If you like the dogs I share and they cheer you up daily, I’d love you to watch this one video.
I only do this once a year and never ask any other time.
You can support here and if you can’t sharing this video helps 🙏 https://t.co/Roftrb3ZWW
Her body was cooled to 60 degrees. Her heart was stopped. The blood was drained out of her brain. Every monitor in the room said she was dead.
Then she woke up and described her own surgery.
Pam Reynolds had an aneurysm at the base of her brain that couldn't be operated on by ordinary means. So Dr. Robert Spetzler stopped her heart, drained her brain, and gave himself 30 minutes to rebuild the artery.
When she recovered, she told him she had watched the whole thing. He told her she couldn't have. She was under surgical drapes. She was brain dead.
So she described his custom-made instruments. The conversations between the doctors, word for word. The problems that came up mid-surgery.
"She described the music they were playing in the operating room while she was brain dead."
Spetzler's own response: "I can't explain it."
As a police officer, Michael Proctor was far more dangerous than any individual he’s ever apprehended. The real problem is with the culture within the Norfolk District Attorney’s Office that's allowed it and protected him. We cannot trust Greg Connor.
Wow @elonmusk 👏🏻 To have this type of life changing blessing is amazing! After working 15 years in the ER we don’t get bonus’ or opportunities like this, we get a pizza party. 😩😭
Elon just created 4,400 millionaires in a single day.
400 of them are now worth over $100 million.
These aren't VCs. They're SpaceX employees, and the list includes welders, technicians, and cafeteria staff, because for two decades the company paid every level of the workforce in stock instead of higher salaries.
Juan Hernandez immigrated from Mexico and took a $28 an hour contractor welding job in 2015. He says he didn't even know what SpaceX was. The company gave him a $10,000 equity grant and let him buy more shares through payroll deductions. That stake is now worth $880,000.
Trevor Hise's parents wanted him to take a stable job at General Electric. He picked SpaceX instead, stayed 12 years, and accumulated over 100,000 shares. At the $135 listing price that's $13.5 million. He's 37 and semiretired. His words: "The magnitude of this has been ridiculous."
The most telling detail came before the listing. Over 100 employees quietly banded together and negotiated a group wealth management deal covering up to $5 billion, because none of them had ever needed a wealth manager before.
Software IPOs have minted millionaires for 30 years. This is the first one where the money went to the factory floor.
📌 BREAKING: The damage caused by Michael Proctor and Sean Goode continues to spread.
In a stunning June 9, 2026 letter, CPCS Chief Counsel Anthony Benedetti formally requested that the Massachusetts State Police turn over a list of every open and closed case investigated by disgraced former Trooper Michael Proctor.
The request comes in the wake of explosive allegations contained in Karen Read’s civil complaint, exposing vile, racist, sexist, antisemitic, homophobic, and hateful texts and audio recordings exchanged between Proctor and Sgt. Sean Goode, along with allegations that Proctor discussed planting evidence.
According to Benedetti, these revelations are so serious that defendants whose cases involved Proctor may be constitutionally entitled to this information because it demonstrates bias and misconduct.
Even more disturbing, the letter notes that MSP allegedly became aware of the messages as early as February 2024 but failed to investigate, discipline, terminate, or determine whether Proctor’s bigotry was affecting his police work.
The actions and conduct of Proctor and Goode have now cast a shadow over potentially countless criminal cases. Their hatred, bias, and alleged misconduct are no longer confined to the Karen Read case, they threaten the integrity of every investigation they touched.
Massachusetts taxpayers may ultimately be paying the price for what Proctor and Goode did, and the fallout is only beginning.
#KarenRead #MichaelProctor #SeanGoode #MassachusettsStatePolice #JusticeForJohnOKeefe #FreeKarenRead
BREAKING: Karmelo Anthony broke down in tears as the guilty verdict was read, visibly shaking while his defense attorney comforted him. Anthony was convicted of murder in the fatal stabbing of Austin Metcalf and now faces the possibility of life in prison.
During the sentencing phase, Anthony’s mother tearfully pleaded for mercy, describing him as her firstborn son and expressing her deep love for him. Prosecutors challenged her testimony by asking whether she could still maintain a relationship with her son if he were incarcerated — a possibility the Metcalf family no longer has with Austin. The same jury will now decide Anthony’s sentence.
VIA: @FoxNews
This is Tyson Goodsell he was a WHITE 17yo football player who was EXECUTED IN COLD BLOOD by a gang of Somalis in Mankato, MN on May 23, 2026.
Ambushed and shot in the head.
Tyson was gunned down execution-style in his Hyundai at 11pm after leaving work.
His car smashed into a townhome.
His mother heard the gunshots from her own house.
Main shooter Abdikhadar Fakhi Mohidin (20, Somali)
Accomplices Ahmed Fuad Mohamud, Ahmed Mohamed Mohamud, and Ryan Wolner also busted.
