Donavon Noggle

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Donavon Noggle

Donavon Noggle

@DNoggle719op7

Souls like Vines with God inherit life and love with sweet buds of Earth so fair have gone to heaven to Blossom there. ⚔️GarryOwen!⚔️

가입일 Mayıs 2023
2K 팔로잉1.3K 팔로워
Jocular Josh 🇺🇸
Jocular Josh 🇺🇸@lifeasjosh·
@TomTiffanyWI I like how this sounds. Don't bend over backwards, but don't close the doors all together either. The extremes have been kinda bugging me. We need a common sense approach.
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Donavon Noggle
Donavon Noggle@DNoggle719op7·
@karol @SCRIBEMOON How can it be stage we can see that security failed and the shooter taken down was only for the lack of an accomplice. If he had had a mind to copycat the Vegas shooter. Never has an event been held where all the possibilities could have happened.
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Jay ✝️
Jay ✝️@AxeSentinel·
More dinosaur footprints attributed to Acrocanthosaurus
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Donavon Noggle
Donavon Noggle@DNoggle719op7·
@EWTNVatican On Peter's Rock, build a stumbling block with a mote in your eye. You may deceive a lie✨️
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EWTN Vatican
EWTN Vatican@EWTNVatican·
Pope Leo XIV held his first meeting with Dame Sarah Mullally, the new Archbishop of Canterbury and the first woman to lead the Church of England and the Anglican Communion. During their audience at the Vatican, the Pope encouraged Catholics and Anglicans to continue the path of dialogue and unity, acknowledging that new challenges have made full communion more difficult. He warned that it would be a “scandal” not only to fail in the common mission of making Christ known, but also to stop working to overcome divisions, “no matter how intractable they may appear.”
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Ryan James Girdusky
Ryan James Girdusky@RyanGirdusky·
Most major cities are seeing a massive decline in their population of children. You’d think as a result we’d see less teachers and smaller education but in many blue cities, the opposite is true. Teachers unions are calling the shots. @marcportermagee joins me to discuss.
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Tony Perkins
Tony Perkins@tperkins·
“Be very careful to…love the Lᴏʀᴅ your God, and to walk in all his ways and to keep his commandments and to cling to him and to serve him with all your heart and with all your soul.” Today’s reading: Joshua 22-23 Full devotional: frc.org/bible
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Donavon Noggle
Donavon Noggle@DNoggle719op7·
@LanieASassyVet @themilliemeter She bought out her husband's Desilu production and sold it to Gulf Western for 17 million, and turned it over to Paramount Productions. She might have been the first female vice president had she desired it.
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Elena 🇺🇸
Elena 🇺🇸@LanieASassyVet·
@themilliemeter That is something I didn't know, thanks for bringing it to my attention. Yeah, Lucille Ball was more than an actress and comedian - she was a savvy business woman.
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Elena 🇺🇸
Elena 🇺🇸@LanieASassyVet·
In 1969, William Shatner’s career ended on national television. Not metaphorically. Not slowly. It stopped abruptly, with a network decision and a canceled time slot. NBC canceled Star Trek after three seasons of modest ratings. Executives who had never fully understood the show—and who had nearly ended it earlier before a fan campaign saved it, finally pulled the plug. The Enterprise’s mission ended early. And William Shatner, who had played Captain James T. Kirk with intensity and unforgettable pauses, suddenly had no role left. He was thirty-eight. Divorced. Financially struggling. And facing an industry that had little interest in an actor tied to a canceled sci-fi show many dismissed as a fad. Shatner found himself living out of a camper, traveling between small theater jobs that paid minimal wages. The man who once commanded a starship was now performing in regional productions, hoping audiences would show up. This was not the plan. Most actors would have left the industry and found stability elsewhere. Shatner didn’t. He doubled down. In the early 1970s, something unusual began. Fans of Star Trek started gathering - small conventions in hotel ballrooms, dismissed by mainstream culture as niche and strange. The industry mocked them. “Trekkies,” they were called. Most