Gary
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Mets’ Director of Hitting, Jeff Albert, still believes the Mets’ offense can turn things around despite the struggles.
“We still have a lot of baseball to play,” Albert said. “Just gotta keep working until we get the outcomes that we think we can produce.”
Albert also expressed confidence in the group currently on the field, even with multiple stars on the injured list.
“We have a very good group that we’re putting on the field every day,” Albert said. “I don’t think our thought process or expectations really change because every team goes through injuries and things like that.”
“Everybody in the room is a professional and we have a job to do and everyone’s focused on trying to get that done.”
Via @MaxTGoodman

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@TruthFairy131 is this real ? not ai bullshit
if I lived in England I would gladly decaputate her and do 5 yrs glady
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📍Florida, USA 🇺🇸
Do you believe the shooting was justified?
A deadly confrontation at a Florida car wash has sparked an intense national debate after a woman who survived the violent attack was sued by the families of the two teenagers she fatally shot.
The woman was working part-time at the car wash when two teenagers attacked her and attempted to steal a vehicle. Police say she was repeatedly punched and kicked during the assault, while one of the suspects tried to flee in the car.
Fearing for her life, the woman drew a firearm she legally possessed and opened fire, killing both teenagers. She survived the attack but suffered facial injuries and required hospital treatment.
Now, the teenagers' families have filed a civil lawsuit seeking $800,000 in damages, arguing that the use of force was excessive.
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She refused the blindfold.
On March 17, 1942, a young woman stood before a firing squad at the Stara Gradiška concentration camp. Her face was bruised from weeks of torture. Her body had been broken by people who were very good at breaking bodies. But when they offered her the blindfold, she looked at the rifles directly and said no.
Her name was Nada Dimić. She was twenty years old.
Born to Serbian parents in Croatia, Nada had joined the first Yugoslav partisan unit operating in the region at a time when most people were still trying to convince themselves that compliance might keep them safe. She was not built for compliance. While others debated, she acted. Railroad tracks twisted apart under her sabotage. Supply lines meant to feed the Nazi war machine became ribbons of useless metal scattered across the countryside.
The Ustasha — the pro-Nazi Croatian fascist movement — wanted her badly.
They caught her in 1941. What followed was systematic and brutal: torture designed not to punish but to extract. Every name she knew. Every safe house. Every planned operation. Every person connected to the resistance network that was keeping the fight alive.
She gave them nothing.
Not a single word. Not a single name.
And then, when her captors grew careless, she disappeared. Slipped back into the resistance network that threaded through the countryside like veins beneath skin. They had spent months trying to destroy her. Instead, they had handed her back to the fight.
She wasn't finished.
On December 3, 1941, Nada was guiding desperate families — people fleeing the fascist killing machine — toward partisan-controlled territory. Then the Ustasha materialized on the road in front of her. They blocked her path. They demanded her identification papers.
Her hand moved toward her handbag.
Not for papers.
For the revolver hidden inside.
She fired. One of them dropped. In that single second she had made her choice: defiance over survival, resistance over compliance, one last act of refusal in a life built from them.
They took her alive this time. And they made sure she would not escape again.
The torture resumed. Worse than before. They had three months to break her — three months to make her regret that shot, that moment when she had reached into her bag and chosen to fight instead of surrender.
She gave them nothing.
Not one name. Not one location. Not one piece of information that could have unraveled the network she had given everything to protect.
When they finally dragged her before the firing squad that March morning, she stood the way she had always stood — straight, clear-eyed, refusing to let them have even that last small dominance of covering her face.
She was executed at twenty years old.
Ten years later, Yugoslavia declared Nada Dimić a national hero.
The recognition came too late for her to hear it. But her story became something that bullets could not kill — a reminder passed from generation to generation about what courage actually looks like in its purest form.
It doesn't always look like strength. Sometimes it looks like a young woman in a damaged body, standing in front of rifles, refusing a blindfold.
It looks like a hand reaching into a handbag on a road blocked by enemies.
It looks like three months of silence when silence was the only weapon left.
Courage isn't the absence of fear.
It's knowing exactly what is about to happen — and choosing who you are anyway

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@Hombrelmparable Y DIJO EL ÁNGEL : CUANDO LOS JUSTOS SON MANCILLADOS, TRAICIONADOS, VIOLADOS Y ABUSADOS . TANTO FÍSICA COMO MENTALMENTE. LÁGRIMAS DE ORO CAEN DEL CIELO, Y ALGUNOS DE LOS SERES LUMINOSOS BAJAN Y SUS ENERGÍAS CONTRA EL MAL , ABREN Y RASGAN FULMINANDO CON TORMENTAS XPANTOSAS.

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Este es John Eisenman. Perdió a su hija a causa de la trata S3xual. Fue vendida por 1000 dólares en Seattle, Washington. Hizo lo que un padre debe hacer: investigó a fondo y descubrió el secuestro. La rescató personalmente. Descubrió que quien la vendió a la trata era su novio de 19 años. Se reunió con él, lo secuestró, lo golpeó y lo apuñal0 hasta la mue1te en noviembre de 2020.

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Absolutely no person should ever be 100% off limits for the right deal.........
That being said, I honestly think Francisco Lindor is way too close to Steve & Alex to be traded. Also the Mets SS position in the farm is very weak + no big time FA available in 2027.
New York Post@nypost
If the Mets are sellers at the trade deadline, should Francisco Lindor be available? | The Show trib.al/cbikEFS
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@TrumpsHurricane go fuck yourself Christian came first muslims always
forget that part
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I know people are allowed to mow their lawns during the day, but 7 a.m. every Saturday is starting to feel rough 😅
My neighbor fires up the mower like clockwork every weekend, and Saturday is usually my one morning to sleep in after a long work week.
I did ask once if he’d consider waiting until around 9 a.m., especially since the yard only takes about 30 minutes, but he said he likes getting it done early.
I get it. It’s his yard, and he’s not necessarily doing anything wrong. But when the whole street is still quiet, that mower feels extra loud.
I’ve tried earplugs, white noise, and closing the windows, but nothing really blocks it out.
Maybe I’m just tired, but I do wish there was a little more consideration for neighbors on weekend mornings.
Be honest, is 7 a.m. too early to mow on a Saturday, or is that still fair game?

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