
Tomboyish Schism
South Central Los Angeles Lifestyle Magazine
July 2025
ISSN: 3065-2642 (ONLINE)
The Great Displacement
The Silent Siege
How America's Workforce Is Being Sacrificed on the Altar of Corporate Greed
In a world where tech giants and billionaire magnates pull the strings of policymakers, the average American worker finds themselves ensnared in a web of betrayal. The latest controversy surrounding the H-1B visa program, championed by none other than Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, is a glaring example of how the livelihoods of millions are being offered up as a sacrificial lamb to the gods of profit and efficiency.
Let’s cut through the sanitized corporate rhetoric: expanding the H-1B visa program is not about "attracting the best talent." It’s about importing a cheaper, more pliable workforce to pad the profit margins of tech empires. For the average American worker, this means increased competition for fewer jobs, stagnant wages, and the looming specter of displacement. How can a domestic worker earning $75,000 annually compete when corporations eagerly hire foreign workers for $50,000 under the guise of "specialized skill sets"?
Drew & Dennis =RHOA
--Oh honey—Drew and Porsha’s tension is thicker than a Southern accent at a Sunday brunch.
​
--While all eyes have been on Brit and Kenya, let’s not forget there’s serious unfinished business simmering between Drew Sidora and the returning peach princess herself, Porsha Williams. Word is, their drama didn’t just start this season—it’s been brewing quietly off-camera for months.
--Insiders say the friction started when Drew allegedly made slick comments about Porsha’s whirlwind marriage to Simon Guobadia, and let’s just say... Porsha didn’t forget.
“Porsha’s Divorce Is Final—But Is Her Peach About to Rot?”
“Porsha’s Back on Bravo—But at What Cost?”
​
Porsha’s peach may be polished, but her return to RHOA is anything but smooth.
Fresh off a finalized divorce from Simon Guobadia, Porsha Williams is twirling back into Bravo with a prenup in hand—but fans are asking: can Simon actually pay what he owes? And if he bounces, will she be the one footing the bill?
​
Then there’s that offhand comment she made about Angela Oakley’s husband—yes, NBA legend Charles Oakley—and baby, it did not go unnoticed. The streets (and Twitter) are wondering if her shady little remark was just a joke… or a not-so-subtle dig wrapped in lip gloss.
Add in Dennis re-entering the chat and some suspicious timeline overlap, and this comeback might be less a glow-up—and more of a Bravo boomerang.

“Market Your Ideas in a Blog and promote.”
BLOGGING LA
Pisces Playbook,
Enjoy life, life after 18 is a miracle, yet changes are necessary some may be painful but chose peace, give a two finger and move forward! Be kind or be quite!

The Corporate Playbook
Eat
Well
Daily
Related Products
Half the Time is Most the Time
Add a general description of the items listed below. You can introduce the list and include any relevant information you want to share. Double click to edit the text.
Jupitor Hammon 1720-1800
Jupitor Hammon was born on Long Island plantation of Henry Lloyd sometime between 1720 and 1730. He remained the property of the Lloyd family, accompanying them to Hartford, Connecticut, during the Revolutionary War. Hammon achieved fame as an opponent of slavery. Though not as forceful a critic as Richard Allen or Prince Hall, Hammon argued for reforms in the chattel system as it stood and for the immediate manumission of younger blacks.
George Moses Horton 1979-1883
George Moses Horton, at his best, was a poet of daring intensity and vast ambition. Born about 1979 in Northampton County, North Carolina, he was a slave for most of his life, until Emancipation in 1865. Horton, who taught himself to read, found his way into the hearts of many unwitting belles of North Carolina through his selling of personalize love lyrics to students at nearby Chapel Hill. He furthered his education by borrowing what books he could from these students.
George Boyer Vashon 1820-1878
George Boyer Vashon was born in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, in 1820 and graduated from Oberlin College in 1844. He received a master's degree in 1849 and became a professor at New York Central College, an abolitionist school. Later he was admitted as a lawyer to the New York City bar.
James Monroe Whitfield 1822-1871
James Monroe Whitfield was born in Exeter, New Hampshire, in 1822 but was to make a mane for himself in Buffalo, New York, where he rose, with the help of Frederick Douglass, from barber to poet and African American spokesperson of national recognition
Frances E. W. Harper 1825-1911
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper was born free in Baltimore in 1825. By the time of her death in 1911, she had become almost an institution in both literary and political circles. Harper used what seems to have been tireless energy to publish countless poems, articles, essays, and novels examining both racial and gender division among Americans.
Joseph Seaman Cotter, SR. 1861-1949
Joseph Seaman Cotter, Sr., was born in Bardstown, Kentucky, in 1861. He did not begin his formal schooling until 1883, in his early twenties, but this late start did not deter him from astonishing accomplishments as a writer, teacher, and activist. Working as a laborer from early childhood, Cotter was educated in night school, becoming a legend as a teacher in the Louisville public school system and African American community.