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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
7 w News & Oppinion

rumbleBitchute
The People Who Run Australia (and YOUR country)… and You Can’t Vote Them Out
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
7 w News & Oppinion

rumbleBitchute
Aussie confronting Indian immigrant for shitting ? on an Adelaide street.
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
7 w

The long forgotten band Eric Clapton thinks are the true “originators of heavy metal”
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The long forgotten band Eric Clapton thinks are the true “originators of heavy metal”

Changing the face of rock. The post The long forgotten band Eric Clapton thinks are the true “originators of heavy metal” first appeared on Far Out Magazine.
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Pet Life
Pet Life
7 w

"Aggressive” Foster Dog Loves Cuddling Her Foster Brother | The Dodo
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"Aggressive” Foster Dog Loves Cuddling Her Foster Brother | The Dodo

"Aggressive” Foster Dog Loves Cuddling Her Foster Brother | The Dodo
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Independent Sentinel News Feed
Independent Sentinel News Feed
7 w

Sen. Tuberville Wants Mass Deportation of Islamist Immigrants
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Sen. Tuberville Wants Mass Deportation of Islamist Immigrants

Senator Tommy Tuberville urged an immediate ban and mass deportation of Islamist immigrants in the US after the DC shooting suspect was identified as an Afghan national who never should have been allowed in. He was a CIA-trained killer. The Alabama Republican set off a firestorm Wednesday night when he said the federal government needs […] The post Sen. Tuberville Wants Mass Deportation of Islamist Immigrants appeared first on www.independentsentinel.com.
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Daily Wire Feed
Daily Wire Feed
7 w

‘Just Horrible’: President Trump Announces Death Of National Guard Soldier
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‘Just Horrible’: President Trump Announces Death Of National Guard Soldier

President Donald Trump announced on Thursday that Specialist Sarah Beckstrom of the West Virginia National Guard had passed away after being shot near the White House the day before. Trump delivered the news as families across the United States were celebrating Thanksgiving, saying, “I must unfortunately tell you that just seconds before I went on right now, I heard that Sarah Beckstrom of West Virginia, one of the Guardsmen that we’re talking about — highly respected, young, magnificent person — started service in 2023, outstanding in every way, she’s just passed away.” “She’s no longer with us, she’s looking down on us right now,” the president continued. “Her parents are with her. This just happened. She was savagely attacked, she’s dead, not with us. Incredible person. Outstanding in every single way, in every department. Just horrible.” Trump’s announcement comes just hours after Beckstrom’s father revealed that she was not expected to survive her injuries. “I’m holding her hand right now,” Gary Beckstrom said earlier on Thursday. “She has a mortal wound. It’s not going to be a recovery.” Beckstrom, 20, had reportedly volunteered to serve over the Thanksgiving holiday so that other National Guard members could spend the time at home with their families. Right now, DailyWire+ annual memberships are fifty percent off during our Black Friday sale. Join now at dailywire.com/blackfriday. “She volunteered, as did many of those guardsmen and women, so other people could be home with their families. Yet, now, their families are in hospital rooms with them while they are fighting for their lives,” Attorney General Pam Bondi said. “They answered the call, they took the charge, they volunteered, they put their lives on the line for people they don’t even know, and that unfortunately is becoming a reality more and more for the members of law enforcement,” United States Attorney for D.C. Jeanine Pirro added. The suspect, Afghan national Rahmanullah Lakanwal, 29, entered the United States in 2021 as part of President Joe Biden’s “Operation Allies Welcome,” which — as The Daily Wire previously reported — allowed roughly 77,000 Afghan nationals into the country.
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
7 w

Shereen Arent and Sambhali U.S. help uplift 80,000+ women and girls in India
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Shereen Arent and Sambhali U.S. help uplift 80,000+ women and girls in India

