Nancy Sinatra

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Nancy Sinatra

Nancy Sinatra

@NancySinatra

Mom, grandma, proud American. SAG AFTRA. Building a community one follow at a time. I'm sorry but I don't read or respond to DMs.

SoCal Katılım Haziran 2009
170.6K Takip Edilen339.3K Takipçiler
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peter
peter@peterthebeast3·
@NancySinatra TY Nancy It was my honor..
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Barack Obama
Barack Obama@BarackObama·
On Memorial Day, we pay tribute to the brave men and women in uniform who gave their lives for this country that we love. It is a debt we can never fully repay, but we must never stop trying. I’ll always be grateful to our fallen heroes and their families, whose sacrifice reminds us of what it means to live for something greater than ourselves.
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Nancy Sinatra
Nancy Sinatra@NancySinatra·
Today we remember the brave men and women who made the ultimate sacrifice for our freedom. Their courage, honor, and selflessness must never be forgotten. We owe them more than words, we owe them our gratitude, our respect, and a promise to never take their sacrifice for granted. I was, and still am, deeply anti-war. But you can hate war and still love the veteran. Never disrespect a veteran. EVER! They were taken from their homes and forced to do an unimaginable job. When I was asked to perform for the troops in Viet Nam, I was scared, terrified, but I knew it was something I had to do. It was the least I could offer to those risking their lives in a war they hadn’t asked to fight. I remember the faces of the many brave souls in the audiences, and those of the sick and wounded I visited in the hospitals, and I often wonder how many of them made it home. Toward the end of my time at Reprise Records, anti-war and protest songs were taking over. The label tried to push me in that direction, but I wasn’t prepared. The sights, the sounds, the smells of Viet Nam were still fresh. They still are. So many things I witnessed that I can’t even talk about to this day. Mac Davis presented “Home” to me, which he had written with Larry Collins and it was just as powerful as songs like “Eve of Destruction,” but Reprise Records relegated it to the B-side of “Drummer Man.” It remains one of the most meaningful songs I’ve ever recorded. “Oh, God, I hope they make it home.” This Memorial Day, let us pause not only to enjoy the day, but to reflect on the cost of the freedoms we so often take for granted. Remember them. Honor them. Never forget. 😢💙🇺🇸
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Bernie Sanders
Bernie Sanders@BernieSanders·
Being anti-Trump is not good enough. Democrats need a progressive agenda.
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Nancy Sinatra
Nancy Sinatra@NancySinatra·
'For the first time in American history, an African American became president.' What a great day it was. What a great president he was.
Mykhailo Rohoza@MykhailoRohoza

On the evening Barack Obama was elected President of the United States, he didn’t rush off to the loud celebrations. Instead, he stayed inside a hotel room in Chicago playing Scrabble with his daughters — Malia Obama and Sasha Obama. A simple moment. But it revealed a great deal about the man who entered history that night. While millions of Americans celebrated his victory, Obama wanted his daughters to remember the evening not as a political spectacle, but as time spent with family. On January 20, 2009, Barack Obama took the oath of office as the 44th President of the United States, placing his hand on the same Bible used by Abraham Lincoln in 1861. For the first time in American history, an African American became president. But Obama’s story was never only about grand speeches and historic ceremonies. During the campaign, he still made time to read Harry Potter to his daughters before bed. As a child growing up between Hawaii and Indonesia, the future president loved comic books and superhero stories. Even his political career began in an unconventional way: in 1996, he won his first seat in the Illinois Senate after a difficult legal battle over the signatures submitted by his opponents. Then came the White House. But even there, Obama refused to abandon simple habits. He personally read letters from ordinary Americans and often replied to them himself — sometimes late at night. He believed a president should hear people directly, not only through statistics and reports. Obama is left-handed — like only a handful of U.S. presidents before him. He wore nearly identical dark suits and the same style of shoes every day so he wouldn’t waste energy on unnecessary decisions. And he had one tradition he never broke: on Election Day, he always played basketball. The only election he had ever lost happened when he skipped it. Michelle Obama once shared that even in the White House, her husband made his own bed every morning — a habit taught to him by his grandmother, Madelyn Dunham, whom he lovingly called “Toot.” Even while living at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, he never forgot who he had been before becoming president. And perhaps that is why millions of people around the world saw in him not just a politician — but a human being. A man who, amid power, fame, and history-changing decisions, tried to preserve the things that mattered most: family, simplicity, humanity, and a connection to the people for whom all of it was meant to matter.

