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1776 Patriot

The Untold Battles of American Veterans After War Across U.S. history, veterans returning from war often faced neglect despite public praise. Continental soldiers after 1783 struggled to receive promised pay and pensions, delayed by 6 to 12 months. Some threatened to march on Congress in the Newburgh Conspiracy. General Washington’s appeal prevented crisis but revealed how fragile veteran support was. After the Civil War, Northern soldiers were publicly honored, yet many lived with poverty, lingering injuries, and untreated trauma. Confederate veterans faced economic devastation and social disruption. World War I soldiers returned to limited jobs. “Shell shock” now recognized as PTSD was often untreated. In 1932, 17,000 veterans and families formed the Bonus Army in Washington D.C., demanding early payment of bonuses scheduled for 1945. Living in tents along the Anacostia River during the Great Depression, they were forcibly evicted by troops; several were injured, illustrating neglect despite service. World War II veterans fared better. Many returned to ticker tape parades and benefited from the GI Bill offering education and housing. However, racial disparities limited access for Black veterans, and mental health issues often went unaddressed. Vietnam veterans rarely received parades and often faced hostility or silence. Employment and PTSD treatment were difficult to access. Studies show roughly 30 percent experienced PTSD, and repeated low level blast exposure in combat or training can cause CTE like brain pathology recently recognized in military research. Iraq and Afghanistan veterans face 20 percent PTSD prevalence and 12 to 15 percent traumatic brain injuries. Despite public respect, many encounter barriers to care, employment, and reintegration. History shows that real recognition requires sustained mental health support, equitable benefits, and societal commitment, not just words. #History #USHistory #America #Veterans #PTSD #SupportOurVeterans #USA

Alexander News Show

Fatal Double Shooting in Richmond West in the Hammocks. Two victims of a fatal Southwest Miami-Dade shooting have been identified as 44-year-old Ulises Cabrera Gonzalez and 42-year-old Susana Rosales Koris, according to the Miami-Dade Sheriff’s Office. --- Fatal Double Shooting in Richmond West Authorities confirmed that a man and woman were found dead inside a home in the Richmond West neighborhood of Southwest Miami-Dade on Saturday afternoon. Deputies responded to a distress call around 1 p.m. reporting a man bleeding inside a residence near the 17000 block of Southwest 153rd Court, just south of Country Walk. Upon arrival, deputies discovered Gonzalez and Koris suffering from apparent gunshot wounds. Miami-Dade Fire Rescue pronounced both victims dead at the scene. --- Investigation Underway - Victims Identified: Ulises Cabrera Gonzalez (44) and Susana Rosales Koris (42). - Location: 17000 SW 153rd Court, Richmond West, a typically quiet residential area. - Response: Deputies and Miami-Dade Fire Rescue crews arrived quickly after receiving the emergency call. - Status: Homicide detectives have taken over the investigation, but officials have not yet disclosed the relationship between the victims or the circumstances leading to the shooting. --- Community Impact Neighbors expressed shock at the violence in an area known for its tranquility. The double homicide has raised concerns about safety in the community, with residents awaiting further updates from investigators. --- What’s Next The Miami-Dade Sheriff’s Office has urged anyone with information to come forward as detectives continue piecing together what led to the deadly incident. As of Sunday evening, no suspects have been named, and the investigation remains active. #Miamidade #Crime #NoticiasdeMiami #Usa #Alexandernewsshow.

