Saturday, August 2, 2025

THE CASH STUFF FOR AUGUST 7, 2025

DUKE HEALTH ACCUSED OF 

“VILE RACISM” BY

TRUMP ADMINISTRATION

By Cash Michaels

Contributing writer


An official letter from Trump Administration Cabinet secretaries Linda McMahon of the Education Dept. and Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. of the Dept. of Health and Human Services, accused Duke Health of “vile racism” in “hiring, student admissions, governance, patient care and other operations …[that] endanger human lives.”

The July 28th missive defined “vile racism” as “affirmative action” that “undermines America’s commitment to merit-based justice and violates the nation’s civil rights laws…”, thus, the letter continued, “ [breaking] faith with patients….”

Those allegations “render Duke Health unfit for any further financial relationship with the federal government.” 

The extraordinary letter offered not one concrete example of any of its incendiary charges, but that didn’t stop Kennedy and McMahon with freezing $108 million in federal funding that has been designated for both hospital and the university.

There will also be a federal investigation into “the illegal use of racial preferences” in hiring, promotion, financial aid, admissions, recruitment and mentoring. And Duke Health officials were ordered to establish a “Merit and Civil Rights Committee” to probe allegations of racial bias, and provide documented proof of doing so.

  At press time, neither Duke University nor Duke Health and publicly responded to the Kennedy/McMahon letter.  

News of the letter was first reported by Fox News.

Subsequent published reports suggest there was a federal complaint lodged against Duke in March by the anti-diversity-in-medicine nonprofit group “Do No Harm,” which alleged  Duke Medical’s “…policies and programs …violate the Civil Rights Act.” According to the News and Observer of Raleigh, those “include initiatives that expanded the medical school’s minority enrollment and the school’s “Minority Recruitment and Retention Committee.”

Do No Harm is on record as suing the University of California at Los Angeles Medical School and the society of Military Orthopedic Surgeons for “similar diversity initiatives”, the N&O reports. The anti-DEI group has also sued the governor of  Montana, the University of Washington School of Medicine, and the Pfizer Pharmaceutical Corp, forcing all to either discontinue or make drastic changes to their diversity, equity and inclusion policies and programs.

Meanwhile at press time came word that the U.S. Dept. of Education  has also opened a DEI civil rights probe the Duke Law Journal after, according to the N&O, “…after a conservative news outlet reported the academic publication factored law students’ racial and ethnic identities when selecting editors. ‘In some, if not all, cases, select applicants were afforded the opportunity to be awarded extra points based on their personal statements that referenced their race or ethnicity,’ the Education Department wrote in a July 28 statement.”

Officials with the Duke Law Journal had not addressed the allegations by press time.

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STILL MORE TROUBLE FOR 

ST. AUG, THIS TIME FOR 

UNPAID FEDERAL TAXES

By Cash Michaels

Contributing writer


For St. Augustine’s University (SAU), the financial problems just keep on coming.

According to reporting from WRAL-TV in Raleigh, the small, private Episcopalian HBCU (historically black college/university) in Raleigh, was hit with two new federal tax liens in March and July totaling $10 million.

That’s $10 million in federal taxes owed, on top of millions owed in previous unpaid federal taxes, legal bills, creditors and vendors, and pending lawsuits from former employees.

It’s primarily because SAU was documented to have poor financial management that the SACSCOC (Southern Association of Colleges and School Commission) revoked SAU’s membership as an academically accredited institution last month after the school’s second, and final appeal.

That accreditation is considered vital for schools to be formally recognized by the federal government to receive financial aid for attending students.

SAU leaders said that the private, Episcopalian HBCU in Raleigh will file a lawsuit against SACSCOC, and petition the court for an injunction, in hopes that it can maintain its temporary accreditation status during court proceedings if granted. 

By doing so, SAU says it can hold classes for the fall semester virtually online. The school’s last graduating class was in May, consisting of approximately 25 students. Enrollment for Fall 2024 classes was 200 students, down from a traditional high of 1500 per semester.

Meanwhile SAU leaders are hoping to apply to TRACS (the Transnational Association of Christian Colleges and Schools) if all legal efforts to maintain SACSCOC accreditation fail.

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