At 6am Trooper Kari Woodard was investigating a crash with injuries on I-65 SB at the 116mm. While she was outside her car, it was struck.
Thankfully she was not injured, this is 1 mile south of the location Trooper Keith was struck last night 😔
Please Slow Down & Move over
Patricia Heaton, Mayim Bialik, Ginnifer Goodwin, Kathy Ireland and Sheryl Sandberg have a message for the world:
DON’T STAY SILENT!
16 women remain in captivity in #Gaza. They have been continuously raped for over 104 days. Demand their return!
Thank you for your voice @PatriciaHeaton@missmayim@sherylsandberg@kathyireland@ginnnygoodwin
💙🇮🇱💙
#HamasRapists
#BelieveIsraeliWomen
#BringThemHomeNow
The way Hamas is gaining international sympathy should be studied.
Their strategy of hiding in tunnels under hospitals, schools, and mosques is the most cowardly and psychopathic war strategy in all of history.
They knowingly planned the destruction of Gaza because they knew that the only way Israel could respond to October 7 was by bombing hospitals, schools, and mosques to get to them and gain sympathy along the way.
Personally, I could never sympathize with terrorists.
In 2005, Israel gave all their land in Gaza to the Palestinians, forcing Israelis to leave behind their homes and gardens. Some Israelis were removed by force from their homes and farms.
The Israelis left behind full infrastructure, including piping.
The Palestinians burned down the gardens and turned the pipes into rockets.
@Sachinettiyil It’s over 180 churches. I’ve following the case closely from Canada. Here’s a report in Spanish I made about the case.
https://t.co/iMRAGoQ52L
100 days.
I am so sorry to the Bibas brothers, that they have not been returned home yet. My heart aches for them. I think about them so often. I couldn’t sleep for weeks after October 7, having watched them get taken on that horrific video, fearing the worst.
These boys are part of my life now. And I haven’t even met them.
I want them brought home so badly.
It hurts to have to write this hashtag again, but here it goes. #BringThemHomeNow
"I have long since realized that your fate does not depend on me. If it is God's will that I should no longer be with you, then indeed he has some other aid ready for you that will work without me." Blessed Nikolaus Gross, German husband and father executed by the Nazis
Those who insist that gasoline-powered vehicles are banned think they offset this inhumanity with donations to the Fresh Air fund. Or maybe they don't care?
July 24, 1998, 25 years ago today. Saving Private Ryan, directed by Steven Spielberg and starring Tom Hanks, is released. The most visceral depiction of D-Day ever put to screen, Americans gained a new appreciation of the horror of war, and the uncommon valor of the boys - now old men - sitting beside them in the theaters.
Saving Private Ryan would do more to inspire Americans’ appreciation of our World War II generation than any other piece of popular culture. It’s opening scenes - still so harrowing and difficult to watch - remind us of the cost their generation paid to be lauded as our Greatest. Well over four million World War II veterans survived at the time of its release. Today, barely 100,000 survive. Twenty five years later, more than ever, let us draw inspiration from and gratitude for the generation whose story was portrayed in the film, and that such men once lived.
Arthur Brooks on #soulmates in @TheAtlantic: "To increase the odds of success, as your romance progresses, don’t ask yourself, “Is our passion as high as it was?” but rather, “Is our friendship deepening?”.
#marriage
https://t.co/E1lF9QVCkP