Jimmy
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NEW: Judge GOES OFF before sentencing mother to 129 months to 20 years in prison for forcing her three children to live in deplorable conditions
'I think you’re a selfish liar. That’s what I think of you, okay?...'
Teriomas Tremice Johnson, 31, pleaded no contest to three counts of second-degree child abuse
Michigan Police found her three children — ages 12 and two 9-year-olds — living alone in an apartment filled with rotten food and human and animal waste, with no working plumbing and using a cardboard box as a toilet
The children told authorities they had not seen their mother since the day before, and their school attendance was inconsistent
Child Protective Services placed the children with family members, and Johnson was later taken into custody
She was already on probation for prior offenses, including child abuse and fleeing police with her children in the car
Johnson was ultimately sentenced to 129 months to 20 years in prison and ordered to have no contact with her children
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Jimmy nag-retweet
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EL INFIERNO TIENE UN LUGAR RESERVADO PARA LOS VERDUGOS de Hannah Cornelius quién tenía 21 años.
Fue secuestrada, violada en grupo, apuñalada y su cráneo destrozado con una roca de 40 kilos por cuatro salvajes.
En el tribunal, sus asesinos se reían mientras se leían los detalles del horror.
Su madre, destrozada por el dolor, caminó hacia el océano y nunca regresó.
Esto no es un “crimen aislado”. Es el rostro de la barbarie que avanza cuando se abandona la civilización, se romantiza la delincuencia y se desarma a la gente decente.


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🚨 EXPOSED: RUSSIAN-MADE MISSILES IN HEZBOLLAH HANDS
The IDF has uncovered Russian-made Kornet anti-tank missile launchers in southern Lebanon — used by Hezbollah to plan and carry out attacks on Israeli soldiers and civilians.
What this means:
• Advanced anti-tank systems in Hezbollah’s arsenal
• Direct threat to IDF forces and civilian areas
• Raises serious questions about weapons flow into Lebanon

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Jimmy nag-retweet
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She was waiting for the end. There she stood, naked, trembling against the cold concrete walls of a room in Auschwitz-Birkenau. It was the winter of 1944, and every woman in that cramped space knew what was about to happen. They were waiting for the gas to descend from the ceiling and turn their breath into a final, silent agony.
Minutes passed in the darkness. The only sounds were the muffled sobs of women clinging to one another and the faint murmur of desperate prayers. But the pipes remained silent. The poison they feared never came. Whether it was a mechanical failure, a guard’s mistake, or a miracle, the valves stayed closed.
When the soldiers finally opened the doors, they were stunned to find hundreds of women still standing. Gena Turgel stepped out into the freezing air on her own legs. Years later, reflecting on that moment, she did not dwell on the technical failure. She simply said:
“God must have protected me.”
Surviving the camps was not a single event, but a daily struggle. Gena was eventually transferred to Bergen-Belsen, a place where death and disease hung in the air like a suffocating cloud. It was there that she met a young girl destined to represent the lost potential of an entire generation: Anne Frank.
Anne was no longer the lively girl of the diary. She was a shadow of herself, ravaged by fever and hunger. Gena, though weak and exhausted herself, refused to look away. She risked her life to bring Anne water and gently wiped her fevered face.
“She was a small, beautiful child. She was delirious, but even in that state, you could see her sweetness.”
Gena held Anne’s hand, offering a glimmer of humanity in a place designed to crush it. She watched Anne struggle against typhus and witnessed the final days of a child the world had failed to save. The memory of Anne’s tired yet luminous eyes stayed with Gena forever.
Then came April 15, 1945. The British Army entered the camp to liberate it. Among the soldiers was a man named Norman Turgel. When he saw Gena, he did not see a prisoner or a number. He saw a woman of extraordinary dignity and strength. Despite her frail body, her eyes burned with a vitality he could not ignore. It was a love story born from the ashes of humanity’s darkest place.
Just six months later, they were married. Gena did not wear a traditional dress. Instead, she wore a wedding gown made from the white silk of a British Army parachute—a symbol of salvation, fallen from the sky and transformed into a garment of hope.
Today, that dress is preserved at the Imperial War Museum in London, a lasting testament that beauty can rise from the ruins of war.
Gena Turgel lived to the age of 95. She did not shy away from her past. Instead, she became a voice for the millions of lives silenced by history.
She visited schools and community centers, sharing her story not to provoke resentment, but to protect the future. She wanted every young person to understand the value of a single breath and the importance of compassion.
True strength is not only surviving darkness; it is refusing to let that darkness turn your heart to stone. Gena survived the gas chamber, held the hand of a dying child, and built a life rooted in love.
Perhaps we will never face the horrors she endured, but all of us make choices. Choosing compassion over indifference is the greatest miracle any of us can achieve.

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Impeached, retire a wealthy man, justice in America
Nick Sortor@nicksortor
🚨 JUST IN: Minnesota legislators have just filed to IMPEACH Tim Walz for the OVERWHELMING FRAUD he's allowed across the state “Federal investigation and lawmakers have estimated up to $9 BILLION in fraud across multiple programs administered by the state. This represents not a minor administrative lapse but a SYSTEMATIC BREAKDOWN in governance.” h/t @GrageDustin
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