@larroc__ 1 Unidade de arroz . 1 unidade e meia de agua. Um dente de alho, sal e azeite. 15minutos no microondas! Agora é só provar! 🙂 Fica aqui uma receita fácil para quem nao sabe fazer. Muito fácil para aqueles que não sabem fazer no tacho 😄
@confucius0101@Malaghetto74 Já nao digo nada.. Tb fiquei espantado com a coragem do juiz! Sempre achei que não lhes ia acontecer nada. A minha questão é se foram condenados como ainda estão em liberdade?
RELEASE THE BODY CAM FOOTAGE
RELEASE THE BODY CAM FOOTAGE
RELEASE THE BODY CAM FOOTAGE
RELEASE THE BODY CAM FOOTAGE
RELEASE THE BODY CAM FOOTAGE
RELEASE THE BODY CAM FOOTAGE
RELEASE THE BODY CAM FOOTAGE
RELEASE THE BODY CAM FOOTAGE
RELEASE THE BODY CAM FOOTAGE
RELEASE THE BODY CAM FOOTAGE
RELEASE THE BODY CAM FOOTAGE
RELEASE THE BODY CAM FOOTAGE
RELEASE THE BODY CAM FOOTAGE
RELEASE THE BODY CAM FOOTAGE
RELEASE THE BODY CAM FOOTAGE
RELEASE THE BODY CAM FOOTAGE
RELEASE THE BODY CAM FOOTAGE
RELEASE THE BODY CAM FOOTAGE
JUDGE MARK MCKONE KC
He allowed convicted paedophile David Brown to walk from his court on a community order despite him having 1000 indecent images of children and of BABIES being raped.
The judge even told the defendant that "the public expect prison sentences in a case like this" but proceeded to give him a community order.
Meanwhile these same courts are sending people to jail for social media posts.
SHARE THIS EVERYWHERE!!!
🚨 𝗠𝗔𝗚𝗡𝗜𝗙𝗜𝗤𝗨𝗘 𝗚𝗘𝗦𝗧𝗘 ! Le gardien du Rayo Vallecano, Augusto Batalla, s'est assis sur le terrain hier pour alerter l'arbitre après avoir repéré un supporter en situation d’urgence médicale dans les tribunes.
Sans une seconde d'hésitation, il s'est assis sur le terrain pour que l’arbitre arrête immédiatement le match. Le jeu a été interrompu, les médecins ont accouru, et le supporter a été pris en charge en toute sécurité et soigné.
Immense respect à lui 👏❤️
@StincoBelhar@PesUniverse More gameplans? Nice! Though they could make it 30 or so. Well better than nothing. But for some people (not me) 20 will feel short.
Most people know Gary Sinise as Lieutenant Dan from “Forrest Gump.”
But his real-life story became far more painful than anything he ever acted on screen.
In 2018, Gary Sinise quietly stepped away from Hollywood after his wife, Moira, was diagnosed with stage 3 breast cancer.
Then, only two months later, his 28-year-old son Mac was diagnosed with chordoma — a rare and incurable bone cancer.
Suddenly, Gary was caring for both his wife and his son as they fought for their lives at the same time.
He stopped focusing on acting completely.
No major projects.
No chasing roles.
No Hollywood spotlight.
His world became hospital visits, treatments, medications, specialists, and caregiving.
For a while, there was hope.
Moira’s treatment worked, and she eventually went into remission.
But Mac’s cancer continued progressing.
Chordoma is extremely rare and attacks the bones of the spine and skull. It grows slowly, but relentlessly.
Over time, the disease robbed Mac of his mobility.
First a cane.
Then a walker.
Eventually a wheelchair.
For more than five years, Gary dedicated himself to helping his son fight a battle doctors already knew could not be won.
He searched for treatments.
Met with specialists.
Managed pain care.
Adapted their lives around the illness.
And through it all, Mac kept creating.
He worked with the Gary Sinise Foundation supporting veterans and military families.
He also poured his remaining strength into music, determined to finish an album called:
“Resurrection & Revival.”
He completed it while battling cancer from a wheelchair.
On January 5, 2024, Mac Sinise passed away at 33 years old.
After spending decades comforting military families who had lost loved ones, Gary Sinise suddenly found himself living the grief he had so often witnessed in others.
He later admitted something heartbreaking:
“As parents, it is so difficult losing a child.”
There was no Hollywood ending waiting for him.
No final miracle.
Just a father who gave up fame and career opportunities to be present for every moment he could still spend with his son.
And perhaps that is what makes Gary Sinise’s story resonate with so many people.
Not celebrity.
Not success.
Love.
The choice to stay.
To sacrifice.
To show up every day for someone you love, even when you know you may lose them anyway.
Today Gary continues the work of his foundation helping veterans and grieving families.
And after losing Mac, he says he now holds his daughters a little tighter.
Because grief changes your understanding of what truly matters.
Sometimes the most important role a person will ever play is not on a screen.
It is simply being there for the people they love.