Non-profit creating documentaries that inspire our audience to make a contribution for a better world. Help Refugee Elephants #elephants#elephantrefugees
Do elephants who need treatment recognise that we're trying to help?
Sometimes, yes! In July 2023, a bull elephant appeared at the Ithumba stockades with an arrow wound. He quickly disappeared back into the wilderness and then, days later, turned up again, this time in the company of ex-orphans Zurura and Kasigau. He proceeded to walk inside one of the stockades (almost unheard-of for a wild elephant), and patiently waited. He could not have made it more clear that he was asking for help!
While a treatment unfolded, ex-orphans Zurura and Kasigau stood stood sentry. Once the operation was complete, they stood by until the bull got back to his feet. Together, they walked back into the Tsavo wilderness.
One week later, the bull came by again, already healing. What we have learned from these moments is that elephants have an awe-inspiring intuition and capacity for trust in those who earn it. We are honoured that this bull came to us in his hour of need and thanks to our donors, we were able to answer the call, providing life-saving treatment on our very doorstep.
Elephants don't forget those that helped them. Donate and be part of a community they remember: https://t.co/NVpsbuFaAn
Allen Parton survived the Gulf War, but a serious brain injury left him disabled and dependent on a wheelchair.
In 2001, while outside a hotel in the United Kingdom, he was struck by a car and thrown from his wheelchair, leaving him unable to move.
His assistance dog, Endal, immediately sprang into action.
The yellow Labrador carefully pulled Allen into the recovery position to help keep his airway clear.
Endal then searched beneath the overturned wheelchair, found Allen's mobile phone, and placed it into his hand. He retrieved a blanket from under the wheelchair and covered him to help keep him warm.
When no one nearby noticed the emergency, Endal ran to the entrance of a nearby hotel and barked persistently until people came outside to investigate. Thanks to his determination, help arrived for Allen.
Endal went on to become one of the world's most celebrated assistance dogs. He learned hundreds of commands, received numerous awards for bravery and service, including the PDSA Gold Medal, and his remarkable partnership with Allen Parton inspired books and documentaries.
I truly don’t understand this ruling, do you? Why would the Supreme Court rule that way especially when the evidence confirms it is true? So glad this son won his battle against this and that his Mom shared his story 🙏
“The picture on the left was my son after more than a gallon of glyphosate was tipped over his neck and shoulders during a work accident. This is why I won't stay quiet. My healthy, 6 ft 5, 18 year old son was taken down to 125 pounds after glyphosate seeped into his pores.
That picture? He'd turned a corner then. We all felt like he just might make it. We were celebrating. He could stand. He could get out of his hospital bed. He didn't want a picture taken at his worst - with no hair from rounds and rounds of chemo, looking more shrunken, bigger tumors. A few months before this left picture, he was at death's door, stage 4 lymphoma and the doctors didn't give us much hope he would live.
I'm one of the fortunate mothers. My son battled like a warrior. He survived and the right picture is him now. But there was a brutal seven year battle with all the alternative methods, all the chemo... so much that he became chemo resistant. Then when nothing else would stop the tumors from growing back, a stem cell transplant that wiped out his whole immune system in the hope it would restart. Many mothers.... many families are not so fortunate. They lost their loved one.
Last week the Supreme Court voted 7 to 2 that glyphosate didn't need a cancer warning. Monsanto won. Bayer won. Two of the largest companies in the world won against thousands of families. My son, our entire family and thousands of others families who have had glyphosate impact their lives felt this blow in our guts.
Eleven years ago the WHO announced it "probably causes cancer." We want the "probably" word gone. We want this monster named for who it is and what it does.
We lost the fight last week. But the battle will keep going. Mothers like me won't stop. Because we know.”
-Serene
In 2007, Brian Dennis befriended a stray Iraqi desert dog named Nubs while serving near the Jordanian border. After a local man severely wounded the dog with a screwdriver, Dennis cared for him until he recovered, forming an extraordinary bond.
When Dennis’s unit was unexpectedly reassigned to a base about 70 miles away, they had no choice but to leave Nubs behind. Believing they would never see him again, the Marines departed.
Two days later, against all odds, Nubs appeared at the new outpost after reportedly following the Marines’ scent across roughly 70 miles of harsh Iraqi desert and active war zone. Moved by the dog’s determination, the Marines secretly kept him in their barracks despite military regulations. Friends and family later raised $2,000 to fly Nubs to the United States.
Nubs spent the rest of his life with Dennis in San Diego, and his remarkable story of loyalty and survival later inspired a bestselling children’s book.
He was 17. Sent to hospice. They told his family to prepare for the worst.
Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma (DIPG). A brain tumor that's almost always a death sentence.
November 2025. Doctors referred him to a children's hospice. A place where children go to die.
His family refused to accept that.
December 2025. They started a protocol.
