Month: January 2026

  • White House Presidential Message Honoring Benjamin Franklin’s 320th Birthday

    White House Presidential Message Honoring Benjamin Franklin’s 320th Birthday

    In an “America 250” message dated January 17, 2026, the White House commemorates Benjamin Franklin on what would have been his 320th birthday, praising him as a printer, inventor, diplomat, public servant, and patriot whose life helped define the American character. The statement highlights Franklin’s self-education and rise as a leading colonial publisher, along with practical innovations and civic contributions such as the lightning rod, bifocals, experiments with electricity, and the creation of public-serving institutions like a library and volunteer fire department, as well as his role as the first Postmaster General. It also emphasizes his central role in the founding era: service in the Second Continental Congress, involvement in drafting the Declaration of Independence, securing French support, helping negotiate the 1783 Treaty of Paris, and advocating for Constitution ratification. The message closes by framing Franklin’s legacy as enduring through American institutions and the nation’s civic ideals, calling him the “First American” and linking his impact to 250 years of national history.

    America 250: Presidential Message on the Birthday of Benjamin Franklin

    Today, we celebrate the towering life and legacy of Benjamin Franklin—printer and philosopher, inventor and diplomat, public servant and patriot, and one of the most consequential Americans to ever live.  On what would have been his 320th birthday, we honor his restless genius, his steadfast devotion to liberty, and his legendary contributions to our national story.

    Born on January 17, 1706, in Boston, Massachusetts, Franklin grew up the 15th of 17 children.  Raised with little formal education, he taught himself how to read and write, emerging at age 23 as one of the most successful and influential publishers in the Colonies.  He was also a passionate innovator, always striving to improve the lives of his fellow citizens through public service and the marvels of science.  Throughout his life, he invented the lightning rod and the first bifocal glasses, harnessed the power of electricity with his famous “key and kite” experiment, established the first public library and volunteer fire department, and served as the first Postmaster General, binding the Colonies together with an organized mail system long before they were bound together as one Nation.

    Of his countless triumphs and successes, his most epic contributions to our Republic were those that fortified the cause of freedom.  While living in England as an ambassador for the Pennsylvania Assembly, Franklin witnessed firsthand the growing British hostility toward the Colonies.  In 1775, Franklin was selected as a delegate to the Second Continental Congress, where, together with fellow patriots John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, he helped draft the Declaration of Independence, suggesting to Jefferson that he include the immortal phrase:  “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal.”

    Franklin’s unshakable commitment to the causes of the Revolution ultimately led him across the Atlantic once more, where he played a pivotal role in securing French support for the patriot cause against the British Empire and acted as a principal negotiator of the 1783 Treaty of Paris, which ended the Revolutionary War.  After American independence was finally won, he played a vital role in rallying support for the ratification of the Constitution in 1788.  Franklin is one of only six men to have signed both the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.

    Benjamin Franklin is often remembered as the “First American”—a title that reflects a life devoted to curiosity, industry, and the cause of human freedom.  His intellect and character helped shape an American identity grounded in courage, self-reliance, and civic duty.  Franklin gave the young country confidence and direction, demonstrating how knowledge and public service could advance the cause of liberty.  His legacy endures in our institutions, our Constitution, and the very character of our Republic—a testament to how one man’s ideas and actions can echo through the history of a nation for 250 glorious years.

    Happy birthday, Benjamin Franklin!

    The White House

    January 17, 2026

    Sources: WH.gov , Midtown Tribune news

    Midtown Tribune Independent USA news from New York

  • Mayor Zohran Mamdani Hosts Africa Cup of Nations Watch Party

    Mayor Zohran Mamdani Hosts Africa Cup of Nations Watch Party

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  • Live: Mayor Zohran Mamdani Appoints a Parks Commissioner

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  • Mayor Zohran Mamdani Makes a Housing-Related Announcement

    Mayor Zohran Mamdani Makes a Housing-Related Announcement

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  • White House. First Lady Frames AI as a “New Engine” for Curiosity—With a Warning Not to Outsource Thinking ( Official Video )

    White House. First Lady Frames AI as a “New Engine” for Curiosity—With a Warning Not to Outsource Thinking ( Official Video )

    In remarks delivered from the White House for a national Zoom webinar, Melania Trump urged students to treat AI as a creative tool, not a substitute for judgment.

