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Pet Life
Pet Life
12 hrs

Cats Rescued from an Industrial Area Find Kind People Who Change Their Lives and Their Kittens' Too
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Cats Rescued from an Industrial Area Find Kind People Who Change Their Lives and Their Kittens' Too

Two cats rescued from an industrial area found kind people who changed their lives and their kittens', too. BestFriendsFelinesEarlier this year, Best Friends Felines, an all-volunteer rescue, welcomed two cats who had been living in an industrial area.They were saved along with 22 other cats during a large rescue mission. Both had noticeably round bellies, and a trip to the vet confirmed that they were pregnant.Soon, it became clear that the cats preferred having their own separate spaces, so the rescue made arrangements to accommodate their needs. BestFriendsFelinesIt didn't take long for the cats, Abby and Priscilla (or Cilla), to settle into the comforts of indoor life. After exploring their new surroundings, they happily approached their people, asking for attention and pets."Abby (tabby and white) is very chatty and loves affection. She enjoys her nightly snuggles (with her foster mom Jen) and also demands the sharing of any food she can safely eat," the rescue shared. AbbyBestFriendsFelinesCilla (gray and white) was placed in the care of another volunteer, Rachel, who prepared a cozy area just for her. Although she ventured out to explore other parts of the house, she always returned to her favorite spot under the desk.She adored having company while she ate and certainly knew how to enjoy a hearty meal. CillaBestFriendsFelinesAbby never passed up an opportunity for cuddles and often made it difficult for her foster mom to work, insisting on keeping a paw on her at all times.Then, one Sunday morning, Abby went into labor. With Jen by her side, she gave birth to four healthy kittens within an hour and a half. "Abby did a beautiful job of cleaning them up and settling them in with her." A fifth kitten sadly crossed the rainbow bridge due to a congenital defect. BestFriendsFelinesMeanwhile, Cilla had warmed up to every member of her foster family and had grown especially fond of her young human sisters. "She's really dialed up the affection level and gets lots of love and snuggles whenever she can."Around two weeks after they were born, Abby's kittens opened their eyes. With their newfound strength and curiosity, they began wobbling around, practicing their balance. BestFriendsFelinesOne night, Cilla decided it was time to bring her kittens into the world. Rachel stayed beside her throughout the entire process, and it turned out Cilla truly needed the support. Of all the kittens she delivered, only two survived. Exhausted, Cilla needed assistance caring for the tiny pair.Both Rachel and Jen were there to help her that night, changing the bedding, weighing the kittens, and making sure they began nursing. BestFriendsFelines"Cilla has taken to motherhood like a duck to water, and it shows in her chunky little babies. She loves spending time with her foster family and sharing her kittens with them."Sometimes she even wanders off and leaves the kittens with her people, or carries them halfway back before meowing for help. "Rachel's kids are happy to scoop them up and tuck them back into bed with Cilla." BestFriendsFelinesWhen Abby's kittens fall fast asleep, she often sneaks away to lounge on the window hammock so she can stay close to her foster mom. Her kittens are becoming more active, often sliding off the bed and using her as their landing mat.Once the kittens are weaned, Abby and Cilla will be spayed, bringing an end to the cycle of endless litters. BestFriendsFelinesThanks to the dedication of rescuers and volunteers, Abby, Cilla, and many others like them have been given a second chance at life.Abby's kittens are now beginning to run around, while Cilla's precious duo are starting to test their tiny legs. Both moms enjoy taking breaks from their duties to spend time with their foster families. They are finally living the good life they've always deserved. BestFriendsFelinesShare this story with your friends. More on the cat families and Best Friends Felines on Instagram @bestfriendsfelines and Facebook.Related story: Cat Finds a Safe Place for Her Kittens, Though She Adores Them All, One Clearly Steals Her Heart
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
12 hrs

Gwen Stefani reveals 'miracle' that brought her to God at 44
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Gwen Stefani reveals 'miracle' that brought her to God at 44

