ConR ❤️‍🔥✝️🇺🇲

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ConR ❤️‍🔥✝️🇺🇲

ConR ❤️‍🔥✝️🇺🇲

@conorbrock5

YESHUA FIRST🙏🇺🇸🙏 MAGADON 🔱 5th Gen Vet USN 🔱 LEX TALIONIS 🔱 #VetPatriots #SavetheChildren

⚜️ Louisiana ⚜️ Bayou Le KEK🐸 Katılım Haziran 2023
4.4K Takip Edilen3.7K Takipçiler
ConR ❤️‍🔥✝️🇺🇲 retweetledi
Kevin W.
Kevin W.@Brink_Thinker·
An 88-year-old mother living in assisted care with Alzheimer’s still sings in perfect harmony with her son as she plays guitar. He says, “She always returns to me when we sing.” 😭💔
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ConR ❤️‍🔥✝️🇺🇲
@jfpbear Having grown up in Ms, visiting favorite Aunt in Bâton Rouge, she hilariously would ask me to read road signs out loud... while driving around La.. Love her for her sense of humor.... no.. I didn't know how to pronounce them...
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ConR ❤️‍🔥✝️🇺🇲 retweetledi
🇺🇸 Bjørn Videbæk🇩🇰
🇺🇸 Bjørn Videbæk🇩🇰@The_Real_Bjorn1·
The Halls of the Slain: Life in Valhalla Valhalla, the Great Hall of Odin located in Asgard, is the ultimate destination for warriors who perish bravely in battle. Described as having a roof thatched with golden shields and rafters made of spears, it is a place of eternal preparation. The Einherjar, the fallen warriors, spend their days fighting one another to hone their skills and their nights feasting on the meat of the boar Sæhrímnir and drinking mead. This cycle is not merely for indulgence but serves a grim purpose: these warriors are being gathered to fight alongside the gods during the final battle of Ragnarök. Valhalla reflects the Viking warrior ethos, where death in combat was viewed not as an end, but as an invitation to join a divine military elite in the afterlife.
🇺🇸 Bjørn Videbæk🇩🇰 tweet media🇺🇸 Bjørn Videbæk🇩🇰 tweet media
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Fletch17
Fletch17@RealFletch17·
I’ve never heard this! Y’all need to touch a tree!!!!
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ConR ❤️‍🔥✝️🇺🇲 retweetledi
Niclas Q
Niclas Q@NiclasQSwede·
✅ You are always protected wherever You go❗️🙏🙏🙏
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.*Funkytown™*.
.*Funkytown™*.@01Funkytown·
It doesn't cost anything to be kind.
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ConR ❤️‍🔥✝️🇺🇲 retweetledi
My moms caregiver
My moms caregiver@mymomcare·
R.E.D. Friday. Never forget 🇺🇸
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IRISH PATRIOT
IRISH PATRIOT@irishpatriot91·
Something is changing. Not division unity. A new Ireland rises. 🇮🇪
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ConR ❤️‍🔥✝️🇺🇲 retweetledi
@UnsinkableDolly The Veterans Conductress
Thank you. These are not lists or trains. I posts memes/gifs or videos to remind us to pray for the safe return of our deployed Brothers and Sisters. I represent 2,500+ Veterans to honor them. Never forget they're the ones who fought for our freedoms that we're enjoying today. Happy Easter and God Bless.
@UnsinkableDolly The Veterans Conductress tweet media
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Lissa4Maga aka Cowboy Killa 🐎
Good Morning beautiful souls 💖 It's been a long week y'all!!! I met a good asshole up here on X.. just saying 👍 Remember to wear red today to support our troops, always!!! We remember everyone deployed on Friday's ❤️ Good assholes are hard to come by these days 😀 Have a wonderful Friday everyone, it's the weekend ❤️
Lissa4Maga aka Cowboy Killa 🐎 tweet media
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Farm Girl Carrie 👩‍🌾
Farm Girl Carrie 👩‍🌾@FarmGirlCarrie·
Bing Crosby's nephew once asked him a simple question on a golf course. "What was the hardest thing you ever had to do in your entire career?" Howard expected Hollywood stories. A difficult director, maybe. Studio pressure. The grind of fame. Bing didn't hesitate for even a second. December 1944. Northern France. The war in Europe still had months of blood left to give. Bing Crosby was overseas on a USO tour - not because anyone made him go, but because he'd tried to enlist and been turned down. Too old, they told him. General George Marshall put it plainly: "We don't need you on the front lines. We need you keeping these men alive on the inside." So Bing went. At his own expense. No toupee — he called the thing a "scalp doily" and refused to wear anything fake in front of men who had nothing fake left in them. And when the brass tried to claim the front rows, he shut that down immediately. Front rows were for enlisted men. The ones who'd actually be in the dirt. That night, they set up an open-air stage in a field. Thousands of soldiers gathered in the cold. There were laughs, there were jokes, there were moments where the war felt briefly, mercifully far away. Then came the last song. White Christmas. Since 1942, that song had followed American soldiers everywhere. It played on Armed Forces Radio. Men who hadn't seen snow, or their families, or their front porches in years would hear those opening notes — and completely fall apart. Bing looked out at the audience as he began to sing. Every single one of them was crying. Thousands of men. Combat soldiers. Men who had seen things no human being should see. Weeping openly, without shame, in a cold field in France, listening to a song about home. And Bing Crosby had to finish it. He had to hold his voice steady. He had to keep going, bar by bar, note by note, while thousands of men wept in front of him. He told his nephew it was the single most difficult thing he ever did in his life. Not a film. Not a performance. Not anything Hollywood ever asked of him. Just a song. Just a field. Just the faces of men thinking about home. A few days later, those same soldiers were sent into the Ardennes Forest. December 16, 1944. The Battle of the Bulge - the largest, costliest battle American forces fought in all of World War II. A surprise German offensive that would leave tens of thousands dead before it was over. Many of the men who wept in that field never came home. After the war ended, Allied troops were surveyed: who had done the most for their morale? Bing Crosby. Ahead of Bob Hope. Ahead of President Roosevelt. Ahead of General Eisenhower. He wasn't a star to them. He was a piece of home that came to find them when they couldn't come home themselves. 🙏♥️🇺🇸
Farm Girl Carrie 👩‍🌾 tweet media
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