CELEBRITY
🔥BREAKING: The Trump administration has terminated Social Security benefits for a Black American cancer patient, alleging she is “not lawfully present in the U.S.”
This is what deliberate cruelty looks like in 2026.
Ramona Rakestraw, 59, was born at Parkland Hospital in Dallas in 1966. She has never lived outside Dallas County — not for travel, employment, or any other reason. Yet the federal government has somehow classified her as “not lawfully present in the U.S.”
Her offense? Being seriously ill.
Rakestraw has struggled with kidney disease for decades. She underwent a transplant, later returned to dialysis, and in 2024 received a cancer diagnosis. Throughout these health battles, she relied on Supplemental Security Income as her sole source of income, along with Medicare Part B.
Then, in October, her payments abruptly stopped. The reason: her “immigration status” was placed under review.
“I’m not an immigrant,” she said. “I’ve never even left Dallas County — much less the country.”
Consider that. A woman born in Texas. Delivered in an American hospital. Battling cancer. Forced to appear at a Social Security office carrying her birth certificate to prove she belongs in the country where she was born.
Even so, she later received a letter stating: “We cannot pay you benefits because you are not lawfully present in the U.S.”
This is the human toll of a system so aggressively focused on policing immigration that it fails to distinguish between a lifelong Dallas resident and someone crossing the border.
Although her Medicare coverage was eventually reinstated, her SSI payments — her only income — remain cut off.
Now she is filing an appeal, buried in paperwork while enduring dialysis and cancer treatment. She has sixty days to challenge a bureaucratic determination that should never have occurred.
This goes beyond a clerical mistake. It reflects a governing climate where citizenship is treated with suspicion and vulnerable Americans are seen as expendable.
Ramona Rakestraw is not seeking special consideration. She is seeking access to the benefits she is legally entitled to — benefits tied to a lifetime of lawful presence in the country of her birth.
Born in Dallas. Fighting for her life. And now forced to fight her own government to survive. That is more than incompetence — it is a system that has lost its humanity.
