It's not the color of your skin we're tired of.
It's your culture.
It's the way you behave.
We're tired of your loud, violent, obnoxious ghetto culture, robbing, murdering, whining about everything!
After FDR finished his second term the poverty rate for black Americans was over 90%.
Plus, let’s just say he didn’t exactly poll very well with Japanese Americans in California.
FDR in my opinion is the most overrated President in American history.
If you grew up using a phone booth, you’re not just tough, you’re basically a government experiment. We used to cram into a glass box that smelled like cigarettes, Aqua Velva, and poor choices, then grab a receiver that had been passed around like a church collection plate during flu season. If you survived that, your immune system didn’t get strong, it got mean 📞😆
For the first time ever, the @FBI is now compliant with our IT systems against insider threats.
In September 2021, the Committee for National Security Systems Directive 504 (CNSSD 504) established minimum insider threat and User Activity Monitoring (UAM) requirements for all Executive Branch agencies - including keystroke monitoring, full application content capture, screen capture, file shadowing, and user attribution.
Previous leadership did little to nothing about it – leaving the Bureau vulnerable and out of compliance for years.
We fixed it.
This week, we got the official update that the FBI is 504 compliant against insider threats for the first time ever.
When you see media criticize changes we are making at your FBI, this is what they leave out – predecessors did nothing to fix many egregious problems making the FBI and ultimately the country more vulnerable. Every day under this administration we are fixing those problems and better serving you.
A Union Army surgeon once tried to have Mary Ann Bickerdyke thrown out of camp.
The complaint reached General William Tecumseh Sherman.
His answer became famous.
“She outranks me. I can’t do a thing in the world.”
Mary Ann Bickerdyke held no military rank.
She was not a doctor.
She had no official command.
But by the middle of the Civil War, thousands of Union soldiers knew exactly who she was.
They called her Mother Bickerdyke.
In 1861, she was a forty-four-year-old widow in Galesburg, Illinois, raising two sons and supporting herself through practical nursing and herbal medicine. Her life was ordinary, far from battlefields and generals.
Then her pastor read a letter in church.
A young doctor from their town had written from Cairo, Illinois, describing Union soldiers dying in miserable conditions. Not only from wounds, but from dirt, disease, hunger, and neglect.
The congregation raised money and supplies.
Someone had to deliver them.
Mary Ann volunteered.
She expected to go and return home.
Instead, she stayed for four years.
What she found in Cairo horrified her.
Men lay on filthy straw.
Food was poor.
Water was dirty.
Hospital floors were coated with blood and waste.
Supplies existed, but were badly managed or locked away.
Mary Ann did not ask permission.
She started cleaning.
She scrubbed floors.
Washed bedding.
Organized kitchens.
Cooked nourishing meals.
Created laundries.
Comforted dying soldiers.
Wrote letters home for men too weak to hold a pen.
When supplies were locked away while soldiers suffered, she broke the locks.
When careless surgeons endangered patients, she fought to have them removed.
When officers questioned her authority, she answered with fearless bluntness.
“I have received my authority from the Lord God Almighty. Have you anything that outranks that?”
Most did not know how to reply.
Soldiers trusted her because she cared more about survival than procedure. She moved through camps and battlefields with a lantern, searching for wounded men left behind after the fighting stopped.
Her reputation reached the top of the Union Army.
Ulysses S. Grant supported her.
Sherman defended her.
He called her one of his best generals because she did what many officers failed to do: she got results.
Mary Ann served through nineteen major battles, including Shiloh, Vicksburg, Chattanooga, and Sherman’s March to the Sea. More than 300 field hospitals were organized under her influence.
When the war ended, she kept serving.
She helped veterans obtain pensions, supported disabled soldiers, assisted settlers in Kansas, and worked with charitable organizations for decades.
Mary Ann Bickerdyke died in 1901 at age eighty-four.
She had no rank.
No degree.
No uniform authority.
But when soldiers were hungry, wounded, forgotten, or dying, she stepped in and acted.
That was why generals listened.
Mary Ann Bickerdyke did not wait to be allowed to help.
She saw suffering.
And did what needed to be done.
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In honor of your service, #veterans receive a FREE ticket to see Young Washington with purchase of another ticket - courtesy of the Department of Veterans Affairs and @AngelStudiosInc . In theaters now!
Limit 2 free tickets per order. Use code VETSGOFREE
Go to: https://t.co/lxHPk1HQV9
Thank you for your service! 🇺🇸 🫡
#YoungWashington
So apparently my response to the new Odyssey movie makes me a racist . This is what I said : "As a proud Greek I find the new Odyssey movie to be a insult to my heritage !" Is that Racist ? I think not .
@realsashastone they don't have anyone else to put up. She's qualified because she is stunningly stupid and can be used by Obama or whom ever runs things in that insane group
@Imogen_Cecil I'm on it, and this is true. I learned how to say no thanks. otherwise, I would end up like some others I know who have multiple meds to take, and seem to be doing poorly.