YubNub Social YubNub Social
    #astronomy #florida #nightsky #biology #moon #plantbiology #terrorism #trafficsafety #animalbiology #gardening #assaultcar #carviolence #stopcars #autumn #notonemore
    Advanced Search
  • Login
  • Register

  • Night mode
  • © 2025 YubNub Social
    About • Directory • Contact Us • Developers • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use • shareasale • FB Webview Detected • Android • Apple iOS • Get Our App

    Select Language

  • English
Install our *FREE* WEB APP! (PWA)
Night mode toggle
Community
New Posts (Home) ChatBox Popular Posts Reels Game Zone Top PodCasts
Explore
Explore
© 2025 YubNub Social
  • English
About • Directory • Contact Us • Developers • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use • shareasale • FB Webview Detected • Android • Apple iOS • Get Our App
Advertisement
Stop Seeing These Ads

Discover posts

Posts

Users

Pages

Blog

Market

Events

Games

Forum

The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
1 y

Wednesday Western: SJ Dahlstrom
Favicon 
www.theblaze.com

Wednesday Western: SJ Dahlstrom

Wilder Good Crowds shuffled through Arlington, a city of roller coasters and stadiums. The jumbotron declared that the temperature was nearing triple digits. It was June, after all, when Texas heat tightens its grip on the air. Novelist/poet Nathan Dahlstrom and his son had driven here from Lubbock. Over the course of their five-hour trek, they played John Wayne DVDs on repeat. And I drove from Oklahoma with my 4-year-old daughter, who was giddy on her first road trip. - YouTube www.youtube.com We met at Globe Life Field, where the Texas Rangers faced the New York Mets. Neither of our kids had been to an MLB game before. What a distinctly American rite of passage. This convergence of fathers had all the markings of Nathan’s Western-tinged fiction and poetry, composed under the pen name S.J. Dahlstrom. In an era when libraries have allowed the creep of ideology to spoil words and undermine literacy, Nathan delivers characters and scenes with backbone. He tells stories the way people used to, before popular art and literature fell to political whimsy. Nathan’s books feature wise mentors who transform weak adults into protectors so that they can lead their children to wisdom. Strong families, sworn to unity. Nathan is devoted to this upbuilding, where love is a matter of construction. He employs this in many ways, right down to his guidance as a creative writing teacher. But here I am straying from his clearest advice: Don’t try to produce a message. Just tell the story, and maybe a message will appear. Range life The Rangers average 30,000 spectators at home games. There was a bright excitement to the atmosphere. Less than a year ago, the Rangers won their first World Series, finally able to hoist the Commissioner's Trophy. The closed roof of the ballpark intensified the feeling that we — thousands of us waiting for fireworks — were as small and frantic as ants, color-coded and primitive. Bursts of high-intensity songs blasted out at random. Fans shrieked at cheerleaders with T-shirt cannons. It was a disorienting but electric setting for a pre-interview. Nathan wore his trademark cowboy hat, a long-sleeve Wrangler pearl-snap, and cargo shorts. We lifted our hands to our hearts for the national anthem, and our kids followed our example. The next morning, we would sit down for an interview at Mercury Studios, home of Blaze Media. Nathan and I had originally planned to meet months earlier, in Oklahoma City, for the Western Heritage Awards, where Nathan won a Wrangler award, his fourth. But a nasty virus struck the Ryan household, and I had to cancel my trip. Nathan sent me a few updates from the ceremony and dinner, including pictures with John Wayne’s children. We got along immediately, with a shared love for the 1962 John Wayne-Jimmy Stewart film "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance." Coincidentally, that week, it was the feature Wednesday Western. Without ever saying it, we also share a love for the writing of 19th-century Danish philosopher Soren Kierkegaard, the first existentialist, who was a Christian, meaning that the basis of existentialism, a supposedly atheistic philosophy, is in fact centered on Christ. In fact, Kierkegaard was alarmed by claims about the decline of Christianity. He wrote, “In the midst of the self-importance of the contemporary generation there is revealed a sense of despair over being human.” Kierkegaard describes reality as a tool God uses to teach us, guided only by His presence. Be wilder Nathan crafts lean stories that are carefully flowered with philosophy and grit. Reading them feels smooth, like floating down a river. They thrive with Hemingway’s deceptive minimalism. It’s so easy to zip through a chapter, to land on a closing sentence that grips you. He weaves scenes full of emotion and upheaval and beauty and love, always cinematic. His characters might seem unremarkable in a market saturated with bizarre fantasy and surreptitious politics. But these sacred nobodies understand the fragility of life. It’s only a matter of time before some wild