The O'Jays - I Love Music (Official Soul Train Video) https://t.co/S9Lr7VzgEV via @YouTube
To Elon Musk..forge ahead. This music will wake you up a little
JUST IN: President Trump urges parents to sign their children up for Trump Accounts immediately, claiming that if they do, their kids will "become, actually, very rich."
"If parents have not done so already, and they are doing so in record numbers, they should go right away to https://t.co/e5B19wTKKE and sign their child up for a free investment savings account”
“A child that has no money can have hundreds of thousands of dollars at a very, very young age. Accounts could grow to be worth numbers that nobody ever thought even possible."
🚨 AWESOME! SecWar Pete Hegseth just OBLITERATED the leftist agitators screeching at him while he honors the National Guard
"In fact, this background noise is PERFECT. It's the sound of INGRATES, of ingratitude, of people who are so blinded by ideology, they can't see law and order and common sense in front of them!"
"There's nothing ideological about this group. There's nothing political about this exercise. Law and order is something all Americans deserve. Black, white, rich, poor, man or woman from D.C. or far-flung places in this country. And the beautiful thing is when I look out at that, this group, that's all of you."
"From all across this great country, you're not from Washington, most of you, but this is your capital. And you believe in this 250th year that it should be safe and it should be secure for every single citizen that lives here and every single citizen that comes to visit in this 250th year."
🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
🚨 AWESOME! SecWar Pete Hegseth just OBLITERATED the leftist agitators screeching at him while he honors the National Guard
"In fact, this background noise is PERFECT. It's the sound of INGRATES, of ingratitude, of people who are so blinded by ideology, they can't see law and order and common sense in front of them!"
"There's nothing ideological about this group. There's nothing political about this exercise. Law and order is something all Americans deserve. Black, white, rich, poor, man or woman from D.C. or far-flung places in this country. And the beautiful thing is when I look out at that, this group, that's all of you."
"From all across this great country, you're not from Washington, most of you, but this is your capital. And you believe in this 250th year that it should be safe and it should be secure for every single citizen that lives here and every single citizen that comes to visit in this 250th year."
🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
Last month at a medical clinic waiting room in Richmond, Virginia. A nine-year-old boy named Cole, sensitive to noise and crowds, became overwhelmed by the waiting room. Sat rocking in his chair.
Hands over ears. His grandmother beside him couldn't reach him. Then a man named Frank, 67, sitting nearby quietly unclipped his Golden Retriever's leash.
The dog's name is Sunny. Frank's anxiety support dog for four years. Frank said one word quietly. Sunny walked straight to Cole and pressed against him. Cole's hands came down from his ears. He gripped Sunny's fur. The rocking stopped. Cole's grandmother looked at Frank through tears. Frank told her: "Sunny knew. He always knows when someone needs him more than I do right now." Sunny's training said help one person. His instinct said help whoever needs it most.
Last month at a medical clinic waiting room in Richmond, Virginia. A nine-year-old boy named Cole, sensitive to noise and crowds, became overwhelmed by the waiting room. Sat rocking in his chair.
Hands over ears. His grandmother beside him couldn't reach him. Then a man named Frank, 67, sitting nearby quietly unclipped his Golden Retriever's leash.
The dog's name is Sunny. Frank's anxiety support dog for four years. Frank said one word quietly. Sunny walked straight to Cole and pressed against him. Cole's hands came down from his ears. He gripped Sunny's fur. The rocking stopped. Cole's grandmother looked at Frank through tears. Frank told her: "Sunny knew. He always knows when someone needs him more than I do right now." Sunny's training said help one person. His instinct said help whoever needs it most.
The hug that changed modern medicine.
In 1995, at The Medical Center of Central Massachusetts, premature twin girls Kyrie and Brielle Jackson were born weighing less than two pounds each.
While Kyrie slowly gained strength, Brielle struggled severely—her oxygen levels plummeted, her heart rate became erratic, and doctors gave her little chance of survival.
Against hospital protocol at the time—which required preemies to be kept in separate incubators—experienced nurse Gayle Kasparian made a bold decision. She placed the sisters together in the same incubator. Almost instantly, Brielle’s condition stabilized: her breathing evened out, her blood oxygen rose, and her heart rate normalized. A now-iconic photo shows tiny Kyrie instinctively stretching her arm across her sister in a protective embrace.
Brielle made a full recovery. The photograph, dubbed “The Rescuing Hug,” went viral around the world and sparked intense medical interest. Subsequent studies proved what the twins had shown in real time: co-bedding and skin-to-skin contact (kangaroo care) help premature babies maintain body temperature, fight infection, gain weight faster, and dramatically improve survival rates.
What began as one nurse’s act of compassion is now standard practice in neonatal intensive care units worldwide. A single hug between sisters quietly changed modern medicine forever.
The hug that changed modern medicine.
In 1995, at The Medical Center of Central Massachusetts, premature twin girls Kyrie and Brielle Jackson were born weighing less than two pounds each.
While Kyrie slowly gained strength, Brielle struggled severely—her oxygen levels plummeted, her heart rate became erratic, and doctors gave her little chance of survival.
Against hospital protocol at the time—which required preemies to be kept in separate incubators—experienced nurse Gayle Kasparian made a bold decision. She placed the sisters together in the same incubator. Almost instantly, Brielle’s condition stabilized: her breathing evened out, her blood oxygen rose, and her heart rate normalized. A now-iconic photo shows tiny Kyrie instinctively stretching her arm across her sister in a protective embrace.
Brielle made a full recovery. The photograph, dubbed “The Rescuing Hug,” went viral around the world and sparked intense medical interest. Subsequent studies proved what the twins had shown in real time: co-bedding and skin-to-skin contact (kangaroo care) help premature babies maintain body temperature, fight infection, gain weight faster, and dramatically improve survival rates.
What began as one nurse’s act of compassion is now standard practice in neonatal intensive care units worldwide. A single hug between sisters quietly changed modern medicine forever.
President Trump price gouging has been going on since I witnessed it in 1983 because of Hurricanes, Oil Companies pulled out of New Orleans, the insurance is a joke… the meat at this store below we had to go somewhere else… the hoarding is out of control