Jason Osborne

3.4K posts

Jason Osborne banner
Jason Osborne

Jason Osborne

@_JasonOsborne

Fmr Senior Communications Strategist, Dr. Ben Carson for President 2016, Bama Grad but LSU Grad Dad and UTampa Dad!

Bay St Louis, MS Katılım Mayıs 2010
984 Takip Edilen4.5K Takipçiler
Jason Osborne retweetledi
Lynden Blake
Lynden Blake@LyndenBlake·
Marco Rubio when he realizes he has to be the next Bachelorette 🌹.
Lynden Blake tweet media
English
268
1.1K
9.3K
1.9M
Jason Osborne
Jason Osborne@_JasonOsborne·
Forgive me for being suspicious because I’ve heard this every year since the 90’s
CSPAN@cspan

.@BudgetHawks President Maya MacGuineas: "Social Security…it's going to be insolvent in 6 years…It's going to cause a generational resentment, and younger people are going to be right to be angry about it."

English
0
0
0
61
Jason Osborne
Jason Osborne@_JasonOsborne·
@granitewinger Also how dare someone accuse you of living in Massachusetts! There are no deep dark dank holes in NH!
English
0
0
1
138
Dave Carney
Dave Carney@granitewinger·
You didn't think so when you were begging for more support in your first two races. Want me to play the voice mail you left me one Friday night? You gladly accepted over a million dollars in support before. #Hypocrite
Glenn Rogers@RogersForTexas

Always a joy to see the Governor’s highly paid chief troll, Dave Carney, emerge from his deep, dark, dank hole to spew his hateful bs, while attempting to defend the most petty, corrupt and mendacious governor in Texas history.

English
5
1
32
5.2K
Jason Osborne
Jason Osborne@_JasonOsborne·
@DougHeye Oh boy wait till she does a live Happy Hour while preparing dinner! That’s the real game changer
English
0
0
0
32
John Boehner
John Boehner@SpeakerBoehner·
Happy birthday to a great friend and even better travel bud. Cheers to 88 years, Milne.
John Boehner tweet media
English
7
7
197
21.2K
Jason Osborne retweetledi
Bobby Weir
Bobby Weir@BobWeir·
It is with profound sadness that we share the passing of Bobby Weir. We send him off the way he sent so many of us on our way: with a farewell that isn’t an ending, but a blessing.  A reward for a life worth livin'. bobweir.net/bobby/ 📸 Chloe Weir
Bobby Weir tweet media
English
2K
5.7K
30.1K
2.3M
Jason Osborne
Jason Osborne@_JasonOsborne·
Where can we send money to help? This is amazing!
Michelle Maxwell ™@MichelleMaxwell

