🚨LET'S GO AMERICA - NORTH CAROLINA RISES UP!
North Carolina Rep. Mark Harris delivers a bold, unapologetic warning on the House floor:
“Sharia law is not compatible with Western civilization.
Radical Islam glorifies violence.
Sharia has no place in America.”
Honor killings. Stoning. Amputation for theft. Death for blasphemy, adultery, or apostasy.
This is the reality of Sharia — the complete opposite of our Constitution, which protects liberty for all people.
Radical Islam isn't a distant threat. It's here.
We watched New York under Mayor Zohran Mamdani become a showcase for extremists — where an ISIS-inspired terror attack with homemade bombs was met with blame on "white supremacy."
Closer to home in Mint Hill, North Carolina (in Rep. Harris's district):
At just 14 years old, Christian Sturtevant pledged allegiance to ISIS. Four years later, he planned an ISIS-inspired massacre with knives and hammers targeting innocent people at a grocery store and restaurant on New Year's Eve.
How many more American teenagers are being radicalized by this violent ideology?
Rep. Mark Harris is showing real courage and leadership by speaking this truth while others stay silent. He’s standing strong to protect North Carolina — and all of America — from the growing threat of Sharia and radical Islam, even as subversive groups work overtime to Islamize our communities, change our culture, and undermine our Constitution.
We will not be silenced.
America is not a place for radical Islam to thrive. Period.
Thank you, Rep. Harris, for your brave fight. North Carolina — and the nation — needs more leaders like you.
One Constitution. One law. No Sharia.
In God We Trust.
Last week in Baltimore, Uber charged me $85 for a trip that usually costs $20. So today, I called Lyft and was picked up by a guy named Mike. He was driving a red F-150, clearly a work truck, full of tools and lumber...
I sat up front.
“How far to the airport,” I asked.
“Fifteen minutes,” he said. “You in a hurry?”
“Not really,” I said. “Are you?”
“Never.”
As we merged onto the road and settled into the slow lane, I asked Mike if he was a carpenter in real life.
“Among other things,” he said.
“Jack of all trades?”
“Well, I don’t know about that,” he said. A while ago, I was a plumber’s helper. Then I worked in the heating and air condition game.”
“How was that?,” I asked.
“Hot and cold,” he said.
I couldn’t tell if he was making a joke or not. His voice had a midwestern drawl with no expression on his face.
“After that, I started carpentry. Trim, then framing."
“You retired now?
“No. I build campers these days.”
“What kind of campers?” I asked.
“I build them small ones you can tow most anywhere. They call ‘em teardrop trailers. I build ‘em by hand, one at a time.”
“Yeah? How’s the quality,” I asked.
“Pretty good,” he said.
“Got a website?” I asked.
“Sure,” he said.
“What’s your website called?” I asked.
“Mike’s Pretty Good Campers.”
“Your company is called 'Mike’s Pretty Good Campers?'”
“I like to manage expectations,” said Mike.
"Under promise and over deliver?"
"That's the idea," said Mike.
"Is that what you were doing before you picked me up? Building a pretty good camper?”
“Yup. But I was frustrated. I don’t work when I’m frustrated. So, every now and then I step away.”
“And drive a stranger to the airport?” I said.
“Never too frustrated to drive.” said Mike. “Driving relaxes me. Besides, we ain’t strangers no more, are we?”
“No,” I said. “I suppose not.”
As we turned on Airport Road, I said, “So what’s the plan? Wait for another call? Or head back to the shop?”
“Ain’t decided yet. Guess I'll see how I feel in a few minutes.”
“Good plan,” I said. “By the way, if I like your website, do you care if I share it on Facebook?”
“Why do you want to do that?” he asked.
“I’ve got a few people who follow me on social media. Maybe some want a pretty good camper, custom made by a quasi-retired carpenter who drives for Lyft when he's frustrated?”
“Can’t hurt,” said Mike. “Once people see these things, they fall in love with ‘em. They got conventions all over the country for teardrop trailer owners. Thousands show up.”
As we pulled up to the airport, Mike asked me what carrier I was on.
“American,” I said. “Right here is fine.”
“Pre-check?” he asked.
“Yes,” I said.
We pulled up to the curb. I hopped out, as Mike dragged my bags out of the bed of his truck.
“You look familiar,” he said. “Have I driven you before?”
“I don’t think so,” I said. “I would have remembered. Thanks for the lift.”
“No problem,” he said. “Was the ride okay?”
"Pretty Good"
Source: Mike Rowe
Purim happened over 2,500 years ago in the Persian Empire, but the spirit behind it is still alive today. The story of the Book of Esther parallels modern Iran, rising global antisemitism, and the Church’s responsibility in this hour. Just as Haman sought a government-sponsored annihilation of the Jewish people, today’s threats against Israel echo the same hatred in a new century.
The question is not whether God will preserve Israel; He will, but whether you will stand with His people and stand for truth for such a time as this.
About 2,500 years ago, in these very days, Queen Esther stopped a state-backed plan to annihilate the Jewish people. Haman, empowered by the Persian throne, signed their death warrant. Esther stepped into the center of power, exposed the plot, and turned the empire against the man who engineered it. Instead of Jews being slaughtered, Haman was executed, and his scheme collapsed in humiliation.
That is why the Book of Esther stands in the Bible. That is why Purim is celebrated every year to remember the great reversal, when a decree of death became a story of survival.
History does not repeat itself exactly, but the pattern is familiar: those who plan destruction often fall into the traps they set, and those marked for extinction endure.
Khamenei is the new Haman.
ESG isn’t “voluntary.” It controls lending and access to capital.
While Republicans were fighting ESG, Michael Whatley’s company, HBW Resources, was helping businesses comply with it.
ESG crushes small businesses and farmers with mandates just to sell their products — including small dairy farmers who just want to sell their milk.
I’m against ESG. I’m against DEI mandates. And I’ll fight to end this system.
— Don Brown for U.S. Senate
I am gonna keep posting how bad Whatley of a candidate is for NC Senate. Thousands of people are now calling for Whatley to drop out of the race because he is worse than Thom Tillis.
He's a rino when he won't even remove a convicted pedophile from his NC 1 district position.
He's a rino when it comes to not doing enough to save multiple house and senate Republican seats in the 2024 election.
He has a terrible record at the RNC and even with Lara Trump in charge for a brief spell.
NC needs to vote for Don Brown @donbrownfornc for US Senate because he is more America first and will fight for the people in NC. 💯
Everyone needs to post these graphics everyday. 💯 I promised @MargoinWNC to keep posting everyday until after March 3rd. 💯
Someone said If you use iPhone
Just say “lumos” and your flash light will turn on. Then say “nox” it will turn off . You must say “hey siri” first, come back and comment if it worked ..
Tried it, it worked..
Technologiiiiiiaaaa