🚨 BREAKING: Elon Musk just now ended Zohran Mamdani’s whole career in once sentence:
“Mamdani has built nothing. He is a taker, never a maker”
MIC DROP 🔥
I am officially nominating Hunter Biden (@HunterBiden) for Sobriety of the Year.
No man in history has announced he’s sober this many times.
By his own count, he’s been clean at least 38 different times.
A truly unprecedented achievement.
And he’s nowhere near done announcing it.
It’s a record worthy of recognition. Thank you for your attention to this matter.
Dear god.
Democrats can’t help themselves, they insult true Americans everyday and blame someone else for their failures.
Now Schultz says it’s the Haitians who have the greatest impact on our country. Last month it was illegals from South America. Before that it was illegals from Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Democrats can’t accept the reality that AMERICANS MADE AMERICAN GREAT.
🚨 JUST IN: Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche just held a press conference and dropped the hammer - 455 healthcare fraudsters charged for scamming Americans out of $6.5 BILLION in just 14 days. DEVELOPING
🚨BREAKING: The DOJ is announcing CHARGES against 455 defendants across 45 states for healthcare fraud schemes, including over $6.5B in false Medicare and Medicaid claims.
In 1997, actor John C. McGinley’s son, Max, was born with Down syndrome. Shortly after, John's talent agent pulled him aside to deliver what was framed as practical advice: Do not talk about this publicly. Keep it quiet. People will stop hiring you.
For some, that might have sounded like reasonable career preservation. Protect the livelihood, avoid the spotlight, and pretend nothing had changed.
John’s response was immediate. He fired the agent.
Then, he did the exact opposite of what he had been told. He brought Max everywhere. Red carpets, talk shows, film sets, and public events. Wherever John went, Max was right beside him. At a time when society still largely preferred to keep individuals with developmental disabilities out of sight, John made a different choice. He made his son visible. Openly, proudly, and entirely without apology.
What began as a father's protective instinct grew into decades of fierce advocacy. John became one of the country's most recognizable voices for Down syndrome awareness. He spoke at global conferences, testified before Congress, and fought hard for employment law reforms that created real opportunities for people with disabilities to work, earn, and live independently.
During this journey, a reporter asked John a question that revealed far more about society's biases than it did about Max. The reporter asked if John ever wished his son were normal.
John didn't hesitate. He replied that Max was normal. The question wasn't. It was a blunt rejection of the idea that a person’s worth is measured by how well they fit into a narrow, conventional box.
Decades have passed since that conversation. Max is now 27 years old. He works, navigates his community, and lives an independent life filled with possibilities that the critics in 1997 never could have imagined for him.
Reflecting on their journey, John often says that Max never limited his life. He expanded it. Through his son, he learned what love, patience, and true commitment require.
The world signaled early on that it would have preferred Max to remain hidden in the shadows. John spent nearly three decades ensuring that the world looked Max right in the eye. Some fathers protect their children by shielding them from the world. Others protect them by refusing to let the world look away.
True inclusion begins when we stop treating differences as deficits. Max didn't need to change to fit into the world.
The world needed to change to make room for Max.
Ask yourself one very simple question.
Why would anyone fight this hard to stop the government from checking whether voters are U.S. citizens?
A Biden appointed judge named Sparkle Sooknanan just blocked Trump's effort to verify citizenship and clean the voter rolls.
They call it "privacy."
Funny how the "privacy" always cuts in exactly one direction — keeping the rolls as messy as possible.
Verifying citizens should not be controversial.
Pass the SAVE America Act.
@SteveHiltonx Zero skin in the game here in Illinois, but I’m rooting for a drastic change to happen to a strong democrat controlled part of the country. At this point, forget party affiliation people and realize that it’s now good vs evil, right vs wrong. 🇺🇸 ALL THE WAY!
I feel a great sense of duty to the people of California and I won’t let you down. My team and I are fighting everyday to save our great state.
Change is coming ☀️
I want to take a moment to publicly thank Officer Walker of the Memphis Police Department
Our family was denied a hotel room at the Best Western Executive Inn simply because my husband has a service dog. He’s a disabled veteran, and the hotel had already been notified about the dog when we made the reservation. But when we arrived, they refused to honor it. The stress, the ridicule, the back-and-forth—it was becoming too much, and I was terrified it would trigger one of my husband’s PTSD episodes.
So I called for an officer.
What happened next is something I’ll never forget.
Officer Walker arrived and immediately changed the entire energy of the situation. He didn’t rush. He didn’t escalate. He calmly spoke with my husband, asked about Abby—his service dog—treated her with respect, and gently helped bring him back from a very overwhelming moment. Then he informed the hotel, clearly and professionally, that they were breaking federal ADA law.
Thankfully, Best Western corporate stepped in and ordered the hotel to give us the room we had every right to.
But what touched my heart most wasn’t just what Officer Walker said—it was what he did.
He stayed with us.
He talked to my husband with kindness and patience.
He reassured me when I was on the verge of tears.
When our 1-year-old reached out, he didn’t hesitate—he picked him up, comforted him, let him cuddle in his arms.
He even took the time to engage our anxious 10-year-old and 8-year-old, helping them feel safe again after everything they’d just witnessed.
Officer Walker didn’t just resolve a situation—he brought peace into the middle of our storm.
To Officer Walker:
THANK YOU.
You were a beacon of light in an incredibly stressful moment for our family.
Your kindness, professionalism, and compassion made a world of difference.
Memphis PD, you’ve got a good one.
By Lori.Ann.Hensley