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Women and youth empowerment through education Welcome to the final week of The Optimist Daily’s Annual Local Changemakers series, where we’ve spent five weeks celebrating community-rooted leaders driving bold solutions across the globe. We close this year’s series with two extraordinary women who remind us that education is far more than a tool; it’s a lifeline. Whether it’s Shirley Santana Herrera nurturing the next generation of Latin American youth leaders or Shereen Arent championing women’s empowerment through Sambhali U.S. and its work in India, these changemakers understand that confidence and opportunity begin with access. Their stories span continents, but share a common thread: when education is paired with dignity, support, and vision, generational change takes root. Let’s take a closer look at how Sambhali Trust, with support from Shereen Arent and Sambhali U.S., is turning education into lasting empowerment for women and girls across Rajasthan. Empowered to choose: Helping women and girls change their own lives In a dusty village in Setrawa, Rajasthan, a woman named Meera once dreamed of being a teacher. However the difficult realities of life eclipsed this hope. Her own education had ended after just two years of elementary school. She was married at 21, raising three children and running a struggling family shop. Her dreams seemed out of reach—until a life-changing opportunity arrived in 2007. That year, Sambhali Trust opened its first empowerment and education center in her village, offering free education, vocational training, and support for Dalit women and children. That year, Meera took a leap of faith that would change everything. She enrolled her children in the newly opened Sambhali Primary Education Center and began attending Sambhali’s Empowerment Center herself. Despite resistance from her father-in-law, Meera’s husband supported her choice. She fought for the right to learn, to work, and to envision a new future for her family.  Meera also enrolled her young daughter Lalita in Sambhali’s programs, and in 2012, Lalita became one of the first girls to move to Jodhpur for Sambhali’s boarding home program. Today, she is thriving while studying science in college, working part-time with Sambhali, and mentoring the next generation of girls. A woman and child at the Sambhali Empowerment Center. Meera, now a trained English and math teacher at the same Primary Education Center where her journey began, recently reopened the family store with her husband. Her eldest son is pursuing a master’s degree in computer science in Italy. Her youngest son is also in college. A family transformed because one woman gathered the courage to say yes to a new path. One grandmother’s vision: Jamali and the Bheel basti of Jaisalmer Two hundred miles away in the border city of Jaisalmer, a similar story unfolded more recently in the Bheel basti, a community where access to electricity, clean water, and education remains limited. Jamali, a respected midwife and community elder, saw what was possible when Sambhali Trust arrived. She encouraged her daughter-in-law Ganga to attend the nearby Empowerment Center, where Ganga developed advanced sewing and embroidery skills. With support from Sambhali, Ganga and her husband expanded their small shop into a thriving business. As trust in Sambhali grew, Jamali made an even bolder move: she led the push to send girls from their basti to Sambhali’s boarding homes in Jodhpur. She started with those close to her heart, her own granddaughters. Samaira and Uma became pioneers for the community, inspiring 12 other families to follow suit. Her eldest granddaughter Latika stayed in Jaisalmer and studies at a private school through a Sambhali scholarship. She aspires to join the army while Samaira hopes to become a district collector. In a basti where girls were once rarely educated, a new norm is taking root. Students at Jaisalmer. Listening, responding, and growing: Sambhali Trust and Sambhali U.S. These are just two of the 80,000 stories made possible by Sambhali Trust since its founding in 2007. At the heart of the organization is a commitment to listening to the needs of Dalit women and girls, responding with care, and building solutions together. What began as a single Empowerment Center in Setrawa has grown into a network of interconnected programs: education centers, boarding homes, self-help groups, anti-violence services, health education, scholarships, and more. New locations like Jaisalmer were not chosen by strategic plan, but by invitation. During India’s severe COVID lockdowns, families in Jaisalmer heard via WhatsApp that Sambhali was distributing food and called them to come. Sambhali answered, and seeing the need, decided to stay.  