Joe Sansalone
9.8K posts

Joe Sansalone retweetledi
Joe Sansalone retweetledi
Joe Sansalone retweetledi

Our prayers go out to Maddox and his family. A sophomore at Wooster High School here in Ohio and his family need all the thoughts and prayers they can get. Please consider donating 🙏🏻⬇️⬇️⬇️
gofundme.com/f/help-support…

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Joe Sansalone retweetledi

I believe in the power of prayer. Please join me in praying for Maddox. Dear Jesus, please heal him and help his family get through this difficult time 🙏✝️🙏
Last night Maddox Graser had two hits and helped his Wooster High School baseball team win 10 to 0.
He was perfectly fine.
By 8 pm he was throwing up at home. It got worse fast. He was rushed to the hospital in Wooster and then life flighted to the Pediatric ICU at Akron Children’s Hospital this morning.
Maddox is a sophomore. A second baseman. A teammate. A son.
Right now he has no brain activity.
From a baseball field celebrating a win to a pediatric ICU fighting for his life in less than twelve hours. His family never saw this coming. Nobody did.
His mom and dad are sitting in that hospital right now needing every prayer they can get.
If you believe in miracles please stop scrolling right now and say one for Maddox. His family is pleading for them.
Please share this post. The wider this reaches the more people are praying over this young man tonight.
Maddox Graser. Remember that name and lift it up.

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Joe Sansalone retweetledi
Joe Sansalone retweetledi


Let's have some more fun.
82% of ML bets are on the Mets. So for every run they score tonight, we're going to give away ANOTHER $1,000 in bonus bets!
For a chance to win, just reply with a baseball emoji ⚾️

FanDuel Sportsbook@FDSportsbook
The Mets might need a little help... They've lost 11 straight, so we've decided to give away $1,000 in bonus bets to 11 of our customers! 💰 For a chance to win: 1️⃣ Repost 2️⃣ Follow @FDSportsbook 3️⃣ Reply with ONE move you'd make to fix the team Rules: go.fanduel.com/FD-NYM
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Joe Sansalone retweetledi

The Mets might need a little help...
They've lost 11 straight, so we've decided to give away $1,000 in bonus bets to 11 of our customers! 💰
For a chance to win:
1️⃣ Repost
2️⃣ Follow @FDSportsbook
3️⃣ Reply with ONE move you'd make to fix the team
Rules: go.fanduel.com/FD-NYM

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Joe Sansalone retweetledi

Joe Sansalone retweetledi

On August 8, 1982, a line drive foul ball hit a four year old boy in the head at Fenway Park. Jim Rice, realizing it would take EMTs too long to arrive and cut through the crowd, sprang from the dugout and scooped up the boy...
He laid the boy gently on the dugout floor, where the Red Sox medical team began to treat him.
When the boy arrived at the hospital thirty minutes later, doctors said, without a doubt, that Jim's prompt actions saved the boy's life.
Jim returned to the game in a blood-stained uniform.
A true badge of courage.
After visiting the boy in the hospital, and realizing the family was of modest means, he stopped by the business office and instructed that the bill be sent to him.
This is what a real sports hero looks like.
"Love is patient. Love is kind."
Thank you Jim Rice for who you are and for all you do.

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Joe Sansalone retweetledi
Joe Sansalone retweetledi
Joe Sansalone retweetledi
Joe Sansalone retweetledi
Joe Sansalone retweetledi
Joe Sansalone retweetledi

"Three men, two towers, one moment when the world stopped holding its breath. In 1988, George H.W. Bush, Ronald Reagan, and Mikhail Gorbachev stood together in Lower Manhattan with the Twin Towers rising behind them—a photograph that captured the end of one era and the uncertain beginning of another."
The year was 1988. The Cold War, which had divided the world for four decades, was finally thawing. Mikhail Gorbachev, the Soviet leader who had introduced glasnost (openness) and perestroika (restructuring), was in New York to address the United Nations General Assembly. On December 7, he delivered a landmark speech announcing unilateral cuts to Soviet military forces, a move that sent a clear signal: the Soviet Union was ready to end the arms race. That same day, he met with President Ronald Reagan and President-elect George H.W. Bush at the U.S. Mission to the United Nations. The photo of the three men, with the World Trade Center towers visible in the background, became an enduring symbol of a world on the verge of transformation.
Behind the smiles and handshakes, the meeting was loaded with history. Reagan, who had once called the Soviet Union the "evil empire," was now in his final weeks as president, having built a personal rapport with Gorbachev through a series of summits. Bush, still not yet inaugurated, was being ushered into a new world order where the Cold War's certainties were crumbling. The Twin Towers themselves—the tallest buildings in the world at the time—stood as monuments to American economic might and global ambition. In 1988, no one could foresee that 13 years later, the skyline they framed would be torn apart. But the photograph, with its three leaders facing forward, already hinted at a future where old enemies would have to find new ways to coexist.
The meeting was more than a photo op. Gorbachev had just announced a 500,000-troop reduction from Soviet forces and the withdrawal of tanks from Eastern Europe. Reagan praised the move, and Bush, despite his reputation for being less warm to the Soviets, pledged continuity. The moment was a hinge: the Cold War was ending, but what would replace it was still unclear. The leaders weren't just posing—they were navigating a transition that would define the 1990s and beyond. The Twin Towers behind them were a reminder of the economic system that had triumphed, but also of vulnerabilities that remained invisible.
Today, that photograph feels like a time capsule. The Twin Towers are gone. Reagan and Bush have passed away. Gorbachev died in 2022. Yet the image still resonates because it captures something essential: the possibility of adversaries choosing dialogue over destruction. In an era of renewed global tensions, it reminds us that peace is not achieved through strength alone—it requires leaders willing to take risks, to listen, and to see the humanity in those they once called enemies.
"Three men stood at the edge of history, with towers behind them that no longer stand, and proved that even the deepest divisions can be bridged—not by pretending they don't exist, but by choosing to face them together."
© Tales Of Past
#archaeohistories

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