103-year-old World War II veteran Cpl. Wilbur J. “Jack” Myers, a Williamsport native, sings the national anthem at Camden Yards as part of the Orioles’ America 250 celebration on Saturday.
Myers served as a corporal gunner in the U.S. Army’s 692nd Tank Destroyer Battalion. He was awarded a Bronze Star for his service.
He flawlessly delivered “The Star-Spangled Banner” and celebrated after by dancing with his family while Orioles fans gave him a standing ovation.
Politicians always want to raise taxes. Have they ever thought of eliminating fraud, waste, and abuse?
I just exposed $190m of fraud, and they are completely silent.
Why?
They don't want the fraud exposed. They would rather blame millionaires and billionaires for your problems
🚨 Here is the full 53 minutes of my crew and I exposing New York fraud, we uncovered over $190,000,000 in fraud as these fraudsters use the elderly and needy to commit fraud through adult and personal home care scams in NYC. Your tax dollars are paying for elderly Koreans and Chinese to play ping pong and do tai chi, while the fraudsters give $ kickbacks to those who enroll. Like it and share this video, the fraud must STOP.
We ALL work way too hard and pay too much in taxes for fraudsters to steal from our pockets. These fraudsters have been able to defraud American taxpayers for years without any pushback from the public and politicians. Time is up.
EXPOSE IT ALL AND END THE FRAUD.
Missing girl, 4, was DISSOLVED with corrosive chemicals by her parents before remains were dumped in creek, according to tearful cop who says they are unworthy of titles 'mom' and 'dad' https://t.co/nNx25JjnKe
The remains of 4-year-old Javeayah Harris were confirmed recovered on July 9, 2026, ending a massive search in Aiken County, South Carolina.
Her parents were arrested and charged with homicide and desecration of remains.
The mother, Michilae Herring, 22, is charged with homicide by child abuse and filing a false police report.
Arrest warrants state that Javeayah died following physical abuse at Herring's hands.
Her father, Johmarea Harris, 23, is charged with homicide by child abuse.
Investigators allege Harris was fully aware of the physical abuse but showed an extreme indifference to human life by failing to seek medical treatment for his daughter.
Allegedly, the parents assaulted the child and neglected to take her for medical treatment.
Authorities speculate that little Javeayah died from her injuries about a month before her parents reported her as missing oh June 30.
Sheriff Marty Sawyer was emotional as he described that some of the little girls remains were “poured” into a lake.
Corrosive chemicals and tools were used to “accelerate” the destruction of her tiny body.
It is unlikely all her remains will be recovered, according to police.
Hell isn’t enough for these monsters. It just isn’t.
A Canadian who lived their “universal healthcare” system for 32 years just gave Americans the reality check everyone pushing “Medicare for All” needs to hear.
She didn’t rant. She showed the receipts:
• Nearly 200,000 emergency patients waited 48+ hours for a hospital bed last year alone.
• Almost 1 million Canadians now leave the ER without care because the wait is too long (up fivefold in some reports).
• ER doctors warn these delays are lethal.
• 5.9 million adults still have no regular family doctor.
• Specialist waitlists are exploding — median 28.6 weeks from GP referral to treatment. Some doctors are closing practices to new patients.
• Only 2.5 hospital beds per 1,000 people — well below the OECD average. Hallway medicine is routine. Patients die on stretchers.
Her line hits hard:
“We want universal healthcare… until we learn.”
She’s not wrong. Canada’s single-payer model gives coverage on paper but delivers rationing by queue in practice. Long waits aren’t a bug — they’re the feature when government controls supply and prices.
America’s system is also broken: crushing costs, administrative bloat, and real gaps for the uninsured or underinsured. We spend nearly twice as much per person and still have problems.
The solution isn’t importing Canada’s waiting rooms. It’s fixing supply (train more doctors/nurses, cut red tape), adding real competition and price transparency, expanding HSAs/direct primary care, and protecting innovation.
