Business Account Mng. w Cellular Sales, an Authorized Verizon Retailer, Guilford Co. Firefighter, Christian, F3 Amateur Q, Backpacker, Fire Whisperer

Joined October 2013
1,627 Photos and videos
@F3 Jitterbug AlDula retweeted
Something like this should not stand out. But it does. Be like Tom.
322
2,848
37,182
254,041
💪🇺🇸
Last night, @POTUS invited the hardworking men who renovated the Reflecting Pool to the Oval Office ❤️ Every man received a signed hat and a presidential challenge coin!
17
@F3 Jitterbug AlDula retweeted
“If you think the world is selfish and rotten, go to the cemetery at Colleville-sur-Mer overlooking Omaha Beach. See what one group of men did for another on D-Day, June 6th, 1944.” — Andy Rooney
189
4,414
27,108
610,374
💪🇺🇸
“Retreat? Hell, We Just Got Here!” Today, we remember the legacy of Marines who fought at the Battle of Belleau Wood during World War I, helping to cement the Corps' reputation as the world's premier fighting force. During the intense battle, the 4th Marine Brigade, comprised of the 5th and 6th Marine Regiments, and the 6th Machine Gun Battalion, fought aggressively through the wheat fields and woodlands in France, helping to stop a major German advance toward Paris in 1918. The Battle of Belleau Wood became a major turning point for the Corps, providing Marines with experience in large scale operations. Legend has it that Marines were later called Teufel Hunden ("Devil Dogs" in German) due to the relentless tenacity while taking enemy positions during the battle. Because of the Marines’ unwavering commitment, the 5th and 6th Marine Regiments were awarded the French Croix de Guerre, an award presented to individuals or units for acts of valor and bravery on the battlefield. Semper Fidelis. ✍️ (U.S. Marine Corps Graphic by Lance Cpl. Matthew Morales) 📷(U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Garrett Gillespie) #USMC #BelleauWood #SemperFi
17
🤔🙏🇺🇸
When you have to include the caveat that something is not a joke, you know that we are in treacherous waters. Common sense is but a memory. Why are we still single-handedly financing this disgusting organization?
1
1
13
RT @marklevinshow: Society collapsing
759
💪🙏🇺🇸
For none of us lives to himself, and none of us dies to himself. For if we live, we live to the Lord, and if we die, we die to the Lord. So then, whether we live or whether we die, we are the Lord’s. Romans 14:7-8
1
49
🤔
On this day in 1943, a thousand starving Japanese soldiers ran screaming out of the fog on a frozen Alaskan island, bayonets lashed to broken sticks, to die. The island was Attu, the westernmost tip of the Aleutian chain. It was the only piece of North American soil the Japanese had captured in the entire war. The Americans had been trying to take it back for nineteen days in the worst conditions either side had ever fought in: freezing rain, knee-deep mud, fog so thick a man could not see his own rifle, and tundra that swallowed boots and never gave them back. The Japanese garrison was down to 800 men. They had no food left. No medicine. No way off the island. They had been told no rescue was coming. Their commander was Colonel Yasuyo Yamasaki, a 51 year old career officer who had been on Attu for less than three weeks. On the night of May 28, he gathered every man who could still hold a weapon. This included his wounded. Those who could not walk were shot or given grenades. Those who could limp were given anything that could stab. Some had bayonets. Some had bayonets lashed to ski poles. Some had bayonets lashed to tent stakes. Then he led them straight at the American line in the dark. It was the largest banzai charge of the Pacific war up to that point. They came through a gap in the fog at 3:30 AM, completely silent until they were inside the American positions. Then they screamed. They overran the front line in minutes. They overran the artillery batteries behind it. They reached the field hospital and butchered the wounded in their cots. They got within a hundred yards of the American command post before they were finally stopped by a scratch force of engineers, cooks, military police and walking wounded who fired at point blank range until their rifles were too hot to hold. When the sun came up, the snow on the slope was carpeted with bodies. The Americans counted 500 dead Japanese on the ground in front of them. Then they began finding the rest. Almost all of the remaining defenders had killed themselves with grenades held against their chests. American soldiers walking the field afterward described finding small groups of three or four men curled in a circle, their bodies folded around the same grenade. Out of a Japanese garrison of nearly 2,900, the Americans took 28 prisoners. It was the second highest American casualty rate of any battle in the Pacific war, after Iwo Jima. Almost no one in the United States has heard of it.
