

Richard Schroeder
7.9K posts

@roschroeder
Defender of the Faith, Father of the awesomest son and daughter, mountain man, renaissance man. #Goldcorp




🚨 Two Guatemalan illegal aliens just got indicted in Florida for the brutal, repeated rape of a 7-year-old little girl. They confessed. Florida law makes this a capital crime — death penalty eligible. These monsters don’t deserve another breath of American air. Execute them. Open borders under Biden-Harris imported this evil. Trump was right — secure the border, deport them ALL, and protect our kids. No more excuses. What do YOU say? Death penalty? YES or NO? Share this if you’re done with the madness. 🇺🇸


Lefties are already virtue-signaling HARD with masks over the new hantavirus cruise ship outbreak. This one is begging everyone to slap on N95 respirators (even outside) “like 2020” to stop lockdowns. 3 dead, passengers stranded at sea. If they come hard at you with mask mandates and lockdowns, are you going to comply?


Religious leaders told 'prepare now' for UFO disclosure to unleash Bible-changing revelations


BREAKING: FedEx driver who pleaded guilty to kidnapping and murdering 7-year-old Athena Strand, has been sentenced to death. Tanner Horner snatched Athena while he was delivering a Barbie doll to her home in Paradise, Texas. At one point during the trial, jurors broke down in tears while hearing audio of Horner killing Athena after he told her to take off her shirt and said she was "really pretty." Athena repeatedly asked for her mother before she was killed. "Horner is then heard asking Athena to remove her shirt, and there are several moments when she says "no" and asks for her mom. That was followed by repeated sounds of crying, screaming and banging," NBC reported last month. Following three hours of deliberation today, Horner was sentenced to death by lethal injection.

I’ve directed the @CivilRights Division, through our new Second Amendment Section, to defend law-abiding Americans from unconstitutional restrictions. No one should face criminal penalties simply for exercising a right shared by tens of millions—regardless of where they live. justice.gov/opa/pr/justice…

🇺🇸 Most Badass Americans You Don’t Know: #1 Roy Benavidez Roy Benavidez is the badass of American badasses. A doctor was zipping him into a body bag. He spit in his face to prove he was still very much alive. Born in 1935 in Cuero, Texas, to Mexican and Yaqui Indian parents. Orphaned young. Raised poor. Dropped out of school at 15 to shine shoes and pick crops. He enlisted anyway. Became a Green Beret with the 5th Special Forces Group. In 1965, on his first Vietnam tour, he stepped on a landmine during a reconnaissance patrol and was badly wounded. Paralyzed from the waist down. Doctors said he’d never walk again and started his medical discharge papers. He refused to accept it. Every night when the hospital was quiet he crawled out of bed and dragged himself across the floor to the wall to force his body to stand. Night after night he fought for every inch of strength until after more than a year in hospitals he walked out ready to return to combat.. May 2, 1968, west of Loc Ninh near the Cambodian border. A 12-man Special Forces recon team plus nine Montagnard allies was surrounded by over 1,000 NVA troops. Benavidez was back at the forward base listening to the desperate radio calls. He volunteered instantly. Armed with nothing but a knife and a medical bag, he jumped from a hovering helicopter straight into the kill zone. He sprinted 75 meters through withering fire to reach the pinned-down team. Wounded in the leg, face, and head before he even got there. Took command anyway. Repositioned the survivors. Directed their fire. Threw smoke to guide the birds in. Carried and dragged wounded men to the extraction helicopter while under constant fire. Went back for the team leader’s body and the classified documents on it. Hit again — small-arms fire ripped into his abdomen, grenade fragments shredded his back. His intestines were hanging out. The extraction helicopter’s pilot was mortally wounded at the exact same moment. The aircraft, riddled with bullets, crashed hard into the jungle. Benavidez pulled the stunned survivors from the overturned wreckage and formed a tiny defensive perimeter. He moved through heavy fire passing out ammo and water, encouraging the men, calling in air strikes and gunship runs. Wounded a third time — shot in the thigh while treating another soldier. In brutal hand-to-hand fighting an NVA soldier clubbed him from behind and bayoneted him. Benavidez yanked the bayonet out of his own body, drew his knife, and killed the man. Spotted two more enemies rushing the second extraction chopper. Grabbed an AK-47 and dropped them both. Made trip after trip carrying wounded men aboard while taking devastating fire. 37 separate wounds — gunshots, shrapnel, bayonets. Only after every surviving man and every classified document was safely loaded did he allow himself to be pulled aboard the last helicopter. He collapsed as it lifted off. Medics later thought he was dead and put him into a body bag. A friend recognized him and called a doctor over for help. The doctor, convinced he was gone, began to zip the bag shut. Benavidez spit in the doctor’s face to prove he was still alive. Roy Benavidez saved at least eight men that day. He was initially awarded only the Distinguished Service Cross. The Medal of Honor was denied multiple times — at the time no living eyewitnesses corroborated his actions, and Benavidez himself believed the entire team had been wiped out. Twelve years later the team’s radioman, Brian O’Connor, was on holiday in Australia when he read a newspaper story about Benavidez. He sat down and wrote a detailed 10-page eyewitness report that verified everything, then came forward and finally made the upgrade possible. President Ronald Reagan personally presented him the Medal of Honor in 1981 and said if the story were a movie script, no one would believe it. Roy Benavidez is an American Legend 🇺🇸