Be informed before you trade one set of problems for another.
Bret Bair: But Mr. President, are you sure you want to give your America250 speech in a storm?!
President Trump: "I don't care. It's America 250! If they can storm the beaches at D-Day, I can do this speech."
Legend.
🇰🇿🇺🇸Together, we celebrate the 250th Anniversary of the independence of the United States of America 🇺🇸 as iconic landmarks in #Kazakhstan’s capital🇰🇿, Astana, and its largest metropolis, Almaty, are illuminated in the vibrant colours of the American flag to mark this special occasion.
This is what it’s all about man.
“American Flag, how you doin’ man. Listen, today is your special day flag…Let me pray for you. Dear God, after 250 years, this flag is still here kickin’ it. We still out here in America kickin’ it. Today is 4th of July, the creator of Earth, of America, let America be in your hands. In the name of Jesus, we pray. Amen. Have a good day Flag.” ❤️
Best thing I’ve seen all day.
God bless that man. 💯
Does it get any better than that?
Happy #IndependenceDay! Tonight, #NiagaraFalls will be illuminated in red, white and blue at the top of every hour for 15 minutes. ❤️ 🤍 💙
📸: Instagrammer lsphotography716
🎆 Happy 250th Birthday, America! 🇺🇸
Today, we're celebrating in style — lighting up the Brandenburg Gate in honor of 250 years of American independence.
“I work the front desk at a small doctor’s office, and I wish people could see what happens on the other side of the phone.
Every day, older patients call us confused.
They are told to use the patient portal, upload documents, check lab results online, fill out forms before the visit, and confirm everything through a link.
Some of them do not know what a portal is.
Some do not have a smartphone.
Some have one, but they are afraid to click the wrong thing.
Last week, a man in his late 80s called about his test results.
He said, “Ma’am, I don’t mean to bother you, but the computer says I have a message and I don’t know how to open it.”
He sounded ashamed.
That broke my heart.
He should not have to feel ashamed for needing a human being.
Technology can be helpful. I understand that.
But when people who built this country are made to feel helpless because everything became a login and a password, we have gone too far.
Not everything needs to be an app.
Not every answer should be hidden behind a screen.
Sometimes people need a voice.
A patient person.
A real human who says, “Don’t worry, I can help you.”
Progress should not leave seniors behind.
Because one day, the world will move faster than us too.
And I hope someone is kind enough to slow down.
~Unknown
Japan will be lighting up the Tokyo Tower, Rainbow Bridge, and Tokyo Aqua Symphony in Red, White, and Blue for July 4th to help celebrate America’s Independence Day 🇺🇸
…I’m ready, America is ready and I sure hope our Team is ready? Because it would be a Pity to Lose at Home and then have to go home, get it. Grrr, go USA! #FIFA#WorldCup2026#USA
Union and Confederate veterans shake hands during the 50th anniversary reunion at Gettysburg, 1913.
Fifty years after the Battle of Gettysburg, thousands of aging Civil War veterans returned to the Pennsylvania battlefield where they had once fought as young soldiers. The 1913 Gettysburg Reunion commemorated the battle’s semicentennial and became one of the largest gatherings of Civil War veterans ever held. Men who had once faced one another across stone walls, ridges, and open fields reunited as survivors of the conflict that had transformed the United States.
Veterans were housed in a sprawling temporary camp near the battlefield, and many were now in their seventies or eighties. They revisited landmarks such as Cemetery Ridge, Little Round Top, and the site of Pickett’s Charge, where some of the war’s fiercest fighting had taken place in July 1863.
One of the reunion’s defining moments came during a ceremonial reenactment of Pickett’s Charge, when surviving Confederate veterans crossed the field and were greeted by Union veterans with handshakes instead of gunfire. More than 50,000 veterans attended the event, and the widely photographed gestures of reconciliation became enduring symbols of national reunion, even as many of the war’s underlying issues and legacies remained unresolved.