🚨 President Trump UNLOADS on Jamie Raskin:
“Loser in life… wasting the Country’s money… EXPEL THE BUM.”
Trump is 100% right. Raskin and the TDS clowns tried to impeach the most successful President in history and failed miserably. Time to drain the swamp for good.
America is done with these political hacks!
SAVE SNUGGLES & FREE SNUGGLES
This precious dog has been locked up for 8 months at a Pima County animal shelter in AZ.
There are so many heartbreaking animals stories.
My heart literally can’t take it.
A dog gets more time behind bars while criminals roam the streets daily. Please release Snuggles to their family. 🙏
I like her!
A British woman yells at a Muslim: “Fuck off already! I’m sick of you! All of you, take your wives and kids and go back to your Islamic countries! Got it!!”
No more politeness. No more pretending. The people are done with the invasion.
Go home. All of you.
Good news for the family of Annelise Camp today:
A temporary injunction hearing took place today, and the judge ordered the hospital to continue providing Annelise with life-sustaining treatment for another two weeks while efforts continue to secure a transfer.
Please keep praying that Annelise can be transferred to a facility which provides the advanced treatments (such as hyperbaric oxygen therapy) her family is seeking. 🙏🙏🙏
Saving Lucy: A Veteran’s War Dog Deserves Better Than Bureaucratic Euthanasia
In the unforgiving deserts near the border of the Islamic State, a stray dog found unlikely salvation in a U.S. soldier. Brendan Jones, a veteran who deployed ten times across Yemen, Iraq, and the Horn of Africa, bonded with her amid the chaos of war. He brought her home to Virginia, where for a decade she became a loyal family companion, protecting the household during further deployments, comforting children, and embodying the quiet resilience of those who survive what others cannot.
Her name is Lucy. At 11 years old, she now sits in a Shenandoah County animal shelter, confused and alone, facing possible euthanasia over a technicality that reeks of neighborly vendetta and bureaucratic overreach.
The backstory is as heartbreaking as it is familiar to anyone who’s watched petty local disputes spiral. About a year ago, while recovering from surgery, bandaged, medicated, and wearing a cone, Lucy reacted defensively when a jogger’s arm reached inside her limited field of vision. It was a single nip, immediately released. The jogger was willing to move on. But others in the neighborhood, amid what Jones describes as two years of harassment, Facebook gossip groups, and repeated police calls over minor complaints, seized on it to push for Lucy to be labeled a “dangerous dog.”
Weary from the toll on his family, Jones acquiesced to the designation. It was a mistake. Virginia’s rules for such dogs are strict: special restraints, signage, insurance, muzzling in public. Then came the morning when Lucy’s collar slipped off in her own yard on their 6+ acre property. She barked at a passerby, the same hostile neighbor, before Jones quickly recaptured her. No one was hurt. She never left the property. Yet animal control descended, seized the dog in front of his devastated children, and issued a misdemeanor summons.
This isn’t public safety. It’s a weaponized technicality. Dogs bark in yards across America every single day. An elderly family pet with a clean decade-long record at home, who survived war zones, Bedouins, and stray packs, does not suddenly become a menace because equipment failed for seconds on private land. The “dangerous dog” label, born from a medicated post-surgery reaction and neighbor pressure, has now trapped a veteran’s companion in a system primed for the worst outcome.
Jones served his country honorably. He faced real threats overseas. Coming home to find the very system he defended turning on his family dog, while a litigious neighbor allegedly gloats, feels like a betrayal of the social contract. Veterans already carry invisible wounds; this adds insult, stripping away one of the few living links to his service and a source of comfort for his wife and kids.
Stories like this expose how “zero tolerance” animal control policies, combined with local feuds, can destroy lives without proportionality. No one disputes the need for rules around truly aggressive dogs. But context matters. Lucy’s incident history is minimal and mitigated. She’s 11, hardly a spring puppy posing an ongoing threat. The response should be education, better fencing, or mediation, not impoundment and a death sentence hanging over her head.
Public outcry has been swift and heartening: petitions, calls to the Commonwealth’s Attorney’s office, donations pouring into legal funds, and the hashtag #SaveLucy spreading far beyond Virginia. Supporters worldwide recognize the injustice, a war survivor punished for human pettiness.
As Jones faces his June 12 hearing, the message should be clear to Shenandoah County officials: Return Lucy home. Drop the disproportionate charges. Let this veteran and his family heal without losing a member who earned her peace the hard way. Bureaucracy has no business ending the life of a dog who outlasted ISIS.
Lucy survived deserts, war, and uncertainty once before. Bring her home, where she belongs, on the rug with her people.
The shelter closed an hour ago. No Lucy today.
That means the county has now held her for at least a full week after I signed a deal I didn’t like, all because I convinced myself it was the fastest way to get her out.
