I see your profile picture. That’s Johnny Cash. My hero too. Arrested seven times. Smuggled 668 amphetamines across the Mexican border in 1965. Took every drug there was and drank like I did. Cheated on his first wife. Slept with more woman than I ever did. Hit bottom in a cave in Tennessee in 1968 trying to crawl off and die. And then he got up. He got clean. He spent the rest of his life singing for prisoners and addicts and the people the country threw away because he knew he was one of them.
That was the whole point of the Man in Black. He wore it for the poor and the beaten down. He wore it for the prisoner who has long paid for his crime. He wore it for the ones who never heard a word of Jesus. He wore it for the addicted and the dying. He wore it as a standing witness that no one is past saving.
You picked his picture. You did not pick his message. Try listening to the words.
SHAWN RYAN: “I don’t even know what to think anymore. I don’t even trust my own intuition when it comes to politics because I thought things were gonna be so different.”
MEGYN KELLY: “The Trump thing is so disappointing.”
AND THE 2026 @JUCOWorldSeries CHAMPIONS WITH A RECORD OF 67-3 THE JOHNSON COUNTY CAVALIERS BRING THE FIRST EVER BASEBALL NATIONAL TITLE BACK TO OVERLAND PARK!
Rep. Stansbury: "There is not a single Republican in the room besides the chairman. For a supposed group of individuals who care deeply about justice for the survivors, not a single Republican could be bothered to travel across the country today to come hear testimony from the former AG."
#1️⃣ Johnson County is in the D1 JUCO NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP GAME for the first time in school history‼️ JCCC will play Blinn at 8PM (Central) on ESPN + for a chance to WIN it all. Cavs are now an incredible 66-3 on the season. ⚔️ UP
BASE: Late-inning heroics from Johnson County in Grand Junction as the Cavaliers score 3 in the 8th to set up a 4-run 9th, including a walk-off 3-run home run from Ashton Hartwig to stun Midland 10-9. The Cavaliers are heading to the @JUCOWorldSeries Title Game. #KJCCC
Miller: The way most welfare works in most states and most places is we take your word for it. If you say your kids are hungry, you are going to get food stamps. We don't check if you even have kids. You will just start getting the checks.
What a wonderful end to an incredible season of #survivor, one of my favorites ever. From the decade-spanning Ozzy-Coach rivalry to to Old Man Colby to Cirie’s social mastery to Rick’s coin flip to the Rizgod holding an idol for every tribal council, so many all-time moments.
What moved me most was the sense of time and scope that this season brought. #Survivor has been on the air for 25 years and this showed how the players age and change - or fail to change - and it was so profound and deeply human, in a way that no other franchise can match.
Congrats to Aubry!!!
#EmporiaState is the only public university in Kansas proposing no tuition increase for the 2026-27 academic year!
The Kansas Board of Regents is expected to consider 2026–27 tuition rates at its June meeting.
Read more: https://t.co/bBDo2b26IE
#EmporiaState
@RogerMarshallMD this is embarrassing. But you are a resident of Florida and know nothing of the damage farmers in Kansas are experiencing with trumps disastrous decisions. A Kansan with a backbone would support his constituents. But that ain’t your style Rog.
Sen. Roger Marshall suggests Biden is responsible for high fertilizer costs and adds, "it's time to stop relying on the Trump administration who by the way, I think has done more for rural America than any administration has ever done"
Best day of school ever! Wichita area #KStateFB stars Avery Johnson (Maize), Wesley Fair (Collegiate) and Will Anciaux (Kapaun) are back in town visiting their old elementary schools today.
First up was Maize Central Elementary, Avery Johnson’s school growing up.
Day 15
How did you become friends with George Brett?
The timing of this question feels especially fitting since today is George’s birthday. Happy Birthday, George!
Back in 2018, I was living out a dream by working as a police officer in the Royals dugout. Before the game started, George’s son, Jackson, came down behind the dugout to say hello to my friend Sergeant Tommy Woods, who had graciously let me work alongside him that night. Tommy introduced us and mentioned that I had just been diagnosed with ALS.
Not long after, I jokingly told Jackson, “Tell your dad to come down here. I want to meet him.” Normally, I would never say something like that. But I knew how deeply ALS mattered to George. It’s even referenced on the inscription of his statue beyond the right field wall.
For more than 40 years, George has been committed to fighting ALS after losing his close friend Keith Worthington to the disease. He made Keith a promise that he would stay in the fight until there’s a cure.
A little while later, Jackson returned and said, “George is down there and wants to meet you.” Instantly, I was nervous. What do you even say to your childhood hero?
George greeted me with a hug and handed me a baseball he had signed. He asked how I was doing and made sure I had the support I needed. Before we finished talking, he asked what he could do for me. I remember laughing and saying, “Honestly, this is already pretty amazing.” But then I added, “Throwing out the first pitch with you would be awesome.”
George smiled and said, “Consider it done.”
Less than a month later, it happened.
Before we parted ways that night, George also promised me something else — that he would stand beside me throughout my battle with ALS. Over the years, he has kept that promise in every way possible.
A lot of people know George Brett as a Hall of Fame baseball player. I know him as a loyal friend, a man of his word, and someone who quietly shows up for people when they need it most. His friendship has been one of the greatest blessings of my ALS journey, and I will never stop being grateful for the kindness he’s shown me and so many others fighting this disease.
#ALS #ALSAwareness #SarahsSoldiers #FightLikeAGirl