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Faith 🇺🇸 support 🇺🇦

Faith 🇺🇸 support 🇺🇦

@FaithParent

just being Faith 🚫DMs🚫| Independent | Proud Wife of a Vietnam Vet | ProChoice | ProDemocracy | French-Canadian Roots ❤️🤍🇨🇦🍁Border Town in northern Maine

Cary, NC Katılım Ağustos 2010
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Great message…
Team Talarico@TeamTalaricoHQ

.@JamesTalarico: The kind of religion that says you can treat people however you want as long as you have a personal relationship with Jesus is an abomination. Scripture says you can't love God and hate other people. You can't love God and abuse the immigrant. You can't love God and bully the outcast. You can't love God and oppress the poor. We spend so much time looking for God out there, that we miss God in the person sitting right next to us.

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Dr. M.F. Khan
Dr. M.F. Khan@Dr_TheHistories·
She was born in 1856 into the kind of wealth that insulates a person from almost everything. Fifth Avenue mansion. Railroad fortune. Servants, silk, invitations to every drawing room in Manhattan. The world Grace Hoadley Dodge entered at birth was one in which a woman of her position had a clearly defined purpose: marry well, entertain graciously, support a tasteful charity or two between seasons. She was 24 when she walked into a tenement basement on the Lower East Side and started teaching Sunday school to factory girls. She thought she'd teach Bible verses. What she found changed the rest of her life. The girls sitting in front of her, some barely 12 years old, were working 12-hour shifts in sweatshops, laundries, and shirtwaist factories. They earned $3 a week. A single room cost $2 to rent. That left $1 for food, clothing, medicine, and everything else. The math didn't work, and Grace quickly understood what happened when the math didn't work. Some girls went hungry. Some were cornered by foremen who offered lighter work in exchange for things that had nothing to do with work. Some simply vanished. She had come to teach them morality. Instead, she started asking a different question entirely. What if the problem isn't these girls? What if the problem is a system that gives them no survivable options? That question consumed the next 30 years of her life. She co-founded the Kitchen Garden Association in 1880, teaching domestic skills. Then she looked at what domestic skills actually got a woman and pivoted hard. What factory girls needed wasn't needlework. It was bookkeeping. Stenography. Business skills that opened doors instead of decorating the ones already closed. A girl who could type had options. A girl with options had leverage. A girl with leverage didn't have to tolerate what Grace had watched those foremen do. The pushback was immediate. Society said women should learn homemaking, not commerce. Factory owners had no interest in an educated workforce that might demand better conditions. Even some reformers worried that too much education would give working-class women ideas above their station. Grace Dodge didn't care. In 1887, she co-founded Teachers College at Columbia University, the first institution in America built on the principle that training teachers was a serious profession deserving serious pay, not a temporary occupation for women marking time before marriage. It became one of the most influential education institutions in the world. It still trains thousands of educators every year. She helped organise the national YWCA in 1906, but not as a prayer circle. As infrastructure. Boarding houses where women could live without landlords extracting sexual favours for rent. Evening classes in marketable skills. Job placement services. Networks where women warned each other which employers were safe, which neighbourhoods were dangerous, which job offers led somewhere no one should go. She helped establish the Travelers Aid Society, which stationed representatives at train stations and ports specifically because predators waited there for young women arriving alone from farms and small towns, girls who had come to the city looking for work and found men offering jobs and housing that led somewhere else entirely. Grace's representatives got there first. Safe lodging. Legitimate referrals. A hand extended before the wrong one was. They intercepted thousands of women from what we would now call trafficking, decades before anyone used the word. Through all of it, Grace operated on a principle that was quietly radical for her time: she refused to blame the women for the conditions crushing them. When other reformers talked about fallen women and moral improvement, Grace talked about wages and working conditions and predatory men with institutional power. © Women Stories #drthehistories
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Sam Stein
Sam Stein@samstein·
I'm absolutely bawling
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Ben Crump
Ben Crump@AttorneyCrump·
Students at North Carolina A&T State University partnered with the Greensboro chapter of Sleep in Heavenly Peace to build beds for children in the Triad who do not have one of their own. This is what community looks like. Meeting a real need, restoring dignity, and showing that when people come together, they can make a lasting difference.
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Sarah Parry
Sarah Parry@SarahWoods66·
Just a simple good night from St Tecwyn’s Church, Llandecwyn
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National Mall NPS
National Mall NPS@NationalMallNPS·
Today is National Vietnam War Veterans Day. The Vietnam War Veterans Recognition Act, signed in 2017, designates March 29 of each year as a day of commemoration to pay tribute to the sacrifices of Vietnam veterans and their families. We honor them at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial on the National Mall.
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Dustin Fitzharris
Dustin Fitzharris@TheDustinFitz·
Today is National Vietnam War Veterans Day. It honors the millions of Americans who served during the Vietnam War. From its earliest days, #AllMyChildren reflected a nation divided. Creator Agnes Nixon wove the conflict into Pine Valley through its characters.
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Jeff Brown
Jeff Brown@Brown27070Jeff·
Cubes delivered
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🐑 Farmer Dixon 🐐🐮🐓🐏🌿
I have a dear friend who loves to help out on the farm & comes over every 3 weeks or so for a days work. She will never accept ££ so I bought her a couple of Greyface Dartmoor, her favourite breed, as a thank you & gave them to her today. They will stay here on the farm for her💕
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Hillbilly
Hillbilly@JamesHu27192912·
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Courtney Mares
Courtney Mares@catholicourtney·
Strong words from Pope Leo on Palm Sunday in which he repeated that Jesus is the “King of Peace” 7 times in his homily. “Christ, King of Peace, cries out again from his cross: God is love! Have mercy! Lay down your weapons! Remember that you are brothers and sisters,” the pope said.
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@jo_col4 @MacFarlaneNews @AaronParnas “You’re” delusional. I was there. “You’re” missing out on a lot of what actually occurred, in addition to “old white people like me!” Maybe join us next time? “You’re” more than welcome…free speech and all. ☺️ God bless you.
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John
John@jo_col4·
@MacFarlaneNews @AaronParnas Your Delusional. It was attended by a majority of old white people in their 60s and 70s. If that is the Democratic Party's new voting bloc, God bless you.
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TonyS🇺🇸
TonyS🇺🇸@TonySamBoat·
Wordle 1,744 3/6 ⬛⬛⬛⬛⬛ ⬛🟨⬛🟨⬛ 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩 whoa!
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