My 3 Cents
30.9K posts

My 3 Cents
@RonRonK
I love this country, best place in the world. I’m pro constitution, pro 2A, pro life, pro human. Christian but not into organized religion.🇺🇸
Northeast Ohio เข้าร่วม Ağustos 2010
821 กำลังติดตาม771 ผู้ติดตาม
My 3 Cents รีทวีตแล้ว

During today’s No Kings Day Protests we look at the REAL Kings of America
Chuck Schumer, 45 years in Congress
Nancy Pelosi, 40 years in Congress
Elizabeth Warren, 15 years in Congress
Bernie Sanders, 34 years in Congress
Dick Durbin, 43 years in Congress
Donald Trump only 5 years 2 months in office
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My 3 Cents รีทวีตแล้ว

🚨 JUST IN: Stephen Miller lays it out PERFECTLY
Imagine a "native Minnesotan who works as a lineman...worried about his ability to support for and provide his family."
"And then imagine that he has a neighbor who's a SOMALI REFUGEE who arrived two years ago and has a Mercedes and NO financial stress and no worries at all in the entire world and never seems to ever go to work at all because he just went to an office in the state, lied on a piece of paper, and got unlimited free money forever for life!"
"THAT is the system that is being run and that is the corruption that this task force under the leadership of the Vice President is going to demolish." @StephenM
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My 3 Cents รีทวีตแล้ว
My 3 Cents รีทวีตแล้ว

Our Constitution’s First Amendment has been weaponized to destroy the nation from within.
I Meme Therefore I Am 🇺🇸@ImMeme0
Masked protesters in NYC: “We support Hamas… It is right to rebel. USA, go to hell!”
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My 3 Cents รีทวีตแล้ว
My 3 Cents รีทวีตแล้ว
My 3 Cents รีทวีตแล้ว
My 3 Cents รีทวีตแล้ว

🚨WTF IS WRONG HERE??🚨
Ohio House just passed a bill to BAN sexually explicit performances in front of CHILDREN.
Every single Democrat voted AGAINST it.
They opposed making it illegal to expose kids to explicit sexual content.
Protecting children should be the easiest vote there is, and they still said no.

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My 3 Cents รีทวีตแล้ว
My 3 Cents รีทวีตแล้ว

@DavidJHarrisJr Conservatives need to start their own conservative based schools or home school their children. Period. There is no fixing this educational mess otherwise.
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My 3 Cents รีทวีตแล้ว
My 3 Cents รีทวีตแล้ว
My 3 Cents รีทวีตแล้ว

When 740 children were condemned to the sea and the world said no, one man said yes.
The world was on fire in 1942, and 740 exhausted children were trapped on a ship in the middle of the Arabian Sea with nowhere to go. These Polish orphans had already survived the horrors of Soviet labor camps, where they watched their parents perish from hunger and disease.
They had traveled through Iran to reach the coast of India, praying for safety, but every British-controlled port turned them away. One by one, the doors of the world slammed shut, leaving hundreds of hungry, terrified children drifting toward a certain death.
Among them was twelve-year-old Maria. She held her six-year-old brother’s hand tightly, remembering the last promise she made to their dying mother:
“Keep him safe.”
But as the ship’s food ran low and the medicine disappeared, Maria looked at the horizon and saw only rejection. The British authorities, who ruled India at the time, insisted the children were not their responsibility.
It seemed as though these 740 souls were invisible to a world consumed by war.
However, news of the wandering ship reached the ears of Jam Sahib Digvijay Singhji, the Maharaja of Nawanagar. He ruled a small princely state in Gujarat. He wasn’t a world leader with a massive army, and he certainly wasn’t required to help. In fact, by welcoming the children, he would be directly defying the British Empire, which had already said “no.”
When his advisors told him the tragic story, the Maharaja didn’t ask about the cost or the political risks. He simply asked how many children there were. When they told him “seven hundred and forty,” he made a decision that would echo through history.
He declared that while the British might control the ports, they did not control his conscience.
In August 1942, the ship finally docked at Nawanagar. The children who walked off that gangplank were skeletal, weak, and too traumatized to even cry. They expected to see soldiers or barbed wire. Instead, they saw a man dressed in white waiting for them on the pier.
The Maharaja knelt down so he could look the smallest children in the eye. Through an interpreter, he spoke words that changed their lives forever: “Do not consider yourselves orphans. From this moment on, I am your father, and you are my children.”
He didn’t just give them a place to sleep; he gave them a home. In the village of Balachadi, he built a sanctuary. He didn’t try to force Indian culture on them. Instead, he hired Polish teachers so they wouldn’t forget their language. He made sure they had Polish food and allowed them to practice their religion and sing their traditional songs.
Under the hot Indian sun, these children celebrated Polish Christmas and felt the warmth of a family they thought they had lost forever. For four years, while the rest of the planet was tearing itself apart, the Maharaja funded every doctor’s visit, every meal, and every schoolbook from his own personal fortune.
When the war finally ended and it was time for the “children of the Maharaja” to leave, many wept. They were leaving the only place that had treated them with dignity when the rest of the world looked away.
Those survivors have become doctors, engineers, and grandparents. In Poland, there are squares and schools named after Jam Sahib Digvijay Singhji, and he is remembered as a national hero.
Power is not measured by the lands you conquer, but by the lives you protect. When the world closes its heart, your greatest act of rebellion is to open yours. True immortality is found in the kindness that outlasts the king.

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My 3 Cents รีทวีตแล้ว























