Please pray• Please Join React-19 On X spaces for a prayer vigil as Cody Hudson is about to be placed on a Medivac flight in critical condition- transferred about 2.5 hours to a Level 1 Trauma Center that can handle every critical issue Cody is enduring currently.
Please pray for him and join the vigil in the post below. Cody is in heart failure and needs a heart transplant and significant immune modulation to address his treatment resistant blood clotting disorder that he was left with after his COVID injections that has left him surviving multiple strokes, DVTs, PEs and Libman Sacks Endocarditis in which he is now in critical condition.
We will make some NOISE- asking WHY do the injured have to become severely, terminally and critically ill before significant care begins.
Athletes dropping dead from cardiac arrest:
1970 – 2020 (50 years): 1,312 cases
2021 – 2022 (1 year): 1,598 cases
Even if the exact numbers are debated, the massive spike is impossible to ignore.
Young, fit athletes suddenly collapsing was never normal.
What changed in 2021?
We all know the answer …
RFK JR: “Today, a compliant child must take between 69 and 92 vaccines to stay in school... and NOT ONE of them has been safety tested in a pre-licensing placebo-controlled trial."
"That is just MALPRACTICE."
The Labrador Retriever was already safe on the rescue platform, but the moment we reached for him, he jumped back into the burning building.
For a split second, I thought the dog had lost his mind.
The yellow Lab had been standing on a second-floor balcony surrounded by smoke. Flames crawled across the roofline behind him, and thick black clouds rolled from shattered windows. Embers drifted through the evening air like glowing snowflakes.
The apartment complex was being evacuated one unit at a time.
Everyone we knew about was already out.
The dog should have been relieved to see us.
Instead, he stared at us, barked once, and disappeared back inside.
My name is Jason Morales.
I was forty-one years old and working with a volunteer fire department outside Colorado Springs when the call came in on a windy October evening.
The fire had started in a downstairs kitchen.
By the time crews arrived, flames had spread through the walls and into the attic spaces connecting multiple apartments.
Families stood outside wrapped in blankets.
Children cried.
Neighbors pointed toward windows.
Everyone was trying to account for loved ones.
The Labrador was standing alone on a balcony attached to a second-floor unit.
At first, we assumed he had simply become trapped.
That happened often.
Terrified pets would hide under beds or in closets until firefighters found them.
This seemed no different.
We extended a ladder truck toward the balcony.
The dog watched every movement.
He wasn't panicking.
That was the strange part.
His tail wasn't tucked.
His ears weren't pinned back.
He looked focused.
Almost impatient.
When firefighter Luke Harris stepped onto the platform and reached toward him, the dog barked sharply.
Then he spun around and ran back inside.
"Did that dog just refuse rescue?" Luke asked.
I climbed onto the balcony myself.
Smoke immediately poured from the doorway.
The heat hit like opening an oven.
Then I heard the dog bark again.
One bark.
A pause.
Another bark.
Not random.
Purposeful.
The sound came from deeper inside the apartment.
Something about it felt deliberate.
"Let's check it," I said.
Two of us entered.
Visibility was poor.
The hallway was filling with smoke.
Water from the sprinkler system dripped from the ceiling.
Furniture had already been knocked over during the evacuation.
The dog barked again.
Closer this time.
We followed the sound.
Down the hallway.
Past a partially collapsed doorway.
Toward a bedroom at the back of the apartment.
The Labrador stood inside.
His body blocked the entrance.
His fur was streaked with soot.
His chest heaved from the smoke.
Yet he refused to move.
Then I heard it.
A faint sound.
Not from the dog.
A voice.
Very weak.
Very small.
Someone was inside.
We pushed past the doorway.
The room was cluttered with boxes and furniture.
Near the far wall sat an elderly woman in a wheelchair.
She looked confused.
Disoriented.
Terrified.
A fallen bookshelf had blocked her path.
She had been trying to move toward the door when the smoke became too thick.
The dog immediately walked to her side.
The woman reached down and placed a trembling hand on his head.
"There you are, Benny," she whispered.
The Labrador leaned against her leg.
Only later would we learn her name was Helen Carter.
She was eighty-two years old and suffered from early-stage dementia.
During the evacuation, family members believed she had already exited with another relative.
That relative believed she was with someone else.
In the chaos, assumptions replaced certainty.
Everyone thought someone else had her.
Everyone was wrong.
Except Benny.
According to neighbors, the Labrador had belonged to Helen for nearly seven years.
She adopted him after losing her husband.
The two were rarely apart.
Every morning they sat together on the same bench outside.
Every afternoon they walked slowly around the courtyard.
Every evening Benny slept beside her recliner.
When firefighters began evacuating residents, Benny initially followed the crowd downstairs.
But at some point he realized Helen wasn't with them.
Instead of saving himself, he ran back into the building.
