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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
7 w

Groom Surprises Bride The Night Before The Wedding With Epic Serenade
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Groom Surprises Bride The Night Before The Wedding With Epic Serenade

People often say that “to be seen is to be loved.” If that is true, then the bride-to-be in the video below can say with confidence that she is wholly seen by the love of her life. It was the night before their wedding, and nerves were likely high. But that did not stop this thoughtful groom from pulling off the best surprise ever. You see, this groom wanted to serenade his bride the day before their wedding. But not just any song would do for this occasion. So, he gathered his friends (and a couple of dogs, it seems) to put on a delightful performance in the bride’s backyard. Find out what song they chose in the viral video below! @leonnsand The bar is in the cloudssssss #wmyb #1d #directioner ♬ WHAT MAKES YOU BEAUTIFUL ONE DIRECTION – always.editts Groom’s Unexpected Serenade for His Wife the Day Before Their Wedding Melts Hearts Everywhere If you somehow do not recognize this song, it’s One Direction’s first ever hit: What Makes You Beautiful. Although the band is no longer together, their loyal fan base is still going strong, even after all these years. This groom clearly understands how important this band still is to his bride, and it’s beautiful to see how he shows that. Is it any wonder that so many people (the bride’s best friend, included) are saying that this act of love is making them raise their standards? We all deserve to be seen in such a thoughtful way, after all! “Not only is he down for it but his friends are too, that’s what really hits for me. He’s found good people,” someone thoughtfully points out in the comments. Others add, “Does he mentor guys on how to do this? Asking for a friend” and “No more bare minimums for me, I want this or nothing.” You can find the source of this story’s featured image here! The post Groom Surprises Bride The Night Before The Wedding With Epic Serenade appeared first on InspireMore.
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Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
7 w

MLB Fans Make It Very Clear They’re Not Happy With All-Star Game Selections
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MLB Fans Make It Very Clear They’re Not Happy With All-Star Game Selections

MLB fans are P*SSED
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Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
7 w

Soccer Star Diogo Jota Killed In Car Crash Days After His Wedding
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Soccer Star Diogo Jota Killed In Car Crash Days After His Wedding

RIP...
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
7 w

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Complete List Of A Day To Remember Songs From A to Z

A Day to Remember formed in 2003 in Ocala, Florida, when vocalist Jeremy McKinnon, guitarists Tom Denney and Neil Westfall, bassist Joshua Woodard, and drummer Bobby Scruggs united with the goal of blending pop-punk melodies with the heaviness of metalcore. Their early DIY ethos led to the release of their debut album And Their Name Was Treason in 2005 through Indianola Records. After gaining traction in the underground scene, they signed with Victory Records and replaced Scruggs with drummer Alex Shelnutt. In 2007, they released For Those Who Have Heart, a defining moment that marked their transition from regional upstarts The post Complete List Of A Day To Remember Songs From A to Z appeared first on ClassicRockHistory.com.
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
7 w

A Mass Blossoming Is Occurring in Wake of Floods to Feed Honeyeater Birds in Australia Where Just 300 Remain
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A Mass Blossoming Is Occurring in Wake of Floods to Feed Honeyeater Birds in Australia Where Just 300 Remain

Recent wet season rainfall along the east coast of Australia has shattered hundred-year records, but as the floodwaters recede, a feast of epic proportions seems ready to explode among the hills and valleys. Soaking up all that water, New South Wales’ various eucalypt tree species are preparing for a mass blossoming that may all but […] The post A Mass Blossoming Is Occurring in Wake of Floods to Feed Honeyeater Birds in Australia Where Just 300 Remain appeared first on Good News Network.
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Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
7 w

Back to the Future Hot Wheels 40th Anniversary Collector’s Set
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Back to the Future Hot Wheels 40th Anniversary Collector’s Set

Hot Wheels Debuts Back to the Future 40th Anniversary Collector’s Set Hot Wheels is revving up nostalgia with a brand-new Back to the Future 40th Anniversary set, launching in 2025! As the beloved film hits CONTINUE READING... The post Back to the Future Hot Wheels 40th Anniversary Collector’s Set appeared first on The Retro Network.
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Daily Signal Feed
Daily Signal Feed
7 w

Bill Moyers, the Face of Taxpayer-Funded Propaganda
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Bill Moyers, the Face of Taxpayer-Funded Propaganda

