Last year, he was inducted into the College Football HOF and our prestigious Ring of Honor.
This year, one of the game's most prolific passers is a nominee for another hall.
Shedeur Sanders wearing a visor on Quarterback on @netflix allowed Joe Flacco to express his disdain for them 😭
“If you wear a visor it’s for look, you think you look sweet. I don’t want my kids to wear visors either. They’re just annoying, they’re gunna fog up.”
Shedeur: “No they’re not.”
Joe: “yeah they are. They f***ing suck dude. It’s all about look. When I was a kid, I wanted a visor too. Then I’m like, visors suck.”
On his kids wearing one: “I’d let em wear it but I’d tell em ‘You’re a quarterback, you’re f***ing wearing a visor? You look like a f***ing idiot.’”
Swatting incidents will continue to grow as long as the FBI and local police don't take them seriously, as in my case, and don't even take basic steps to investigate, such as collecting emails, phone recordings, and other evidence that exists.
Swattings are very dangerous and can be akin, to me, to attempted murder because of what the swatters intend to happen.
In my case, my family was hit twice (and another family member in another city at the same time).
For example, one caller and emailer told police he had stabbed to death his girlfriend (at my address) and said they should "send an ambulance." He was hoping the SWAT team would arrive all bowed up and ready to shoot me or my husband who wouldn't know what was happening or that police were coming, and might unwittingly respond in a way the police considered suspicious or aggressive.
Then, as the FBI predicted would happen, our bank accounts were repeatedly wiped out, and our credit cards compromised over and over, even with repeated changes.
The bank finally said it couldn't protect our accounts, and we'd just have to change banks.
Obviously this caused great agony and cost us months of time plus the expense of all the charges for bounced payments for all regular bills that go thru on the changed accounts each time it happens, and other costs associated with what you have to do when people fraudulently wipe you out.
But for civilians like me and others I know, the police act like it's no biggie, and the FBI just shrugs and says it's impossible to catch the criminals because the trails lead to foreign sources. (Not that they've bothered to find out in the specific case, they just declare it's that way.)
One thing is for sure: you'll never catch them if you don't try.
“Houston lost a trailblazer and a generous, truly special, pillar of our community with the passing of Janice McNair.
Her dedication and passion, not just to the Texans organization, but most importantly to the Houston community she loved and served is an incredible loss for our city.
On behalf of Whitney and I, and our entire Astros organization - we send our deepest condolences to the McNair family and the entire Texans organization. “
- Jim and Whitney Crane
It is with profound sadness that we announce Houston Texans Co-Founder and Senior Chair Janice S. McNair passed away peacefully in Houston this afternoon with her family by her side. Mrs. McNair was 89 years old.
Remember when instead of investigating the fraud the mainstream media decided to investigate the person who exposed the fraud?
Why? Because they were complicit in the cover up
I was right, they were wrong
I work for you, they work against you
The media is full of learers.
Justice Kagan: "The reason I think it's probably not appropriate, at least not now, to call it the 'shadow docket' is because we have done a better job in the recent past of where appropriate -- and it's not always appropriate -- of explaining ourselves, at least to a moderate degree."
How an electrician’s custom-built "lobster trap" security system caught three separate copper thieves.
Between 2022 and 2024, three separate copper thieves attempted to break into Ray Delgado's workshop shed. Remarkably, all three individuals were apprehended in the exact same manner, thanks to a highly creative security system designed by the homeowner.
Delgado, a retired master electrician, had outfitted his workshop with four-gauge copper wiring amounting to roughly eight hundred pounds of material that was worth more than his personal truck at current scrap metal prices. Knowing his workshop was a prime target for theft, he decided to wire the building's security alarm entirely by himself.
Instead of just alerting the authorities, the system was engineered so that cutting any single wire immediately triggered a backup electrical loop. This loop instantly activated blinding industrial floodlights, a piercing one-hundred-decibel siren, and a heavy-duty electromagnetic deadbolt on the main shed door. Every single intruder was found by local authorities standing trapped in the exact same corner, completely disoriented by the noise and lights, still clutching their bolt cutters. The setup worked so flawlessly that the Prescott Police Department eventually nicknamed the shed "the lobster trap."
John Harbaugh says every team fights 4 silent forces - every single day.
He and his brother named them years ago.
You won't always see them - but they shape your culture and define your team.
Here are the 4 hidden threats every organization faces:🧵
South Carolina Governor @HenryMcMaster appoints replacement for Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC): "It's my honor to ask his little sister Darline Graham to finish his work for him now."