So it appears Ro was ok with Platner assaulting a Republican woman but now that a Democrat has told her story -- well, we gotta pull back.
Believing all women really means believe Democrat women.
Statement on behalf of Charlie Kirk's immediate family, his parents Robert and Kathryn, his wife, Erika, and his sister, Mary:
Charlie was a beloved husband, son, brother, friend, and father. Every court proceeding serves as a painful reminder of his death and the loss that has irrevocably impacted our lives and the lives of his children.
We remain deeply grateful for the support, prayers, and kindness we have received. This outpouring has sustained us during the darkest days of our lives.
Out of respect for the judicial process, we will not be commenting further at this time. We ask for continued privacy as we navigate this process and immense grief.
🚨 WOW! President Trump didn't only call FIFA President Gianni Infantino about the faulty red card suspension against USA's Folarin Balogun — but assembled a team of LAWYERS from outside the government to challenge it, per @ClayTravis
A TRUE LEADER!
Sec. Howard Lutnick and Andrew Giuliani were also reportedly involved 🔥
The decision was ultimately made by the independent FIFA committee.
47 DID THE RIGHT THING. This is honestly what every country has a responsibility to do — speak up for your people! 🇺🇸
The “Bells of Congress”, replicas of the bells in Westminster Abbey that were given to the U.S. as a 1976 Bicentennial gift, are ringing in the clock tower of the Old Post Office and Former Trump International Hotel in Washington DC in celebration of America’s 250th birthday 🇺🇸
Today, America wakes 250 years later as a beacon of hope, a republic entrusted to its people, an idea that changed the world.
A nation worth preserving. A dream worth pursuing. A freedom defended by every generation.
Happy 250th, America! 🇺🇸
On this day in 1776, the United States was actually born. Not July 4. July 2. That's the day the Continental Congress voted to break from Britain, and John Adams was so certain of it that he predicted July 2 would be the great American holiday forever. He nailed everything except the date.
The vote came down to the wire, and one man had to ride through the night to save it. Delaware's delegation was split, one for independence, one against, which meant the colony's vote canceled itself out. The tie-breaker, Caesar Rodney, was 80 miles away in Delaware. He got word that he was needed and rode all night through a summer thunderstorm, sick and in pain, boots and spurs still on, and made it into Philadelphia just in time to cast Delaware's vote for independence.
The other holdouts fell into place too. In Pennsylvania, the men most opposed, including John Dickinson, deliberately stayed away from the chamber so their colony could swing to yes. South Carolina came around for the sake of a united front. When the roll was called, twelve colonies voted for independence and not a single one voted against. New York simply abstained, waiting on permission from home.
And so, on July 2, 1776, it was done. The colonies had legally, officially declared themselves free. The next day Adams wrote to his wife Abigail that this day "will be celebrated by succeeding generations as the great anniversary festival," with "pomp and parade, with shows, games, sports, guns, bells, bonfires, and illuminations." Fireworks and all. He was describing the Fourth of July two days early.
So why do we celebrate the 4th? Because that's the day Congress approved the final wording of the document explaining the decision, the Declaration of Independence. The vote to be free happened on the 2nd. The paperwork got finished on the 4th, and history remembered the paperwork.
The country was actually born in a rainstorm and a roll call on July 2, thanks in part to one sick man who refused to let a tie decide the fate of a nation.
Only a handful of these 1876 Centennial flags are known to exist.
Thanks to York County’s Jeff Bridgman, one is proudly on display at Pennsylvania’s booth at the Great American State Fair.
A piece of Philly history, now in DC. Stop by and see it!
I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America, and to the republic for which it stands, one nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.
Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson famously disagreed with each other on everything. But if you go back and read Jefferson's Notes on Virginia and Hamilton's Discourse on Manufacturing, you learn that they agreed that our nation would not survive being swamped by foreigners with no allegiance to our government.
THIS CAN ONLY HAPPEN IN AMERICA. In 1930, an 18-year-old Scottish woman named Mary Anne MacLeod boarded a ship for New York with nothing but $50 in her pocket. She came from a rugged island with limited opportunity, registered as a domestic servant, and worked her way through the depths of the Great Depression.
Years later, she married Frederick, the son of German immigrants. They raised five children in Queens. Including a boy named Donald, who would grow up to reshape the New York skyline and eventually become President of the United States.
That is the extraordinary promise of America. It’s a story built on legal grit, hard work, and respect for the rule of law. Only in this country can the son of a legal immigrant maid rise to the highest office in the land.
Mayor Mandami has shown us the reality of big government socialism’s inability to solve problems. Telling New Yorkers to set their air conditioning at 78 degrees is an open admission of the failure of the left to provide enough inexpensive electricity that people can be comfortable even in hot weather. Does anyone believe Madison Square Garden will be at 78 degrees for the Taylor Swift -Travis Kelce Wedding. Big government socialism always takes care of the well connected while causing pain and deprivation for normal everyday people. Mandami is no different. Reporter should ask him if he is going to ask Taylor Swift to sweat through her wedding at the Mandami dictated 78 degrees. That would lead to the wedding moving to a red state where they have adequate electricity for air conditioning.