richard harvey 🍊

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richard harvey 🍊

richard harvey 🍊

@203primetime

USAF Veteran, supporter of the 2nd amendment, conservative, patriot, Trump is my President. Let’s Go Brandon! proudly MAGA supporter

California, USA Katılım Aralık 2013
10.6K Takip Edilen13.1K Takipçiler
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G-PA
G-PA@IndianaGPA·
🙏♥️🙏 Back in 1952, a baby was born at a hospital in New York. The room went dead silent. The infant was blue, limp, and silent. Panic began to settle over the medical staff, and for a terrifying moment, it looked like they might give up. Then, a steady, calm voice cut through the tension. «Let's score the baby,» the woman commanded. That woman was Dr. Virginia Apgar. That single, simple instruction changed the course of modern medicine forever. Virginia Apgar's path wasn't easy. She originally wanted to be a surgeon, but in the 1940s, the doors to operating rooms were firmly shut against women. She was told plainly that no hospital would hire a woman as a surgeon. Many people would have quit right there, but Apgar simply shifted her focus. She moved into the field of anesthesiology. It was a career pivot that would eventually save millions of lives. While working in the maternity ward at Columbia-Presbyterian, Apgar watched something that broke her heart. She saw newborn babies dying within minutes of birth because doctors didn't have a standardized way to check if they were healthy or in distress. It was all guesswork. There was no system, no set of rules, and no shared language among the staff. One morning in 1952, Apgar decided to solve the problem herself. She sat down with a piece of paper and a pen. She developed a simple, five-point test to evaluate a newborn's health based on heart rate, respiration, muscle tone, reflexes, and skin color. She called it the "Apgar Score." The medical community didn't just accept it; they embraced it. Within a decade, nearly every hospital in the United States had adopted her method. Because doctors finally had a universal language to assess a newborn's health, they knew exactly when to intervene. The infant mortality rate plummeted. Infants who might have been left for dead in the past were suddenly being resuscitated and kept alive. Virginia Apgar didn't stop with that one test. She went on to get a degree in Public Health and worked tirelessly with the March of Dimes, becoming a global advocate for mothers and their children. She spent her life breaking barriers, not by shouting, but by being the most capable person in the room. Because doctors finally had a universal language to assess a newborn's health, they knew exactly when to intervene. The infant mortality rate plummeted—studies have estimated that the implementation of standardized neonatal assessments contributed to a significant decline in neonatal deaths, with some regions seeing mortality rates for high-risk infants drop by as much as 40 to 50 percent in the years following its adoption. Infants who might have been left for dead in the past were suddenly being resuscitated and kept alive. When people asked her how she managed to thrive in a world that didn't want her there, she would offer a small, knowing smile. She once explained her resilience by saying: «Women are like tea bags—you never know how strong they are until they're in hot water.» Dr. Virginia Apgar passed away in 1974, but her work remains invisible yet essential. Every two seconds, somewhere on this planet, a baby takes its first breath. In that moment, a doctor or a nurse silently calculates a score. That number is a tribute to a woman who refused to give up—not on the babies, and certainly not on herself. vision, and a refusal to back down can rewrite the future. She taught us that your circumstances don't define your impact; your actions do. Most people will never know the name of the woman behind the score they receive at birth. But every life she helped save is living proof that you don't need fame to be a hero—you just need to leave the world better than you found it 🙏♥️🙏
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It’s RedFriday!! Support our Troops🪖🦅 Have a blessed day and be Thankful you woke up to enjoy it. 🕊️♥️
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Rick D
Rick D@RickD_GK·
Texting and driving, or X'ing and driving aren't safe folks... Poor lady didnt stand a chance.😓💥
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Robbie Mouton
Robbie Mouton@mcgmouton57·
The Commission of Fine Arts on Thursday approved a new 24-carat gold coins featuring President Trump's likeness to celebrate America's 250th birthday. This gives the go-ahead to the US Mint to begin production. The design is a stern-looking Trump with his fists clinched on a desk and the word "Liberty" scrawled above him. The other side features an eagle about to take flight. nypost.com/2026/03/19/us-…
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G-PA
G-PA@IndianaGPA·
Richest man in the World right there!! 💕💕
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Catathrenia is a real sleep condition but it’s harmless. Good to know. 💫
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G-PA INDY
G-PA INDY@GPAIndiana·
🙏🇺🇸🙏 He made millions of people recognize his face, but never let them see the part of his life that mattered most. Abe Vigoda is remembered for his roles in The Godfather and Barney Miller, but long before Hollywood, he was a young man sent into war. In 1943, at just 22 years old, he enlisted in the United States Army during World War II. Like millions of others, he stepped into a conflict that changed lives permanently. But unlike many, he chose never to speak about it again. No interviews. No stories. No details about what he saw or what he went through. He carried it in silence. After the war ended in 1946, he returned home and used the GI Bill to study acting at the American Theatre Wing. From there, he built a career that made him famous across generations. People recognized him. Quoted his roles. Remembered his characters. But the man behind those roles had already lived something far heavier than anything written in a script. When he passed away, his gravestone did not highlight Hollywood success or iconic performances. It said something far simpler and far more powerful. United States Army. World War II. A quiet reminder that before the fame, before the cameras, before the applause, he was a soldier who went to war and came back carrying something he never shared with the world 🙏🇺🇸🙏
G-PA@IndianaGPA