What makes this story even more powerful is the quiet force of cross-cultural allyship helping it flourish. The U.S. connection: How Shereen Arent is building bridges, not blueprints Though Sambhali Trust is based in Rajasthan, the depth of its impact reaches far beyond India’s borders, thanks in large part to Sambhali U.S., a nonprofit that raises critical funds, provides technical assistance, and shares stories of resilience with American audiences. At the helm is Shereen Arent, whose journey with Sambhali began in 2019 with a self-funded volunteer trip that blossomed into deep, lasting relationships. Since then, Shereen has traveled to India more than half a dozen times at her own expense. She’s now considered a mentor and friend by many of the boarding home girls, some of whom she first met as teenagers and has watched grow into confident young women. Shereen with board members and boarding home residents who are now young women in college and graduate school. “I think a key part of what makes Sambhali so successful is its inclusive and holistic approach to supporting marginalized communities,” Shereen told The Optimist Daily. “Sambhali grows in response to the community, whose members feel empowered to bring the obstacles they face to staff who then work with them to co-create programs.” A support system that honors Indian leadership As Sambhali Trust’s impact has grown, so too has the role of Sambhali U.S., but always with humility and intention. Under Shereen’s leadership, the U.S. arm remains firmly rooted in community-led values. “Our job isn’t to direct,” she emphasizes. “It’s to support Sambhali’s vision while making sure our assistance respects and strengthens their leadership.” Shereen, second from the left, with Sambhali staff (one of whom began as a girl in the rural Primary Education Center then became an original resident of the boarding home). In the past year alone, Sambhali U.S. has supported a wide range of initiatives: boarding homes, school scholarships, women’s self-help groups, menstrual health and nutrition workshops, and more. Volunteers have contributed to curriculum design, program evaluation, communications, and direct service. In total, Sambhali Trust has now reached more than 80,000 women and children across Rajasthan. For Shereen, though, it always comes back to the people. “These are not just numbers or projects. These are people I know. Young women I met as high schoolers who are now in college. Families I’ve stayed in touch with. This is what makes the work matter.” That human-centered approach is part of what makes the U.S.-India partnership so effective. Rather than leading the work, Sambhali U.S. amplifies it. They mobilize resources, share stories, and stand in solidarity with Sambhali’s India-based leadership every step of the way.  Why it matters now In the areas Sambhali serves, only 28 percent of women can read and write. Fewer than 10 percent complete middle school. Despite education being mandatory for children in India ages 6 to 14, many girls are pulled out early or never even enrolled. Sambhali’s centers are rewriting that future. A glimpse into a Sambhali Primary Education Center computer class. Through inclusive education, trauma-informed support, and economic empowerment, Sambhali is shifting cultural norms from the inside out. From Rajasthan to the rest of the world, their message is clear: when you invest in women and girls, entire communities rise. Learn more and support this life-changing work at sambhalius.org  The post Shereen Arent and Sambhali U.S. help uplift 80,000+ women and girls in India first appeared on The Optimist Daily: Making Solutions the News.
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
7 w