The American deer camp was, between approximately 1880 and 1990, the autumn ritual of every rural family in the upper Midwest, the Northeast, and the Appalachians. A cabin in the woods. Three or four men, three generations sometimes, who got there on the Friday before opening day, lit the wood stove, drank coffee that had been on the burner since 4am, played cards, told the same stories they had told the year before, and went out at first light on Saturday with rifles their grandfathers had owned. A buck taken cleanly with one shot. Field-dressed in the snow. Hung in the woodshed. Butchered the next weekend in the garage with the family. Forty pounds of venison in the chest freezer. Steaks for the winter. Sausage made by the grandfather with a recipe nobody had written down. A roast for Thanksgiving. The hide tanned and turned into mittens for the youngest grandson. The deer was free. The freezer was full. The boys learned to shoot, to clean a rifle, to gut an animal, to butcher it, to thank the woods for the deer, to be quiet for hours at dawn in the cold and notice things. Roughly 14 million Americans hunted in 1980. By 2020 that number was 11.5 million, and the average hunter age had risen from 35 to 51. The next generation is not coming up. Suburbanization removed the woods from the back door. Liability fears closed private lands. Public hunting access shrank. Time pressure on working families killed the long weekend at camp. The cultural drift made hunting socially suspect, then unfashionable, then, in some quarters, taboo. The number of American teenagers who have ever fired a rifle, gutted an animal, or watched their grandfather butcher a deer in the garage on a November Sunday afternoon is, in 2026, statistically vanishing. The freezer that used to be full of free, lean, grass-fed wild protein is full of ground beef from a Smithfield CAFO in Iowa. The skill is one generation deep. If the grandfather did not pass it to the father, and the father did not pass it to the son, the chain is broken. YouTube is, at the moment, where the few remaining young hunters are getting most of their training. A small American tradition that fed families for a century, taught a sequence of practical and moral lessons no textbook can replace, and connected three generations to the land their ancestors lived on, is closing down quietly, camp by camp, season by season. The cabin is still there. The stove still works. The buck is still in the woods. The grandfather is in the cemetery on the hill above the cabin. He cannot take the boy himself. Somebody else has to.



.@Sen_John_Carson is standing on the steps of the Colorado State Capitol and making it clear: we’re pushing back. SB-135 isn’t just policy, it’s about real impacts on our communities, our economy, and our future. And we’re strenuously against it. Watch, share, and stay informed. Your voice matters.

Coloradans deserve to know exactly where the next Governor stands on issues that matter. I am proud to be the only candidate with a comprehensive plan for our future. ☕️ I will fight to address public safety, water, and more, and I’ll get to work on day one.