creative turns the series into a TV show or movie. I believe that it would be a phenomenal hit. The Wall Street Journal included Nathan’s work on a list of children's books featuring "grit, audacity, and imagination." Wilder Good is a 12-year-old boy with two married parents and a sister. Nathan modeled Wilder Good on himself, drawing from his own childhood. He grew up on a small ranch, surrounded by miles of unbroken nature, his private frontier. He learned to become a cowboy. His family attended a Church of Christ three times a week. Compare this to Disney’s prolific use of characters without families. A whopping 30 Disney movies include variations of dead parents, roughly half of the company’s 62 animated films. Alongside animal sidekicks, dead or missing parents are quite possibly the most prevailing theme in Disney movies. Why? If it’s merely a literary device or an irremovable part of the Disney formula, then it’s bad writing. Pure laziness. But what if it’s more? As a cultural journalist, it intrigues me. As a writer, it annoys me. As an armchair philosopher, it fascinates or bores me — I can’t decide. As a parent, as a father, it riles me up with a special indignation. Nathan offers an escape from Disney’s bizarre mythology. As Wilder’s mother tells him in "Texas Grit," while discussing her cancer treatment, “Sometimes you just have to grit your teeth and get mad and hold on.” Wilder Good is a hunter who loves riding horses and exploring the wild. As a result, we see the emotional complexity of the hunter who shoots Bambi. The Wilder Good series opens with "The Elk Hunt," Wilder’s chance to use his grandpa’s 270 Winchester rifle. The book was a finalist for the 2016 Lamplighter Triple Crown Awards. "Texas Grit" followed, winning the 2015 Will Rogers Gold Medallion Award for Young Readers. In it, Wilder gains even greater emotional depth, a strengthening of his resilience. You can see Nathan stretching out a little as he tells the story. The downpour of awards began with his fourth volume, "The Green Colt," which garnered Nathan’s first Wrangler Award and his second Will Rogers Gold Medallion Award, as well as two finalist honors. Nathan opens the book with an extended soliloquy, an almost stream-of-consciousness monologue by Papa Milam, Wilder’s grandpa. It’s longer than the previous Wilder Good novels, marking a shift in Nathan’s style and process, an advance in his creative play. "Black Rock Brothers," the fifth, earned him a Will Rogers Silver Medallion Award. With his sixth, "Silverbelly," he was back to Gold. "Black Rock Brothers" also started his three-year streak of winning the Wrangler Award. The seventh, "Cow Boyhood," also earned him another Will Rogers Silver Medallion Award. His most recent Wrangler Award-winning book, "Heartwood Mountain," marks the eighth installment in his Wilder Good series. By now, Wilder Good is minted, heroic. Nathan doesn’t even begin the book with Wilder, in an adventurous approach. Paramount A former Paramount hub, Mercury Studios is the largest TV and film studio in Middle America. It's the site for scenes in "JFK," "Walker, Texas Ranger," "Talk Radio," "Leap of Faith," "Prison Break," and — my favorite — the children’s show "Barney & Friends" — one of Barney’s beloved tree-mendous trees slumps outside Stage 19. It also served as the platform for music videos by an array of artists, including Garth Brooks, Phil Collins, Guns N’ Roses, and the Backstreet Boys. Nathan and I chatted on one of the many couches in the 75-foot-ceilinged hallway. We discussed the importance of creating redemptive and edifying but most of all entertaining children's literature, the influence of the Bible on personal lives and literary works, and the craft of writing. We shared our experiences and insights on mentorship, storytelling, and living a meaningful life. We discussed the role of leadership and governance in society, as seen in "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance," and the ability of the Western genre to explore the concept of the ideal man. We lauded the fruits of creativity, hard work, and living life fully in the pursuit of success and personal growth.We pondered masculinity, discernment, order through wildness, and even kung-fu wisdom. The searchers Nathan grasps an ancient ritual of elders who mentor the youth. It’s one of the most unwavering themes throughout his work, often performed by the wise old man who guides boys to manhood and men to humility. In Nathan’s case, this mentorship was also creative and professional. His friendship with John R. Erickson, author of the “Hank the Cowdog” series, launched him into a writing career. John Erickson taught Nathan how to use his gift, although first he had to find it. Nathan has done the same in turn, many times over. He co-founded Whetstone Boys Ranch, a boys' home and boarding school that offers therapeutic ranching to troubled young men. But this quality is also evinced with his own son, a wonderful, sharp young man who gives me hope for the future of our nation. It was cool to see their connection. They have a special bond, as if they can understand one another in a million unspoken