🙏🇺🇸🙏 Charles Durning landed on Omaha Beach and watched his entire unit disappear in the chaos of war. June 6, 1944. The beach was a nightmare. Machine gun fire tore through the surf. Explosions shook the shoreline. Thousands of soldiers fought to reach cover. About 2400 American troops died on Omaha Beach that day. But somehow, Durning survived. During the brutal fighting he helped neutralize enemy positions but suffered devastating injuries. Bullets struck both of his legs. Shrapnel ripped through his body. He was evacuated and spent 6 months recovering in a hospital in London. Doctors said he would never walk again. But Durning returned to the war. He later fought at the brutal Battle of the Bulge. During the chaos he was captured by German forces and forced to march with other American prisoners through the snow covered forests near Malmedy. Then came one of the war's darkest moments. During the Malmedy Massacre, SS soldiers opened fire on the captured Americans. Durning miraculously escaped. He crawled through frozen underbrush and hid from patrols until he reached safety. After the war, Durning began an entirely different life. He became a successful actor in Hollywood, earning 2 Academy Award nominations and appearing in dozens of films. Yet the memories of the men he fought beside never left him. "I saw things nobody should ever see," he said shortly before passing. God bless this American hero 🙏🇺🇸🙏

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𝐌𝐑. 𝐖𝐇𝐈𝐓𝐄 ™
🍼 THE INVISIBLE BABY HEIST That baby must’ve been on a strict “Hot Cheetos & energy drinks” diet. Invisible baby eating better than most people right now. Story ⤵️ Officers stop a young couple outside a convenience store looking nervous… and oddly protective of an empty baby basket. They get walked back inside. The manager points straight at the basket: “That’s where they’re hiding it.” Officer looks inside… no baby… just snacks stacked like a grocery Jenga tower. One officer pauses… “So… y’all got a ghost baby or just a hungry one?” The couple stays quiet. The basket? FULL of chips, candy, and drinks… apparently the “baby” had elite taste. Do you commit to the lie… or admit your “baby” is just snacks?
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Robbie Mouton
Robbie Mouton@mcgmouton57·
3/20/1854 In Ripon, Wisconsin, former members of the Whig party meet to discuss forming a new party to oppose the spread of slavery into western territories. The Whig Party, which was formed in 1834 to oppose the "tyranny" of President Andrew Jackson, had shown itself incapable of coping with the national crisis over slavery. With the introduction of the Kansas-Nebraska Bill of 1854, an act that dissolved the terms of the Missouri Compromise and allowed slave or free status to be decided in the territories by popular sovereignty, the Whigs disintegrated. The Republicans rapidly gained supporters in the north. By 1860, southern states threatened succession if a Republican won the presidency. In Nov 1860, Republican Abraham Lincoln was elected president over a divided democratic party, and 6 weeks later, South Carolina seceded from the Union. In April of 1861, the Civil War officially began when Confederate General P.G.T. Beauregard opened fire on Fort Sumter in South Carolina's Charleston Harbor. The Civil War identified the Republican party as the party of the victorious North. By 1876, the Republican party had lost control of the South, but it continued to dominate the presidency until the election of Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1933. Why an elephant? Because it is strong, docile, larger than life, but when threatened capable of inflicting servere damage to its opponents! history.com/this-day-in-hi…
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This is a bad case of road rage. This girl endangered everyone on the road. This is another reason I don’t leave the house empty handed.
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Robbie Mouton
Robbie Mouton@mcgmouton57·
Prepare yourself people as a new White House URL is out of this world(wide web). The eye-brow raising domain name - "Aliens.gov" - has been added to the federal government's official website registry, amplifying speculation that President Trump could be pulling the curtain back on what US intelligence agencies really know about if we are alone in the universe. Though the website is not yet live, the government has reserved the domain name for an as-yet-unknown purpose. nypost.com/2026/03/18/us-…
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GnosisWolf
GnosisWolf@GnosisWolf·
FAFO FRIDAY!! 🤡🤛 Armed robbers, meet Mr. Marine…lol.
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