Singer Gwen Stefani grew up in a Catholic household but drifted away from the Church as an adult — until an unexpected prayer brought her closer to God than she ever thought possible. The No Doubt co-founder and multi-platinum solo artist recently opened up about her newfound faith with Jeff Cavins from Christian prayer and meditation app Hallow.'Please, God, let my mom have a baby.'Stefani said her shift came 12 years ago, after talking to an acquaintance who had converted to Judaism despite a non-religious upbringing in Israel.Wake-up call"He was studying the Torah, and he had this big epiphany, ... and he starts talking to me about the Torah. And I was desperate at this point, too, during all this. I really wanted to have another baby," Stefani told Cavins. "I really did. And I couldn't."After describing the teachings of the Torah as "waking me up," she recalled talking to her then-8-year-old son about why he was unlikely to get his wish for a younger sibling."I'm sorry, your mommy's too old," she told him.He then shocked her with a spontaneous prayer: "Please, God, let my mom have a baby.""I never taught him that," Stefani marveled as she remembered the moment. RELATED: Country star Blake Shelton says he found God in 2019: 'I had one of those moments that you hear people talk about' Running to GodTo Stefani's surprise, she learned she was pregnant just four weeks later."I was pregnant with Apollo, who I had at 44 years old naturally, totally a full-on gift. And that was the first miracle," she explained."You can run from God, or you can run to God," Cavins responded, with Stefani noting that she was always taught to run toward him.The 56-year-old also revealed during her interview that the closest she feels to God is when she is doing music."Honestly, it's 'cause I'm desperate for him because I'm like, I'm about ready to go on stage, and I'm not nervous, but I just want God to use me. I just want people to see God's light through me," she explained.RELATED: 'I'm Japanese and I didn't know it': Singer Gwen Stefani defends fascination with the Asian country, faces questions about cultural appropriation December 2000. Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic Daily practiceStefani went on to say that she discovered the Hallow app during the COVID-19 lockdown and became so attached to the idea of daily prayer, she would have fears that one day the app would shut down and she wouldn't be able to use it.Now, she is doing work with the Christian prayer app, recently releasing videos like a 40-day Lent prayer challenge in which she encourages users of the app to pray every day leading up to Easter.Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
12 hrs

Doja Cat reveals shocking celeb trick for getting attention: 'Virtue signaling'
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Doja Cat reveals shocking celeb trick for getting attention: 'Virtue signaling'

Want to make yourself the center of attention — without people thinking you're a bad person?"Jealous Type" singer Doja Cat has revealed a trick long-favored by celebrities when weighing in on the latest scandal — and you don't even have to know anything about the topic at hand. Welcome to the wonderful world of virtue signaling.'What I was doing yesterday was virtue signaling ... something that I could leverage.'The pop star's revelation came after actor Timothée Chalamet appeared on a CNN & Variety town hall, where he ruffled feathers with his passing remarks on the commercial irrelevance of opera and ballet."I don't want to be working in ballet or opera or, you know, things where it's like, 'Hey, keep this thing alive!'" Chalamet said to co-host Matthew McConaughey.Whiny dancerThe comments prompted backlash from many in the entertainment industry, including Doja Cat — real name Amala Ratna Zandile Dlamini — who lashed out at Chalamet in a TikTok video.After mocking the actor, she claimed that "people [do] give a f**k" about opera and ballet, and she praised its decorum."You show up in a nice outfit. You sit the f**k down and shut the f**k up," she said. "That's the usual etiquette around those things. Maybe learn something from that."Mea culpaJust one day later, however, Dlamini was singing a different tune."I know nothing about opera. I know nothing about ballet," she offered in a short, contrite follow-up. "I've never been to a ballet. I've never seen an opera," she revealed. "And I took it upon myself yesterday to kind of give it to the man because there is a culture based around outrage and things like that, and people want to feel like they're part of something. It's a need to connect, whether good or bad," she added.Dlamini then took her confession a step further and told fans she was only doing it for views.RELATED: Timothée Chalamet is right: Opera and ballet are dying — and you'll never guess why Rare honestyThe blunt confession was a rare moment of honesty in a culture generally concerned with trading outrage for clicks. "What I was doing yesterday was virtue signaling because I wanted to connect, and I knew that Timothée's goof-up was something that I could leverage in order for people to connect with me and f**k with me," the Los Angeles native went on.“And it's easy. It's a modern way to garner clicks, likes, approval, and all kinds of things like that from people. And so I did that yesterday, and I didn't really think about why I was doing it."RELATED: Gene Simmons' advice for celeb activists Ben Stiller, Mark Ruffalo: 'Shut the f**k up' Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images 'Wanted a hug'"That was the perfect material for me to seem sincere. But the truth is, I don't know anything about opera. I don't know anything about ballet, and I've never been to either shows," she said.The 30-year-old also displayed some vulnerability when she discussed the deeper motivations behind her reaction. "I think I just wanted a hug. I think that's all that I wanted. I wanted a hug. I wanted to feel like I was part of something bigger than myself. I wanted to be pat on the back the way everybody else is patting each other on the back in the comments sections. And I wanted to look like a hero, and that's what happened. And when I got it, I didn't like it so much," she said.The half-Jewish, half-South African has been wildly successful over just five studio albums. She has gone platinum five times between 2019 and 2023, with her music gaining recognition in Switzerland, Sweden, and Great Britain.Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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The Blaze Media Feed
12 hrs