Back through smoke.
Back through flames.
Back to her.
And then he waited.
Not for help.
For the right people to follow him.
We carefully lifted the bookshelf.
Another firefighter helped secure Helen into an evacuation chair.
The entire time Benny stayed close enough that his shoulder touched her leg.
He never wandered.
Never panicked.
Never left her side.
When we finally moved toward the exit, he walked beside us like an additional member of the rescue team.
Outside, paramedics immediately evaluated Helen.
She was dehydrated and suffering from mild smoke inhalation but otherwise stable.
The moment her daughter saw her, she burst into tears.
Then she saw Benny.
The Labrador trotted forward.
His tail finally started wagging.
Not wildly.
Not dramatically.
Just enough to show that the job was finished.
The family surrounded him.
Neighbors applauded.
Several firefighters removed their helmets and knelt down to pet him.
Benny accepted every bit of attention with complete indifference.
His eyes never left Helen.
The next day, local news stations covered the story.
Photos of the Labrador spread across social media.
People called him a hero.
The fire chief called him one of the bravest dogs he had ever seen.
But my favorite part happened three months later.
The apartment building had been repaired.
Helen returned home.
Our department received an invitation to visit.
When we arrived, we found her sitting outside in the sunshine with Benny stretched across her feet.
A new brass nameplate had been mounted beside the apartment door.
It read:
"Benny's Place."
Helen laughed when she saw us reading it.
"He saved my life," she said. "The least I could do was put his name on the front door."
Benny looked up at her voice and thumped his tail against the porch.
The old woman scratched behind his ears.
The dog closed his eyes.
And for the first time since the fire, he seemed completely relaxed.
Because the person he had gone back for was finally home.
And this time, neither of them was going anywhere.
So much has happened since their arrest that I’d nearly forgotten about these two.
An Essex man has now been charged with more than a dozen further sexual offences as part of an ongoing investigation into alleged human trafficking for sexual exploitation.
Following continued enquiries by detectives, 57-year-old Barrie Drewitt-Barlow has been charged with an additional 15 offences, while Scott Drewitt-Barlow, 32, faces a further two counts of rape and one count of causing or inciting sexual activity.
The new charges against Barrie include five counts of rape, four counts of sexual assault, two counts of sexual activity with a child, two counts of paying for the sexual services of a child, causing an individual to engage in sexual activity without consent, and causing or inciting sexual activity.
This now brings the total number of charges faced by Barrie to 24, while Scott is facing seven charges in total.
Both men, formerly of Southwood Chase, Danbury, remain in custody and are due to appear at Chelmsford Crown Court.
Ivermectin is more than a drug. It’s a silenced revolution in medicine and this truth needs to be publicized more!
1 – Ivermectin prevents the damage caused to RNA Vaccines.
2 – Ivermectin blocks the entry of Spike Protein into cells. So, if the person was vaccinated with COVID, they have hope, they have a way to treat themselves through Ivermectin.
3 – Ivermectin is a treatment after Covid and after vaccination, it is an effective medicine in all phases of Covid 19, even before entering the cell, Ivermectin already destroys the virus in the blood. It only has beneficial effects and no harmful effects in the treatment of the coronavirus.
4 – Ivermectin has a very powerful anti-inflammatory action against Coronavirus.
5 – Ivermectin has a powerful action for traumatic and orthopedic injuries, it strengthens muscles and has no side effects like corticosteroids.
6 – Ivermectin treats autoimmune ailments such as: rheumatoid arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, fibromyalgia, psoriasis, Crohn's disease, allergic rhinitis.
7 – Ivermectin reduces the frequency of flu and colds.
8 – Ivermectin improves the immunity of cancer patients.
9 – Ivermectin treats Herpes Simplex and Herpes Zoster.
10 – Ivermectin reduces the frequency of sinusitis and diverticulitis.
11 – Ivermectin protects the heart in cardiac overload, in an embolism for example, it prevents cardiac hypoxia because it stimulates the production of basic energy so that the tissue is not destroyed and thus improves cardiac function.
12 – Ivermectin is antiparasitic. 13 – Ivermectin is anti-neoplastic (anti-cancer), it suppresses the proliferation and metastasis of cancer cells, only killing cancer cells and preserving healthy cells, improving the effectiveness of chemotherapy treatment, as it kills cancer cells resistant to chemotherapy, defeating the resistance to multiple chemotherapeutics that tumors develop, and combined with chemotherapy and/or anti-cancer agents, it provides an increase in the effectiveness of these treatments.
HORRIFYING: COVID Injections PROVEN to Cause Fatal Myocarditis
Groundbreaking autopsy study confirms it.
A systematic review of fatal myocarditis cases after COVID shots (Hulscher, McCullough et al.) examined autopsies. 100% were linked to the injections as the cause.