    WASHINGTON—First Lady Melania Trump used a virtual address to thousands of classrooms Friday to pitch artificial intelligence as a once-in-a-generation accelerator of learning and creativity—while cautioning students not to let the technology do their thinking for them. (The White House)

    Speaking in opening remarks for “Zoom Ahead: AI for Tomorrow’s Leaders,” a national learning event hosted by Zoom, Mrs. Trump described an “Age of Imagination” in which curiosity can be satisfied “almost magically, in seconds,” and argued that the decisive skill in the AI era is not memorization but asking better questions. (The White House)

    The event—scheduled for Jan. 16 at 9:00 a.m. Pacific via Zoom Webinar—was positioned by the company and the White House as part of a broader push to build AI literacy for K–12 students and educators, with a particular emphasis on responsible use. (Zoom)

    “Age of Imagination,” “intellectual freedom”

    Mrs. Trump’s prepared remarks read like a motivational address aimed at demystifying AI for young audiences: a student who wants to design fashion, write music, or create an animated superhero series can now use AI tools from home to draft concepts, characters and scripts. (The White House)

    But the core of the speech was less about software than mindset. “In the new AI era, the most powerful skill is knowing what to ask, why it matters, and how to think beyond the first answer,” she said, urging students to be “stubbornly curious” and to “question everything.” (The White House)

    Her closing message, however, drew a bright line between generation and meaning. AI can create “images and information,” she said, but “only humans can generate meaning and purpose.” She urged students to “never surrender your thinking to AI,” warning against treating the technology as a shortcut. (The White House)

    A corporate partnership with a classroom pitch

    The White House said the initiative is intended to “improve America’s children’s understanding” of AI and to “empower the next generation” to use it in education and later careers, with Zoom as a partner reaching “thousands of schools nationwide.” (The White House)

    Zoom, for its part, framed the webinar as part of a wider AI literacy program and emphasized confidence and ethics in adoption. The company’s release said its event is designed to help students understand how AI can be used “responsibly, creatively, and confidently,” and noted that Mrs. Trump would deliver opening remarks live from the White House. (Zoom)

    Eric Yuan, Zoom’s chief executive and founder, echoed the responsible-use theme, arguing that the spread of AI in learning and work makes literacy and ethical norms essential for students and educators. (The White House)

    The politics of AI education

    Mrs. Trump has increasingly made technology and youth-focused education a signature lane, using the language of national competitiveness alongside personal development. The Zoom release quoted her as saying students and educators have a “unique chance to get ahead” by learning AI early, positioning literacy as a workforce advantage and a way for communities to shape, not simply absorb, technological change. (Zoom)

    The White House statement also tied Friday’s remarks to a broader agenda, noting that Mrs. Trump had called on the international community at the 2025 United Nations General Assembly to join her efforts and that she plans to host an inaugural meeting of a related initiative, “Fostering the Future Together,” at the White House this spring. (The White House)

    A simple message for a complicated technology

    For all the talk of “imagination,” the subtext of the address reflected a debate that has moved quickly from Silicon Valley to school districts: how to harness AI’s ability to draft, summarize and generate media without weakening core skills like reasoning, writing and judgment.

    Mrs. Trump offered a practical rule of thumb: use AI to widen the field of ideas—but keep ownership of conclusions. “Be intellectually honest with yourself,” she said. “Use AI as a tool—but do not let it replace your personal intelligence.” (The White House)

    In an era when students can produce a passable essay or a polished slide deck in minutes, the First Lady’s prescription was old-fashioned: do the hard part yourself. The technology may be new; the standard she set was not.

    Jan 16, 2026 White House Washington , DC

    Midtown Tribune Independent USA news from New York

  • Mayor Zohran Mamdani Delivers Remarks at DSNY’s Graduation, Promotion and Longevity Ceremony

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  • Mayor Zohran Mamdani Appoints a Chief Equity Officer and Commissioner of the MOERJ

    Mayor Zohran Mamdani Appoints a Chief Equity Officer and Commissioner of the MOERJ

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  • Mayor Zohran Mamdani Announces New Enforcement Actions Against Predatory Delivery Apps

    Mayor Zohran Mamdani Announces New Enforcement Actions Against Predatory Delivery Apps

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  • Mayor Mamdani Promotes 3-K and Pre-K Enrollment

    Mayor Mamdani Promotes 3-K and Pre-K Enrollment

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  • 3-K and Pre-K enrollment is now open!

    3-K and Pre-K enrollment is now open!

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