ways. They could just as easily be the father and son from Cormac McCarthy’s "The Road," navigating a post-apocalyptic hellscape, always with a sense of continuity. Nathan loves Teddy Roosevelt, Mark Twain, Emily Dickinson, and John Wayne, but most of all, he loves Christ Jesus. This is the height of manliness. There are plenty of nonsensical rules in society. One of them is that creatives stand on one side of the battlefield and frontiersmen on the other. Nathan Dahlstrom upends this paradigm. Because the reality is quite the opposite: If a man can fight — and he ought to know how — he certainly better know how to speak, how to translate his emotions, how to be gentle, how to be kind, and how to honor women without degrading his masculinity. Then there’s the gentleness of fatherhood, an experience that requires a man to be tender. But other times, a father must be a brute. A man has to bleed. In one poem, Nathan describes “the glory of men talking low” as they wait for a hunt. You can hear that silence. He likes to say that he’s “interested in all things outdoors and creative, he writes poetry while bowhunting and collects wildflower seeds when doing ranch work.” That description is fantastic. It should be a common goal among men, balancing nature with art. He lives by the twin mottos "be Wilder" and "find beauty." “Whetstones: 40 Manly Poems” is a chapbook themed around masculinity, although he certainly doesn’t exclude the role of girls and women. Some of it is written using couplets or quatrains, with the formal rhyme schemes of ballads and sonnets. There’s also free verse, gorgeous lines like, “We held our cowboy hats to our bellies / as the wind stirred / the fall-yellowed cottonwoods / in the canyon below us.” He writes, “Only hidden beauty is true.” When creating their art, writers, poets, and musicians all must decide: Will my music conform to truth? Or does my truth conform to music? Most take the latter. It’s far easier. Great music arrives unexpectedly. It is forever passing through. Truth, however, does not bend so easily. It’s rigorous and unchanging. Before having children, I saw life in abstractions, colors, melodies, poems. But then my kids changed everything into poetry. I used to understand only the potential of life. Now I see the endlessness of love. The Ranch It’s a joke at Mercury Studios: If someone’s in town, you take them to the Ranch, the finest steakhouse near the Blaze Media headquarters. Some of my colleagues groan at the mention of it. But not me. The cowboy ribeye and meat and cheese platter alone are worth any wait. So naturally, we all went to the Ranch after our interview. My dad, my sister, my daughter, Nathan, and his son. My only regret is that we didn’t record the conversation. It centered largely on truth. Nathan values authenticity. A real man, an authentic man, is both rough and gentle. An outdoorsman. A hunter. But equally a lyricist and a gardener. Nathan is well educated, with a major in Bible studies and a minor in Greek. He’s incredibly well read. Yet he urges young folks to reject the absolutism of a college degree. An education can only have a heart if you also pursue the wildness of life and the order of nature. This theme courses through Nathan’s work: A rich education too often leads to pride; humility is better than credentials from the most impressive universities. As the waiter began pulling plates from the table, Nathan quietly announced that one or all of us had to finish the meat. (No problem.) There’s something violent about tossing meat into the trash. Nathan often explores this sacred connection to God’s lower creations. His first novel, "The Elk Hunt," contains vivid scenes driven by this tension. He applies a brokenhearted philosophy to the examination in his poem, “Watching a Deer Get Killed.” In another, he describes cats with a funny disdain, “Something about their smell / and blasé nonchalance / doesn't seem American / seems arrogant without achievement. / Seems French.” Humor aside, his reverence for animals is constant. The truth of nature isn’t growth or motion; it’s self-preservation, followed by the hope of redemption. Life always fights to survive, or at least to have had a chance. Wilder Good captures all of this, without guttering into condescension. He intuits the still sad music of humanity reflected in nature. Then there’s what nature does to herself, her red-clawed destruction, only, in the next breath, to sigh to us with a breeze. As Dante writes, we are calmed by “the bond of love that nature makes.” The paradox doesn’t end. Wilder Good is at peace in nature. But he also understands the painful realities of hunting. Killing is unnatural. Yet life can’t function without it. Look at Genesis 3:21: God provides Adam and Eve with clothing … made of animal hide, of skin. In order to survive, we have to continually destroy other creatures’ chance at survival. But this is not as bleak as it sounds. In "Texas Grit," as Wilder crosses through untouched nature, he muses, “The world seemed as fresh and raw as it must have been at the beginning.”
Like
Comment
Share
The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
1 y

