William granade
3.2K posts

William granade
@william_granade
Texan, Army Vet, Fishing is my Line. Go, Cowboys 🇺🇸🇺🇸
Houston, TX Katılım Mart 2016
429 Takip Edilen825 Takipçiler
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Thank you, @DonaldTrump! Polls are now open. Bring five friends with you. Post your photos to remind Texans that today is election day! Let's work together to make Texas great.

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You Sir, can fuck right off. Today is for heroes.
Mayor Jacob Frey@MayorFrey
Today, we remember George Floyd, who was murdered by a former Minneapolis police officer six years ago. That moment changed our city forever.
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Mayor of Charlotte, NC asks that we not post about this lady murdered on a Charlotte train by a repeat offender with 14 prior arrests
I say in Iryna’s memory please share and make this go viral! A repeat offender with 14 prior arrests should not be roaming the streets of ANY city! They should be locked up!! Epic failure in the justice system..
We will never forgot her ever

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William granade retweetledi
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William granade retweetledi
William granade retweetledi

Years after the Vietnam War ended, a man walked up to former Army nurse Patti Ehline at an event and said:
“You were my nurse in Vietnam. You took off my leg.”
Patti stared at him.
She had treated thousands of wounded soldiers in 1968 — the deadliest year of the war. Too many faces. Too much blood. Too many boys barely old enough to shave.
She couldn’t remember him.
But he remembered her.
Because right before the anesthesia took him under, Patti had leaned over and said:
“I’ll take good care of you.”
And he never forgot it.
“When you’re dying,” he told her, “you remember the last person you heard.”
Patti Ehline was 22 when she arrived in Vietnam as an Army nurse.
Helicopters landed day and night carrying shattered bodies. Some soldiers were missing legs. Some were burned beyond recognition. Some were already dead before they hit the operating table.
She worked shifts that stretched past 24 hours.
She triaged wounded men in seconds:
Who could be saved.
Who couldn’t.
And while many Americans picture Vietnam veterans as men carrying rifles through the jungle, around 11,000 American military women served there too — most of them nurses.
Patti once said:
“A lot of people really don’t think that I’m a veteran for some reason. But I carry the same sense of pride.”
She also carried the trauma.
The shelling.
The screaming.
The memories that never really left.
Back then, nobody even called it PTSD yet.
One week after Patti left Vietnam, a rocket hit the hospital she had served in.
A nurse named Sharon Lane — one of the women who replaced her — was killed instantly.
She became the only American servicewoman killed by enemy fire during the Vietnam War.
Patti survived. But the war followed her home.
For decades, she’s spoken openly about PTSD and fought for veterans whose wounds never showed up on X-rays.
And somewhere in America, there are men with children and grandchildren alive today because Patti Ehline stood over an operating table and refused to let them die.
Men who still remember the final voice they heard before everything went dark.
“I’ll take good care of you.”
And she did.

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