What a race we had under the lights in St. Louis! 💪🏻
@rinusveekay brought home our best result of the season so far, while @sting_ray_robb gained positions in a hard-fought race and battled all the way to the checkered flag.
Great work by the No. 76 and No. 77 crews 👊🏼
#GoJHR
This is the best single lap in Indianapolis 500 history.
Absolutely incredible.
And by Turn 2 he said he wishes his wife and 3-week-old daughter was there.
Indy, man.
#Indy500 || 💕
BREAKING: Four-Star OT Jake Hildebrand has Committed to Arizona State, he tells me for @Rivals The 6’6 300 OT from Chandler, AZ chose the Sun Devils over Oregon, Texas A&M, and Utah
“ASU!! I'm staying home!! #forksup#agtg 🔱🔱”
https://t.co/6AN9I5pcIw
In Nazaré, at Praia do Norte, Sebastian Steudtner rode a 26.21metre wave, and it was officially recognised as a world record for the largest wave ever surfed.
King Charles III quietly did something genuinely moving during his state visit to the United States. A lifelong environmentalist who has championed conservation for over five decades often at the cost of ridicule from the British press the King ended his trip by visiting Shenandoah National Park in Virginia.
There, he sat with park rangers, swore in a new group of Junior Rangers, met Buddy the bald eagle, and unveiled a new partnership between Shenandoah and Scotland’s Cairngorms National Park. This is the same man who converted his own estate to organic farming back in 1986, long before it was fashionable.
A foreign monarch showing up with real curiosity and respect for America’s public lands felt refreshingly sincere. And yet, it barely made a headline.
That silence is telling. When a visiting head of state reminds us of the value of our own national parks more visibly than our own leadership, something has gone wrong.
For decades, King Charles has put his credibility on the line for the natural world.
Meanwhile, America’s public lands have faced aggressive rollbacks: the weakening of protections like the Roadless Rule, opening tens of millions of acres of national forests to logging and mining, and efforts to sell off large portions to private interests.
It’s a stark contrast. One man has spent a lifetime planting trees and defending nature.
The other treats the outdoors primarily as a backdrop for golf courses.
Our public lands deserve better than being viewed as a development opportunity. They belong to all of us and they’re worth protecting, not selling.
People don't realize how absurd this view actually is.
A camera. On a robot. On Mars.
Built by humans on a planet 140 million miles away, launched on a rocket, landed using a sky crane, and now driving across an alien desert taking pictures so detailed you can count the rocks.
100 years ago, your great-grandparents thought airplanes were a miracle.
You are scrolling past Mars on your phone.
I just spent 2 incredible weeks in Italy and it is so frustrating to come back to the U.S…
How is it possible @RobertKennedyJr that the Italian food supply is so vastly superior.
I literally ate bread at every meal, dessert multiple times per day, and generally ate way more than I do in the U.S.
Not once did I have acid reflux. Not one headache, no digestive problems, and I didn’t gain any weight.
If I ate the same way in the U.S. (I used to at times) I would have gone through a full bottle of Tums and Advil just to get through the day…
WHY does the U.S. allow glyphosate in wheat, high fructose corn syrup in food and who knows what in our milk products?
The difference in quality of life in Italy vs the U.S. is staggering from their common sense (anti corporate) food regulation.
WHY aren’t more people upset about this?
The U.S. is the richest country in the world and we eat like one of the poorest.
What a phenomenal night for ASU football, Kenny Dillingham and his staff. Two first-rounders for the first time in a quarter-century. Neither player was a top-750 recruit in high school. Exceedingly rare at a minimum.