'I'm sure we've lost passengers': Alaska Airlines flight attendants detail terrifying panel blowout incident
Favicon 
www.theblaze.com

'I'm sure we've lost passengers': Alaska Airlines flight attendants detail terrifying panel blowout incident

The Alaska Airlines flight attendants, who were on Flight 1282 from Portland, Oregon, to Ontario, California, on January 5 when a door panel flew off the aircraft mid-flight, recently shared details of their experience, Fox Business reported.The National Transportation Safety Board held a hearing on Tuesday about the terrifying incident involving the Boeing 737 MAX 9 airplane that was carrying 171 passengers and six crew members. 'Safety culture needs a lot of work.'The aircraft ultimately landed safely at Portland International Airport; however, the incident remains under investigation. Eight passengers reported minor injuries.Interviews conducted with the flight attendants onboard the aircraft that day were shared at Tuesday's hearing.According to officials, one attendant thought that some passengers had been sucked out of the airplane after she saw the door panel was missing and noticed five empty seats around it. The attendant testified, "I said there is a hole in the plane, in the back of the plane, and I'm sure we've lost passengers."Additionally, the employee expressed concern about an unaccompanied child who was on the aircraft. "All I could think of was that he was sitting there, and he was too small to reach the mask and was probably really scared," the flight attendant said.Another flight attendant on the plane told officials, "I think I was able to (blurt) out, 'I think we have a hole, and we might've lost passengers.' And then it seemed like I just lost contact. I tried calling back, tried speaking loudly into the phone. I couldn't hear anything.""Probably the scariest thing was I didn't have exact communication with my flight deck, and at first I didn't know if the decompression was in the front, if we have pilots, and not being able to fully communicate with the back," the second flight attendant remarked.NTSB Chair Jennifer Homendy stated Tuesday that neither the board nor Boeing has been able to determine who was responsible for previously removing the door plug on the jet to perform maintenance work before it was reinstalled and delivered to Alaska Airlines. According to Homendy, the board has not been able to speak with the door plug team manager, who may have been one of the individuals responsible for inspecting the panel before it was delivered to Alaska Airlines with all four bolts missing. "The safety culture needs a lot of work (at Boeing)," Homendy said. "It is not there from the evidence itself, from what you see in the interviews. There's not a lot of trust, there's a lot of distrust within the workforce."Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
Like
Comment
Share
The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
1 y

3 important facts Christians need to know about Tim Walz
Favicon 
www.theblaze.com