Tony Dungy out at NBC after 17 years — Jason Whitlock believes his faith played a role
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Tony Dungy out at NBC after 17 years — Jason Whitlock believes his faith played a role

Former NFL coach Tony Dungy says he’s looking ahead in faith after learning he will not return to NBC’s “Sunday Night Football” this fall following 17 years on the broadcast.“I have been informed by NBC that I won’t be back with FNIA this fall and it has given me time to reflect and also to look ahead. It’s disappointing news but I want to thank my NBC family for making the last 17 years so special. I’ll have lasting memories of my time there, especially with Rodney Harrison who has become a tremendous friend,” Dungy posted on X.“God has always directed me in these moments and while I’m not sure what the next step will be for me — whether it will be in football, in broadcasting, or getting more involved in church and community outreach — I know God has plans for my life and I can’t wait to see them unfold,” he continued.“And I am reminded of one of my favorite verses in the Bible — Romans 8:28. ‘God works all things for His good for those who love the Lord,’” he added.“Seventeen years on NBC always shocked me. NBC is probably the most secular television network we have in America. I think they used Tony Dungy and the NFL used Tony Dungy to try to signal that ‘hey, we’re not anti-Christian,’” BlazeTV host Jason Whitlock says on “Jason Whitlock Harmony.”“And now NBC and the NFL, I think, are kind of done with the biblical worldview — the Christian worldview — and so they have removed Tony Dungy,” he adds.“I was surprised, just because, as you pointed out, he’s been there 17 years,” Anthony Walker tells Whitlock.“I think it was a few years ago he started becoming even more vocal about his stance against abortion, about, you know, saving unborn children and went to a few rallies, public speeches, and faced a lot of criticism because of that,” Walker explains.Want more from Jason Whitlock?To enjoy more fearless conversations at the crossroads of culture, faith, sports, and comedy with Jason Whitlock, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.
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History Traveler
History Traveler
12 hrs

This Mysterious Coin Was Used To Pay For A Bus In Leeds. Now It’s Been Identified As A 2,000-Year-Old Phoenician Coin
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allthatsinteresting.com

This Mysterious Coin Was Used To Pay For A Bus In Leeds. Now It’s Been Identified As A 2,000-Year-Old Phoenician Coin

