Muslim woman who appears to be a U.S. service member confirms that she would REFUSE commands if they were targeting Muslims.
How is this person allowed to even be in the military???
Cc @SecWar
Right before Elizabeth Warren (@ewarren) voted against Pete Hegseth (@SecWar) in 2025, she told me that Hegseth was a drunk and essentially a threat to women and children.
This is the same Elizabeth Warren who described Graham Platner (@grahamformaine) as “the fire we need.”
Platner announced he is taking time to “reflect on his campaign” after he was accused of sexual assault.
Elected Democrats are hypocrites and liars.
The Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger has confirmed that the band is aiming for a return to the stage next year, while teasing that new music is already in development. https://t.co/X3gBmv6MCC
Attention everyone in Flower Mound, Texas area
The Hive Bakery apparently hates Conservatives and our country. This was their message for the 4th of July:
“We refuse to observe this holiday. F*** this fascist regime”
Would be a shame if everyone in the area saw this!
🚨 BREAKING: In a stunning blow to the "experts," Japanese automaker Toyota has REFUSED to produce the Tacoma pickup truck in Mexico — instead opting for TEXAS, USA as part of a $3.6 billion investment
ANOTHER TRUMP WIN! 🇺🇸🇯🇵
Texas is set to gain 2,000 jobs from this investment alone 👏🏻
This is exactly what I voted for. And it will ONLY get better from here!
Every year on her son’s birthday, his mother takes him to the cemetery to pick up “the present his father gave him.” It keeps his father alive in his memory.
Out of 16.4 million Americans who served in WWII, only about 40,000 are still alive.
They’re dying at a rate of ~100 per day.
These are the heroes who saved the world from tyranny.
Find one. Thank one. Listen to their stories.
While you still can.
When Navy seaman Douglas Hegdahl fell overboard into the Gulf of Tonkin in 1967, North Vietnamese forces pulled him out of the water and dragged him to the most feared prison of the Vietnam War — the Hanoi Hilton.
He was young. He was low-ranking. And the moment he arrived, he made a decision his captors never saw coming.
He would become the dumbest man in the room.
Hegdahl shuffled around the prison yard with a blank expression and a dopey grin, tripping over things, asking confused questions, acting like a man who couldn't tie his own shoelaces. His guards laughed at him. They gave him a nickname — "The Incredibly Stupid One" — and, crucially, they gave him something no other prisoner had: the freedom to wander.
They thought he was harmless.
He was anything but.
While his captors looked away, Hegdahl quietly dropped dirt and stones into enemy truck fuel tanks, sabotaging their operations one engine at a time. But that wasn't his real mission. His real mission was invisible.
Every day, Hegdahl watched. He listened. He memorized — the name of every American prisoner held in that camp, their capture date, the conditions they endured, the torture they suffered. Information the North Vietnamese deliberately hid from the outside world. Information that hundreds of families back home were desperate for.
And he found a way to make sure he'd never forget a single detail.
He set every name, every date, every fact — to the tune of "Old MacDonald Had a Farm." He sang it silently in his head, day after day, in a prison cell, surrounded by men who had no idea what the young fool was quietly carrying.
In 1969, the North Vietnamese released him early as a propaganda gesture. They wanted to show the world their generosity. They thought they were setting a harmless simpleton free.
Instead, they handed the United States one of the most valuable intelligence assets of the entire war.
The moment Hegdahl reached American soil, he delivered everything — name after name after name. Over 250 prisoners accounted for. Families who had waited years in agonizing silence finally learned their sons, husbands, and fathers were alive.
Senior military officers later said his information was so detailed, so precise, that it fundamentally changed how America understood the POW situation in Vietnam.
Douglas Hegdahl never fired a weapon. He never led a charge. He won his battle by making the enemy believe he was nothing — and quietly becoming everything.
The most dangerous person in the room isn't always the loudest. Sometimes, it's the one they forgot to watch.