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1776 Patriot

John F. Kennedy: The President with the Highest All Time Approval John F. Kennedy, the thirty fifth president of the United States, is still viewed as one of the most respected leaders in modern American history. Throughout his presidency, his approval rating stayed near 70 percent, which is one of the highest averages ever recorded. His standing is measured through the modern polling system that began in 1936, allowing his numbers to be compared across generations of presidents. Based on this long record of surveys, Kennedy holds the highest average approval of any president in the polling era. Kennedy’s popularity came from his personality, message, and calm leadership during major challenges. His inaugural address, urging Americans to serve their country, became one of the most memorable speeches in US history. During the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962, he guided the country through thirteen days of extreme tension, preventing nuclear conflict and earning wide respect. His support for early civil rights efforts and his commitment to the space program added to the sense that he was leading the nation into a new and ambitious era. Surveys taken long after his death show how strong his legacy remains. One major poll found that 85 percent of Americans approved of his performance when looking back on his presidency. Even during difficult periods, such as the aftermath of the Bay of Pigs invasion, Kennedy kept approval ratings above 70 percent, something few presidents have matched. His calm approach, clear communication, and ability to connect with the public helped him maintain support across states, age groups, and political backgrounds. Kennedy’s consistently high approval demonstrates how trust and confidence from the public shape a president’s place in history. Although he served less than one full term, his leadership during world crises and his appeal to national unity left a lasting mark. #Politics #USA #History #USHistory #America

1776 Patriot

Assured Destruction: The 1961 Plan That Made Nuclear War Unthinkable Robert McNamara created Assured Destruction after becoming U.S. Secretary of Defense in 1961 under President Kennedy, proposing it after reviewing nuclear plans. The U.S. had about 1,200 strategic warheads aimed at the Soviet Union, China, and Eastern Europe. Major cities were targeted with multiple warheads. A full nuclear exchange could kill 200–300 million civilians and destroy 60–70% of industrial capacity, making war unthinkable. Assured Destruction aimed to prevent nuclear war by ensuring any attack on the U.S. could be met with a retaliatory strike capable of destroying much of the Soviet Union. It set limits for deterrence. The U.S. had to survive a first strike and retaliate to destroy 20–25% of the Soviet population and 50% of its industry. Analysts mapped cities, factories, rail hubs, and power centers and found 75% of Soviet heavy industry in 10% of cities, ensuring retaliation. U.S. nuclear forces were redesigned to survive. Missile silos could withstand 50–70% of strikes. Submarine-launched missiles carried 16–20 warheads each, while B-52s carried 2,000+ bombs, with about 400 on continuous alert. Missile defenses could stop only 10–15% of incoming warheads and risked encouraging first strikes. Assured Destruction rejected limited nuclear war. Modeling showed 100–200 warheads could escalate rapidly. During the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Soviets had 100+ warheads in Cuba and 300+ strategic warheads elsewhere. Assured Destruction differs from Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD). Assured Destruction defined U.S. deterrence. MAD, emerging around 1967, described the situation once both sides had secure second-strike forces. Any first strike guaranteed self-destruction. By turning catastrophic numbers into limits, Assured Destruction made nuclear war with the Soviet Union unthinkable. Even 150 warheads could destroy the country, showing restraint was the only safe choice. #History #USA

Curiosity Corner

America’s Supervolcano: When Will It Erupt? The Revealing Evidence Beneath Yellowstone National Park lies one of the planet’s largest volcanic systems, a supervolcano capable of eruptions exceeding 240 cubic miles of magma. An eruption of this magnitude would reshape landscapes, blanket vast regions in ash up to several feet deep, destroy forests, and disrupt global climate for years, potentially lowering temperatures worldwide. The Yellowstone caldera spans roughly 34 by 45 miles, about the combined size of Rhode Island and Delaware, and contains over 10,000 geothermal features including geysers, hot springs, mud pots, and fumaroles, which are vents releasing steam and volcanic gases. The magma chamber extends 55 miles long, 18 miles wide, and 3 to 9 miles deep. Most of it is solid rock, while only 16 to 20 percent is molten, far below the 50 percent needed to fracture the crust and allow a supereruption. Yellowstone’s last supereruption, 640,000 years ago, expelled nearly 240 cubic miles of material, covering much of North America in volcanic ash and altering ecosystems for centuries. Earlier events 1,300,000 and 2,100,000 years ago were even larger, illustrating the irregular timing and immense power of supervolcanic activity. The U.S. Geological Survey estimates the annual chance of a supereruption at about 1 in 730,000. More likely hazards include major earthquakes and sudden hydrothermal explosions. Scientists monitor thousands of earthquakes, ground movement via GPS and satellites, gas emissions including carbon dioxide and sulfur dioxide, heat flow, and hot spring chemistry. Current readings show slow uplift and subsidence, low sulfur dioxide, and no sustained earthquake swarms, indicating deep cooling magma. Any future supereruption would be preceded by years of escalating seismic, chemical, and deformation signals, none of which are present today. #Supervolcano #Yellowstone #Science #ScienceNews #America #News #USA

