Stephanie Scolaro

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Stephanie Scolaro

Stephanie Scolaro

@StraightTalkSES

Breast Cancer SURVIVOR,Italian/Sicilian-American,Singer,Wife,Pug lover,& proud Nana! Join me on *Straight Talk: Reloaded* (YouTube,TikTok, X, Instagram)

Florida, USA Katılım Temmuz 2024
4.7K Takip Edilen1K Takipçiler
Stephanie Scolaro
Stephanie Scolaro@StraightTalkSES·
Kat, I am so very sorry for the loss of you wonderful father. I lost mine due to COVID-19 and we, too, shared a very special relationship, so I understand the pain you're going through( I'm also a breast cancer survivor, and my Dad was my doctor). I'm wishing you peace during this awful time for you and your family. May the wonderful memories you have shared with your Dad bring you peace, and even a little laughter. Time is your friend for these types of losses, as they will never fully heal, but time will make them less brazen. I'm keeping you and your entire family in y prayers, amd I'm sending you all my love....xoxo
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Kat Timpf
Kat Timpf@KatTimpf·
My seemingly healthy, strong father Daniel “Dad Timpf” Timpf died very unexpectedly on the evening of May 7 at just 69 years old.   It does not seem like enough to simply call him my father, because he was so much more than that. He was my rock, my hero and my best friend. He was loyal, funny, kind, selfless, hard-working, and so devoted to his children that it was impossible to be near him and not find yourself inspired. He was a writer, a painter, a sailor, and somehow knowledgeable on every subject from world history to literature to accounting. He was the most dependable person anyone has ever met. I always felt like, as long as I had his phone number, there was not a problem I could not solve. I needed him here with me; I am not okay, and I am far from the only person who feels this.   The birth of my son in February 2025, his first grandchild, was supposed to be a happy new beginning for our family. A family that had been already once devastated by an untimely loss: the loss of my mother Anne Marie to a rare disease in 2014 just a matter of weeks after her diagnosis.   The joy of my son’s birth was, of course, complicated by my also very unexpected breast cancer diagnosis just a matter of hours before going into labor with him. During this time, my dad did what he did best, which was to save the day. As soon as he heard about my diagnosis, he simply got into the car and started driving to New York -- making it through the tunnel just as my  son was born…on the day that happened to be his own birthday, as well.   In the tumultuous time of a simultaneous new cancer diagnosis and new baby, my dad was the sole reason for our stability, rushing in to help care for our son, and returning to do so again for my double mastectomy, reconstructive surgery, and any time that we ever needed him. It was an awful, awful year… but I found so much joy and hope throughout it by watching the beauty of a very special relationship form between my son and my father. This horrible thing that was happening was creating such a very special bond between the two of them -- almost making the terrible thing worth it -- and I was so excited to see how that bond would grow.   The bond was of top priority for my father, who visited from Michigan often. I saw him last on the Monday before he died, and my son was so proud to help his grandfather push his suitcase down to the car as he left. The goodbyes were quick. Why wouldn’t they be? We would all see each other again at the beginning of June, when we would all head to Texas for my shows and to see my grandpa. We wanted to make sure that my son could spend as much time as he could with his great-grandfather. He is, after all, 93.   I was certainly not over the trauma of my cancer or having to amputate the breasts I so badly wanted to feed my son with, but the one thing I could always count on to get me through my worst moments was seeing my son’s and my father’s faces light up when they saw each other, be it during the visits or our routine morning and bedtime FaceTime calls.   That is, at least, until I had to hear over the phone from a doctor I had never met in an emergency room in the same town up north that I’d previously announced to my father that I was pregnant that my dad was dead; I would never see him again, and neither would my son. It would turn out that last year was not the hard one, after all. Rather, it was the one I would now do anything to relive. I would amputate my breasts every year just to be able to speak with him one more time, even for five minutes.   I am currently living an unimaginable horror. For many people, this is a tragic story. For me, it’s my life. I do not know how I will recover from it. I only know that I have to for the sake of what is left of my family.
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Leah Rain ✝️🇺🇸🎸🏝️
An arrogant tourist decided to throw a rock at an endangered Hawaiian monk seal… Luckily it was caught on video.. When confronted by it he said “I’m rich. I can pay the fine”. Well, a whole lot of karma came down on him. He’s now facing local and federal investigations among other things.
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Charlie
Charlie@MAGACharlie2024·
"I'm your sister, I'm your sister"
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JOSH DUNLAP
JOSH DUNLAP@JDunlap1974·
Bob Costas : "Trump is by far the most disgraceful figure in modern presidential history. You have to be in a toxic cult to believe that Trump has ever been emotionally, psychologically, intellectually, or ethically fit to be POTUS. Thoughts?
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Reverend Jordan Wells
Reverend Jordan Wells@WellsJorda89710·
🚨Construction worker drops truth bomb on NC teachers’ union “sick-out” today:🚨 “I work in construction. My son’s school is closed because teachers called out to protest in Raleigh. I don’t get paid if I don’t show up — no work, no paycheck. Just talked to his teacher. She admitted they’re getting full pay tomorrow while marching. I’m done. These entitled folks don’t deserve another dime in raises. As a taxpayer, I’m saying: end the pensions for government workers too. I have none. I grind 10-hour days, 6 days a week. No safety net. Why should they? Teachers: do your job or find another one. Our kids come first — not your rally.” Paul Locklear (and thousands of working parents nodding along) #TeachersStrike #NCSchools #KidsFirst #TaxpayerAnger #EndEntitlement #PublicEducationFail #NCTeachers #RaleighProtest #WorkForPay #SchoolChoice
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Stephanie Scolaro
Stephanie Scolaro@StraightTalkSES·
This is the most disgusting and shameful thing I've ever read!!!! The reason we all are able to live our lives without fear of bombs over our heads is because of our Veterans!!!! SHAME ON YOU CONGRESS!!!! PASS THIS BILL!!!!
mike bski@BskiMike22802