How many more young White boys get taken from their family before America wakes up?
Media blackout, open borders, soft-on-crime bullshit, and “diversity” flooding White areas….
This stops when we stop importing and tolerating it.
Deport them all.
P*ssed off father addresses township board over the cover up of an accident where his wife his son were hit by the son of a friend of the chief of police.
This father is demanding accountability at a North Huntingdon Township Board of Commissioners meeting, but the backstory behind this confrontation is a chilling look at a family's fight against small-town corruption.
On July 7, 2024, Kathleen Morcheid was driving with her 13-month-old son, Jordan, when a vehicle driven by 22-year-old Nolan Patrick Mullen crossed the center line, striking them nearly head-on. Accident reconstruction experts later testified that Mullen was flying at 90 MPH in a 35 MPH zone just five seconds before the collision.
While the toddler miraculously survived without major injuries, Kathleen suffered life-altering harm, including a severe traumatic brain injury and permanent physical tremors that stripped her of her career as a nurse.
Nicholas Carrozza, the child’s father seen at the podium, quickly uncovered what he alleges is a deep-seated conflict of interest. Local critics and public complaints allege that Mullen’s father was close personal friends with high-ranking local police officials.
Carrozza claims responding officers failed to perform standard on-scene sobriety testing, ignored witnesses who saw the driver laughing after the crash, and systematically stonewalled his family's Right-to-Know requests for body camera footage and basic police reports.
The systemic frustration peaked when the District Attorney’s office offered Mullen a lenient plea deal—dismissing the felony chargesin exchange for probation and home electronic monitoring.
Fortunately, a Westmoreland County judge took the unusual step of rejecting the plea deal, stating home monitoring was entirely inappropriate for an offense requiring prison time.
Carrozza fought back with constitutional law. He openly called out Township Manager Harry Fulk for attempting to bypass him, exposed threats of arrest from the DA for asking questions, and vowed to strip the board members of their qualified immunity via a federal civil rights lawsuit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
As of June 2026
The fallout has turned into a massive First Amendment battle. Instead of transparent answers, local authorities hit Carrozza with a wave of criminal charges, ordering him to stand trial for misdemeanor counts of disrupting a public meeting, illegal recording in a police lobby, and endangering a public official after he posted an officer's photo online to criticize the department.
Carrozza maintains that these charges are an unconstitutional overreach designed to criminalize citizen activism and silence a father demanding justice for his permanently injured wife and child. Meanwhile, the family home has fallen into foreclosure due to mounting medical debt.
As far as the driver.
Mullen's defense attorney requested a special pretrial hearing to challenge the state's evidence, specifically arguing that Morcheid's injuries did not legally meet the threshold of "serious bodily injury" and that the felony charge should be thrown out.
Judge Stewart firmly rejected the defense's request to drop the felony charge. The judge noted that Morcheid's daily life remains entirely upended by her ongoing brain injury symptoms, headaches, speech issues, and physical tremors. The prosecution also successfully presented accident reconstruction data proving Mullen was driving 90 MPH in a 35 MPH zone just five seconds before the impact, which the court agreed was the absolute "definition of recklessness."
Because the defense's efforts to dismiss the charges failed, Judge Stewart ruled that the final determination of fault and the severity of the crash must be decided by a local jury. Mullen remains charged with felony aggravated assault by vehicle, misdemeanor reckless endangerment, and multiple traffic summaries as the case moves toward a formal criminal trial.
I wish Karen Read had told Craig Melvin today that she wasn't doing this for money (even though she deserves it), she's doing this because racist cops like Michael Proctor are a danger to people like Craig Melvin. There is no way the State Police didn't know how Proctor felt about racial minorities. The institutional rot is still there, and he was allowed to stay on, working cases, despite this bias. If she doesn't sue them then there will be no accountability. Look what Michael Proctor and the State Police took from her: her job, her ability to drive, her house, her boyfriend, her mental health, and her reputation. How much would Craig Melvin pay to avoid that happening to him? That's what this lawsuit is about. There can be no justice for John O'Keefe and Karen Read until the institution is fixed and she is made whole.
The Today Show interview got better for Karen Read as it went on, and she responded to the comment about how John was being lost in all of this perfectly:
"He's not lost, he's the reason we're doing this."
This needs to be emphasized more because it's the most common criticism of her detractors. Karen is John's voice. There would be no justice for John O'Keefe if she was convicted. She and her team have done more to shed light on what really happened to him than anyone who claims to be fighting for him while trying to put her in prison. She really humanized him with this answer, telling the public who John really was, and what a tremendous loss this was for everyone. We rarely heard this from her during the trial and it was powerful. The antis have tried to take ownership of John's legacy and she took it back with this answer.
I know Karen cared for John because she sent me pictures of him that showed what a good father he was, and pictures of her with the kids that showed how much they liked her. She asked me not to share them publicly because she didn't want to exploit them, but she wanted me to know what a tremendous loss it was for the kids.