mark daly retweetledi
mark daly
47K posts

mark daly
@immdaly
Dad, engineer, Christian libertarian. Interested in science, sports, culture, statistics, ethics, politics, history and probably in that order too. #ProLife
Dublin, IE Katılım Ağustos 2014
5.1K Takip Edilen3.2K Takipçiler
mark daly retweetledi

If a homeless Somalian coming to Ireland and threatening to rape your daughters and sisters is not enough for you to say the country needs radical change then you truly are lost.
We need to close the borders and we need to send the illegals far away from here.
#MakeIrelandSafeAgain

English
mark daly retweetledi

5 yr old Joselyn Rojas was playing in her front yard when a stranger pulled up and lured her into his car by offering her ice-cream.
Family immediately called police and began a search. Hearing the news, Temar Boggs jumped on his bike and began searching for Joselyn.
Almost a mile away, Temar spotted a sedan with Joselyn crying inside. The kidnapper floored it when he realized Temar was following him, but despite the risk, Temar kept peddling to save Joselyn.
Temar chased the criminal for over 15 minutes at high speeds.
The kidnapper panicked when he saw Temar wasn't giving up and finally let Joselyn out.
She IMMEDIATELY ran into Temar's arms crying for her mommy.
A 5 year old girl is alive today because of this young man's quick thinking and courage.
God bless him 🙏

English
mark daly retweetledi

Tánaiste Simon Harris has said the energy crisis we are living through now 'is the worst the world has ever seen'
rte.ie/news/ireland/2…
English
mark daly retweetledi

She got pregnant with twins for strangers.
Then she realised: it wasn’t her pregnancy anymore.
Contracts dictated everything.
The babies were already “assigned.”
Her role? Deliver.
She now says she was exploited in what she calls the “Wild West” of surrogacy.
And people still call this “ethical”?
Let’s be clear:
A woman’s body rented.
A child promised before birth.
A separation organised in advance.
If this happened in any other context, we would call it exactly what it is.
So why do we accept it here?
👇
dailymail.co.uk/lifestyle/fami…�
English
mark daly retweetledi
mark daly retweetledi
mark daly retweetledi
mark daly retweetledi

This morning the Islamic regime in Iran killed two more protester by hanging.
Look at his face. This is one of them; Mohammadamin Biglari. Only 19. A caregiver. A young man trying to hold his world together after losing his mother, while taking care of his sick father.
Right now, Iranians are living under bombs and fear.
And still, the regime finds the time, to take prisoners out of their cells, one by one, and execute them to send a message to the rest of the population:
Don’t come back to the streets.
Why would this regime stop executing protesters? When the threats, of this war target a nation, but not the men who hang its youth. When Western leaders speak of international law, yet fail to use it to hold these crimes accountable.
💔

English
mark daly retweetledi
mark daly retweetledi
mark daly retweetledi
mark daly retweetledi

"His condition is incompatible with life," the specialist told Antonio Colella. The words hung in the sterile hospital air like a death sentence. Antonio was a doctor himself, and he knew exactly what those words meant.
His seven-year-old son, Matteo, was lying in a bed at the House for the Relief of Suffering, but he was barely there. It was January 2000, and a deadly case of acute fulminant meningitis had ripped through the boy’s body with terrifying speed.
By the next morning, the situation had moved from critical to impossible. Nine of Matteo’s vital organs had completely failed. His kidneys, his lungs, and his heart were no longer functioning on their own. In the medical world, when nine organs collapse, there is no "recovery" phase—there is only the wait for the final heartbeat.
Matteo was clinically dead, kept in a state of suspended animation only by the rhythmic humming of machines.
While the doctors looked at the monitors and saw flat lines and failure, Matteo’s mother, Maria Lucia, looked toward something else. She left the bedside and went to the tomb of Padre Pio, the humble friar who had lived and died in that very town of San Giovanni Rotondo.
She didn't offer a polite prayer; she cried out with the raw, gut-wrenching desperation of a mother refusing to let go. "Padre Pio, save my son," she pleaded. "You worked so many miracles for strangers, now do it for us."
As the hours passed, something shifted in the intensive care unit. The machines began to register a change that defied every textbook in the building. Without any new medication or surgical intervention, Matteo’s organs began to "wake up" one by one. It was as if an invisible hand was restarting his body's systems.
When Matteo finally opened his eyes, he wasn't confused. He looked at his parents and the stunned medical staff and spoke about a journey he had just taken. He told them he had seen an old man with a long white beard and a brown habit.
"I wasn't alone," Matteo later explained to the investigators. "Padre Pio was with me. He took my hand and promised me, 'Don't worry, you will soon be healed.' He even told me we would go to heaven together, but then he sent me back."
The doctors were speechless. They had never seen a patient come back from total multi-organ failure, let alone with no brain damage or physical side effects.
Within days, Matteo wasn't just stable; he was sitting up and asking for a snack. By February, the boy who was "incompatible with life" was discharged from the hospital, completely cured.
This miracle was so powerful and so well-documented by the medical community that it became the official miracle used by the Vatican for the canonization of Padre Pio. Because of Matteo’s recovery, the world recognized Padre Pio as a Saint in 2002. Matteo stood in St. Peter's Square that day, a living, breathing testament to the impossible.
Science can tell us the "how," but faith tells us the "why."
Even when the experts say there is no way out, there is a power greater than any machine that can rewrite our destiny.
Never stop believing in the power of prayer.

English
mark daly retweetledi
mark daly retweetledi
mark daly retweetledi

@mikegalsworthy @IlvesToomas Europe has been freeloading on the guarantee of US security for too long and getting mired in mindless bureaucracy.
America economically has been powering ahead for years.
Trump is finally shaking Europe of its lethargy.
English

Macron has a point.
Next to the chaotic US, Europe is looking like a really attractive place. It’s stable, rules-based, sensible, good quality of life, hosts the world’s leading science programme…
Open Source Intel@Osint613
French President Macron: “Europe is an extremely attractive continent. For months I’ve been saying this, and thanks to our American friends, I now have an unprecedented selling point: We are predictable.”
English
mark daly retweetledi

