Liberal journalists dumped a barrel of glorifying adjectives upon the news Bill Moyers died at age 91. The Washington Post headline was “Bill Moyers, eminence of public affairs broadcasting, dies at 91.” AP’s Frazier Moore gushed, “the former White House press secretary who became one of television’s most honored journalists, masterfully using a visual medium to illuminate a world of ideas.” Some also used “legendary.” CNN’s Brian Stelter oozed, “His career can and should serve as a model for younger generations.” Ugh. NPR anchor Scott Simon hailed Moyers as “one of the signature figures, along with Big Bird and Susan Stamberg, who helped build public broadcasting in the United States.” Simon added, “He won the most prestigious awards of our profession, some in bunches—more than 30 Emmys, 11 Peabodys, two Columbia-duPonts, plus many other honors for his PBS documentaries and interviews.” Moyers was acclaimed by other leftists because he was a die-hard leftist. Objectivity was never observed. He crusaded on the public dime against those villainous conservatives. He won Emmy Awards just like the latest prizes to “60 Minutes”—for hating Donald Trump and laboring to elect Kamala Harris. They award having your “heart in the right place.” Moyers was the “signature figure” of everything wrong with “public” broadcasting. He savaged conservatives and also lined his own pockets with revenues of his programs being sold on PBS Home Video. He used his PBS fame to sell expensive coffee-table books, just as Ken Burns does today. But the notable quotes were outrageous. In 1987, Moyers oozed over paintings glorifying the Marxist revolutionaries dominating Nicaragua: “The white dove of freedom soars with the Sandinista revolution, whose heroes included Jesus Christ, George Washington, and the nationalist hero Augusto Sandino.” After the bombing of a federal building in Oklahoma City in 1995, Moyers blamed conservative talk radio on NBC: “Talk radio in that part of the world is more anti-government today than ever. The airwaves are saturated with hostility. It’s just an unremitting vilification of government.” On his PBS show “Now” in 2003, Moyers ripped Republicans who wore flag pins, which was somehow reminiscent of communism: “When I see flags sprouting on official lapels, I think of the time in China when I saw Mao’s Little Red Book on every official’s desk, omnipresent, and unread.” Later that year, Moyers came unglued over a press conference with President George W. Bush before the invasion of Iraq that was insufficiently vicious: “Matt Taibbi wrote in The New York Press at the time that it was like a mini-Alamo for American journalism. I’d say it was more a collective Jonestown-like suicide. At least the defenders of the Alamo put up a fight.” In 2007, Moyers compared Bush-Cheney to an “arsonist” and a “burglar in the basement.” He suggested the press was in cahoots with the “arsonist.” In 2011, Moyers ranted that Republicans want “to feed red meat to Fox News and the partisan talk radio hosts who have turned the public airwaves … into a right-wing romper room.” He quoted from yellow dog Democrat Rep. Lloyd Doggett of Texas, that “My constituents turn to (NPR) because they want fact-based, not Fox-based coverage.” The attacks, he continued, are “an ideological crusade against balanced news and educational programs.” NPR is balanced and nonideological? How delusional can you be? But to Moyers, a crusading leftist press was the model, and a mildly liberal media were basically in cahoots with evil Republicans. This is why he’s “acclaimed” by people who still pretend their ideological screeds are “fact-based.” Their opinions aren’t opinions, they’re “truth,” and that “truth” should be eternally supported by all taxpayers. COPYRIGHT 2024 CREATORS.COM We publish a variety of perspectives. Nothing written here is to be construed as representing the views of The Daily Signal. The post Bill Moyers, the Face of Taxpayer-Funded Propaganda appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
7 w

Mystery Of Leonardo Da Vinci's "Vitruvian Man" Solved By A Dentist And A Protractor
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Mystery Of Leonardo Da Vinci's "Vitruvian Man" Solved By A Dentist And A Protractor

The answer was right under our noses all along. Literally, actually.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
7 w

Asteroid Ryugu’s Latest Mineral Is As Weird As Finding “A Tropical Seed In The Arctic”
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Asteroid Ryugu’s Latest Mineral Is As Weird As Finding “A Tropical Seed In The Arctic”

This discovery is making scientists question how this space rock came to be.
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
7 w

America’s Southwest was conquered fair and square
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America’s Southwest was conquered fair and square

