As of June 2nd, only NINE NFL teams have NOT made posts about pride month. Those teams are:
-Dallas Cowboys
-New Orleans Saints
-Cincinnati Bengals
-Cleveland Browns
-Kansas City Chiefs
-Las Vegas Raiders
-New York Jets
-Pittsburgh Steelers
-Tennessee Titans
Props to these teams for not capitulating to the gender cult mob!
I would rather be home making bread and cooking healthy meals for my family, teaching my grandchildren about the Lord and His ways, keeping my home clean and tidy, and teaching women the beautiful ways of the Lord than doing anything in the workforce. 🤩
June means summer in Lancaster County. Produce season.
We have the best soil, best farmers, and best food in the world.
Shop your local farm stand.
Help preserve what we have here. If we lose it, we can’t get it back.
I don’t care how many companies post rainbow flags today. God created marriage to be between one man and one woman, and the rainbow is God’s promise to never flood the earth again.
The rainbow is God’s.
We are getting ready to head to the hospital for my husband’s surgery and just wanted to say thank you so much to all of who have shared messages, prayers and well wishes for Abraham. We are humbled and so grateful to be surrounded by aloha during this really tough time. 🙏🏽
I was a child of the 60s and 70s:
Our schools taught us "The Star-Spangled Banner," "America the Beautiful," and the Pledge of Allegiance.
Saturday morning Looney Tunes gave us comedy, classical music, and memorable characters - not the woke slop cartoons kids are fed today.
Nobody brought guns to the neighborhood block parties.
We had drive-in movies, not drive-by shootings.
We hung out at roller rinks, bowling alleys, and pinball arcades without fear of being snatched up by pedophiles.
We had radio, vinyl records, 8-tracks, cassettes, and CDs—and none of them said the F-word or the N-word.
We had inoffensive TV families and sitcoms, not dystopian garbage.
We had neighborhoods where people knew each other's names, and kids weren't raised by screens.
Our news came from a few trusted sources, not a stream of outrage and confusion.
Our boredom made us create, imagine, and go outside.
We had fewer voices telling us who to be, and more freedom to figure it out ourselves.
We could argue and still share a table afterward.
We had fewer distractions, so the moments we did have mattered more.
We lived our childhood instead of giving it to the internet.
And our AMERICAN culture was a shared experience, not a weapon used against half the country.
I'm remembering these things more now than ever before.
What do you miss about life in America?
One of the most chilling verses in the Bible isn’t a prophecy of the future, it’s a description of what happens when a society loses its moral compass.
When evil is praised, truth is mocked, and common sense becomes controversial, the warning signs are already there.
Isaiah saw it thousands of years ago, and his words still ring true today.
Here’s how Polish fans celebrate their club’s victory.
Before leaving the square, they cleaned up after themselves. No one was beaten up or raped.
Be Like Poland.
Airman 1st Class Elizabeth Jacobson was only at the beginning of her military career when war took her life.
In 2005, just three months into her deployment during Operation Iraqi Freedom, the young Air Force security forces member was traveling in a convoy near Camp Bucca, Iraq.
Then the ambush began.
Enemy attackers struck the convoy without warning, turning an ordinary mission into chaos within seconds. Explosions and gunfire ripped through the area as service members fought to survive.
Elizabeth Jacobson did not make it home.
She became the first female Airman k*lled during Operation Iraqi Freedom.
That heartbreaking milestone carried enormous weight across the military community. Behind the headline was not simply a statistic from war, but a real young woman with a future that disappeared thousands of miles from home.
Jacobson served in Air Force Security Forces, one of the military’s most dangerous career fields during the Iraq War. Security forces personnel protected bases, escorted convoys, and operated in environments where roadside attacks and ambushes became constant threats.
Many Americans never realized how exposed convoy troops were during the war.
Every road could hide explosives.
Every mission carried uncertainty.
Every departure could become the last goodbye.
Elizabeth had only been deployed for three months.
Three months.
That is what makes stories like hers so devastating. Young service members barely arrived in combat zones before some were suddenly gone forever.
Her d*ath deeply affected fellow Airmen and military families across the country, reminding many people that the dangers of Iraq extended far beyond front-page headlines.
Today, Elizabeth Jacobson’s story remains a symbol of sacrifice carried by thousands of young Americans who volunteered to serve during one of the most dangerous conflicts of the modern era.
She gave her life before she even had the chance to fully begin it.
I see Democrats showing up in droves at ICE facilities, loudly demanding better treatment for those inside. Yet I’ve never once seen a Democrat visit a VA hospital to check on our wounded veterans and their care. That tells me everything I need to know.
Anyone who claims the lack of joy about the 250th is a function of a rough economy was not alive in 1976.
The country rocked in its 200th celebration and the economy was a FREAKING MESS.
There is this Gen Z misconception that the '70s and early '80s were some sort of economic golden age of readily available, well-paying jobs, low cost housing and an all around sense of prosperity.
WRONG.
Google "Stagflation." Google "gas lines." Google "mortgage interest rates in the 1980s."
Our economy today is a golden age by comparison, without exaggeration.
Yet somehow in 1976 we could gleefully celebrate our nation's birthday without Democrats turning it into a Howard Zinn-inspired anti-history hatefest.