1776 Patriot

Catching America’s Deadliest Serial Killer: The Green River Killer Investigation Gary Ridgway, the Green River Killer, stands among America’s most prolific serial predators, responsible for 49 confirmed victims and claiming up to 80. His crimes spanned from 1982 to 2000 across Washington state. Ridgway targeted vulnerable women, often sex workers or runaways, luring them into isolated areas and strangling them before leaving their bodies in concealed locations along the Green River, which slowed early discovery and hindered investigative progress. Forensic teams relied heavily on microscopic and biological evidence to link him to victims. Minuscule paint spheres measuring roughly 10 microns were recovered from at least six victims. For scale, 10 microns is one tenth the width of a human hair and comparable to a single red blood cell. Infrared microspectroscopy showed the particles matched rare industrial spray paint used at Ridgway’s workplace. Investigators noted that hundreds of spheres in multiple colors created recurring environmental signatures that tied murders to a single source and demonstrated how trace materials could quietly record offender movements. DNA evidence added decisive weight. Preserved samples from several victims were matched to Ridgway’s 1987 saliva sample, confirming direct contact and strengthening the timeline of his activities. These converging forensic streams enabled detectives to confidently link victims separated by many years and refine a consistent offender pattern with greater precision. Ridgway’s methodical tactics and repeated returns to dump sites helped him evade capture for nearly two decades. After his arrest, he entered a detailed confession to avoid capital punishment. He received life imprisonment without the possibility of parole for each count, ensuring he will remain in custody permanently. #TrueCrime #LawEnforcement #History #ForensicScience #SerialKiller #USA

1776 Patriot

From The Farm to the Field: Inside CIA Covert Operations Training

Camp Peary, known as "The Farm," is a clandestine CIA training facility in Williamsburg, Virginia, covering roughly 9,000 acres. Officially an Armed Forces Experimental Training Activity, it operates under the Department of Defense while its CIA role remains unacknowledged. Originally a 1942 military base, it was converted in 1951 to train operatives for operations in politically hostile or restricted regions. The centerpiece is the Denied Area Course, a six-month program simulating missions in territories where U.S. presence is prohibited. It is called “Denied Area” because trainees operate in environments where access is forbidden or dangerous, requiring stealth, improvisation, and complete operational secrecy. Exercises include navigating urban areas under surveillance, infiltrating mock foreign compounds, and conducting clandestine meetings. Trainees practice evasion from simulated hostile forces, rooftop and subway movements, and covert observation techniques. Daily routines incorporate firearms drills, close-quarters combat, defensive driving, lock-picking, and improvised entry tactics. Survival training includes wilderness navigation, procuring food and water, and enduring extreme weather while maintaining cover. Psychological resilience is tested through continuous stress scenarios, including simulated capture, interrogation, and live-action decision-making under time pressure. Trainees must respond accurately with minimal information, fostering adaptability and mental toughness. The Farm’s structured classrooms support language training, cryptography, and intelligence analysis, while specialized mock villages allow operatives to rehearse extraction and tradecraft in realistic settings. Though largely secretive, Camp Peary shapes operatives capable of performing complex espionage globally. Its blend of physical, tactical, and psychological training ensures recruits are prepared for both intellectual and operational dangers. #Military #USA #USMilitary

From The Farm to the Field: Inside CIA Covert Operations Training
Abraham Lincoln

The Summer of Fire: Witnessing the New York Draft Riots- Historically Accurate I remember the summer of 1863 as if it were yesterday. The city was tense before the lottery began, with the war raging and families struggling to survive. When the federal government announced the Enrollment Act, requiring men of fighting age to register for the draft, anger filled every street and tenement. Wealthier men could pay $300 or hire a substitute, while the working poor had no choice. Many whispered this was a “rich man’s war but a poor man’s fight,” and I felt that resentment in every glance. Every alley, every crowded tenement seemed charged with tension, and whispers of fear and anger traveled faster than any messenger. On July 11, the lottery began; by July 13, anger erupted. Crowds surged through the streets, overturning police wagons, smashing windows of draft offices, and storming homes. Fear and fury carried men to deeds they might never have imagined. The worst came as mobs turned on African Americans. I watched in horror as the Colored Orphan Asylum was set ablaze, the children escaping just in time. Fires burned, cries rang out, and smoke filled the streets. Looting spread across neighborhoods, and the sound of breaking glass and shouting haunted the city for days; the chaos seemed endless, as if the city itself trembled under the weight of its anger. By July 16, federal troops from Gettysburg arrived, and the rioters dispersed, leaving behind bodies, rubble, and shattered lives. At least 119 were dead, countless wounded, and millions in damage. I saw fear in our eyes and in my own. Yet, even amidst destruction, the city endured. We had faced anger, sorrow, and violence, and we would rebuild. The draft riots revealed both our failings and our resilience. The city had been tested, and though we trembled and mourned, we had survived. We had learned that fear and courage often walk together, and that the Union, like the city, could endure. #History #USHistory #USA