Key facts from Dr. Peter McCullough & McCullough Foundation research:
- Mean victim age: just 44.4 years old
- Mean time from last shot to death: 6.2 days (median only 3 days)
- Cardiovascular system was the only organ affected in nearly all cases
Even more damning: In the largest review of published autopsies after COVID vaccination, 73.9% were independently adjudicated as directly caused by the COVID injections. Sudden cardiac death, myocarditis, heart attacks, and other fatal injuries dominated. Many deaths occurred within days to a week.
The temporal link, autopsy confirmation, and Bradford Hill criteria all point to causation.
This is not “rare.” This is documented death from the shots.
The evidence is in the bodies. The cover-up ends here.
Essex Police - Castle Point District
Can you help us find missing 15-year-old Shayla Brook?
Shayla was reported missing from #Canvey Island on Monday 14 June.
She was last seen near the Benfleet train station that day and may have got on a train.
We’ve carried out enquiries locally to try to find her but now we’re asking the public for their help.
Shayla is described as 5ft 2ins tall, of medium build. She has several facial piercings, including her nose.
When she went missing, she was wearing a white camisole top, jean shorts, fluffy slipper shoes and carrying a black tote bag.
We’re concerned about Shayla due to the length of time she’s been missing and want to find her as soon as we can to make sure she’s okay.
Please repost
If you’re with Shayla, know where she is or have information that can help us find her, call 999
Credit Essex police
Dear friends please share
Due to me not complying to this notification on my iPhone yesterday, I snow cant access a single app on my phone.
I cant get any WhatsApp notifications etc so if you need me, call me or send old fashioned text
Cheers
Britain's children can't even take their pets out for walks without invaders targeting them.
This child has a social media page for her and her dog so she caught this on video.
Imagine how often it happens and goes undocumented?
And the invasion continues unchallenged!
Please read and help if you can..
I really don’t want to loose my little boy until he’s 18…. 😪😪
In the last 9 years since speaking out about being raped by Pakistani men from 12yrs old I’ve had to move 17 times, I’ve had to have my little boy abroad to keep him safe from the Pakistani men who raped me from 12 years old. Social services took my 5yr old daughter for her own protection when I spoke out about being a victim. When I got pregnant with my little lad social services plan was to take him too. My daughter was abused in foster care and there was no way I was letting them take my baby for it to happen to him too. (Proof in comments). I was able to pay for my little boy but 2 years ago I had a fall and had a very bad coccyx injury which left me in bed and having carers in 4 times a day. I also had a mental health breakdown which took over a year to get back to a little bit of a normal mind. I need help to look after my little lad as I’m still not well enough to do it on my own. If anyone can help we would be very grateful. Things are so bad that’s I might have to bring my little boy back to England because I cannot afford over £1000 a month to look after him and give him a normalish life abroad anymore, but if I do he will be taken by social services… I cannot loose another child especially after what my little girl went thru.
Could I get 1000 people to donate just £1 per month with re occurring monthly donations? My son will be able to stay safe and have a normalish life with this at least. Ideally I’d like to raise enough money to leave the uk to be with my son full time but to do that I’d have to open a little business and get a place to live permanently and have health insurance which isn’t much in Egypt. But any help will be very appreciated and will be used only for my son.
• GoFundMe: https://t.co/aLh9lU8Hm0
• PayPal: https://t.co/XKYJnwV8is
I QUIT VACCINATING MY DOGS IN 2015.
In April 2022 my very healthy and happy boy, Kodi, age 8, had to go to the vet for a possible broken bone.
Vet sedated him for X-Rays then took him back and updated ALL his vaccines WITHOUT our permission. 👉🏼 No Broken Bones.
Two weeks later, he was a zombie and shook uncontrollably.
Lesson Learned 👉🏼 NEVER LEAVE YOUR PETS SIDE AT THE VET.
Spent the next year & half working w/ a holistic vet to detox.
September 2024, age 10, he was diagnosed with a bleeding splenic tumor (hemangiosarcoma).
He died 2 weeks later, Sept 17.
RIP Sweet Boy. 🙏🏼
When you call 9-1-1 in Portland, get ready for the long wait to get even longer.
https://t.co/w3n11THRnN
The Portland City council just passed a ridiculous budget that cuts police and fire services, which should be the bedrock of any city.
Citywide average response time for Portland sits at 19 minutes but in some areas you might wait as long as half an hour.
The new budget approved by the 12 members of Portland's bloated new city council cuts police positions, and overtime, and about 20-thousand hours of regular police service.
So, a city with an overall budget of 8 and a half billion spending less than ten percent of that amount on all public safety sees fit to cut even more.
At the same time, the city considers spending hundreds of millions of dollars to subsidize a sports arena for a ball team owned by a billionaire.
Like they say, Don't TELL me what you value.
Show me your budget, and that tells me what you value.