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THE LATE NIGHT_PODCAST

A dog crossed nearly 75 miles of lraqi desert iust to find one Marine In 2007, then-Maior Brian Dennis was stationed near the Irag-Svria border in Anbar Province when a stray docg wandered into the outpost. The Marines named him Nubs because his ears had been brutallyv cut short. He looked hardened, but he wasn't. According to reporting by outlets including People Nubs quickly bonded with Dennis and the unit, sleeping beside them and offering something rare in a combat zone: uncomplicated comfort Then the unit relocated. Military rules prohibited keeping local animals, so Dennis had to leave him behind. As the convoy pulled away, Nubs chased their vehicles into the dust until he disappeared from sight Davs later, Marines at the new base saw a familiar shape outside the wire Against terrain, distance, and freezing desert nights, Nubs had tracked them across roughly 70 miles. No one knows how he navigated. What's documented is that he made it But it wasn't the iourney. It was the rulebook. Dennis was ordered to get rid of the dog. Instead, supporters raised funds to transport Nubs through Jordan and eventually to the United States Their story later inspired the book Nubs: The True Storv of a Mutt, a Marine & a Miracle. In a war defined by strategy and survival, it was a stray dog who reminded soldiers what loyalty actually looks like Sometimes devotion does not need orders.

TheCrew®POd

Why Can the U.S. Spend Billions Abroad While Americans Can't Afford Food or Rent? People ask this question all the time, and it's a fair one: How can the United States spend billions on other countries while people here struggle to put food on the table or keep a roof over their heads? The short answer is priorities Federal spending isn't based on what Americans need most - it's based on what Congress treats as non-negotiable. Military spending and foreign aid tied to "national security" are fast-tracked, bundled into must-pass bills, and rarely questioned. Programs that help Americans eat, pay rent or stay housed are framed as "entitlements" and endlessly debated Another uncomfortable truth: war is big business. Detense spending supports massive corporations, campaign donors and jobs spread across congressional districts. Cutting food or housing aid hurts vulnerable people. Cutting defense contracts hurts powerful interests. Guess which one gets protected. It's also important to understand that much of what's called "foreian aid" isn't charity. A arge share iS military aid or weapons funding, and much of that money never leaves the U.S. - goes straight to American defense contractors. Politicians can claim they're helping allies while the money circulates back into corporate profits. Meanwhile, hunger and housing insecurity are treated as personal failures instead of national emergencies. If food insecurity or unaffordable rent were framed as security threats, thev'd be funded without hesitation The U.S. does not lack money t lacks political will This isn't about choosing America or the world. It's about acknowledging that a country capable of funding wars indefinitely is also capable of ensuring its people can eat and live with dignity - if it chooses to You can't fix a system until you're honest about what it values.

candy_coco

She had lost her puppies… but a mother’s heart doesn’t stop searching. 🐾💔 Along a quiet roadside, she kept walking the same few steps again and again… pausing, turning back, and looking around as if she might hear the tiny paws she once followed everywhere. Not long ago, she was surrounded by her little ones. They were her whole world — soft whimpers, playful movements, and small bodies staying close beside her. She protected them, cared for them, and loved them with the quiet devotion only a mother can give. ❤️ But now the space beside her is empty. Still, she returns to the same place, hoping… waiting… listening. Her gentle eyes search the silence as if she believes her babies might appear at any moment. Even after everything, she hasn’t lost the kindness in her heart. She still believes the world might bring something good again. Sometimes all a broken heart needs is one moment of compassion… one person who chooses kindness. Please send this sweet mama some love and prayers. May her story lead her to the safety, warmth, and care she truly deserves. 🐶🙏💛

Rick And Morty

Choose love. In a world screaming hate, cancel, divide, retaliate—Jesus says choose love. Not because it’s easy. Because it’s radical. Because it’s who He is. God is love (1 John 4:8). And we’re called to reflect Him. Matthew 22:37-39 — greatest commands: Love God with all your heart/soul/mind. Love your neighbor as yourself. Everything hangs on these. Then Jesus ups the ante: “Love your enemies. Pray for those who persecute you” (Matt 5:44). Not tolerate. Not ignore. Love. Actively bless those who curse you (Luke 6:27-28). Why? Because hate stirs conflict, but love covers wrongs (Prov 10:12). Hate poisons you first. Love frees you. 1 Corinthians 16:14 — “Let all that you do be done in love.” Not some things. All. Work, words, social media, family fights, politics—let love lead. Love isn’t mushy feeling. It’s choice + action. Patient. Kind. No envy. No boasting. Not rude. Not self-seeking. Not easily angered. Keeps no record of wrongs. Protects. Trusts. Hopes. Perseveres (1 Cor 13:4-7). Jesus modeled it: Betrayed? Forgave. Mocked? Prayed for them. Crucified? “Father, forgive them.” He chose love when hate was deserved. We can’t love like that in our strength. But in Christ, we’re empowered by the Spirit. His love pours into us so it overflows out (Rom 5:5). Real check: • When wronged, do you choose revenge or release? • In division, do you choose sides or bridge with grace? • Daily, do you choose love over convenience, pride, fear? Choose love today. It’s not weakness—it’s weaponized grace. It overcomes evil with good (Rom 12:21). It points people to Jesus. The world expects hate. Shock them with love. Choose love. Choose Jesus. Drop a ❤️ if you’re committing to this today. Who’s choosing love in a hard spot right now?