The most striking images from the recent anti-Immigration and Customs Enforcement riots in Los Angeles depicted protesters defiantly waving the Mexican flag. Some commentators noted the irony: Why carry the flag of the very country you don’t want to be deported to? Others offered a darker interpretation — the flag wasn’t just a symbol of heritage but a claim. The message: California rightfully belongs to Mexico.That sentiment echoes the increasingly common ritual of “land acknowledgements” on college campuses. Event organizers now routinely recite statements recognizing that a school sits on land once claimed by this or that Indian tribe. But such cheap virtue signaling skips over a key point: Tribes seized land from each other long before Europeans arrived.The United States had offered to purchase the disputed territories. Mexico treated the offer as an insult and indignantly refused. And the war came.Do the descendants of the Aztecs have a claim to California and the rest of the American Southwest? The answer is a simple and emphatic no. The United States holds that territory by treaty, by financial compensation, and, yes, by conquest. But the full story is worth examining — because it explains why Spain and later Mexico failed to hold what the United States would eventually claim.The rise and fall of the Spanish empireSpain launched its exploration and conquest of the Americas in the 15th century and eventually defeated the Aztec empire in Mexico. But by the 18th century, Spanish control began to wane. The empire’s model of rule — exploitative, inefficient, and layered with class resentment — proved unsustainable.At the top were the peninsulares, Spaniards born in Europe who ran colonial affairs from Havana and Mexico City. They had little connection to the land or the people they governed — and often returned to Spain when their service ended.Below them stood the creoles, locally born Spaniards who could rise in power but never fully displace the peninsulares.Then came the mestizos — mixed-race descendants of Spaniards and natives — and, finally, the native peoples themselves, descendants of the once-dominant Aztecs, who lived in state of peonage.Inspired by the American Revolution, Mexico declared itself a republic in 1824. But it lacked the civic traditions and institutional structure to sustain self-government. Political chaos followed. Factionalism gave way to the dictatorship of Antonio López de Santa Anna, who brutally suppressed a rebellion in Coahuila y Tejas.Texas had long been a trouble spot. Even before independence from Spain, Mexican officials encouraged American settlement to create a buffer against Comanche raids. The Comanche — superb horsemen — dominated the Southern Plains, displacing rival tribes and launching deep raids into Mexican territory. During the “Comanche moon,” their war parties could cover 70 miles in a day. They were a geopolitical power unto themselves.RELATED: Flipping cars for ‘justice’ — then back to poli-sci class Photo by: Prisma/Universal Images Group via Getty ImagesAnglo settlers in Texas brought their own ideas of decentralized government. When tensions escalated, they declared independence. Santa Anna responded with massacres at Goliad and the Alamo. But after his defeat and capture at San Jacinto, he granted Texas independence in exchange for his life. Mexico’s government refused to honor the deal — and continued to claim Texas, insisting that the border lay at the Nueces River, not the Rio Grande.How the Southwest was wonAfter the United States annexed Texas in 1845, conflict became inevitable. Mexican forces crossed the Rio Grande and clashed with U.S. troops. President James Polk requested a declaration of war in 1846.The Mexican-American War remains one of the most decisive — and underappreciated — conflicts in U.S. history. The small but capable U.S. Army, bolstered by state volunteers, outclassed Mexican forces at every turn. American troops seized Santa Fe and Los Angeles.General Zachary Taylor pushed south, winning battles at Resaca de la Palma and Monterrey. General Winfield Scott launched a bold amphibious assault at Veracruz, then cut inland — without supply lines — to capture Mexico City. The Duke of Wellington called the campaign “unsurpassed in military annals.”The war served as a proving ground for a generation of officers who would later lead armies in the Civil War.Diplomatically, the war might have been avoided. The United States had offered to purchase the disputed territories. Mexico treated the offer as an insult and indignantly refused. And the war came.Territory bought and paid forThe Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, signed on February 2, 1848, ended the conflict. Mexico ceded California and a vast swath of land that now includes Nevada, Utah, New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado, and Wyoming. Mexico also gave up its claim to Texas and accepted the Rio Grande as the southern border.In return, the United States paid Mexico $15 million “in consideration of the extension acquired by the boundaries of the United States” and assumed certain debts owed to American citizens. Mexicans living in the newly acquired territory could either relocate within Mexico’s new borders or become U.S. citizens with full civil rights. The Gadsden Purchase added even more land.The United States gained enormously from the war at the expense of Mexico. Critics of the expansionist policy known as “manifest destiny,” including the Whigs and Ulysses S. Grant, called the result unjust. Some Southerners wanted to annex all of Mexico to expand slavery. That plan was wisely rejected, though the “law of conquest” made it a possibility.Still, the U.S. paid for the land, offered citizenship to the inhabitants, and declined to claim more than necessary. In the rough world of 19th-century geopolitics, that counted as a just outcome.
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