OMG… Christopher Macchio just sung Nessun Dorma and said at the end— “NO ONE SLEEPS”
Drop a 🐸 if you know
Nessun Dorma is played at the end of the film The Sum of All Fears, in which time ALL the traitors & Deep State Actors were executed
https://t.co/LHJc2nthOI
🚨 PRESIDENT TRUMP ON THE SCENE IN DC FOR AMERICA 250!
“Despite the heat, which isn’t as bad as predicted, the crowds in D.C. are INCREDIBLE! The love of our Country has never been stronger! The Air Shows are at a level never seen before… See you all later! Speaking at around 10:00 P.M. at The Lincoln Memorial. Happy Independence Day. Our Country is Stronger than EVER!!!”
— President Donald J. Trump
This is what winning looks like, patriots. Massive crowds showing up in the heat while the communists stay mad!
Boston Mayor Michelle Wu disgracefully ordered the American flag 🇺🇸 taken down from City Hall Plaza just so they could raise the Somali flag for Somali Independence Day, right in the middle of America’s 250th anniversary celebrations.
U.S. flag code is crystal clear: NOTHING flies above or replaces Old Glory. Forcing down the Stars & Stripes is an absolute betrayal, un-American, disrespectful, and downright shameful.
This isn’t “inclusion.” It’s putting foreign flags before our own. Priorities like this are why people are fed up.
Who else is sick of states prioritizing Somali’s? 🤚🏼
He played a soldier who lost both legs.
The role earned him an Oscar nomination.
Then real wounded veterans started calling him “Lieutenant Dan.”
It changed his life forever.
After portraying Lt. Dan Taylor in Forrest Gump (1994), Gary Sinise became one of Hollywood’s most recognizable actors.
But after 9/11, something shifted.
As thousands of Americans returned from Iraq and Afghanistan with life-changing injuries, Sinise began visiting military hospitals.
The veterans didn’t see a movie star.
They saw someone who understood, even if only through a role.
So he kept showing up.
In 2003, he formed the Lt. Dan Band, performing free concerts for troops, veterans, and military families around the world.
Then, in 2011, he launched the Gary Sinise Foundation.
While still starring on CSI: NY, he spent his days filming and his nights raising money, visiting hospitals, and supporting military families.
Eventually, the mission became his full-time work.
One program became the heart of it all:
R.I.S.E. (Restoring Independence Supporting Empowerment).
The goal wasn’t simply to thank wounded veterans.
It was to give them their independence back.
The foundation builds specially adapted, mortgage-free smart homes for America’s most severely wounded veterans.
Wider doorways.
Roll-in showers.
Accessible kitchens.
Voice-activated technology.
Homes designed for people whose lives were permanently changed in combat.
Each one is given to the veteran free of charge.
Since its founding, the Gary Sinise Foundation has delivered more than 100 of these custom-built homes while also providing mobility equipment, mental health support, emergency relief, and millions of meals to service members, veterans, first responders, and their families.
Sinise once said:
“We can never do enough for our nation’s defenders, but we can always do a little more.”
He could have spent the last two decades chasing bigger movie roles.
Instead, he chose hospital hallways over red carpets.
A character he played for two hours became a mission he has lived for more than twenty years.
Sometimes the greatest role a person ever plays…
isn’t on a screen.
It’s in real life.
Scott Jennings is seriously considering running to fill Mitch McConnell’s soon-to-be vacant seat.
Scott said if Trump asks, he would do it.
Scott Jennings would make a GREAT MAGA Senator.