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The Husky
The Husky@Mr_Husky1·
Remember the guy who wouldn't take the flag pole down on his Virginia property awhile back? You might remember the news story several months ago about a crotchety old man in Virginia who defied his local Homeowners Association and refused to take down the flag pole on his property along with the large American flag he flew on it. Now we learn who that old man was. On June 15, 1919, Van T. Barfoot was born in Edinburg, Texas . That probably didn't make news back then. But twenty five years later, on May 23, 1944, near Cyrano, Italy, That same Van T. Barfoot, who had in 1940 enlisted in the U.S. Army, set out alone to flank German machine gun positions from which gunfire was raining down on his fellow soldiers. His advance took him through a minefield but having done so, he proceeded to single-handedly take out three enemy machine gun positions, returning with 17 prisoners of war. And if that weren’t enough for a day's work, he later took on and destroyed three German tanks sent to retake the machine gun positions. That probably didn’t make much news either, given the scope of the war, but it did earn Van T. Barfoot, who retired as a Colonel after also serving In Korea and Vietnam , a well deserved Congressional Medal of Honor. What did make news was his Neighborhood Association's quibble with how the 90-year-old Veteran chose to fly the American flag outside his suburban Virginia home. Seems the HOA rules said it was OK to fly a flag on a house-mounted bracket, but, for decorum, items such as Barfoot's 21-foot flagpole were "unsuitable." Van Barfoot had been denied a permit for the pole, but erected it anyway and was facing Court action unless he agreed to take it down. Then the HOA story made national TV, and the Neighborhood Association rethought its position and agreed to indulge this aging hero who dwelt among them. "In the time I have left", he said to the Associated Press, "I plan to continue to fly the American flag without interference." As well he should. And if any of his neighbors had taken a notion to contest him further, they might have done well to read his Medal of Honor citation first. Seems it Indicates Mr. Van Barfoot wasn't particularly good at backing down. If you've read this post and don't share it, - Guess what -You need your butt kicked. I share this with you because I don't want MY butt kicked anymore and I'm tired of seeing those who hate our country yet march in our streets, tear down our statues, burn our stores and loot our businesses have a free hand to do whatever they want. WE ONLY LIVE IN THE LAND OF THE FREE BECAUSE OF THE BRAVE! AND, BECAUSE OF BRAVE OLD MEN LIKE VAN BARFOOT!
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Spot World Affairs
Spot World Affairs@SpotGlobals·
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum announces free universal healthcare for 130 million citizens starting next year.
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Nancy Sinatra
Nancy Sinatra@NancySinatra·
I can't believe any thoughtful American can support this demented man. WHY DOES ANYONE SUPPORT HIM?
RobertFella 🇺🇸 🇺🇦@Bonkavision5

Too on point not to share. This is great, but too bad the Orange Felon’s enablers won’t let him see it. This Australian's reply to #Trump's rant about “NATO not being there for America” is perfect. "Mate. You run a country with 600,000 homeless people sleeping on the street tonight. A country where 40% of adults can't cover a $400 emergency without borrowing money. A country where insulin costs more than a car payment and people are rationing it to survive. A country where medical debt is the number 1 cause of bankruptcy. A country where women are dying in hospital car parks because doctors are too scared of abortion laws to treat a miscarriage. You lock up more of your own citizens than any nation on earth. More than China. More than Russia. More than North Korea. The land of the free has 2 million people in cages, and a quarter of them haven't even been convicted of anything. They're just too poor to make bail. Your life expectancy is going backwards. You're the only developed nation where that's happening. Your infant mortality rate is worse than Cuba's. Your kids do active shooter drills between maths and English while you sell the gunmaker's stock to your mates. Your minimum wage hasn't moved in 15 years. You've got teachers working 2 jobs and veterans sleeping under bridges and you just spent a trillion dollars flattening a country that didn't attack you. And you’ve got a convicted felon, adjudicating raping, paedophile protecting, porn star shagging insurrectionist running the biggest dumpster fire war campaign since the Taliban thanked you very much for losing again. And you're calling Greenland poorly run? Greenland has universal healthcare. Free education. One of the lowest incarceration rates in the world. Nobody goes bankrupt there because they got sick. Nobody dies in a waiting room because their insurance said no. 'NATO wasn't there when we needed them." When exactly was that, champ? September 11? Because NATO invoked Article 5 for the first and only time in history FOR YOU. Soldiers from dozens of countries deployed, fought, bled, and died in Afghanistan FOR YOU. Australia wasn't even in NATO and we still showed up. For 20 years. And you pulled out at 2am without telling anyone and left them to deal with the mess. So maybe before you start calling other countries poorly run, have a look at your own backyard, you spray-tanned aluminium siding salesman. The only thing poorly run in this picture is your f----- mouth." - Tony Locke

