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Joan Kay
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Joan Kay
@joankay1971
Viva Cristo Rey! Homeschooling mom, grandma, Catholic, blessed. Libertarian since forever. Just here for the ratios.
Maryland, USA Katılım Ocak 2009
584 Takip Edilen270 Takipçiler
Joan Kay retweetledi

Took Lucy treats. Couldn't see her. One of the ladies took a video of her. She sent it to me along with the following message:
"Praying for a positive outcome soon for Lucy! 🙏"
These people are heroes. God bless them. But I want my dog back.
#SaveLucy
@Herb_Minstrel
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Joan Kay retweetledi

JUST IN: Vatican announces that Pope Leo XIV’s first encyclical — titled Magnifica Humanitas, on the safeguarding of the human person in the age of AI — will be presented at 11:30am on Monday, May 25, in the Vaticanʼs Synod Hall, in the presence of the Holy Father.
Speakers at the presentation will include:
Cardinal Víctor Manuel Fernández, Prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith;
Cardinal Michael Czerny, Prefect of the Dicastery for the Service of Integral Human Development;
Professor Anna Rowlands, Political Theology, including Catholic Social Teaching, and theological ethics of human migration, Department of Theology and Religion, Durham University, United Kingdom;
Christopher Olah, co-founder of Anthropic (USA) and head of interpretability research for artificial intelligence;
Dr. Leocadie Lushombo, Political Theology and Catholic Social Thought, Jesuit School of Theology / Santa Clara University, California.
Concluding remarks will be delivered by thel Secretary of State, Cardinal Pietro Parolin.
The presentation will also include an address by Pope Leo XIV.
Magnifica Humanitas was signed and dated on May 15, the 135th anniversary of the promulgation of Pope Leo XIII’s Encyclical Letter Rerum Novarum.

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@RealCandaceO @candaceoshow I did not see that coming. I’ll be there.
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Joan Kay retweetledi
Joan Kay retweetledi

It has now been one month since Lucy's collar slipped over her head. One month since she was loose in my yard for a few seconds. One month since nobody got hurt. One month since nothing happened.
It has also been one month since the police were called. One month since animal control issued me a court summons. One month since they took my dog, the dog I bonded with in war ten years ago. One month since my world turned into a living hell.
It has been one month since nothing happened. And it has been one month since everything happened, in response to nothing.
She has spent one month in jail. Over nothing. Away from everything. One month away from her fields. Away from Lex. Away from the kids. Away from @Herb_Minstrel and me.
Let her come home. It's been long enough. It's time. It's damn time.
#SaveLucy
I have nothing more to say.
@LoneStarChica @catturd2

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Joan Kay retweetledi
Joan Kay retweetledi
Joan Kay retweetledi

Pizza Hut brings back its old-school restaurant features as nostalgic customers rejoice: 'So excited' trib.al/LcSG3Ll

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Joan Kay retweetledi

Pizza Hut RETURNS to classic retro restaurant style as ‘classic’ locations open up across US
thepostmillennial.com/pizza-hut-retu…
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Joan Kay retweetledi
Joan Kay retweetledi
Joan Kay retweetledi
Joan Kay retweetledi

I just introduced “End the Fed”
Title: Federal Reserve Board Abolition Act, HR 8421
Americans would be better off if the Federal Reserve did not exist. The Fed devalues our currency by monetizing the debt, causing inflation.
massie.house.gov/news/documents…

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@Robbiemeep @Villgecrazylady Of course. But this defense would prob run in the hundreds of thousands at the low estimate or prob more to put on. If you don’t have it 🤷🏻♀️ The lawyer could smell a rat, I’m sure, shook his head and wished them well. Idk
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@joankay1971 @Villgecrazylady Good possibility but still why not hire a lawyer? Wouldn't their son's life be worth it?
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Sooo looks like they’re going with… and hopefully I get this right…
“The prosecutors took the video of Tyler on 9/11 at WCSO…and spliced it onto the video of him invoking his right to counsel in Utah County on the evening of 9/12… and they made those two separate surveillance videos, from two separate police stations into one video… that they then split apart again for separate presentation in court.”
😐


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@Robbiemeep @Villgecrazylady I think this says that Tyler and his parents thought this was a misunderstanding that could be cleared up before long. This lawyer probably told them how intense the whole thing was going to really be and that it could drag on for a very long time.
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@Villgecrazylady It probably doesn't matter too much, well yet anyway, but the lawyer Tyler wanted retired soon after this. So why didn't the parents hire another lawyer? Why did the court appoint Tyler a lawyer?
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Joan Kay retweetledi

In 1974, a twenty-three-year-old man named Dan Jury made a decision that went against everything expected of someone his age.
He took his eighty-one-year-old grandfather, Frank Tugend, out of a nursing home and brought him into his small apartment.
Dan was young. He had no money to spare. No medical training. No guarantee he could handle what lay ahead.
He had watched his grandfather fade inside an institution. Surrounded by routines instead of relationships. Efficiency instead of tenderness. He could not accept that this was how the man who shaped his childhood would spend his final years.
So Dan brought him home.
From that moment on, Dan became a caregiver in every sense. He helped Frank bathe. He gave him medication. He cooked, cleaned, lifted, waited, stayed.
He learned the slow rhythms of an aging body. He learned how fragile dignity can be and how carefully it must be protected.
Friends his age were building careers, falling in love, chasing independence. Dan changed sheets. Sat through long nights. Held a hand when pain made words impossible. People told him he was sacrificing his youth.
Dan would later say those years taught him more about life than anything else ever could.
As Frank’s health declined, Dan began to photograph their days together. Not staged portraits. Not sentimental images. Honest ones. A frail body resting. A grandson leaning close. Moments of exhaustion, tenderness, frustration, humor, and quiet connection.
Nothing was hidden.
In 1978, Dan and his brother Mark published the photographs in a book titled Gramp.
The book was unlike anything most Americans had seen. Aging was usually kept behind closed doors. Gramp showed the truth: the vulnerability, the intimacy, the humanity of dying at home, surrounded by someone who loved you.
Frank became a teacher in his final years. Not through speeches, but through presence. By accepting help without surrendering dignity. By letting himself be seen, cared for, and loved.
He taught Dan patience. He taught him how love shows up in small, unglamorous acts. He taught him that care is never something to delegate when life becomes inconvenient.
When Frank died, Dan was changed forever.
Their story quietly shifted how many Americans thought about elder care. Caring for a family member is not a burden to endure. It is a relationship that can deepen both lives.
Dan did not lose his youth.
He spent it learning to love without turning away.
And in doing so, he helped the rest of us see aging not as something to hide, but as a final chapter that still deserves tenderness, dignity, and human presence.

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