The neighbors call the cops on my dad every six months. They think he’s running a fighting ring or flipping pets for profit. For years, I wasn't sure they were wrong. My father, Frank, is a man of few words and even fewer friends. He lives on a fixed income in a small, weathered house just outside of town. He’s 68, walks with a limp he got in ’71, and spends most of his day in his garage. But his most controversial habit involves the local animal shelter. Like clockwork, Dad brings home a dog. Not the cute puppies everyone wants. He picks the "unadoptables." The three-legged pit bulls, the senior labs with gray muzzles, the curs that cower in the corner. For six months, that dog lives like royalty. I’d visit and see Dad hand-feeding them steak scraps, walking them for hours, talking to them in a soft voice he never used with me. Then, six months later? Gone. The dog vanishes. No photos, no collar left behind. Just an empty bowl and Dad driving his rusted pickup truck to the shelter to get another one. "Where’s Barnaby?" I asked last Sunday. Barnaby was a one-eyed Golden Retriever mix he’d had since spring. That dog worshipped the ground Dad walked on. "Moved on," Dad grunted, staring at his coffee. "Moved on? Did you sell him, Dad? The neighbors are talking. They say you’re sick." "Let them talk." I couldn't take it anymore. I loved Barnaby. The thought of my father selling that sweet soul to some stranger for a few hundred bucks made my stomach turn. So, when I saw him load a bag of high-grade kibble and a new leash into his truck the next morning, I followed him. I expected him to drive to a breeder or a shady parking lot exchange. Instead, he drove two towns over to a drab apartment complex near the VA hospital. He pulled up to a ground-floor unit. I watched from my car, phone ready to record evidence, as he knocked on the door. A young man answered. He couldn't have been older than 25, but he looked 50. He was missing his right arm, and the way he stood—tense, scanning the perimeter—screamed PTSD. I recognized that look. I’d seen it in Dad’s old photos. Dad didn't say a word. He just whistled. From the passenger seat of Dad’s truck, a dog jumped out. It wasn't Barnaby. It was "Duke," a German Shepherd he’d had last year. Duke looked incredible. Focused. Calm. He trotted right up to the young man and sat by his left leg, leaning his weight against the boy’s thigh. The young man crumpled. He fell to his knees, burying his face in Duke’s fur, sobbing. Duke didn't flinch. He just held his ground, anchoring the boy to reality. Dad handed the young man a thick envelope. Not money—paperwork. Vaccination records. Training logs. I got out of my car. "Dad?" He jumped, looking more terrified than I’d ever seen him. He walked me away from the boy, lowering his voice. "You weren't supposed to see this." "You trained him," I realized. "You didn't get rid of them. You trained them." Dad sighed, lighting a cigarette with shaking hands. "A fully trained PTSD service dog costs anywhere from fifteen to thirty thousand dollars. The insurance doesn't cover it. The VA has a waiting list a mile long. These boys... they come home, and they can't sleep, they can't go to the grocery store, they can't breathe." He looked back at the young man, who was now smiling through tears, throwing a ball for Duke with his left hand. "I can't give them money," Dad said, his voice cracking. "I don't have any. But I know dogs. And I have time." "But why the secrecy? Why every six months?" "Because that’s how long it takes to turn a scared shelter dog into a soldier’s lifeline," he said. "Basic obedience, task training, desensitization. I take the broken dogs nobody wants, and I turn them into the partners these kids need." "And Barnaby?" I asked, my throat tight. "Delivered him yesterday to a female marine in Ohio. She hadn't left her house in two years. She went to the park this morning." 🐾 on my ❤️ Please share if this moved you.

English
0
0
0
139
Jason Osborne retweetledi
Utah Public Safety
Utah Public Safety@UtahDPS·
We are seeking the public's help in identifying this person of interest in connection with the fatal shooting of Charlie Kirk at Utah Valley University. 1-800-CALL-FBI Digital media tips: fbi.gov/utahvalleyshoo…
Utah Public Safety tweet mediaUtah Public Safety tweet media
English
737
6.4K
27.9K
1.4M
Jason Osborne retweetledi
FBI Salt Lake City
FBI Salt Lake City@FBISaltLakeCity·
We are asking for the public's help identifying this person of interest in connection with the fatal shooting of Charlie Kirk at Utah Valley University. 1-800-CALL-FBI Digital media tips: fbi.gov/utahvalleyshoo…
FBI Salt Lake City tweet mediaFBI Salt Lake City tweet media
English
19.8K
107.4K
315.2K
89.5M
Jason Osborne
Jason Osborne@_JasonOsborne·
Holy cow talk about insensitive!
Jason Osborne tweet media
English
0
0
1
222
Jason Osborne retweetledi
Kyrsten Sinema
Kyrsten Sinema@kyrstensinema·
Despicable hit piece on @JohnFetterman - I wish I was surprised anyone would publish an obvious vendetta re: a man’s medical journey. What a weird medical stalker. To the former staffer: My advice to you is to do what your parents did. Get a job, sir.
English
773
537
5.1K
1.4M
Michael Caputo
Michael Caputo@MichaelRCaputo·
I love Reagan National Airport because it always feels like it’s 1991 and I just closed down the 15 Minutes Club. @benschilibowl is the best of memories.
Michael Caputo tweet media
English
1
1
11
791
Jason Osborne retweetledi
LSU Swimming & Diving
LSU Swimming & Diving@LSUSwimDive·
Women's 200-yard Freestyle Relay | Michaela, Zoe, Sabrina, and Reagan (1:28.24) finish fourth in heat number two💥
LSU Swimming & Diving tweet media
English
0
2
13
413