actors avoided these events. Shatner didn’t. He met fans. Signed autographs. Answered questions. Showed up when others wouldn’t. Because while others saw failure, he saw something different. Star Trek wasn’t gone. It was evolving. The show thrived in syndication. Viewers rewatched episodes, shared recordings, built communities, and kept the story alive. The audience was growing. By the mid-1970s, Star Trek had become something larger than television - a cultural force driven by its fans. And Shatner, who stayed connected, became its living symbol. Hollywood had overlooked it. The audience had not. In 1979, Paramount Pictures revived Star Trek as a feature film. Shatner returned and not as a fading actor, but as someone the audience had kept alive. The film succeeded because the fans showed up. They had waited. They had believed. And so did he. Years later, Shatner admitted something revealing: At first, he didn’t understand the fans. “I thought they were obsessed,” he said. Then he realized that they were sustaining him. They kept the character alive. The story alive. His career alive. They weren’t obsessed. They were committed. Shatner learned from them. He learned respect for audience passion. He learned reinvention. He adapted. He starred in T.J. Hooker. He took on new roles. He embraced self-awareness. He appeared in commercials that leaned into his persona, recorded music, and kept working. Then came Boston Legal. At seventy-three, he played Denny Crane, a role that blended humor and vulnerability, and won two Primetime Emmy Awards. The same style once mocked was now celebrated. He had never stopped evolving. And then - something unexpected. At ninety, Shatner went to space. On October 13, 2021, he flew aboard Blue Origin’s New Shepard rocket. The actor who once imagined space travel finally experienced it. He returned visibly moved, reflecting on Earth’s fragility, beauty, and significance. It completed a journey few could imagine. From struggling actor to cultural icon. From canceled show to lasting legacy. From fiction to reality. William Shatner didn’t just play Captain Kirk. He embodied the idea: exploration, persistence, and reinvention. He entered spaces others avoided - fan conventions, unconventional roles, unfamiliar paths, and turned them into opportunities. He proved that failure isn’t permanent, that audiences matter, and that reinvention is always possible. The fans once dismissed as outsiders were right. The story mattered. The vision mattered. And William Shatner learned to see it.They didn’t just preserve nostalgia. They preserved possibility. They kept something alive... and in doing so, they kept him alive too. That’s the story. Not just success - but understanding. Not just survival - but transformation. William Shatner played Captain Kirk for only three seasons. But he spent decades living the message: Keep moving forward. Keep adapting. Keep exploring. The mission continues.
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Donavon Noggle
Donavon Noggle@DNoggle719op7·
@Pontifex The stumbler removing stumbling blocks as he stumbles over his mote.
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Pope Leo XIV
Pope Leo XIV@Pontifex·
While our suffering world greatly needs the #peace of Christ, the divisions among Christians weakens our capacity to be effective bearers of that peace. If the world is to take our preaching to heart, we must, therefore, be constant in our prayers and efforts to remove any stumbling blocks that hinder the proclamation of the Gospel. #ChristianUnity vatican.va/content/leo-xi…
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Donavon Noggle
Donavon Noggle@DNoggle719op7·
@bungarsargon Strange that violence rips across the nation for 12 years from bars to schools, and it finally ends up at a political leaders' legacy media event, The perpetrators of the violence they created now looking for justice. The actor of the violence is now vindicated by the groomers.
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Batya Ungar-Sargon
Batya Ungar-Sargon@bungarsargon·
"It’s incumbent upon all us to reject the idea that violence has any place in our democracy" says President Obama. But we aren't all at fault. The bullets are only flying in one direction. Polling shows the more liberal you are, the more you support political violence. My column: We Don't Have a Political Violence Problem in America. We Have a Left-Wing Political Violence Problem in America: batya-us.com/p/we-dont-have…
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