Snoop Dogg has officially called for a major cultural shift in the United States, proposing that more national attention and funding be directed toward honoring military veterans and community heroes instead of expanding Pride Month celebrations. According to the legendary rapper, America should place greater focus on the people who sacrificed their lives, protected the nation, and quietly served their communities for decades.
The controversial statement immediately sparked fierce backlash online and ignited a nationwide debate across social media and television. But Snoop Dogg didn’t stop there. He followed up with an even more powerful message about patriotism, unity, and forgotten American values — a statement so unexpected that it left millions of fans and critics completely stunned, pushing the media storm to an entirely new level.
🚨 GREAT NEWS: The City of Westminster, California just INSTALLED "Charlie Kirk Way" signs in honor of Charlie
These signs are going up NATIONWIDE, from FLORIDA to even California now 👏🏻
For Charlie! 🇺🇸🙏🏻
Chuck Norris, the famed martial arts actor best known for roles in Walker: Texas Ranger, The Delta Force, The Expendables, and Sidekicks, has died at the age of 86.
For more: https://t.co/05rwXMbrZ7
Im in tears. Iranians in London went to honor fallen American Troops at the US Embassy who lost their lives
These Iranians even sung our national anthem
Pray for our Troops 🙏
5 months ago we called, and you didn’t hesitate.
Through HEROES - Freedom Alliance & Save The Children collaboration - you raised over $120000 in 4 days, powered by 2637 donations and 853 bids.
Save The Children’s CEO shares a special thank-you message:
https://t.co/L33FfFKmrx
🎉ULTRAKILL x Palworld🎉
Fight back HELL in style.
Gear and weapons from the cult-hit ULTRAKILL are coming to Palworld!
Gear up with iconic weapons from ULTRAKILL in this unprecedented collab! 🔫
Coming soon!
Obituary for my father.
Richard Warner Carlson died at 84 on March 24, 2025 at home in Boca Grande, Florida after six weeks of illness. He refused all painkillers to the end and left this world with dignity and clarity, holding the hands of his children with his dogs at his feet.
He was born February 10, 1941 at Massachusetts General Hospital to a 15-year-old Swedish-speaking girl and placed in the Home for Little Wanderers in Boston, where he developed rickets from malnutrition. His legs were bent for the rest of his life. After years in foster homes, he was placed with the Carlson family in Norwood, Mass. His adoptive father, a tannery manager, died when he was 12 and he stopped attending school regularly. At 17, he was jailed for car theft, thrown out of high school for the second time, and enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps.
In 1962, in search of adventure, he drove to California. He spent a year as a merchant seaman on the SS Washington Bear, transporting cargo to ports in the Orient, and then became a reporter. Over the next decade, he was a copy boy at the LA Times, a wire service reporter for UPI and an investigative reporter and anchor for ABC News, covering the upheaval of the period. He knew virtually every compelling figure of the time, including Jim Jones, Patty Hearst, Eric Hoffer, Jerry Garcia, as well as Mafia leaders and members of the Manson Family. In 1965, he was badly injured reporting from the Watts riots in Los Angeles.
By 1975, he was married with two small boys, when his wife departed for Europe and didn’t return. He threw himself into raising his boys, whom he often brought with him on reporting trips. At home, he educated them during three-hour dinners on topics that ranged from the French Revolution to Bolshevik Russia, PG Wodehouse, the history of the American Indian and, always, the eternal and unchanging nature of people. He was a free thinker and a compulsive book reader, including at red lights. He left a library of thousands of books, most dog-eared and filled with marginalia. His reading and life experiences convinced him that God is real. He had an outlaw spirit tempered by decency.
In 1979, he married the love of his life, Patricia Swanson. They were together for 44 years, all of them happy. She died sixteen months before he did and he mourned her every day.
In 1985, he moved to Washington to work for the Reagan Administration. He spent five years as the director of the Voice of America, and then moved to the Seychelles as the US ambassador. In 1992, he became the CEO of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, and later ran a division of King World television.
The last 25 years of his life were spent in work whose details were never completely clear to his family, but that was clearly interesting. He worked in dozens of countries and breakaway republics around the world, and was involved in countless intrigues. He knew a number of colorful national leaders, including Rafic Hariri of Lebanon, Aslan Abashidze of Adjara, Mobutu Sese Seko of Zaire, and whomever runs Somaliland. He was a fundamentally nonjudgmental person who was impossible to shock, and he described them all with amused affection.
He spoke to his sons every day and had lunch with them once a week for thirty years at the Metropolitan Club in Washington, always prefaced by a dice game. Throughout his life he fervently loved dogs.
Richard W. Carlson is survived by his sons, Tucker and Buckley, his beloved daughter-in-law Susie, and five grandchildren. He was the toughest human being anyone in his family ever knew, and also the kindest and most loyal. RIP.