Time was on my side. The prosecution’s case was becoming increasingly unpopular. Leaders of the Virginia GOP were reaching out. The dam was about to break. A little more time, I thought, and that popular outrage would be too much for the Commonwealth to keep pushing a case it should never have taken up in the first place.
But time wasn’t on Lucy’s side. She’s eleven years old. She had already been locked in that concrete kennel for seven long weeks. I had to get her out. That was the only thing that mattered.
It still hasn’t happened.
And tonight that leaves me sitting here, staring at the empty spot on the rug by the kitchen table where she should be curled up, wondering who the real enemy is in all this.
Is it the DA? No. Not personally. She’s just doing the job they pay her to do. She didn’t ask for this mess. In fact, she wrote the judge on Monday asking her to sign the order that would let Lucy come home.
Is it the neighbors? No. They’re not villains. They’re just sheep; mindless, easily spooked, moving in a mob that takes on the collective wisdom and virtue of its loudest, basest, and stupidest members. At the end of the day, they’re still sheep.
So who’s the wolf?
There isn’t one.
It’s something far worse than a wolf. It’s a Leviathan; a cold, sprawling tangle of laws and technicalities and a government that’s far too eager to shove its nose into places it was never invited. A machine that grinds slowly, impersonally, and without mercy, even when every human being involved knows the right thing to do.
That kind of enemy is the one diligent little sheepdogs like Lucy and Snuggles were never built to fight. Their loyalty, their courage, their sharp instincts - none of these things matter against paperwork and policy and the slow, soulless turning of bureaucratic gears.
And that’s what is on my mind as another day turns to night and Lucy remains in her cramped, little cell.
The real enemy is something that we have created by not being diligent guardians of our own government.
#SaveLucy
#SaveSnuggles
ADAM’s facing his final hours, alone……💔
Dies today bc he’s a very scared little pup & is shutting down😢
UTTERLY stressed, going sideways, in decline😭
ADAM 2yo ##A387825
Horribly infested with🪱
❤️🩹He doesn’t feel well & needs🏥care
He’s not had a happy life
Plz make him feel better
#pledge4rescue
Asking 4 HW+🪱sponsor
Corpus Christi Texas
⚠️Why in the bloody hell is this shelter using the horrible Heart stick method to Kill their dogs!!? Very painful‼️
This method should only ever be used according to Grok:
Shelters and veterinarians perform an intracardiac (IC) injection—injecting directly into the heart—primarily because the animal is too sick, too small, or too injured to find a working vein.
This “shelter” Clayton County Animal Control, in Jonesboro GA , seems to use this Very Painful method on all the dogs they Kill‼️
Please go and Adopt or offer to Foster or Adopt, very sweet , Bernard now: Atlanta , Jonesboro GA area due to be killed tomorrow , 6/12!🙏
#SaveSnuggles#SaveLucy
Enough govt overreach. Private citizens are private citizens. Let us live our lives in peace.
This is guaranteed to us by our Constitution and the Bill of Rights.
Hello rescue community 👋. We are asking for a miracle. Adam dies in a few hours. We need pledges for boarding. We are begging for pledges 🙏🙏🙏🙏Any amount helps. We are told he is very shy . That should not be a death sentence. Please please!!!!! @RoCoGB@LisaBrabson@shannon_fla@rothfarms@SamfromSpain
This man is Robert Young. My friend and neighbor of nearly 30 years. He married his wife on the steps of Louis Emerson House. Mr. Young is one of my incredible supporters in the race for Phoenix City Council District 8. His endorsement means more now than ever. He and I have toiled together (literally in the summer sun) in the often thankless and sometimes seemingly impossible vineyard of Historic Preservation - for decades. It is a labor of love, heritage and for the benefit of future generations. If elected to council, I will continue EVEN MORE VIGOROUSLY to support his efforts to save this beautiful and historic home, one of the few examples of mixed Queen Anne and Charles Eastlake design left downtown. The house predates statehood and is built of locally sourced sand brick, baked in the open air over a hundred years ago downtown. It is a box house or box cottage, a rare example of territorial style homes. The only others that come close to comparison are in the Presidio in Tucson. Louis Emerson, who built the house, was a local butcher and happened to be a Republican who opposed segregation and anti-semitism in the pioneer days of Phoenix. The house is the pride of the historic Churchill subdivision. EMINENT DOMAIN is a widely abused practice, particularly in the City of Phoenix. This is elder abuse and an outrage. If this INJUSTICE disturbs you, stand up for Robert Young by voting MAUPIN for Phoenix City Council District 8 and @andybiggs4az for Governor and @votewarren for Attorney General. More to come as we fight fight fight for Brother Young! @johnrich@realDonaldTrump@KariLake