Link: https://t.co/bG6cnrsnEy
.@glennbeck I’ve been reflecting on our conversation and how genuine, thoughtful, and professional you were throughout the interview.
Most of all, thank you for showing the compassion and humanity that has been completely missing from so many in Illinois, including @GovPritzker, @SenatorDurbin, @SenDuckworth, and others in positions of power.
I’m reposting our interview and hope people take the time to watch it and hear Katie’s story.
Thank you again for giving her a voice. I truly hope our paths cross again someday. You are a good man, and I sincerely appreciate you.
From our country’s beginning, for as long as America has embodied freedom and exceptionalism, the soul of our nation has been rooted in the Christian faith.
Today we gather, as our forefathers did on this day centuries ago, to rededicate our nation to God.
I want to tell you the story of a young woman who you have probably never heard of. Her name is Mary Anne. She was born on a remote island in Scotland, where life was harsh and unforgiving.
On May 2, 1930, when she was 18 years old, she got on a boat headed for Ellis Island to start a new life. She arrived here 11 days later.
She wasn't chasing fame, riches, or power. She came for the unique opportunity that America offered. Her sister was already here and had found a job as a maid. So, Mary Anne MacLeod joined her, listing her occupation as “domestic” on her Ellis Island immigration papers.
She came to America knowing that she would clean the houses and toilets of the wealthy families in New York. She and her sister lived and worked hard through the worst days of the Depression. And she persevered.
Six years later, she married a man named Fred. He was the son of German immigrants. Then In 1942, she became a citizen.
Mary and Fred would end up having five children: two daughters and three sons.
One of those sons, they named Donald.
A woman who came here as a maid, the lowest of jobs, would raise a son who would change the very skyline that greeted his mother when she arrived at Ellis Island.
After that, he would become the 45th and 47th President of the United States.
There is no other country in the world where a woman can arrive with nothing, and in ONE generation, her son would lead the entire world.
For America’s 250th anniversary, I wanted to present President Trump with this painting I did, and then I ran out of time and talent. So, I asked a good friend of mine, Mike Malm, to help me finish it. This is how I envisioned her coming into the United States.
Mary Anne MacLeod Trump should be a household name. Her story is everything that is great about America.
“FROM MAID… TO PRESIDENT’S MOTHER.” 🇺🇸✨
@GlennBeck tells the story of Mary Anne MacLeod—an 18-year-old immigrant who came with nothing but hope. One generation later… her son became President.
This is America: where beginnings don’t limit your ending.
@Moms4Liberty
Ok, after DJT second term is up and Federal Income Tax is over, if you don’t think DJT face should go on Mt. Rushmore, you might be a Domestic Terrorist🫨! I don’t know about you, but I am SOOO HAPPY a hospital didn’t ☠️ me TO LIVE THROUGH THIS😲!
The Deadly Cost of Ignorance.
(Audio of my latest X article)
I wrote this with genuine hope, to challenge all of us to think more deeply about what’s happening beneath the surface of the immigration debate.
You don’t have to agree with my conclusions.
But I do hope more Americans across the political spectrum will hear it, read it, reflect on it, and ask harder questions about the systems, incentives, and narratives shaping public opinion.
“So we both want to help people, right? What is the best way to help people? We have a case study over 60 years—‘is it good for people to be permanently on government assistance?’ No, it’s not. It’s really had for them.”
This exchange is jampacked with gems. Charlie addresses the conservative right “not living out Jesus’ teachings with their policies,” who should be responsible for public welfare programs, whether or not Trump exemplifies Jesus, and whether God ever chooses immoral men to become rulers and kings and do good.
33 habits that (quietly) changed my life forever:
1. Protect the first 4 hours of the day for creative flow.
2. Write before the world wakes.
3. Break a sweat daily. 4. Watch the sunrise often. 5. Say “no” with love. 6. Ask: “What’s the one domino that knocks the rest?”
7. Operate from systems, not moods.
8. Journal my fears until they dissolve.
9. Automate one task every week.
10. Build once, distribute forever.
11. Re-read my 10-year vision weekly.
12. Ask ���who, not how” every single day.
13. Leave one day plan-free.
14. Call my parents unprompted.
15. Give credit publicly, often. 16. Build a brand I actually admire.
17. Return to nature every week.
18. Practice: slow is smooth and smooth is fast. 19. End showers cold.
20. Carry a pocket notebook everywhere. 21. Sketch ideas instead of typing them.
22. Meditate on impermanence.
23. Leave my phone outside the bedroom.
24. Let go of one grudge.
25. Sing alone in the car, loudly.
26.End the day with gratitude.
https://t.co/xi58fLfYt3 until I’m 80% full.
28. Eat the same lunch every day.
29. Invest automatically monthly.
30. Edit my possessions every 90 days.
31. Block one full week per quarter fully off-grid.
32.Sleep without an alarm.
33.Replace “I have to” with “I get to.”