Ivermectin – 1.5mg/kg/day
Mebendazole – 2000mg/day
No clinical trial. No doctor's blessing. Just hope and a prayer.
Three months later? His world changed.
The boy who couldn't stand up straight before Christmas – he's walking without a cane.
The boy who dragged his left foot with every step – he's back at the gym.
His speech? Almost back to normal.
Getting out of bed used to be a very difficult task.
Now he's independent. Strong. Alive.
The same Canadian politicians who push assisted suicide are trying to criminalize his treatment.
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith wants to stop this.
She wants to block a child's "Right to Try."
But this boy's family didn't wait for permission. And now their son is not dying in hospice – he's living.
A child saved from hospice.
The system sent him to die. Ivermectin and Mebendazole brought him back.
This might be a world's first.
It definitely is a family's miracle.
👇 Share this. Someone needs to know hope exists.
⚠️ Not medical advice. Just the story of a boy who refused to give up.
#DIPG #Ivermectin #Mebendazole #RightToTry #Miracle
Why do our ex-orphans bring their wild-born calves home to the Keepers?
We can't know exactly what's in their heads. But after ex-orphan Yatta first made the pilgrimage many years ago, nearly every ex-orphan mother has followed suit, and walked her newborn to the stockades, often within hours of giving birth, and introduce the calf to the people who raised her.
It's likely a mix of trust (the Keepers were her family for years), safety (the stockade compound is calm and predictable), and recognition (these are the people she knows). Whether she's actively imprinting her calf with that knowledge or just following her own instinct to come home, the calf grows up understanding that our Keepers and the dependent orphans are a part of their family too.
Meet our newest wild-born calf, baby Moon: https://t.co/WjZQtajvUC
God bless them both proving that a little care and kindness, in this day and age, could possibly save someone’s life and protect innocent children
Sometimes, heroes wear uniforms — not capes.
The Garbage Truck Crew Noticed Something Was Wrong with My Kids — What They Did Next Shocked Me
Every Monday morning, like clockwork, my twins Jesse and Lila waited outside for the garbage truck. Jesse wore his dinosaur pajamas, and Lila wore her sparkly tutu — both barefoot and full of excitement. And every Monday, Rashad and Theo, the garbage truck crew, arrived like superheroes.
At first, it was just small things — a honk, a high five. Then the twins got to pull the garbage lever once, and from that day on, Monday mornings became a special time for all of us.
But one Monday, everything changed.
I had been feeling weak and dizzy all weekend, but I thought it was just tiredness. I was handling work, bills, and the twins alone because their dad was away on a job. That morning, after putting the trash out, I must have fainted without anyone knowing.
Jesse and Lila went outside as usual, but I never followed them.
When Rashad and Theo saw the twins standing alone, crying and barefoot, they immediately knew something was wrong. One stayed with the kids, while the other ran to my door and knocked. When no one answered, he forced the door open.
They found me unconscious on the kitchen floor.
They called 911, got help on the way, and even found my phone to call my husband. They wrapped Lila in a safety vest and kept Jesse busy riding in the truck to keep him calm.
I woke up in the hospital hours later. The first thing I asked was, “Where are my babies?”
The nurse smiled and said, “They’re with their heroes.”
That day, Rashad and Theo weren’t just garbage men — they were lifesavers.
A farmer in rural Ireland noticed that one of his cows would cry for hours every time he left for the train station to pick up supplies.
Moved by her distress, he started taking her with him. To everyone’s surprise, the cow quickly learned the routine. She would calmly wait on the platform while he was away, then joyfully walk home beside him once his train returned.
The heartwarming story has captured the world’s attention, beautifully illustrating that cows are far more than livestock — they’re intelligent, emotional animals capable of forming deep bonds and meaningful routines with the people who care for them.
🚨 Today the California Senate Committee held a hearing on the “Stop Nick Shirley Act,” known as AB 2624. This bill will criminalize and punish anyone from looking into fraud inside immigrant communities in California.
This bill was created only after I exposed billions of dollars in fraud throughout immigrant communities in the US. “Immigration support services” have become a billion dollar industry in California, and now that the fraud has been exposed, they are trying to criminalize those who look into the fraud.
The bill has passed through the California Assembly and is set to pass through the Senate and then to Governor Newsom’s desk. This bill was created by the Attorney Generals WIFE and will allow him to go after citizens if they film nonprofits and “immigration support services providers”.
Welcome to Califraudia.
An orangutan kept escaping his enclosure just to reach an elephant, and nobody knew why until CCTV showed what happened between them.
At a zoo in Texas, visitors panicked after an orangutan was seen outside his enclosure and heading straight toward the elephant habitat.
At first, staff thought it was a one-time escape, but then it happened two more times.
Each time, zookeepers had to move him away from the elephants, confused about why he kept going back to the same place. He wasn’t looking for food, he wasn’t being aggressive, and staff noticed he wasn’t interested in any other animal at the zoo.