3 important facts Christians need to know about Tim Walz

Vice President Kamala Harris announced on Tuesday that she selected Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz (D) to be her running mate.Walz, a far-left governor, self-identifies as a "Minnesota Lutheran," though he rarely discusses his faith publicly, according to the Religion News Service. Walz, moreover, refers to Pilgrim Lutheran Church in St. Paul as "my parish." That church is a congregation in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, one of the most progressive and liberal Christian denominations in the United States.'The Harris-Walz ticket is the most radical on abortion and gender ideology in American history.'But what should Christians know about his policy positions and record as governor of Minnesota? 1. AbortionWalz is unabashedly pro-abortion, in both rhetoric and policy.For example, two bills that Walz signed into law last year make Minnesota one of the most pro-abortion states in America.The first bill, the Protect Reproductive Options Act, codified into Minnesota law a "fundamental right ... to obtain an abortion." The bill imposes no limits on abortion. Minnesota, in fact, is one of just seven states (and Washington, D.C.) that imposes no legal gestational limit on abortions. The second bill, Minnesota Senate Bill 2995, essentially eliminated "nearly all the protective and modestly pro-life features of existing Minnesota law," according to National Review."Abortion is health care," Walz said earlier this year.If you combine Walz's radical pro-abortion views and record with Harris', then you generate "the most pro-abortion presidential ticket America has ever seen," said Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of SBA Pro-Life America.2. LGBTQ agendaNot only does Walz support the LGBTQ agenda, but he has turned Minnesota into a "trans refuge."Last year, Walz signed a bill — the so-called "Trans Refuge" Act — and an executive order protecting so-called "gender-affirming" procedures for children while prohibiting legal action against people who travel to Minnesota for so-called "gender-affirming" care. Walz has also banned "conversion therapy."There is, of course, also the law that requires period products to "be available to all menstruating students in restrooms regularly used by students in grades 4 to 12." This means that boys' bathrooms in Minnesota schools do make available pads and tampons.Walz, moreover, is described by his critics as "anti-parent."Walz's record on issues related to the LGBTQ agenda has earned him high praise from GLAAD, which released a statement on Tuesday celebrating his "proven record" on these issues.3. COVID pandemic and religious freedomWalz, like many other Democratic governors, instituted harsh restrictions on residents during the COVID-19 pandemic.But Walz took heat from Christians during the pandemic for enacting policies they argued were religiously discriminatory. Case in point: In May 2020, Walz signed an executive order allowing retail shops to re-open at 50% capacity — while still prohibiting in-person religious gatherings to 10 people.After pushback from Catholic and Lutherans — who promised to buck Walz's restrictions — Walz allowed churches to re-open at 25% capacity."Governor Walz, a former teacher, gets an F in religious liberties," said Erick Kaardal, special counsel at the Thomas More Society.Levi Secord, pastor of Christ Bible Church in Minnesota, added of Walz's record on religious freedom:Walz and Democrats in Minnesota sought to coerce religious institutions to hire against their sincerely held beliefs. Democrats enacted a change to employment law that would have forced religious institutions, including churches, to hire against their beliefs about sexuality and gender. Thanks to a groundswell of opposition from local churches, this was eventually reversed. Sadly, under a new proposed amendment, Walz’s party is trying again to undermine religious liberty.Earlier this year, however, Walz did sign a law that clarified religious protections under the state's Human Rights Act."Governor Tim Walz is a radical progressive," said Dr. Andrew Walker, a professor at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. "There's no way to downplay the fact of this. He's aggressively pushed some of the most pro-trans and anti-religious liberty policies in the United States," Walker explained. "Don't take the bait on the grandfatherly Midwest persona. Christians, please be clear-eyed about the anti-human agenda on the Democratic ticket."The Minnesota Family Counsel explained, "The Harris-Walz ticket is the most radical on abortion and gender ideology in American history."Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
Like
Comment
Share
The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
1 y

JD Vance marches up to reporters avoided by Harris outside Air Force 2 and drops a great line
Favicon 
www.theblaze.com

JD Vance marches up to reporters avoided by Harris outside Air Force 2 and drops a great line

The last time Vice President Kamala Harris had a thorough interaction with the press was on June 24, when she sat down for a controlled interview on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" to stoke fears about possible legal protections for the unborn. Harris has avoided interviews of substance in the weeks since, despite many historic events taking place about which prospective voters may want her input. For starters: The Democratic establishment acknowledged President Joe Biden's decrepitude, then killed his re-election campaign; Harris leapfrogged the remains of Biden's political career and chose a running mate now facing allegations of "stolen valor"; President Donald Trump was shot in a failed assassination attempt; and Iran and Israel are drifting toward war. Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio), Trump's running mate, seized upon the opportunity this week to again strike a sharp contrast with the current vice president, demonstrating that he is not similarly averse to engaging with the fourth estate. Harris and her new running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, were in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, for a campaign event Wednesday. Vance, similarly in Eau Claire for a rally nearby, noticed Air Force Two sitting on the tarmac at Chippewa Valley Regional Airport, not far from where he touched down. 'Hopefully it’s gonna be my plane in a few months.' Vance, flanked by U.S. Secret Service agents, marched over to a group of reporters gathered nearby who were otherwise ignored by Harris. "I figured I'd come by and, one, just get a good look at the plane because hopefully it's going to be my plane in a few months," said Vance. "But I also thought you guys might get lonely because the vice president doesn't answer questions from reporters and hasn't for 17 days." Vance pressed the issue of Harris' relative silence, asking, "Have they given you guys an explanation for why she won't take questions from reporters?" "I'd love her to just answer what she wants to do and also explain why every single position she has has changed," continued Vance. "She pretends to be a tough-on-crime prosecutor, and yet here she is wanting to defund the police. She's the border czar, yet she's opened up the American southern border." Prior to moseying back across the tarmac, Vance added, "This is a person who has to answer questions from the media, and it's disgraceful that she runs from you guys, and it's also insulting to the American people." The Ohio senator later provided additional context on X, noting, "I thought the reporters traveling with Kamala might be a little lonely given that she never answers questions from them, so I figured I'd come say hello and check out my new plane while I was at it." At his campaign event in Eau Claire, Vance underscored that unlike Harris, he and Trump "will go anywhere. We will answer any question because we respect the American people enough to actually ask them for their vote rather than sit in front of a teleprompter, read scripted lines, and run away from every reporter and every actual citizen who's going to decide this election." Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
Like
Comment
Share
Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
1 y

