Dear @WhiteHouse, my name is Rodney Smith Jr., founder of Raising Men & Women Lawn Care Service in Huntsville, Alabama. Through our 50 Yard Challenge, over 6,000 kids across the country have signed up to mow free lawns for the elderly, disabled, veterans, active-duty military, first responders, and single parents. With America celebrating its 250th birthday this year and me also being born on July 4th, I wanted to humbly ask if a few kids from our program and myself could travel to Washington, D.C. to help mow the White House lawn for this historic celebration.
More than anything, I want these kids to see how a simple act of service something as ordinary as mowing a lawn for someone in need can lead to extraordinary places. What better lesson in community service than showing them that helping others can take them all the way to our nation’s capital? I’d also love to bring my American flag-themed mower in hopes that the President might sign it, so I can later auction it off and donate 100% of the proceeds to a nonprofit supporting veterans. It would be a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to highlight the importance of service, patriotism, and the impact young people can have when they choose to make a difference. 🇺🇸
@Azraels_Brother I just set boundaries with people I love because it’s truly sad but how do you argue with insanity like that. Worst part is they believe it.
@ShawnDaNupe@TheChadWithrow Hilarious to call a man a bigot and point out his race in the same sentence. Like black folks can’t be bigots. Why’s it always gotta be about race?
@RileyPiere525@WFODavid I think it’s because the majority of NFL fans are Blue blooded Americans and don’t subscribe to the grievance, victim mentality that he was pushing more so than skin color.