Only that particular elephant. However, CCTV finally showed the moment that explained it.
The orangutan made his way near the elephant again, but instead of fear or chaos, the elephant gently reached out and stroked him with her trunk like she already knew him.
The orangutan sat still, then picked a small flower nearby and held it toward her like a gift.
After that, staff said they finally understood why he kept escaping. He wasn’t running away from his enclosure. He was running back to the one animal he connected with at the zoo.
Zoo staff are now calling it one of the most unlikely bonds they’ve ever seen.
When the Fukushima nuclear disaster forced thousands of people to flee in March 2011, they left with only what they could carry.
Homes were abandoned, farms were deserted, and countless animals were left behind. Many owners believed they would be back in a few days.
They never imagined they would be gone for months, or even forever.
For those animals, every passing day meant more hunger, more loneliness, and less hope.
But one man couldn't walk away.
His name is Naoto Matsumura. After evacuating, he made the heartbreaking decision to return to the radioactive exclusion zone around the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant.
While the world saw an empty, dangerous place, he saw thousands of innocent lives waiting for someone who might never come.
Every day, he fed abandoned dogs, cats, cattle, ostriches, and other animals that had no one left. Many had spent days searching for the families they had lost. Some ran to him for food.
Others simply stayed close, as if they finally felt safe again. With no electricity, limited supplies, and constant risk, Matsumura devoted his life to caring for creatures that the disaster had forgotten.
His selfless compassion earned him the nickname "The Guardian of Fukushima's Animals," but to the animals he rescued, he was something even greater.
He was hope.
In a place where so much had been lost, one man's kindness reminded the world that even in the darkest moments, humanity can still shine through.
Faith in humanity restored.
🚨GOVERNMENT’S WAR ON THE UNIVERSAL ANTIDOTE: Dr. Pierre Kory Exposes Why Chlorine Dioxide — The Cure for Viruses, Cancer & Deadly Pathogens — Is STILL BANNED in America
They know it empties hospitals and heals millions… yet the U.S. government is waging all-out war to keep it out of your hands.
Chlorine Dioxide is the $30 “Universal Antidote” that destroys viruses, bacteria, parasites — and literally starves cancer cells — but Big Pharma and the feds have banned it to protect trillion-dollar treatments.
While it’s saving lives in countries brave enough to use it, here in America it remains criminalized in 2026.
This isn’t protection.
This is suppression at the cost of your life.
Margaret, 90, had gotten outside twice before her son Keith installed cameras. He expected to find footage of the problem.
He found something else. Every single night for nine months their golden retriever Flynn had already been at the front door before Margaret reached the hallway.
Blocking. Redirecting. Taking her sleeve and guiding her back to bed. Thirty-seven documented nights. Not once had she made it outside. Margaret's neurologist watched the recording and said: "I have worked in memory care for twenty-three years. Flynn is performing structured redirection. He built every component of it on his own." Keith said: "He figured it out the first night."
A baby elephant named Ellie was discovered alone in the wild in South Africa, having been rejected by his herd due to a severe umbilical abscess and hernia.
Ellie remained lethargic and deeply depressed, showing no will to live. Recognizing that elephants are intensely social creatures, the team introduced him to Duma, a retired service and sniffer dog residing at the sanctuary.
The effect was instantaneous. As soon as they met at the sand pile, Ellie’s demeanor shifted from despair to curiosity. The two became inseparable, with Duma’s playful energy teaching Ellie how to be a joyful calf again. She finally had a chance to heal and enjoy life.
[📹 Earth Touch News]
[📍 Thula Thula Rhino Orphanage]
An underage girl from Mesa, Ariz. who went missing in May has finally been found by U.S. Marshals at a homeless encampment called "The Jungle" in Olympia, Wash. The child may be a sex trafficking victim.
Leftists in Washington state defend the encampment, viewing it as an autonomous zone. In 2023, a dead woman was found there.
Photos by The Olympian and JOLT:
On the evening of 30 April 2012, around 20:00, armed "robbers" broke into the Stafleu family home on their farm. Venessa Stafleu was shot and killed in front of her two young children, aged just 3 and 5 years old. The terrified kids witnessed their mother's execution-style murder before fleeing across the dark farm toward the main road in sheer panic. Her husband, Willem Stafleu, was driving back to the house at the time and arrived to this nightmare.
These attacks aren't just robberies; they are savage assaults on innocent White families trying to feed the nation, often with gratuitous violence that goes far beyond theft. The government’s refusal to declare farm murders a priority crime is disgusting and enables this ongoing slaughter.
Venessa left behind a devastated husband and traumatized children who, years later, still suffered from triggers, noises, and fear, refusing to sleep in their own rooms. This is the real cost of ANC-enabled chaos; shattered White families, orphaned kids, and a farming community under constant siege.