1
19
State Constitution 's are worth a review-orig. 13 states-. 💪☝️🙏🇺🇸
Of course America is a Christian Nation - The original state constitutions professed Jesus Christ as King - A Christian statement of faith was required to serve in public office - Our Declaration of Independence is written as a prayer to the ‘Judge’ of the world — Jesus Christ. - 55/56 signers of the Declaration of Independence were Bible believing Christians -Our original founding document references God 4 times and derives all principles from Biblical law - John Adam’s said our nation was established only for a ‘moral and religious people’ When the godless left attacks ‘Christian Nationalism’ they are attacking America itself. So who will inherit the legacy of this great nation? Polling shows Democrats have abandoned Christianity en-masse while the right is leading a revival back to the church. We also are the only ones creating families, having children and passing on our values. You do the math. America is a Christian Nation and our descendants will restore it to its original founding. Thank you @kayleighmcenany and @FoxNews for having me on to establish this critical truth. 🇺🇸
15
@F3 Jitterbug AlDula retweeted
2
17
110
1,239
California has passed on act that prohibits its citizens from showing how much government fraud is in the state. So much for ‘We the People’
12
@F3 Jitterbug AlDula retweeted
A reminder that Bill Clinton did not have a balanced budget until the Republicans took over Congress under Newt Gingrich.
In 1998, the United States achieved its first federal budget surplus in 29 years, effectively ending a streak of deficits that had lasted since 1969. ⁠ ⁠ This milestone was achieved under President Bill Clinton, following the passage of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997, which resulted in a fiscal surplus of approximately $69 billion for that year.⁠ ⁠
241
321
2,869
122,921
@F3 Jitterbug AlDula retweeted
You have to learn how to let go and trust your team to lead.
3
14
118
3,044
@F3 Jitterbug AlDula retweeted
Warren Buffett: "I can end the U.S. deficit problem in 5 minutes. Just pass a law that any time there's a deficit of more than 3% of GDP, all members of Congress are ineligible for re-election."

90
1,416
6,969
72,671
💪🇬🇧🙏
No screaming. No fires. No broken glass. No threats, or machetes, or chants of “Allahu Akbar.” Just well-mannered, civilized Brits working to save their country from barbarism.
1
18
@F3 Jitterbug AlDula retweeted
Barack Obama weaponized the United States Intel Community to destroy a new President. I don't think people realize just how serious this is.
1,061
3,891
11,075
96,560
@F3 Jitterbug AlDula retweeted
George Patton at 17 He was the third generation in his family to attend Virginia Military Institute
43
183
2,664
38,733
💪🇺🇸
May 13
Elon Musk just defended America better than every politician in Washington combined. Musk: “After World War 2, the US could have basically taken over the world and any country. Like we got nukes, nobody else got nukes. We don’t even have to lose soldiers. Which country do you want?” One nation on earth held a weapon nobody else had. Total dominance. Zero competition. No risk of retaliation. Every empire in history that held that kind of advantage used it. Rome. The Mongols. The British. The Ottomans. They conquered until they collapsed. America had a bigger advantage than all of them combined. And it rebuilt the countries it just defeated. Musk: “The United States actually helped rebuild countries. So it helped rebuild Europe, it helped rebuild Japan. This is very unusual behavior, almost unprecedented.” Almost unprecedented? It had never happened before. Not once in 5,000 years of recorded history. The Marshall Plan wasn’t foreign aid. It was the most radical act of restraint any superpower ever committed. America turned its enemies into allies. Turned rubble into economies. Turned surrender into partnership. Germany went from ashes to the economic engine of Europe in a generation. Japan went from unconditional surrender to the third largest economy on earth. Three years after the war, America was flying food into Berlin. A city in the heart of the nation that just tried to destroy it. That’s not policy. That’s a civilization deciding what it is at the exact moment it has the power to be anything. You’re being told a story right now. That America is the villain of history. You hear it everywhere. Media. Universities. Social platforms. Musk: “There’s always like, well America’s done bad things. Well of course America’s done bad things, but one needs to look at the whole track record.” Every nation on earth has dark chapters. Every single one. The difference is what a country does when nobody can stop it. And when nobody could stop America, it fed its enemies and rebuilt their cities. Musk: “The history of China suggests that China is not acquisitive. Meaning they’re not going to go out and invade a whole bunch of countries.” Probably right. China has historically built walls, not fleets. But the real question isn’t about borders anymore. We’re approaching a moment that mirrors 1945 in ways nobody has fully processed yet. AI is going to give a handful of people a power advantage that makes nuclear monopoly look quaint. If someone is going to hold that kind of power, who do you want it to be? The country that conquered when it could? Or the one that rebuilt when it didn’t have to? Every alliance. Every trade route. Every economy. Billions lifted out of poverty. All of it traces back to one act of restraint that had never been done before. And carries no guarantee of being repeated. The most powerful thing America ever did wasn’t building the bomb. It was what it didn’t do after.
12
@F3 Jitterbug AlDula retweeted
True
What Democrats think fascism means: Republicans What fascism actually means: a far-left, authoritarian ideology focused on creating a highly centralized, dictatorial state that subordinates to the state all aspects of society—economy, culture, media, education, and private life
6,508
30,410
175,187
22,582,142
💪🇺🇸
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
19