1776 Patriot

Massive Federal Fraud Revealed: $233–$521 Billion Lost Annually, Treasury Secretary Confirms, GAO Report On 4/16/2024, the non partisan Government Accountability Office released the first government wide fraud estimate covering all federal programs, including emergency relief. The report estimates $233–$521B lost annually, or 3%–7% of federal spending. The low end totals $1.1T over 5 years, while the high end exceeds the combined 5-year budgets of Education, Labor, Transportation, Homeland Security, Agriculture, and Interior, which total $1.815T. Losses come from identity theft, fake credentials, shell companies, phantom employees, and networks exploiting verification gaps. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in 4/2024 federal fraud totals “about $600B a year.” The report was available on the GAO website. Agencies cannot verify income, jobs, or eligibility in real time, letting payments go through. Medicare and Medicaid, on GAO’s High Risk List, account for much of the fraud. Pandemic programs, including $1.9T stimulus and $600B economic support, were vulnerable as speed outpaced checks, allowing billions in improper payments. Only 10% of confirmed losses are recovered. Indirect costs like audits and enforcement add tens of billions annually. Better detection could save tens of billions yearly, roughly equal to NASA, EPA, and NSF combined ($46B). Public awareness remained low; GAO released the report online without a press conference. On 4/15–16/2024, pro Palestinian "Tax Day" protests blocked roads, bridges, and airports. Millions filed taxes; media focused elsewhere. On 4/17/2024, the Biden Administration issued a brief comment disputing aspects of the estimate. At the time, President Biden was the leading Democratic candidate; the report’s scale affected his campaign. On 1/10/2026, Secretary Bessent announced a plan to strengthen fraud detection and improve real time verification across federal programs. #Fraud #BreakingNews #News #USNews #USA #Economics

Abraham Lincoln

How I Became a Hall of Fame Wrestler- Historically Accurate Before law and politics defined my life, I was known across central Illinois for physical strength and skill in wrestling. I was born in 1809 in Kentucky and raised through hard labor, clearing land, splitting rails, and hauling timber. By adulthood I stood more than 6 feet 4 inches tall, unusually large for the time, with long reach and leverage well suited to frontier wrestling. Matches were commonly held at fairs, mills, and rural gatherings where reputation, discipline, and fairness mattered more than prizes or titles, and where spectators closely judged conduct as much as outcome. Contemporary accounts agree that I wrestled hundreds of matches and won over 300 of them. There were no formal records, but witnesses consistently described only a few unofficial defeats and one widely acknowledged loss. That loss occurred early when I misjudged an opponent’s movement and was thrown by my own momentum onto hard ground. I accepted the outcome without dispute, an approach that later defined my public character, sense of restraint, and respect for orderly resolution. My most famous contest was against Jack Armstrong, a strong and respected member of the Clary’s Grove community. The match drew a large crowd and lasted more than an hour. Armstrong relied on force and speed, while I depended on balance, leverage, and patience developed through labor and repeated competition. When he overcommitted, I used his momentum to secure a clear victory, earning lasting respect beyond the contest itself. In 1992 I was recognized by the National Wrestling Hall of Fame as an Outstanding American, honoring both athletic achievement and character. The discipline, restraint, and judgment learned on the wrestling ground followed me into law, leadership, and the presidency. #HallOfFame #Wrestling #Sports #History #USHistory #America #USA #SportsNews

The Kentucky Buzz | Newspaper

The "ball" is dropping twice to ring in 2026. Shortly after the ball makes its 60-second descent to signal the start of the new year, the ball will be relit with an America250 design above the illuminated "2026" numerals and be dropped again at approximately 12:04 a.m. ET. In addition to the second ball drop, a new video titled "America Turns 250," a red, white, and blue confetti drop and a "dynamic pyro finale set" to the tune of Ray Charles’ rendition of "America the Beautiful" is slated to occur. America250 will build "anticipation" for the moment with a series of features over the course of the evening, including a reveal of the America250 Ball Design atop One Times Square during “The Star-Spangled Banner" beginning at 6:04 p.m. #NewYearsRockinEve #NewYearsEve #BallDropTwice #USA #NewYork