President Trump is once again pushing for permanent Daylight Saving Time... and it may well go down as one of the worst mistakes he makes.
'Natural Time' matters - this is why...
https://t.co/GehYInOjmL
Happy Birthday @brextonbusch!!! Your mom & I are so proud of who you’re turning out to be! You’re the best kid on & off the track, you amaze us every day. Keep doing what you’re doing and there is no limit to what you’ll accomplish! Love you buddy!
Greenville council member gives testimony on the effects of planes spraying the skies above her farm in South Carolina
She’s raised endangered monarch butterflies for 14 years, she says 80% of her butterflies have died in the last 3 years because of planes spaying our skies
This is why we don’t have bugs covering our windshields and cars anymore in America
“I've been farming for about 20 years. We have animals on our farm. We have flowers on our farm -1 I serve on the South Carolina garden clubs — I serve as the wildlife director. — I raise endangered monarch butterflies and have done that for 14 years, and I've watched them just almost go extinct. They're down 80%. And that was really the first signs of things going on on my small farm. It didn't make sense. I watched the bees start going — The bees started disappearing — and the last three years by the end of June, my garden was gone.
-1 I realized that it was geoengineering and realized what was going on”
Everyone should listen to this testimony
This is what we are fighting for. 🇺🇸
Driven by American grit.
Defined by the American spirit.
Born here. Raised here. Harvested here. Processed here.
The TRUE American standard.
Because when you see that label, it means exactly what it says: PRODUCT OF USA!
#ProductofUSA @PRCA_ProRodeo
Kenyon Sadiq had one of the best days ever by a TE at the Combine:
40-Yard Dash: 4.39 (best ever by a TE)
Vertical Jump: 43.5’’ (second-best ever by a TE)
Broad Jump: 11’1’’ (third-best ever by a TE)
@Accenture | @oregonfootball
I locked the classroom door and turned to twenty five high school seniors, the Class of 2026. They were supposed to be the digital generation, confident and plugged in. Instead, staring back at me under the glow of hidden phones, they just looked tired.
I asked them to turn their phones off. Not silent. Off.
On my desk sat an old olive green military rucksack that belonged to my father. For weeks they ignored it, assuming it was just junk. They didn’t know it was the heaviest thing in the building.
I dragged it to the center of the room. Thud.
I told them we weren’t doing the Constitution that day. I handed out blank index cards with three rules. No names. Total honesty. Write down the heaviest thing you are carrying.
At first, no one moved. Then Sarah, straight A student, perfect everything, started writing. Then Marcus, the football captain, hunched over his card and wrote just three words.
One by one, they folded their cards and dropped them into the bag.
I zipped it shut and told them this bag was who they really were. Then I began to read.
A father pretending to go to work after losing his job. A student carrying Narcan for their mom. A kid mapping exits everywhere. A teen trapped between parents screaming about politics. A girl with thousands of followers crying alone at night.
Then the last card.
I don’t want to be here anymore. I’m just waiting for a sign to stay.
Marcus was crying openly. Sarah was holding the hand of a boy who usually sat alone. The cliques were gone. They were just kids carrying too much.
I told them the bag would stay in the room so they wouldn’t have to carry it alone anymore.
When the bell rang, no one rushed out. Every student stopped and touched the rucksack on the way out. I see you.
That night, a parent emailed me. Their son hugged them for the first time in years and asked for help.
Everyone you pass is carrying something you can’t see. Be kind. Be curious. Ask the people you love what they’re carrying. You might save a life.