After forty years it's time to retire. I thought this was an appropriate backdrop. MGTOW seems like a safe mindset. Thank you UHaul for taking care of my family and I for the 40.
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The corrupt establishment will fight tooth and nail to protect their lifelong seats, but everyday working families are fully backing the push to limit how long politicians can stay in power. Who completely agrees that their time is up?
🚨BREAKING: Congress is drafting a bill to let federal law enforcement use dye-filled water cannons on rioters—the color stains skin for days.
Do you Firmly support this bill?
A. Hell yeah
B. No
🇺🇸🔥 IT’S OFFICIAL: RFK JR. SHATTERS GLOBAL ORDER – U.S. completes WHO withdrawal with final message: “WE WILL NEVER BE RULED BY THEM AGAIN” [VIDEO]
🇺🇸🔥 HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced the full U.S. withdrawal from the World Health Organization. In a historic speech, he exposed the WHO’s failures during COVID and declared that American health policy will no longer answer to unelected foreign officials. This move reclaims national sovereignty, ends U.S. funding, and reshapes global health leadership.
🇺🇸🔥 RFK Jr. Just Took Down the WHO – “We Will Never Be Ruled by Them Again”
FOLLOW ME, THE NEXT DROP WILL BE SHOCKING
BREAKING: Marco Rubio just said the quiet part out loud.
Americans work 40+ years…
Pay taxes.
Follow the rules.
Build the country.
Then retire on $800, $900, maybe $1,000 a month.
Meanwhile, new arrivals can allegedly receive more support from the same system they never paid into.
Read that again.
The people who built America are being pushed to the back of the line.
This is not compassion.
This is a government priority problem.
America First was never just a slogan.
It was a warning.
Who comes first?
The taxpayer… or the system?
U.S. hit back
President Donald Trump ordered fresh strikes against Iran.
After the IRGC shot down an American Apache helicopter in the Strait of Harmoz, American Navy & Airforce launched a retaliatory strikes and currently attacking Iranian targets in Sirik & Bandar Abbas.
She was 15 years old. Her name was Nicole van den Hurk.
On October 6, 1995, Nicole left her grandmother's house in Eindhoven, Netherlands on her bicycle. It was a Friday morning. She was heading to her part-time job at a supermarket, pedaling through streets she'd cycled a thousand times. She never arrived.
By evening, her bicycle was pulled from the Dommel River. Two weeks later, her yellow backpack was found nearby. The police searched. Days became weeks. Weeks became months. In November, 47 days after she disappeared, a body was found in a forest between two small towns. It was Nicole.
She had been raped and murdered.
For 16 years, her family lived in a kind of limbo. The investigation had been thorough. But 1995 forensic technology couldn't extract clear DNA profiles from the trace evidence on her body. The case went cold. No arrest. No answers. No justice.
Her stepbrother Andy carried this weight every day. He grew up, moved to England, lived his life—but never forgot. And he came to understand something the police didn't yet know: modern DNA technology could do what 1995 science could not. If Nicole's body could be exhumed, if the evidence could be retested, there was a real possibility that her killer could finally be identified.
But Dutch law required a specific legal trigger for exhumation. Cold cases didn't easily get that trigger.
So Andy made a choice that was reckless and brilliant and driven entirely by love.
On March 8, 2011, he posted a message on Facebook: "I will be arrested today for the murder of my sister. I confessed. Will get in touch soon."
Then he went to police and told them he had killed Nicole van den Hurk.
He was arrested immediately. He was extradited to the Netherlands. And after 5 days in custody, when investigators realized his confession didn't match the evidence, he was released.
Then he explained what he had done and why: "I wanted to get her exhumed and get DNA off her. I kind of set myself up and it could have gone horribly wrong. She is my sister, absolutely. I miss her every day."
His false confession had worked exactly as intended.
The Netherlands reopened the investigation. In September 2011, a court authorized the exhumation of Nicole's body for advanced DNA testing.
When the forensic scientists analyzed the evidence, they identified DNA from three different people in a single trace. One belonged to Andy—explained by family contact. One belonged to her boyfriend at the time. The third belonged to someone unknown.
That third profile was run through the Dutch DNA database.
It matched Jos de G., a 46-year-old man with prior convictions for rape and sexual violence against minors.
He was arrested in 2014. At trial in 2015, he was convicted of rape but the court initially acquitted him of manslaughter due to insufficient evidence. He was sentenced to 5 years.
The prosecution appealed. The appeal court took a different view of the evidence—the same DNA, the same forensic analysis, but weighed differently. On October 9, 2018, after hearings spanning August through October, Jos de G. was convicted of both rape and manslaughter.
He was sentenced to 12 years in prison.
Justice, when it finally came, came because a brother loved his sister so much that he was willing to risk his own freedom, his own life, to get her exhumed.
When asked about it later, he said the same thing: "She is my sister. I miss her every day."
Nicole van den Hurk deserved to finish her bike ride. She deserved more than 16 years of silence. And when the system couldn't give her justice, her brother gave it to her anyway—at tremendous personal risk, driven by nothing but love.
She was 15 years old. Share her name. Share her story.
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BOOM💥 — Brevard County sheriff Wayne Ivey delivers a stark message to rioters:'WE WILL K*LL YOU!'
"If you throw a brick, a firebomb, we will be notifying your family where to collect your remains at because we'll kìll you. We're not gonna play."