You know what a burn pit smells like. If you were there -- if you served in Iraq or Afghanistan -- you already know. That thick, chemical, wrong smell that never fully left the back of your throat. Plastics. Chemicals. Medical waste. Ordnance. Burning. All day. Every day. Right next to where you slept, where you ate, where you ran PT in the morning. Nobody told you what it would do to your lungs. His name was Richard Star. Army combat engineer from Ohio -- right near Cleveland. He cleared IED-laden roads so other soldiers could drive on them without dying. Desert Shield. Desert Storm. Iraq. Afghanistan. Kuwait. He went back. He kept raising his hand. He breathed those burn pits for years -- the same smoke, the same chemical air, the same carcinogens that had no business being in a human lung. In 2018, that smoke caught up with him. Stage 4 metastatic lung cancer. The VA rated it 100% service-connected. His own government certified in writing that the United States of America's burn pits gave Richard Star terminal cancer. He was medically retired before hitting 20 years. Not because he quit. Because there was nothing left to give. And then the Army sent him a letter. The letter showed two numbers. The first number was what Richard Star had EARNED in military retirement -- what the United States government had promised him when he raised his right hand and swore an oath and then spent decades keeping it. The second number -- what he would ACTUALLY receive -- was zero. Zero dollars. Zero cents. His 100% VA disability rating for the cancer eating his lungs wiped out his entire retirement check through the concurrent receipt offset. Dollar for dollar. Every single penny of retirement pay he had earned, gone. A man dying of cancer he got in uniform, holding a piece of paper from his own government that said his retirement was worth nothing. If you have buried someone from burn pit exposure, I need you to sit with that image. Your brother. Your battle buddy. Your soldier. Sitting at a kitchen table. Oxygen tank next to the chair. Chemo running through his veins. Holding a government letter that says zero. That is what happened to Richard Star. His wife Tonya quit her career to become his full-time caregiver. While she sat next to him through every treatment, while their household ran on whatever the VA disability check provided, while the retirement check the Army told him he'd earned sat at zero -- Tonya was also fighting. Calling. Writing. Testifying. Standing in congressional hearing rooms telling her husband's story to the people who had the power to fix it. Richard never stopped either. He traveled on oxygen tanks to advocate for this bill. He could barely stand. He fought for the 50,000 veterans behind him who were carrying the same injustice, because that is what that kind of man does -- he thinks about the ones behind him even when he is the one dying. He died February 13, 2021. He was 51 years old. Tonya kept going. She kept his name alive in every room she could reach, because she loved him and because she refused to let what happened to Richard happen to the next family. Tonya passed away on August 12, 2024. She was also 51 years old. Both of them gone at 51. Both of them fighting until they could not. The bill still not law. Right now -- today, this month, this year -- there are 50,000 veterans receiving that same letter Richard received. Two numbers. What they earned. What they actually get. And for too many of them, the second number is devastating. Some of them are already sick. Some of them already have the diagnosis. Some of them are sitting at kitchen tables with oxygen tanks next to the chair, opening mail from the government that sent them to those burn pits, wondering if this country is going to keep its promise before they run out of time. Sgt. Lyle Allen. 14 years. Multiple deployments to Iraq. His vehicle hit an IED. He does not remember much after that -- just the medics' faces above him. The VA certified his TBI as 100% permanently and totally disabling -- it will never improve. The offset wiped out his retirement. He calls himself "retired without retirement." He says the country is "turning their backs" on him. A Marine. 