Leeds City CouncilThe Phoenician coin that someone used as bus fare in 1950s Leeds. In the 1950s, a passenger in Leeds, England, boarded a bus and paid for their fare with a coin, as usual — or so it seemed. This particular coin later proved, in fact, to be most unusual. When the fares were eventually counted up, this strange, rather old-looking coin was set off to the side by the chief cashier, who gave it to his grandson as an odd little collectible. Now, more than 70 years later, researchers have taken a closer look at the coin — and realized that it was minted 2,000 years ago. More specifically, the coin was created by the ancient Phoenicians and originates from a Carthaginian settlement in Spain. While many questions about the coin remain, including how it ended up as bus fare in 1950s England, the discovery remains as exciting as it is unexpected. The Discovery Of A 2,000-Year-Old Phoenician Coin Among Bus Fare In England According to a statement from the Leeds City Council, the Phoenician coin was picked out of the fare pile sometime in the 1950s by James Edwards, the chief cashier with Leeds City Transport. His job was to count the total bus fare at the end of the day and pick out any non-British coins. He would often come across coins that were ineligible, fake, or foreign, some of which he then gifted to his young grandson, Peter Edwards. Leeds City CouncilJames Edwards, the chief cashier with Leeds City Transport, who picked the coin out of a pile and gifted it to his grandson, Peter. “My grandfather would come across coins which were not British and put them to one side, and when I went to his house, he would hand me a few,” Peter Edwards recalled. “It was not long after [World War II], so I imagine soldiers returned with coins from countries they had been sent to. Neither of us were coin collectors but we were fascinated by their origin and imagery – to me they were treasure.” Out of all the coins that Peter had been given by his grandfather, one stood out. Decades after he first received it, Peter decided to do some research — and discovered that it was a 2,000-year-old Phoenician coin. The Astounding History Behind This Ancient Phoenician Coin Leeds City CouncilKat Baxter, Leeds Museums and Galleries’ curator of archaeology and numismatics, holding up the Phoenician coin. The Phoenician coin caught Peter Edwards’ eye for a reason. On one side, it features an impressive figure that we now know is the powerful Phoenician god Melqart, depicted as the Greek hero Hercules, wearing his famed lion skin headdress. On the other side, it depicts a pair of bluefin tuna. After Edwards uncovered some information about the coin’s age and provenance, he donated the coin to the Leeds Museums and Galleries. Researchers have since determined that it was minted in the the Spanish city of Cadiz, then part of Carthage, a Phoenician city-state, in the first century B.C.E. According to the museum, some Phoenician coins at the time used Greek imagery, in order to appear more appealing to traders. “It’s incredible to imagine how this tiny piece of history created by an ancient civilization thousands of years ago has somehow made its way to Leeds and into our collection,” said Leeds City Councillor Salma Arif. “Museums like ours are not just about preserving objects, they’re also about telling stories like this one and inspiring visitors to think about the history that’s all around us, sometimes in the most unlikely of places.” Indeed, it’s a mystery how the Phoenician coin made its way from ancient Carthage, into the pocket of a 20th-century English citizen who, perhaps unknowingly, deposited it as bus fare. But whatever the case may be, Peter Edwards is happy that the coin has now ended up in the hands of the museum, where it can be preserved and displayed for generations to come. “The coin always fascinated me because it was hard to decipher where it came from,” Peter Edwards said. “My grandfather would be proud to know, as I am, that the coin is coming back to Leeds.” He added: “However, how it got there will always be a mystery.” After reading about the 2,000-year-old Phoenician coin that was surprisingly discovered among old bus fare in England, discover the story of Tyrian purple, the luxurious dye coveted by wealthy elites in antiquity. Then, learn about Queen Dido, the legendary founder of the empire of Carthage. The post This Mysterious Coin Was Used To Pay For A Bus In Leeds. Now It’s Been Identified As A 2,000-Year-Old Phoenician Coin appeared first on All That's Interesting.
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Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
12 hrs

‘This Is a Case About Swinging D***s:’ A Dissent Goes THERE on Transgender Issues (LAWSPLAINING)
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‘This Is a Case About Swinging D***s:’ A Dissent Goes THERE on Transgender Issues (LAWSPLAINING)

‘This Is a Case About Swinging D***s:’ A Dissent Goes THERE on Transgender Issues (LAWSPLAINING)
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Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
12 hrs

Biden DOJ's Masterstroke: 'Sorry, Not Sorry' Letter for Straw Buyer Who Then Armed an ISIS Fanboy to Kill
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twitchy.com

Biden DOJ's Masterstroke: 'Sorry, Not Sorry' Letter for Straw Buyer Who Then Armed an ISIS Fanboy to Kill

Biden DOJ's Masterstroke: 'Sorry, Not Sorry' Letter for Straw Buyer Who Then Armed an ISIS Fanboy to Kill
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NEWSMAX Feed
NEWSMAX Feed
12 hrs

Hegseth: Sooner David Ellison Takes Over CNN, the Better
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Hegseth: Sooner David Ellison Takes Over CNN, the Better

War Secretary Pete Hegseth said at a Pentagon briefing Friday he was looking forward to CNN being controlled by David Ellison.
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NEWSMAX Feed
12 hrs

Grassley: Easing Russian Oil Sanctions Would Fuel Putin's War
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Grassley: Easing Russian Oil Sanctions Would Fuel Putin's War

Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, on Friday criticized efforts to lift sanctions on Russian oil, warning that any move to ease restrictions would help finance Moscow's war in Ukraine and prolong the conflict.
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NEWSMAX Feed
12 hrs

Judge Orders WH to Continue Funding Consumer Watchdog
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Judge Orders WH to Continue Funding Consumer Watchdog

A federal judge on Friday ordered the Trump administration to continue funding the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau indefinitely, saying top officials had unlawfully relied on deficient legal advice to justify their refusal to do so.The ruling from U.S. District...
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