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The Husky
The Husky@Mr_Husky1·
"Circa early 2018, somewhere in the quiet of his beloved Cornville, Arizona ranch, John McCain — living with the knowledge that his days were growing shorter — made a decision that was so perfectly, mischievously, achingly him that it made the whole country smile through their tears when they finally heard about it: he picked up the phone and called Barack Obama, the man who had defeated him for the presidency a decade earlier, and asked him to speak at his funeral. Obama later said that when that call came, he felt 'sadness and also a certain surprise' — and then, with the warmth that defined him, he recognized exactly what McCain was doing, telling mourners at the Washington National Cathedral on September 1, 2018 that the invitation showed McCain's 'irreverence, his sense of humor, a little bit of a mischievous streak' — because, as Obama put it to a cathedral that erupted in laughter through their grief, 'what better way to get a last laugh than to make George and I say nice things about him to a national audience?' It was John McCain's final act of political theater, and it was genius — choosing the two men who had each defeated him for the presidency to stand before the nation and celebrate his life, sending a message louder than any speech he could have given himself: that in America, rivalry and respect are not opposites, that the man you run against can still be the man you trust with your legacy, and that decency is not weakness but the most durable form of strength. Obama stood at that altar and told the packed cathedral that McCain had 'made this country better,' that he had made Obama a better president, and that when all was said and done, despite every disagreement, 'we never doubted the other man's sincerity or the other man's patriotism' — and in the front pew, Cindy McCain wept, because her husband had arranged, from the very edge of his life, one last beautiful lesson in what it means to be an American.
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Gianl1974
Gianl1974@Gianl1974·
This is Officer Caroline Edwards. She was attacked by the insurrectionists on January 6th. They cracked her heac open, resulting in a permanent brain injury. For all those who support Trump's pardons and say you "back the blue". You don't. You support fascism.
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The Husky
The Husky@Mr_Husky1·
Harry Truman left the White House with almost nothing. No large fortune. No presidential pension. No motorcade waiting to carry him into retirement. On January 20, 1953, Harry and Bess Truman climbed into their own Chrysler and drove themselves home to Independence, Missouri. His approval ratings were low. Critics called his presidency a failure. Much of Washington was relieved to see him leave office. What shocked many people later was how little money a former president actually received at the time. Truman’s only steady income came from a small Army pension worth just over one hundred dollars a month. Financial pressure became so serious that he reportedly needed bank loans simply to cover daily living expenses. The situation became so embarrassing for the country that Congress eventually created pensions for former presidents. But Truman never spent his retirement chasing sympathy or public praise. Back in Independence, he returned to a simple routine. He walked through town without heavy security. He answered his own telephone. He personally responded to letters from ordinary Americans. On his desk remained the famous sign: “The buck stops here.” While Truman lived quietly, the impact of his presidency continued growing. The Marshall Plan helped rebuild Europe after World War II. The Truman Doctrine became a foundation of American Cold War policy. In 1948, he ordered the desegregation of the United States military despite fierce political opposition. When General Douglas MacArthur publicly challenged presidential authority during the Korean War, Truman removed him from command, protecting civilian control of the military even though the decision damaged his popularity. Then history delivered one final moment of recognition. In 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson traveled to the Truman Library to sign Medicare into law. During the ceremony, Johnson handed the first Medicare cards to Harry and Bess Truman. It carried special meaning because Truman had pushed for national health insurance decades earlier and faced enormous backlash for it at the time. By the end of his life, public opinion had changed dramatically. The man once dismissed as weak and unpopular came to be viewed as one of the most consequential presidents of the twentieth century. Harry Truman never chased applause. He simply accepted responsibility for difficult decisions and lived long enough to see history reconsider them. Story based on historical records. This post is for educational purposes.
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распад и неуважение
The U.S. ambassador to Ukraine resigned and openly accused Trump of aligning with Putin. Respect to Bridget Brink — a brave and honest woman.
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Anonymous
Anonymous@YourAnonNews·
Jeff Bezos cries and complains about paying taxes. Stephen Colbert gifted 2.5 million dollars to the world central kitchen to feed people. Fuck Jeff Bezos. We need more people like Colbert in this world.
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Rep. Mike Levin
Rep. Mike Levin@RepMikeLevin·
🚨 Every Republican present in the House Appropriations Committee last night voted to make THEMSELVES eligible to collect from Trump's $1.8 billion January 6th slush fund. I am not making this up. I introduced an amendment to stop Members of Congress, the President, and the Vice President from collecting a single dollar from Trump’s slush fund unless a court actually orders it. Every single Republican who cast a vote was AGAINST my amendment, making themselves eligible for settlement funds. Members of Congress, the President, and the Vice President, have no business lining their own pockets by claiming they were victims of government weaponization. Trump set up this fund, now MAGA Republicans in Congress are ensuring they all can collect from it. That is exactly the kind of self-dealing corruption the American people are sick of.
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Andrew Weinstein
Andrew Weinstein@Weinsteinlaw·
Joe Biden literally wrote a memo telling staff that he’d be disappointed in them if they missed family milestones because of work.
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Nancy Sinatra
Nancy Sinatra@NancySinatra·
It’s my beautiful daughter Angela Jennifer Lambert’s birthday today. She came into the world on 05/22 at 5:22, special from the very start.  Watching you grow into the strong, kind, and talented woman you are has been one of the greatest joys of my life, AJ. You have such a big heart, and it shows in everything you do. When you set your mind to something, you always find a way to make it happen. I admire you more than you probably even realize. I hope your day is filled with laughter, love, and special moments that stay with you long after the candles are blown out. You deserve all of it and more. I love you endlessly, sweet girl. ❤️ PS AJ is back on the festival circuit with her latest short film, Cerulea, the follow up to the award-winning short, The Junction. Stay tuned to her Instagram accounts (links in comments below) for more information and upcoming screenings.
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