@Super70sSports Had one. Took my traffic ticket to court because I made an illegal U turn leaving McDonalds hauling 6 kids because the youngest left his Happy Meal toy. Hard to turn these battleships quickly. Told story and judge only charged $25!
@marlene4719 Um, planted those trees a bit close to the building. Obviously planned by a guy that only knows how to put his name on a building in a city.
@SilentSkyZero@houmayor Absolutely NOBODY in Houston is going to pull over for an unmarked vehicle with masked drivers. Ask a Houston cop.They even have have classes where they tell you not to!
@ScottJenningsKY As my high school football playing kid said years ago to another kid when he wore a pink shirt, "I am secure in my masculinity, how bout you?" Scott Jennings is a smirking weak little man...
@Giargre@TheTNHoller@FreedomNTV@ScooterCasterNY One guy saying there's a problem can easily be fired for speaking up. Unions first job is to protect their workers and have the support and strength of an organization.
Ukraine 🇺🇦 did not intercept a single one of the 23 Iskander ballistic missiles fired at Kyiv tonight because it ran out of PAC-3 interceptors, and the US 🇺🇸 doesn’t send more
Putin is getting exactly what he wanted from Trump, a defenseless Ukraine which can be bombed endlessly
A primeira foto é de 1956. Ela mostra uma mulher negra observando membros da Ku Klux Klan (organização terrorista, racista, de extrema-direita, focada em supremacia branca) caminhando por uma calçada em Montgomery, Alabama (EUA). Não encontrei o autor da foto, mas a maioria das fontes afirma que foi feita em 1956.
A segunda foto mostra membros do grupo Patriot Front (grupo supremacista branco e nacionalista, formado em 2017, que defende abertamente o que chamam de "Fascismo Americano") viajando no metrô durante o 250º aniversário da independência dos EUA em Washington D.C., enquanto uma mulher negra os observa. A foto é do fotógrafo Cheney Orr, feita em 4 de julho de 2026, 70 anos após a primeira foto.
The government insisted they were dangerous women. Their real offense was standing silently outside the White House holding signs that embarrassed the President of the United States.
By November 1917, the authorities had grown tired of the spectacle. Lucy Burns and dozens of fellow suffragists were arrested on flimsy charges of “obstructing traffic,” even though the crowds gathering to watch them often caused the congestion. Refusing to pay fines, they demanded recognition as political prisoners instead. That decision sent them to Virginia’s Occoquan Workhouse—and into one of the darkest episodes in the fight for women’s rights. (The Library of Congress)
What happened next was so shocking that many Americans initially refused to believe it.
Rumors spread that the women had been beaten. The truth was even worse.
On the night later remembered as the “Night of Terror,” guards stormed the cellblocks under orders from the superintendent. Women were dragged by their arms, thrown into iron beds, choked, kicked, and locked into filthy cells. One prisoner, Dora Lewis, was slammed so violently against a metal bedframe that she lost consciousness. Another, Alice Cosu, believed her friend had been killed and suffered a heart attack from the shock. (The Library of Congress)
Lucy Burns became the night’s unforgettable image.
The guards shackled her hands high above her head to the bars of her cell, forcing her to remain standing for hours. They believed exhaustion would break her resolve. Instead, she became a symbol of it. Fellow prisoners raised their own arms in silent solidarity from neighboring cells, mirroring her agony across the corridor. (Arlington Public Library)
The abuse did not end there. Hunger-striking women were pinned down and force-fed through tubes in a practice so brutal that it horrified the public once their accounts were smuggled out. The government’s attempt to crush a protest became one of the suffrage movement’s greatest victories, turning public sympathy sharply toward the women it had tried to silence. Within three years, the Nineteenth Amendment became law.
#drthehistories
My name is Clayton Tucker. I’m running for TX Ag Commissioner to protect our farms from data centers.
This race isn’t right v left. It’s organized people v organized money.
Organized money may have bought out most of our politicians, including my opponent, but my heart only belongs to the people.
Trump loves to talk about the problems ruining America: immigrants, mail-in voting, and felons. Well, Trump married an immigrant, is a felon, and votes by mail.