How the hell was someone who pled guilty for supporting ISIS out of jail and back on the street to attempt a terror attack at Old Dominion? Simply unacceptable. Thank god for the brave ROTC member who took him out:
The NCAA will mandate all players be covered from the waist down
This ends the short shorts era of college football
Glad to see the NCAA has been focusing on the real issues of our sport
“Before I do anything, I wanna give God the glory-my Lord & Savior, Jesus Christ. Without Him, I’m nothing. I appreciate Him giving me this opportunity to play this great game with this great organization.”
- Houston Texans QB CJ Stroud after 4 INT in a playoff loss vs Patriots
🇮🇷 — Acaban de ingresar a la Embajada de Irán en Londres y han quitado la bandera del régimen islámico para poner en su lugar la verdadera bandera de los iraníes libres.
Absolutely a JOKE that @NDFootball is not part of the college football playoff/ the Irish have dominated 10 in a row after a heartbreaking 1 point loss to @AggieFootball What football is the committee watching, somebody tell me please.
He knew he might never walk off that plane… but he still chose to fight.
When terrorists hijacked United Airlines Flight 93 on the morning of 9/11, 32-year-old Todd Beamer didn’t freeze. He didn’t surrender. He picked up an Airfone and spoke to operator Lisa Jefferson — calmly, bravely — in the final minutes of his life.
With his wife carrying their unborn child at home, Todd’s voice shook as he said:
“If I don’t make it, please call my family and let them know how much I love them.”
He could have spent his last moments in fear.
Instead, he chose courage.
Todd and a group of passengers made a plan — to rush the hijackers and take back control. Lisa quietly stayed on the line, listening as he rallied the others with one final, unforgettable phrase:
“Let’s roll.”
Their fight forced the plane down in a Pennsylvania field — away from the U.S. Capitol, away from thousands of innocent lives.
Todd Beamer didn’t live to see his baby born. His children will grow up knowing their father died a hero — protecting people he would never meet.
Some heroes wear uniforms.
Some simply refuse to give in to fear.
And the world is safer because of them.
NEVER FORGET THIS MAN