Dona Lynette Stewart retweetledi
Dona Lynette Stewart
223.6K posts

Dona Lynette Stewart
@donalynette
And builds a heaven in hells despair.. W. Blake. Almost heaven, West Virginia,.. J. Denver. Heaven is in your mind,.. Traffic.
Rural South Katılım Nisan 2013
1.7K Takip Edilen4.1K Takipçiler
Dona Lynette Stewart retweetledi
Dona Lynette Stewart retweetledi
Dona Lynette Stewart retweetledi
Dona Lynette Stewart retweetledi

Bingo!!! And somehow they will always blame the democrats for doing a shitty job
Oldcrowsnest¥@bw438497
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Dona Lynette Stewart retweetledi
Dona Lynette Stewart retweetledi
Dona Lynette Stewart retweetledi
Dona Lynette Stewart retweetledi
Dona Lynette Stewart retweetledi
Dona Lynette Stewart retweetledi

BRAND NEW! 🔥 🇺🇸
John Roberts has turned the Supreme Court into a partisan tool for the rich and powerful — rigged rulings, ethics scandals, and attacks on voting rights.
ENOUGH.
Tell Congress: Impeach Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts NOW!
actionnetwork.org/letters/tell-c…
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Dona Lynette Stewart retweetledi

Samuel Alito’s son has worked as a lawyer inside Trump’s Treasury Department since early last year. The administration hid it.
No public resume, no LinkedIn, no mention on the Treasury website, outdated bar listings. Four former officials confirmed it.
The public was never told.
Here is why that matters.
Philip Alito served as an attorney-adviser in Treasury’s general counsel office, briefed on department matters across the board, while the Supreme Court took up a case in which the Treasury Department was a named defendant.
The department never disclosed the connection in court.
Justice Alito did not recuse.
The federal recusal law is plain. A justice must step aside in any case where his impartiality might reasonably be questioned.
That is the test.
Not whether anyone can prove influence but whether a reasonable person looking at this would doubt it. A justice ruling on cases involving the very agency that employs his son fails that test on its face.
And Treasury sits at the center of many upcoming issues, including the fight over Trump’s $1.776 billion dollar fund to reward the January 6th rioters he pardoned. That fight could be headed to the Court too.
This is exactly why the honor system has failed.
The Supreme Court is the only court in America with no enforceable code of conduct. I support withholding funding from the Court until the justices adopt a binding code with real recusal review.
Congress holds the power of the purse.
We should use it.
notus.org/us-news/samuel…
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@CrazyVibes_1 “Making every promise to God, I could think of”.
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I’m 68 years old, a biker with more miles on my boots than most men dream of, and three years after losing my wife, I never thought life had any big surprises left for me. Then, by pure accident, I met Maya.
She was four months old, lying in the NICU, crying like the world had already given up on her. Born with Down syndrome, a serious heart defect, and addicted to methamphetamine from birth, she had been turned down by twelve families. Too many complications. Too much risk. Too expensive. They were preparing to send her to institutional care.
I had wandered onto the wrong floor while visiting a buddy when a nurse saw me standing there in my leather vest and said, “That baby’s been crying for hours. Nothing calms her. You want to try?”
I picked her up, held her against my chest, and started humming a low, rumbling note—the same way I used to calm my Harley on cold mornings. Maya stopped crying instantly. Her tiny hand wrapped around my finger, and something in my chest that had been frozen since my wife passed came roaring back to life.
I came back every single day for two weeks. When the social worker said they had no choice but to move her to a group home, I looked her in the eye and said, “No. I’ll take her.”
They laid out every reason I shouldn’t: my age, my lifestyle, the surgeries ahead, the years of therapy and special care. I listened to all of it, then told them the only thing that mattered: “She deserves to grow up with someone who chooses her.”
My motorcycle brothers showed up like a cavalry. These rough, tattooed men spent a whole weekend painting her nursery a soft sunny yellow and wrestling with a crib that took four of us three hours to assemble. They brought diapers, clothes, and enough casseroles to feed a platoon. For the first time in years, my house felt alive.
At five months old, Maya went in for open-heart surgery with only a seventy percent chance of making it through. I sat in that waiting room for six long hours, making every promise to God I could think of. When the doctor finally came out smiling, I cried like a kid.
Today, Maya is nine months old and she is the brightest light in my world.
She smiles the moment I walk into the room, lighting up like I’m the best thing she’s ever seen. Her little laugh fills the house when I make silly faces or dance her around the living room to old rock ballads. She’s hitting her milestones with that stubborn fighter spirit I’ve come to love so much. The heart defect is behind us, and every day she grows stronger, happier, and more curious about the world.
I know I won’t be here for all of her life. I’m old, and the road I’ve traveled has been long. But I’ll be here for every single day I have left, and I’ve already made arrangements with my brothers and their families so Maya will never know a day without love and protection.
She was nobody’s baby once. Now she’s mine—completely, fiercely, and forever.
Every night I lay her down in her yellow nursery, kiss her forehead, and whisper the same thing: “You were chosen, little girl. You are wanted. You are loved beyond measure.”
And as she drifts off with my finger still in her tiny hand, I realize something beautiful: I didn’t just save Maya.
She saved me.
I’m the luckiest man who ever lived.

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Dona Lynette Stewart retweetledi

@AdamtrendHQ @janet_yackle We already know he took money so what do you define justice as, now?
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Dona Lynette Stewart retweetledi

NEW: Calls are growing for a full investigation into Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas over reports of undisclosed luxury gifts and benefits.
The allegations include private jet flights, luxury vacations, yacht trips, elite resort stays, tuition payments, and even a reported $267K RV.
Critics say no public official, especially a SCOTUS Justice, should be above transparency or accountability.
If ordinary Americans had these kinds of financial questions hanging over them, would the IRS stay silent?

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Dona Lynette Stewart retweetledi
Dona Lynette Stewart retweetledi
