17 years. Three combat tours. An IED in Afghanistan took both of his legs. THREE YEARS from the 20-year mark. Three years. The government took his legs in the service of this nation and then took his retirement check on top of it because of a calendar. These are not abstractions. These are the men who were standing next to you downrange. The ones who smelled what you smelled. The ones who drove those roads. The bill to fix this is the MAJOR RICHARD STAR ACT. Current 119th Congress: H.R. 2102 in the House, sponsored by Rep. Gus Bilirakis (R-FL) with Rep. Raul Ruiz (D-CA), introduced March 14, 2025. S. 1032 in the Senate, sponsored by Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) with bipartisan co-sponsors including Mike Crapo, Elizabeth Warren, and Rick Scott. Previous Congress: H.R. 1282 in the House and S. 344 in the Senate -- died without a floor vote. Current co-sponsors: 322+ in the House. Nearly 80 in the Senate. The Wounded Warrior Project, MOAA, VFW, IAVA -- virtually every major veterans organization in this country -- stands behind this bill. The votes exist. The will to schedule them does not. On March 3, 2026, Senator Ron Johnson of Wisconsin blocked this bill on the Senate floor. Twice. Once on unanimous consent. Then again when a compromise was offered for a simple recorded roll call. He did not want the bill to pass. He did not want to go on record opposing it either. His reason: cost. Richard Star got a letter that said zero. Senator Johnson found that affordable. I need you to make a phone call. Right now. While this is still in your chest where it belongs. SENATE SWITCHBOARD: (202) 224-3121. Tell them: "I am calling to demand my senator support S. 1032, the Major Richard Star Act, and force a floor vote. Combat-wounded veterans are dying while this sits in committee." HOUSE SWITCHBOARD: (202) 225-3121. Tell them: "I am calling to ask my representative to co-sponsor H.R. 2102 and demand leadership schedule a floor vote." Then share this post. Every share puts Richard Star's name in front of someone who has not heard it yet. Every share might reach a veteran who does not know they are owed this money right now. Every share might reach the family member who makes the call that changes the vote. Richard Star traveled on oxygen tanks to fight for veterans he would never meet. The least we can do is make a phone call. @MajorStarAct @StarActEnemies @SenRonJohnson @SenatorWicker IF you agree: LIKE this post so the algorithm shows it to the people who need to read it. SHARE this -- for Richard. For Tonya. For the veteran you know who is sick right now and does not know this fight exists. COMMENT below -- have you called yet? Tell me right here. Hold yourself accountable out loud. And if you want MORE of this -- the data, the history, the science, the stories -- JOIN Bski's Classroom community on X or YouTube. But what do I know -- I am only a medically retired Army combat medic who breathed that same air, who served alongside men who came home carrying things that would kill them slowly, and who has spent years watching a government that sends people to war find every possible excuse not to keep its promises when they come back broken. #MAGA #Veterans #Trump #majorstaract

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The Ways of A Gentleman
The Ways of A Gentleman@Gentleman_Ways·
Serious question… What’s the most important aspect of being a gentleman? -Etiquette -Manners -Presence -Character -Discipline -Something else? You can only choose one. What is it?
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SafetySwipe
SafetySwipe@SafetyNotorious·
LAKE COUNTY, Fla. — Lake County Schools has fired substitute teacher Angela Faith Jourdan following her arrest Monday after an erratic outburst at Lake Minneola High School. Jourdan allegedly twerked in class, slammed desks, made explicit sexual comments and called herself a “million-dollar prostitute.” She faces charges of disorderly conduct, simple battery and disrupting school functions.
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