VIDEO - Ret. Gen. Dana Pittard on Iran: To Eliminate Their Ballistic Missile Threat, Can You Completely Do That by Air? ‘No’ @AlexWitt@DanaPittard https://t.co/7XW3k0EcDe
Bobby Douglas is a legend in so many ways. He was a blessing! Thinking of his family and all the wrestlers all over the country who competed for Coach.
🙏🏼🌪️❤️🙏🏼
13 years ago:
• Cocaine 4–5 nights a week.
• Bankrupt.
• Addicted.
• Living with my mom at 30.
Today:
• 1M+ followers.
• Thriving businesses.
• A strong family.
• Healthier than I’ve ever been.
I’m proof that no matter how far you fall, everything is still possible.
Rest In Peace, US Army Sergeant Major Teresa Coble Salinas. Teresa enlisted at 18 as an Army broadcast journalist and served in key public affairs roles at Fort Bragg with the 22nd Mobile Public Affairs Detachment. She completed several combat tours in Iraq and one in Afghanistan, where she played a vital role in establishing a media operations center in Kandahar Province. Her distinguished career culminated at U.S. Special Operations Command, where she continued to lead, inspire, and embody the best of our profession until her retirement.
Tragically, Teresa experienced neck pain and vomiting and went to the ER on Thursday night. She was admitted after a CT scan showed nothing, and doctors initially suspected a migraine. It sadly turned into a stroke, and she lost her battle.
Our thoughts are with her family, friends, and fellow service members during this difficult time. 🫡
@RealMikeyBets@WaddleandSilvy Marc Silverman is my friend of 30+years! If he called me and said I need your help. I can’t tell what it is and you can never ask me about it and some people are going to get hurt! My response: who’s car are we taken🫡🫡🫡🫡
“Can I call you Dad? I was ten when Mason found me at the shelter. By then I’d been moved so many times I stopped opening my bags. I sat by the door with a trash bag of clothes, waiting for whatever placement came next. Mason wasn’t there looking for a kid. He was a retired Army mechanic trying to figure out his life after service. Bad knee, quiet house, not many people around him. He volunteered at the shelter because he said it kept him steady. He noticed me right away. Not because I talked—I barely did. He just saw I wasn’t with anyone. He asked if I’d eaten. Simple question, but nobody really asked me things like that. Staff told him I had no family coming back and nowhere stable lined up. The next morning, he showed up again and asked if I wanted breakfast. I said yes. That’s when everything shifted. Four weeks later, I asked if I could call him Dad. He didn’t hesitate. Twenty years later, I’m wearing this uniform because Mason showed me what it means to stand by someone for real.”
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Ai image is for demonstration purpose only.
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Credit: Mary Holmes