1776 Patriot

The SS United States: America’s Biggest and Fastest Ocean Liner The SS United States was the largest passenger ship ever built in the United States and a flagship example of mid century American industrial strength. Completed in 1952 at Newport News Shipbuilding, the vessel measured about 990 feet in length and displaced more than 53,000 tons. Its design used unprecedented quantities of aluminum in bulkheads, deckhouses, and framing to reduce structural weight and increase power to weight efficiency. Construction required more than 2,000 workers, extensive precision welding, and strict quality controls because the ship’s engines were adapted from classified naval propulsion systems. These turbines produced more than 240,000 shaft horsepower, giving the vessel unmatched acceleration and sustained high speed capability. On its maiden voyage the SS United States seized the Blue Riband, covering the westbound Atlantic in just over three days with an average speed above 35 knots. No passenger liner has surpassed this performance. The ship carried more than 1,900 passengers and nearly 1,000 crew and was built to convert rapidly into a troop carrier able to transport more than 14,000 personnel. The dual purpose design, compartment layout, and material choices, including fire resistant furnishings and reinforced decks were intended for heavy military loads. The liner operated from 1952 to 1969 before withdrawal due to rising operating costs and competition from jet aircraft. Since retirement it has remained laid up yet structurally sound, supported by preservation campaigns that emphasize its engineering significance. The SS United States remains the largest and fastest ocean liner ever produced in America and a benchmark in high performance civilian shipbuilding. #History #USHistory #America #USA #Shipbuilding

1776 Patriot

Cartels Shift Strategy: Produce Drugs on American Soil Federal operations this week show cartels increasingly producing drugs inside America rather than relying solely on smuggling. On 11/17/25, the DEA, Homeland Security Investigations, and Customs and Border Protection seized roughly 1.7 million counterfeit fentanyl pills, weighing 436 pounds, plus 26 pounds of raw fentanyl powder from a Colorado storage facility. Evidence including chemical equipment, packaging materials, and residue testing confirmed the substances were processed domestically. On 11/18/25, a meth trafficking network was dismantled after smuggling 7,055 pounds hidden in produce; investigators recovered lab manuals, precursor chemicals, and partially processed meth, clearly showing local processing activity. Then on 11/19/25, the DEA, FBI, ICE, and HSI announced the largest meth seizure in Colorado history: over 1,000 pounds, with lab evidence showing domestic synthesis. Authorities say the operations were linked to cells of the Sinaloa and Jalisco New Generation Cartels. Combined, the estimated street value exceeds $2.5 billion, highlighting the growing scale of domestic operations. Authorities estimate 5,000 to 7,000 cartel-affiliated individuals operate in America, coordinating labs, storage, and distribution. Traffickers obtain precursors legally or smuggled from abroad, converting them into fentanyl powder, counterfeit pills, or meth. Fentanyl is often cut with xylazine, creating unpredictable potency. Synthetic opioids now contribute to over 110,000 overdose deaths annually, making drug overdoses the fifth leading cause of death in the U.S. In some states, fentanyl accounts for more than 75 percent of deaths involving synthetic substances. Producing drugs domestically avoids border checks, reduces transport costs, and meets demand quickly. This shift toward domestic production puts it in our backyards and swift action is essential to end this epidemic. #BreakingNews #News #USNews #USA

Curiosity Corner

The Science Behind Alien Abductions About three percent of Americans believe they were abducted by aliens, and scientists study why these events feel real. One major cause is sleep paralysis, a state where the brain wakes up but the body remains frozen. People can see figures in the room, feel pressure on their chest, hear voices, or sense floating. Around eight percent of people experience this at least once. The brain tries to explain these intense sensations and often uses familiar images, which for many are aliens that match well known cultural patterns and long standing ideas shared across society. Memory also plays a major role. Human memory is flexible and can create vivid false memories under suggestion or stress. Experiments show that nearly one third of people can form detailed memories of events that never happened. Abduction stories often expand over time as the brain adds new layers that feel completely real. The brain itself can generate powerful sensations. The temporal lobe controls imagination, fear, and the feeling that someone is nearby. Disturbances from migraines, seizures, or certain magnetic fields can trigger the sense of a presence. In laboratory tests more than half of participants reported feeling a figure when this area was stimulated. Many people describe the same type of alien because culture gives everyone a shared template. Movies and television popularized the small gray figure with large eyes. When someone experiences sleep paralysis or a neurological event, the mind often fills in the unknown with this familiar image that has been reinforced repeatedly over decades and now feels almost universal. Together these scientific factors explain why alien abduction accounts feel real, why many witnesses report similar details, and why a small but notable share of Americans believe they were taken. #Aliens #America #Science #USA #ScienceNews #News

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