these are the updated results of the November 2024 Elections from Grok:
Joel F. Abstain - 41.1%
Donald Trump - 29.4%
Kamala Harris - 28.5%
Others - 1.0%
i hope this helps clarify things.
🥷🏻🥷🏻🥷🏻🇺🇸👑
This HVAC technician went to the wrong house to fix a furnace… and ended up being an answer to someone’s prayer.
He showed up thinking he was sent there, fixed the broken relay, and got the heat working. When he realized he had gone to the wrong address, the woman started crying and told him she had prayed that morning asking God to send someone to fix her heat because she couldn’t afford it.
He told her it was on the house and left her with a warm home. Sometimes God really does work in mysterious ways.
Have you ever experienced something that felt like it was meant to be?
BIG FIGHT BREAKS OUT INSIDE POLAND’S WROCŁAW ZOO 😂
A rhino and a baby deer were having a playful fight together ❤️
The baby deer somehow managed to scare the rhino and send it running 🦌🦏😭
A 70-year-old man was charged with attempted murder after he tried to drown a 21-year-old man on crutches at a residents-only lake in Hopkinton, Massachusetts, over a dispute about access to the lake.
According to a Hopkinton police report, Dana shouted at a group of young men that it was "time to go," referring to the group riding a jet ski on the lake
The group and Dana shout back and forth, with Dana eventually walking up to the group to confront them, according to officials
"Are you going to beat up a cripple?" one of Duffy's friends reportedly asked Dana.
"I don't care, I'll take a cripple." Dana responded, according to the report.
Speaking with NewsCenter 5, the victim, Matthew Duffy, said he feared for his life.
"I was so scared for my life because I can't fight back, I broke practically everything and this guy's on top of me under the water, I can't see what's going on, I can't fight back," Duffy said
Steven Dana was charged with an attempt to murder, two counts of strangulation/suffocation, and assault and battery on a disabled person.
This dude took over the parking spot that the local PD likes to radar from and the officers can't handle it. It's like a child that got their favorite toy taken away.
We are in Henrico County for this one. You have a citizen journalist that is aware of the favorite parking spot that the local PD loves to post up at to conduct speed traps.
The journalist took over the parking spot minutes before the officer and let's just say, the officers was lost on what to do about it.
The attempt by the officer he pulled up behind the parked vehicle of the journalists. Officer James approached the driver’s side window, standard protocol and tried to turn things into a welfare check, and requested that the driver roll down the glass.
Right from the jump, the driver established his boundary: he flatly refused to roll down the window, asserting through the glass that he could hear the officer perfectly fine.
Recognizing a non-standard situation, Officer James immediately called for backup ("Code 2") while attempting fish for something to escalate the situation and turn this into a traffic stop. He began by asking if the journalist was broken down, experiencing a medical emergency, or in need of assistance.
What followed was a clinic on how to handle the police through awkward silence. Instead of speaking, the driver responded to the officer's safety inquiries exclusively with thumbs-up gestures through the closed window.
The interaction hit a snag when Officer James questioned why the journalist was stopped in a turn lane. While the driver refused to answer out loud to the officer, he later pointed his camera to show the layout of the road. The journalist showed he wasn't blocking a turn lane at all; he was parked on an asphalt cutout next to the turn lane—an area that is frequently used for overflow parking.
Realizing he was not getting anywhere, the officer went back to his car for one last ditch effort by running the plates of the journalist. Once things came back clean the officer had to do that walk of shame and left.
The encounter didn't end there, though. A second officer, Officer Jennings, arrived shortly after also looking to park in the spot to conduct a speed trap.
Interestingly, the driver shifted strategies for the second interaction. Rather than sticking to the silent thumbs-up routine, the driver chose to verbally engage with Officer Jennings through the glass.
He explicitly confirmed that he was completely fine, did not require any emergency help, and was simply sitting there. Once again another walk of shame when the officer came up empty handed from his fishing exercise.
It's amusing to see these officers have to basically pack up their toys and go home because they could not use their favorite radar spot.
20 MILES OFFSHORE and this dude is just… swimming?! 😱💀
Boat crew spots a guy treading water in the middle of nowhere, helps haul his ass aboard after hours out there chasing a damn fish. “You’re 20 miles offshore!” “I know, it took me a little bit.”
