The Dude retweetledi
The Dude
105.1K posts

The Dude
@dalsmunson
Husband, Dad, Grandpa, fisherman. Loves family, friends, God and country and #420, Desert Storm Veteran, Non Sibi Sed Patriae. #cannabis
USA🇺🇸 State of hockey Katılım Şubat 2014
6.5K Takip Edilen4.5K Takipçiler
The Dude retweetledi
The Dude retweetledi
The Dude retweetledi
The Dude retweetledi
The Dude retweetledi
The Dude retweetledi
The Dude retweetledi

🚨 President Obama put in place several measures that allowed Chinese nationals to engage in birth tourism and become U.S. citizens.
💥 As of 2025, the total number of birth tourists in the Northern Mariana Islands alone is 𝗪𝗘𝗟𝗟 𝗢𝗩𝗘𝗥 𝗢𝗡𝗘 𝗠𝗜𝗟𝗟𝗜𝗢𝗡 ❗️
This is one of many reasons why the Supreme Court case on birthright citizenship matters.
@SatAmericaFNC ⬇️
English
The Dude retweetledi

Wow. Tucker Carlson just called-wants to come to Jerusalem to share Easter Sunday with me. Said he's been wrong about Israel, Jews, Iran, criticizing @realDonaldTrump & wants to publicly renounce stuff he's been saying and do it right in heart of Israel!
English
The Dude retweetledi

I had Grok break down Trump’s EO, and there were some interesting points:
1) This EO includes the involvement of DHS creating state citizenship lists for every state. DHS’s role in election security is expanding.
2) Mail-in ballots are being reformed, with “unique intelligent mail barcodes”, and these ballots can only be mailed to citizens on the state citizenship lists created by DHS and SSA.
3) The order also directs the AG to prioritize investigations and prosecutions of election-related crimes, particularly related to distributing/collecting illegal ballots to/from non-citizens.
In conclusion, Trump is using DHS to secure elections via managing the voter rolls and preventing mail-in ballot fraud, while the DOJ has been instructed to prosecute any attempts to cheat.
This is what the Dems have been worried about the entire time. This is why they have been refusing to fund DHS and throwing a fit about ICE. It was always about election security.
English
The Dude retweetledi

@BasedMikeLee Funny how the media got so worried about laid-off USAID employees but doesn't care about furloughed DHS employees.
English
The Dude retweetledi

He drives a school bus in Dallas, Texas. But the kids on his route call him something else — Dad.
Every morning before the sun is fully up, Curtis Jenkins pulls his yellow school bus to the curb and waits. Not just to pick up kids. To see them.
For seven years, Curtis noticed things other people missed. The little girl who folded her paper lunch bag perfectly every day but left it on the bus — because there was nothing inside. The boy whose shoes were too small. The kids who got on quiet, eyes down, carrying weight no child should have to carry alone.
So Curtis did something simple. He made his bus a community.
He gave every child a job — a greeter, an assistant, a "police officer" keeping order in the aisles. Every morning he'd call out, "We're going to care about each other and love everybody, right?" And 50 small voices would answer back.
But it didn't stop there.
Over the years, Curtis spent thousands of dollars of his own money — money he saved by skipping his own Christmas gifts with his wife — on birthday cards, bikes, backpacks, turkeys at Thanksgiving, and 70 hand-wrapped Christmas presents. He didn't buy random gifts. He asked each child what they wanted. Then he went and got exactly that.
No donation page. No announcement. No cameras.
When the story finally got out and people questioned how a bus driver could afford it, Curtis just smiled.
"It doesn't take money. It takes discipline."
But here's the part that will stay with you.
When a reporter asked the kids what they loved most about Curtis — not one of them mentioned the gifts.
A fifth grader named Ethan, whose parents had divorced when he was four, looked up and said quietly:
"He's the father that I always wanted. In some ways, I wish my dad could have been like that."
Curtis heard it. Didn't flinch. Just nodded.
"That's the paycheck right there," he said later. "If I can get that, you can keep the money."
He wasn't looking for a medal. He wasn't going viral on purpose. He was just a man who decided, every single morning, that his bus would be the safest place those kids walked into all day.
Sometimes the person who changes a child's life forever isn't a teacher or a coach or a counselor.
Sometimes it's the person behind the wheel of a yellow bus at 7 a.m. — who chose to show up, and chose to care, when nobody was asking him to.
Tag someone who needs to read this today. 💛

English
The Dude retweetledi
The Dude retweetledi
The Dude retweetledi
The Dude retweetledi
The Dude retweetledi
The Dude retweetledi
The Dude retweetledi
The Dude retweetledi




