'When You've Lost CNN': Looks Like JD Vance Might Have ENDED Tim Walz's Honeymoon With the Media
Favicon 
twitchy.com

'When You've Lost CNN': Looks Like JD Vance Might Have ENDED Tim Walz's Honeymoon With the Media

'When You've Lost CNN': Looks Like JD Vance Might Have ENDED Tim Walz's Honeymoon With the Media
Like
Comment
Share
RedState Feed
RedState Feed
1 y

Watch: Key Harris Ally Says 'F*** the White Women' but Is Happy to Take Their White Guilt Money
Favicon 
redstate.com

Watch: Key Harris Ally Says 'F*** the White Women' but Is Happy to Take Their White Guilt Money

Watch: Key Harris Ally Says 'F*** the White Women' but Is Happy to Take Their White Guilt Money
Like
Comment
Share
RedState Feed
RedState Feed
1 y

Tim Walz and the 'Feeding the Future' Fraud and Failure
Favicon 
redstate.com

Tim Walz and the 'Feeding the Future' Fraud and Failure

Tim Walz and the 'Feeding the Future' Fraud and Failure
Like
Comment
Share
NEWSMAX Feed
NEWSMAX Feed
1 y

Ousted 'Squad' Member Bush Threatens Pro-Israel PAC
Favicon 
www.newsmax.com

Ousted 'Squad' Member Bush Threatens Pro-Israel PAC

Rep. Cori Bush, D-Mo., vowed retribution against a pro-Israel PAC after she lost a primary race Tuesday.
Like
Comment
Share
NEWSMAX Feed
NEWSMAX Feed
1 y

Tech Drags Indexes to End Down; Treasury Auction Weak
Favicon 
www.newsmax.com

Tech Drags Indexes to End Down; Treasury Auction Weak

U.S. stocks ended lower Wednesday as technology shares declined, with investor jitters stoked by weak demand in a 10-year Treasury auction.Indexes started the day higher and began to lose steam in afternoon trading.
Like
Comment
Share
NEWSMAX Feed
NEWSMAX Feed
1 y

George Floyd's Family Attorney Hails Walz VP Pick
Favicon 
www.newsmax.com

George Floyd's Family Attorney Hails Walz VP Pick

Ben Crump, the civil-rights attorney who represented the families of George Floyd and Daunte Wright called Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz a "strong choice" as Kamala Harris' running mate on the Democrat ticket in the 2024 presidential race.
Like
Comment
Share
Showing 61180 out of 98358
  • 61176
  • 61177
  • 61178
  • 61179
  • 61180
  • 61181
  • 61182
  • 61183
  • 61184
  • 61185
  • 61186
  • 61187
  • 61188
  • 61189
  • 61190
  • 61191
  • 61192
  • 61193
  • 61194
  • 61195
Advertisement
Stop Seeing These Ads

Edit Offer

Add tier








Select an image
Delete your tier
Are you sure you want to delete this tier?

Reviews

In order to sell your content and posts, start by creating a few packages. Monetization

Pay By Wallet

Payment Alert

You are about to purchase the items, do you want to proceed?

Request a Refund