Absolute madlad. Real-life ocean heroes made sure this daredevil lived another day. Who else is out here living dangerously? 😂🔥
His name was Roddie Edmonds.
Most people had never heard of him.
A quiet Methodist from Knoxville, Tennessee. A husband. A father. A churchgoing man who came home from World War II, raised his family, and never once bragged about what he had done.
The world almost lost his story completely.
December 1944.
The Battle of the Bulge.
Roddie Edmonds had been on the Western Front less than a week when his unit was surrounded by German forces. Thousands of American soldiers were captured during Hitler’s final major offensive.
Edmonds became one of them.
What followed was brutal.
A forced march through freezing snow.
Men collapsing from exhaustion.
Packed into rail cars with almost no food or water.
Days of starvation and cold before arriving at Stalag IX-A, a German prison camp.
As the highest-ranking American noncommissioned officer there, Edmonds was responsible for 1,292 prisoners.
Then came the order.
All Jewish soldiers were to report separately the next morning.
Everyone understood what that meant.
Separation was not administration.
It was a death sentence.
That night, Edmonds gathered his men and gave a simple instruction:
“All of you. Every American. Outside in formation tomorrow morning.”
The next day, the German commandant arrived expecting a small group.
Instead, he found 1,292 American prisoners standing shoulder to shoulder.
Furious, he shouted:
“They cannot all be Jews!”
Roddie Edmonds answered with four words that would echo across history:
“We are all Jews here.”
The commandant pulled out a pistol and pressed it against Edmonds’s forehead.
He threatened to shoot him if he did not identify the Jewish soldiers immediately.
Edmonds never moved.
Instead, he calmly reminded the officer that under the Geneva Convention, prisoners only had to give their name, rank, and serial number.
Then he said this:
“If you shoot, you’ll have to shoot all of us. And when this war is over — which it nearly is — you’ll be tried as a war criminal.”
The commandant lowered the gun.
Turned around.
And walked away.
About 200 Jewish-American soldiers were saved that morning because one man refused to divide his men into categories worth protecting and categories worth surrendering.
But Edmonds wasn’t finished.
Weeks later, the Germans ordered the prisoners onto another forced march through the snow.
Edmonds knew many would die.
So he secretly told his men to make themselves appear too sick to travel — eat dirt, grass, whatever it took.
When the Germans came, the Americans stayed behind.
Nearly all the prisoners forced onto the march died.
Edmonds’s men survived to be liberated by General Patton’s forces in March 1945.
And then?
Roddie Edmonds came home and said almost nothing about it.
No speeches.
No interviews.
No book deals.
He worked. Went to church. Raised his children.
He died in 1985.
His family knew he had been a POW.
They had no idea he had saved hundreds of lives.
The truth only resurfaced decades later after his son discovered his wartime diary and began contacting survivors whose names were written inside.
Again and again, they told the same story.
The same frozen morning.
The same pistol.
The same four words.
“We are all Jews here.”
In 2015, Yad Vashem recognized Roddie Edmonds as “Righteous Among the Nations” — the first American soldier ever to receive the honor.
And in 2026, more than 80 years after that moment in the prison yard, his son accepted the Medal of Honor on his behalf.
No battlefield charge.
No dramatic explosion.
Just moral courage.
A man staring down a loaded gun and refusing to hand over his soldiers.
One survivor later said:
“That such people can exist gives you hope for humanity.”
They do exist.
Roddie Edmonds was one of them.
Devon Larratt on Joe Rogan: "I saw the Kandahar Giant"
He described seeing an 8-foot Afghan warlord through optics from 200 meters away during a mobility op in Kandahar.
"He was huge. He was a massive dude... I think he was eight feet. ... Our officer was probably somewhere at the bottom of his chest. Great big Afghan dude. Big beard, big dude. His lackeys around him were normal size. Great big warlord."
"He was big, big, big human being far out of the standard. Yeah, and he was a warlord."
This firsthand account from the Canadian Special Forces veteran ties directly into the Kandahar Giant legend of unusually tall figures in the region. Real anomalies exist in remote areas with extreme genetics and isolation. Eye-opening perspective from someone who was there.
If Satan has a residence on Earth, it is in Russia: the story of former Kherson mayor Volodymyr Mykolayenko, who survived Russian captivity.
After seeing Russia from the inside, he described it as a moral void, completely incompatible with Ukraine.