Elevation through knowledge: Shirley Santana Herrera’s blueprint for youth empowerment
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Elevation through knowledge: Shirley Santana Herrera’s blueprint for youth empowerment

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Women and youth empowerment through education Welcome to the final week of The Optimist Daily’s Annual Local Changemakers series, where we’ve spent five weeks celebrating bold, community-rooted leaders transforming lives across the globe. This week, we highlight changemakers elevating those who are too often overlooked through education, nourishment, and care. We close with two powerful stories of women whose hard work shows us that education is the greatest catalyst for generational change. Whether it’s Shirley Santana Herrera nurturing the next generation of Latin American youth leaders or Shereen Arent championing women’s empowerment through Sambhali U.S. and its work in India, these changemakers understand that confidence and opportunity begin with access. Let’s turn now to Latin America, where Shirley Santana Herrera’s Excelsior Academy is empowering thousands of young people to break cycles of poverty through digital education, leadership training, and access to global opportunities. From a childhood shaped by scarcity to a career defined by innovation and service, Shirley’s journey is a testament to how equity in education can unlock futures. From La Romana to Forbes 30 Under 30 At just 24 years old, Shirley Santana Herrera has already founded Excelsior Academy, launched a regional climate initiative, and earned a place on the 2025 Forbes 30 Under 30 list for her work in education and social impact. She’s also a global speaker, advocate, and digital creator whose educational content has reached more than five million people and generated over 20 million views across platforms. But her drive isn’t fueled by accolades alone, but is shaped by lived experience. Growing up in La Romana, Dominican Republic, Shirley faced firsthand the barriers of an under-resourced education system. Rather than accept that reality, she used it as fuel. Those early challenges ignited a passion she’s carried ever since. Shirley Santana Herrera “She herself comes from an impoverished background,” wrote Ghazaleh Samandari, who nominated Shirley as a Local Changemaker. “But she is the ideal model to show what determination and hard work can do.” Excelsior Academy has now trained thousands of Latin American students, offering culturally relevant online courses that prepare students for scholarship applications, global exchanges, and community leadership. “Shirley has a tireless energy and innovative spirit,” Ghazaleh added. “She has built a sustainable and growing movement to help young people all over the world lead better, more promising lives.” Excelsior Academy: Training youth to lead At the heart of Shirley’s mission is Excelsior Academy, a digital platform offering leadership development, academic training, and life-changing mentorship for underserved and first-generation students across Latin America. Since its founding, Excelsior has directly served over 5,000 students from 15 countries, including the Dominican Republic, Mexico, Peru, Colombia, and Bolivia. But Excelsior is more than a course provider. It’s an engine of upward mobility and generational hope. Shirley shared with The Optimist Daily that the Academy boasts a 90 percent program completion rate, and participants are four times more likely to secure full-ride scholarships for higher education compared to peers outside the program. In just the last three years, Excelsior students have collectively earned at least $250,000 in national and international university scholarships. Shirley at the Rompiendo El Molde event in celebration of the International Day of the Girl The ripple effects continue far after graduation. A remarkable 95 percent of alumni go on to participate in community-driven, impact-focused extracurricular initiatives. Whether launching local youth programs or working in climate resilience, Excelsior graduates aren’t just improving their own lives. It is clear that Shirley’s efforts are grounded in her belief in compound impact. Her work demonstrates that when you train a young person with leadership skills and give them access to opportunity, they don’t stop with personal success. They replicate that empowerment in their communities. Accessible, scalable, and grounded in real need Excelsior’s programs meet students where they are, which is often in rural or digitally underserved areas. Its flagship offering, the Gaceta de Oportunidades (Opportunities Gazette), is a free, weekly digital magazine that reaches 25,000 students and shares vetted academic, leadership, and scholarship opportunities tailored to Latin American youth. This thoughtful, inclusive design is informed by Shirely’s own lived experience, and is what sets Excelsior apart. A parallel mission: Voces de la Tierra While education is Shirley’s core passion, she understands its deep intersection with environmental and social justice. In addition to Excelsior, she also founded Voces de la Tierra (Voices of the Earth), a climate governance initiative that empowers youth to advocate for environmental resilience in vulnerable regions. By amplifying youth voices in climate policy and organizing local training sessions, Voces de la Tierra bridges the gap between global environmental goals and grassroots action. It’s another example of Shirley’s belief in interdependence and her ability to connect seemingly separate issues through a single lens of empowerment. What’s next? Excelsior Academy continues to evolve, but on top of that, Ghazaleh shared with The Optimist Daily that Shirley is currently developing a new initiative that will equip at-risk youth with the skills and access they need to attain higher levels of education and economic stability. Her focus remains on building scalable, adaptable solutions that can work across cultures and conditions. To date, Shirley’s efforts have impacted over 30,000 people directly, but have certainly inspired millions more. Her grassroots leadership has attracted recognition from global institutions like the Kofi Annan Foundation and drawn partnerships that reflect the power of mission-driven trust. She’s not just building a movement. She’s building futures. Excelsior Academy Want to support Excelsior Academy?  Visit somosexcelsioracademy.com or follow Shirley’s work on social media to learn more. Find Shirley Santana Herrera’s personal accounts here: Instagram: @shirsantanaherrera LinkedIn:  Shirley Santana Herrera And follow Excelsior Academy for the latest news!  Instagram: @_excelsior_academy LinkedIn:  Excelsior Academy TikTok: @excelsior.academy180The post Elevation through knowledge: Shirley Santana Herrera’s blueprint for youth empowerment first appeared on The Optimist Daily: Making Solutions the News.
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Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
7 w

