who don’t have his power and wealth. In his mind, they were never meant to have it. But he does.

Here’s the kicker, though. The real reason why what Trump says and does seems so absurd and anti-social to the rest of us is because, in reality, he can’t see beyond his own nose. That means he’s never wrong, because everything he does is for the ultimate benefit of self.

That’s why when Trump got royally slammed for that racist, since-deleted video chimpanzee trope of former President Obama and First Lady Michelle, not only did he refuse to apologize, but he lied about how it came about, and then defiantly declared, “I didn’t make a mistake.”

And he defiantly declared that during Black History Month!

Trump was striking back at perceived enemies with that video. In this case, two former occupants of the White House who remain, to this day, trusted and beloved, something he knows he’s not! Thus, all of his silly architectural signature self-memorializing around Washington, D.C.

Trump extraordinarily resents that the Obamas have retained the love and respect of a good portion of the nation and world. So he viciously attacks them, hoping to diminish them, without apology.

As far as Trump is concerned, Pres. Obama is one of the few people on Earth ever to publicly ridicule him and get away with it, and Joe Biden is the only person ever to actually beat him in an election, which is why Biden has also been a target of Trump’s deepest discontent and ire.

What was it that Trump admitted at the National Prayer Breakfast recently?

“They rigged the [2020] election. I had to win it….I needed it for my own ego. I would have a bad ego for the rest of my life. I really have a big ego… Beating these lunatics [in 2024] was incredible. What a great feeling!”

Trump spewed all of that madness at the National Prayer Breakfast just last week!

        Imagine what he’ll say at the next Republican National Convention.

One man, an accomplished Black man, Trump hates because he’s eternally jealous of him; the other he hates because he can never admit to losing to him.

And to make matters worse, Trump has a White House staff and political party (the Republicans) who’re willing to lie for him, cheat for him, defend him, and protect him no matter what because they are so desperate to be on the trigger-finger side of power. They protect his sick lust to hurt and dominate.

The most powerful man in the world can’t see beyond his own nose, his own hatred. That makes Trump truly a monster of his own making, and we have to put up with him because the Americans who elected him in 2024 were suffering from the exact same affliction.

That’s right! MAGA voters - you know, the Bad Bunny haters -  also can't see beyond their own noses. All they care about is giving some old, deranged, rich racist criminal has-been reality TV star a shot at being in-charge only because he's brazenly lied to them about what he would do for them, if elected. 

And now we’re stuck with him, and ALL of us are paying for it! 

I grimly say we’re stuck with Trump because none of us knows what’s really going to happen in 2028. This clown may announce at the end of this term that he got “cheated” in 2020, so the country owes him four more years, and he refuses to leave office standing up.

He may have some crazy plan of succession by executive order.

Trump may literally declare himself king, and do more damage to the country than we ever dreamed.

All of this because he has no common code of decency. No North Star towards honor and  justice. Only an outsized super-narcissistic ego he wants the rest of us to bow down to.

         And the part that really burns my britches is that Trump is able to successfully and fiendishly hide his indecency behind a false mask of patriotism. "Make America Great Again" is nothing more than a false flag distraction from all of the evil and illegal stuff he's getting away with, using the power of the presidency to perpetuate. 

        This is what makes Donald Trump so additionally dangerous!

Tell you what, Mr. President. Since you want to be remembered as the "greatest" ever in history, why not send North Carolina $2 billion in federal funds to fix the eastbound lanes of Interstate 40 on a five-mile stretch of the highway near the Tennessee border, that the Pigeon River washed away during the Hurricane Helene floods.

I’m sure our Republican-led legislature wouldn't mind naming that project after you.

I mean, after all, dear Donald, it would truly be the “decent” thing to do!

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