These days it feels like there is no justice for our heroes. I am gutted by this sad news.π«£π Just helped a friend through the #Alzeheimer journey so my awareness of the challenges has been raised. #SullySullenberger https://t.co/aqc7wgTSmd
Charlie Angus responds to Senator Adam Schiff on the impact of the Canadian booze boycott: "Instead of saying, 'Stop being mean to us, Canada, why won't you like us' -- why aren't you taking those intense losses and putting pressure on the White House and speaking up?"
I still canβt believe these numbers.
50 civilians.
Killed in Kyiv.
In just one weekππ
These werenβt statistics.
They were people with names, families, dreams, and plans for tomorrow.
How many more lives must russia steal before the world decides enough is enough?
Seeing my first kidsβ book out in the wild never gets old! Rumpa and the Snufflewort was our Covid family project and my kids did all the illustrations! They were only 8 & 11. What a treasure we made. β₯οΈ
#fuckcancer#yyj
What if he just doesn't pay E. Jean? What if they never release the Epstein files? What if they never acknowledge McConnell is gone?
Trump said today he used AI to get elected and NOBODY asked what that meant?
Stephen Colbert just nominated for 6 Emmy's. They let him get fired and didn't fight back.
We have no more legitimate press. MAGA billionaires own EVERYTHING. Is this thing on?????
I haven't gotten any new followers in months and my videos get millions of views
Imagine being on a spacewalk experiencing this.
The upper tendrils of Earth's aurora reach high enough that we fly right through them. I felt so small, floating between our planet & the universe, surrounded by this, as we start to permanently leave home.
Filmed by @Soph_astro of @esa through the windows of the International Space Station last week.
After seeing his audition in space, the Dodgers have decided to sign Astronaut Koichi Wakata to a 800 million dollar contract. 799 million deferred for the next 32 seasons.
πΊπΈ Decades after the Vietnam War, Patti Ehline attended an event where a man approached her with words she never expected:
"You were my nurse in Vietnam."
Because before surgery, when fear gripped him and the future was uncertain, Patti had leaned close and whispered:
"Iβll take good care of you."
It was the last voice he heard before losing consciousness. More than fifty years later, he still remembered every word. Patti was just 22 when she arrived in Vietnam in 1968 β the warβs deadliest year. As an Army nurse in evacuation hospitals, she faced a relentless pace: helicopters landing day and night, each arrival bringing urgent decisions that could mean life or death. There were no easy shifts, no predictable days, only constant urgency.
She worked through exhaustion, danger, and uncertainty, caring for soldiers whose lives had changed in an instant. For many, survival depended not only on medics and surgeons, but on nurses like Patti β someone willing to stand beside them in their hardest moments.
Years later, Patti became an advocate for veterans and those carrying the unseen burdens of war. Yet one encounter remained unforgettable: a man she barely remembered, who remembered her for a lifetime. Not for a medal, not for a procedure, but for a promise kept in the darkest hour β comfort, hope, and care.
#TheVietnamWar #ArmyNurses