In captivity, he survived purely through willpower—holding on by sheer determination. When he finally returned home on August 24, 2025, it felt as though he had grown wings.
What struck him most was the way Ukrainians welcomed the released prisoners. From the Belarusian border all the way to Chernihiv, crowds stood along the roads waving Ukrainian flags. For the first time in a long while, he felt genuine respect and love.
Mykolayenko neither hid nor fled, even though he had the opportunity. He joined the Territorial Defense Forces because he asked himself a simple question: who else would protect his family?
He was given an assault rifle, but quickly realized that rifles alone cannot stop tanks.
The Russians lured him to a meeting under false pretenses, threw him into a car trunk, and took him away.
In captivity, he was beaten almost daily and suffered a broken rib. The occupiers offered him the position of head of the occupation administration, but he refused.
They demanded that he publicly condemn Roman Shukhevych, yet Mykolayenko instead called him a Hero of Ukraine.
Later, he was transferred between detention facilities—first to occupied Crimea, then to Russia’s Voronezh region, where the beatings became even more severe.
He never received a single letter from his family. He even refused prisoner exchanges, insisting that wounded young soldiers should be released in his place.
In his view, this war did not happen because of abstract mistakes. It happened because of geography and irresponsibility.
Russians chose Putin twenty-five years ago, and many continue to support him today. At the same time, too many members of Ukraine’s elite behave as if they have a “backup country”—Paris, Prague, New York—places they can escape to while blaming the people who were left behind.
But most Ukrainians have no alternative. There is no second homeland. There is only Ukraine.
According to Mykolayenko, the true strength of the country lies in its people—those who have survived occupation, torture, and loss, yet continue to fight.
Victory rests on two pillars: the soldiers who destroy the occupiers every day, and the civilians who do everything they can each day to ensure that the army can keep fighting.
He himself endured for the sake of his family and his faith in victory. He is proud of his daughter, who has been fighting since the first day of the war, and hopes that his grandchildren will one day be proud of both him and their country.
A Chinese man decided to prove that women are perfectly safe in India and Bangladesh
He disguised himself as an unattractive pregnant woman and spent three days in public.
According to him, he was repeatedly groped, harassed, and nearly sexually assaulted.
Now he says he has a very different understanding of how “safe” things really are.
🚨 Cherokee elder and knowledge keeper shares that Native American traditions have long understood the true nature of the UFO phenomenon, viewing it through a spiritual and cultural lens far predating modern reports.
His perspective highlights generational accounts of nonhuman intelligence and aerial phenomena deeply embedded in indigenous oral histories across the Americas.
This longstanding awareness contrasts with contemporary government disclosure efforts and adds indigenous context to the global conversation.
Above and beyond the call of duty!
A mother and her two children were found sleeping in the lobby of a police station by Ohio Deputy Brian Bussell. When he asked about their situation, he learned that they were homeless after being kicked out of their house. Instead of telling them to leave, Deputy Bussell tried to find them a place to stay, but when that didn’t work out, he paid for a 10-day hotel stay for the family using his own money! He even went with them to Wal-Mart to buy food, shoes, and new clothes. He didn’t want any credit for what he had done.
The mother later shared her experience on social media, saying, "This guy, officer Brian Bussell from Butler County Sheriff's Department, has genuinely blessed me and my family." That’s when the story became known to the public. The Butler County Sheriff then wrote, “This is a wonderful gesture of kindness,” and expressed how proud he was of his deputy. Deputy Bussell had kept his actions a secret from everyone at work, especially with all the recent criticism toward law enforcement. His actions speak volumes.
Deputy Bussell deserves a huge thank you for his kindness and generosity! He truly shows what a wonderful police officer should be!
California McDonald's employee is recovering after an unprovoked coworker threw hot oiI on him
The assailant then fled the scene.
The local CA media framed the attacker as 'missing at risk man'
Meanwhile, Mainstream Media is SILENT.
This story needs to be shared everywhere.
McDonald's should step up for Jacob Smith, 20, a star employee who worked his way up to a manager position.
Jacob is now facing skin graft surgery.
Suffering the most severe pain in his fingertips, according to mom Amber Smith, after raising his hand to shield his face from the hot oiI.
Jacob has plans to for marriage in February.
Prayers for your speedy recovery Jacob.