🇺🇸🇮🇷 Feds just arrested a dual U.S.-Iranian citizen living in a $35 MILLION California mansion for illegally supplying computer tech to Iran.
The DOJ says Jamshid Ghomi smuggled hardware that directly aided Iran's military and nuclear programs.
"We are beginning the process of seizing his mansion, which was purchased with his illegal proceeds."
This guy was living the American dream while actively helping its #1 enemy. Wild.
Source: @DAGToddBlanche
160th SOAR Night Stalker helicopters fly over Bourbon Street crowds in New Orleans.
If they're hard to see, that's by design. Elite 160th pilots often fly using night vision with no external aircraft lighting.
If the enemy can't see you, you win.
Austronaut Reid Wiseman from Artemis II said that he wept when he saw a cross after landing back on earth.
"I’m not a religious person," Wiseman admitted. "But when that man walked in... I saw the cross on his collar, and I just broke down in tears. It’s very hard to fully grasp what we just went through."
Christ is Lord!
🚨 AMAZING: Immediately prior to losing comms on the far side of the moon, NASA Astronaut Victor Glover shared a message from the gospel 🙏🏻 https://t.co/qwqZiKDxae
“Christ said in response to what was the greatest command, that it was to love God with all that you are.”
"He said the second... that is to love your neighbor as yourself.”
A HARVARD psychologist says: “if you’ve achieved nothing by 25, you’ve avoided the most destructive illusion of youth”
> In 2021, a Harvard psychologist surprised a lecture hall with an unexpected statement:
“If you haven’t accomplished much by 25, you may have escaped one of youth’s biggest illusions.”
At first, the room laughed.
She wasn’t kidding.
> The illusion of early success.
In your early 20s, the brain seeks quick proof of worth ~status, attention, rapid achievements.
But psychologists warn that chasing recognition too soon can lock people into roles or paths they never consciously chose.
They decide too early… and spend years trying to undo it.
> The exploration phase.
Research on career development suggests that people who explore more before 30 often build stronger long-term directions.
Testing ideas.
Making mistakes in public.
Changing course.
At 25 it looks like confusion ….but by 35 it often turns into clarity.
People who feel “behind” in their mid-20s frequently gain something others miss:
Perspective.
Patience.
And a clearer sense of what truly matters to them.
That foundation often leads to better decisions later on.
At the end of the lecture, the psychologist left the students with one final thought:
“You’re not meant to have life fully figured out at 25.”
“You’re meant to discover who you’re not.”