Trump Announces Female National Guardsmen Shot In DC Has Died
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Trump Announces Female National Guardsmen Shot In DC Has Died

'She has a mortal wound'
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Daily Signal Feed
Daily Signal Feed
7 w

Trump Announces Death of National Guardsman After Shooting
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Trump Announces Death of National Guardsman After Shooting

REUTERS—President Donald Trump said on Thursday that a National Guard member had died after being shot in an ambush by an Afghan national near the White House, an attack that drew accusations from his administration of Biden-era immigration vetting failures and prompted a sweeping review of asylum cases. .@POTUS announces that U.S. Army Specialist Sarah Beckstrom of Summersville, West Virginia, one of the National Guardsmen savagely attacked yesterday in Washington, D.C., has just passed away.May God be with her family ? pic.twitter.com/BEbAOxmJme— Rapid Response 47 (@RapidResponse47) November 27, 2025 Sarah Beckstrom, 20, died of her wounds and her fellow Guardsman Andrew Wolfe, 24, was “fighting for his life,” Trump said, as investigators conducted what officials said was a terrorism investigation after Wednesday’s shooting. The FBI searched multiple properties in a widening probe, including a home in Washington state linked to the suspect, who officials said was part of a CIA-backed unit in Afghanistan before coming to the U.S. in 2021 under a resettlement program. Agents seized numerous electronic devices from the residence of the suspect, identified as 29-year-old Rahmanullah Lakanwal, including cellphones, laptops, and iPads, and interviewed his relatives, FBI Director Kash Patel told a news conference. U.S. Attorney for Washington, D.C. Jeanine Pirro said the suspect drove cross-country and then ambushed the Guard members while they were patrolling near the White House on Wednesday afternoon. Our hearts and prayers go out to the family of 20-year-old Sarah Beckstrom of the National Guard — a hero who volunteered to serve DC on Thanksgiving for people she never met and gave the ultimate sacrifice. May she rest in peace. It is now time to avenge her death and secure… pic.twitter.com/g6e0PhhD7Z— Jeanine Pirro (@JudgeJeanine) November 27, 2025 “I want to express the anguish and the horror of our entire nation that the terrorist attack yesterday in our nation’s capital, in which a savage monster gunned down two service members in the West Virginia National Guard, who were deployed as part of the DC Task Force,” Trump said in a Thanksgiving call for U.S. military service members. Trump said the suspect’s “atrocity reminds us that we have no greater national security priority than ensuring that we have full control over the people that enter and remain in our country.” War Secretary Pete Hegseth called Beckstrom an “American hero, at home with the LORD.” An American hero, at home with the LORD.RIP, Specialist Sarah Beckstrom.May our nation kneel in prayer for her family. https://t.co/u8VNBGcpRt— Pete Hegseth (@PeteHegseth) November 27, 2025 Armed with a powerful revolver, a .357 Magnum, the gunman shot one member who fell and then shot again before firing multiple times at the second member. The gunman was wounded in an exchange of fire with Guard members before he was arrested. He was in hospital under heavy guard on Thursday, and Trump said he was in serious condition. The alleged assailant, who lived in Washington state with his wife and five children, appeared to have acted alone, said Jeff Carroll, executive assistant chief of the Washington Metropolitan Police Department. (On the Reuters side, reporting by Leah Douglas, Jana Winter, Phil Stewart, Ted Hesson, Lucia Mutikani, Jasper Ward and Tim Reid; Additional reporting by Idrees Ali, Jeff Mason, Steve Gorman; Writing by Julia Harte, Rod Nickel and Matt Spetalnick; Editing by Ross Colvin, Deepa Babington and Diane Craft. The Daily Signal’s Katrina Trinko also contributed.) The post Trump Announces Death of National Guardsman After Shooting appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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