NHL prospect Jonah Sivertson taking part in the standing long jump test Saturday morning at the NHL Draft Combine in Buffalo👀
✍️+📹: @kelsey_surmacz4
https://t.co/pZxMcvTZWU
Congratulations to Jonah Sivertson on his invitation and participation at to the 2026 NHL Scouting Combine in Buffalo! He has worked extensively with our Leadership & Development Coaches from his early days in minor hockey to his continued work with Coach Deanna Wells.
Congratulations to Jonah Sivertson on his invitation and participation at the 2026 NHL Scouting Combine! This achievement reflects Jonah’s hard work, dedication, and passion for the game.
We’re proud to have you represent Martin Academy!
Good luck at the Combine, Jonah!
"It's a new day and just to play our game tonight and hopefully come out on top."
Jonah Sivertson and the @PARaidersHockey are taking the 'business as usual' approach ahead of Game 2 at the 2026 #WHLChampionship!
Chris Pratt made a raw deal with God in the NICU: "If You save my son, I’ll give You my life, my platform—I won’t be ashamed to talk about You."
His premature baby faced health scares. Pratt prayed desperately. Son survived. He's been making good on that promise ever since—openly sharing faith, using his fame for it.
Crisis moments often forge unbreakable vows. When the stakes are your child, promises stick.
Ever had a "if You save them, I'll change everything" moment with God (or the universe)? Did you follow through?
Your stories 👇
EXCLUSIVE: Humboldt Father Speaks Out, Exposes Why Sidhu Still Avoids Deportation: “He Only Cares About Himself"
(WARNING: The contents of this story may be extremely upsetting or distressing to some viewers.)
On April 6, 2018, a double-trailer semi-truck driven by Jaskirat Singh Sidhu blew through a stop sign at a rural intersection in Saskatchewan, Canada, and collided with a bus carrying the Humboldt Broncos players and staff, injuring 13 people and killing 16, most of them teenagers, including Chris Joseph’s son, Jaxon.
After pleading guilty and serving roughly four years in prison, Sidhu has been on full parole since 2023. However, he has continued to dominate headlines, fighting tooth and nail not to be deported back to India.
Jaxon’s father, Chris Joseph — a former NHL player and firefighter — says Sidhu is not the remorseful man the media portrays him to be, but a "selfish" one who affected his life “in the worst way possible,” and who continues to do so by seeking an exemption from the law after having destroyed 29 families.
“The last time I ran my fingers through my son’s hair was in a morgue. He was cold, and he was beat up,” says Joseph, responding to the truck driver whose reckless driving resulted in the death of Joseph’s son Jaxon, along with 15 others, yet who continues to fight against deportation to India on the grounds that he does not want to be separated from his own son.
While most Canadians agree with his deportation order, some columnists and politicians argue that he should be forgiven and not be separated from his family.
“You tell me which child of yours you want to give up, and I will be the keyboard warrior hoping for forgiveness. It’s not about vindication — it’s about what’s right and what’s wrong, and the future of our country,” says Joseph, arguing that giving Sidhu an exemption from the law would set the wrong precedent for other unqualified drivers and signal that Canadian lives do not matter.
“Everybody has told him he should be deported — the judge, the CBSA, the Immigration and Refugee Board, the Federal Court of Appeal — and he still keeps trying, because he is looking out for himself and he really doesn’t care about anybody else,” says Joseph, urging politicians not to interfere with the judicial process and to allow him to be deported as he is supposed to be.
In this exclusive interview with @MediaBezirgan, Chris Joseph addresses those who advocate against Sidhu's deportation, discusses the corruption within the trucking industry, and explains why he no longer trusts the mainstream media when it comes to this story.
For nine months, my wife Brooklyn carried our baby boy knowing he was dying. Three months in, they told us he had severe hydrocephalus. Too much fluid crushing his brain. "Off the charts bad," the specialists at Cincinnati Children's said. So extreme they stopped measuring because it didn't matter anymore.
The MRIs were sickening to look at. They said over 90% chance he'd either die right after birth or survive with such severe brain damage that any quality of life was impossible. We had meetings about breathing tubes. About when to remove life support. About letting our son "pass peacefully."
Brooklyn moved to Cincinnati, lived in a hotel near the hospital in case she went into labor. I drove back and forth, working, trying to hold our family together while planning our baby's funeral. On July 8th, fifteen minutes before her C-section, we had another meeting about the breathing tube. About when we'd need to remove it and let him go to Heaven.
Then Charlie came out crying. The sweetest sound I've ever heard.
He stayed in intensive care until yesterday. Now he's home, doing everything babies do. Normal. Beautiful. The doctors have no medical explanation. His brain somehow cleared the blockage on its own, something they've never seen in a case this severe. Nurses with decades of experience kept saying "miracle" and "divine intervention."
Thousands of people were praying for us. Friends, family, strangers, people we'd never met. I'm practical, I believe in science, but I know God was involved in this. I give Him all the credit.
During those endless nights in Cincinnati, I started woodworking in the hotel parking lot just to keep my hands busy, to stop my mind from breaking. Made small toys hoping one day Charlie might hold them. Listed a few things on the Tedooo app where I'd been selling my work, and strangers started buying pieces they didn't need, sending messages saying they were praying for our son. That community held me when I couldn't stand.
Charlie's here. He's alive. Prayer is real, and miracles still happen.
By Amanda Cain
I once asked a high-performer why they stayed with their company for 10 years.
I expected them to say "the salary" or "the bonuses options."
Instead, they said:
"A few years ago, I had a family emergency. My manager didn't ask for a doctor's note. They didn't check my performance. They just said: 'Take care of your family, we’ve got your back.'"
Retention isn't a "perk." It's a feeling.
If you want to keep your best people in 2026, stop looking at them as "resources" and start looking at them as humans.
Perks like free snacks and fancy offices are great, but psychological safety is what keeps the lights on.
🚨 BREAKING: Nick Shirley was just put on NATIONAL TELEVISION as his Minnesota Somali fraud video blows up to nearly 100 MILLION views
Nick is giving a HUGE shoutout to David - the man in the video who helped find $110 MILLION in fraud in one day
"A KINDERGARTENER could've figured out there's fraud going on!"
"It's just the tip. There are BILLIONS in fraud in Minnesota right now!" 💯
"If you drive around Minneapolis, you will see day care centers, autism centers, transportation companies that have snow piled up like they haven't moved in months, and buildings with 14 and 22 health companies!" @nickshirleyy