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1776 Patriot

The Night the Democratic Party Turned Its Back on Americans June 2019 was a turning point. During a Democratic primary debate, every candidate raised their hand when asked if their health care plan would cover undocumented immigrants. Many looked to see if others raised their hands first before agreeing. This meant taxpayer-funded care for 11 million people living illegally in the United States. Meanwhile, over 550,000 Americans were homeless that year, including 37,000 veterans, and around 28 million Americans lacked health insurance. They watched undocumented immigrants walk into warm hotel rooms paid for by taxpayers while they slept in the cold outside. In California, Democratic leaders borrowed 3.44 billion dollars from the general fund to cover a Medi Cal gap. The program now spends 8.5 billion dollars a year on undocumented immigrants, who make up roughly 20 percent of 1.7 million full scope Medi Cal enrollees. Yet 58% of Californians oppose taxpayer-funded Medi Cal for undocumented immigrants. Every person counted also boosts California’s population, increasing congressional power and political influence nationwide. Americans are reacting. The fastest growing states are Florida, Texas, and Georgia. The fastest shrinking are New York, California, and Illinois. From 2020 to 2024, Democrats lost 2.1 million registered voters while Republicans gained 2.4 million. Even in blue states, the Democratic registration edge fell from 11 points to six points. The national debt exceeds 33 trillion dollars, meaning every American carries over 100,000 dollars of debt. Analysts warn Social Security and Medicare could face insolvency by 2033. Veterans and homeless citizens can reach the VA at 1-800-827-1000, visit va.gov, or call the National Homeless Shelter Hotline at 1-800-799-6599. Americans saw the party prioritize noncitizens over citizens, veterans, and hardworking families. We cannot help others unless we help ourselves first. #HealthCare #America #USA #News

1776 Patriot

America’s Largest Cash Heist: The Dunbar Depot Robbery The Dunbar Depot robbery in Los Angeles in 1997 remains the largest cash theft in the United States. A safety inspector at the armored facility spent months studying camera gaps, door access points, employee routines, and the placement of bundled currency. His role allowed unrestricted movement through loading corridors and vault staging areas, giving him a clear understanding of when the depot held the most cash with the fewest workers present. On a Saturday night the crew used duplicate keys to enter the building and moved through a corridor the leader knew would not be captured on video. They reached the loading zone where millions in currency waited for early morning distribution. The thieves restrained employees and seized stacks of high denomination notes arranged for upcoming shipments. They filled large bags with 18 million dollars and exited without triggering alarms or leaving meaningful forensic evidence. A rented truck nearby served as the transport vehicle. The money was divided among storage units, safe houses, and small businesses used to launder portions of the stolen cash. Investigators struggled because the entry showed no forced damage and the timing indicated deep internal knowledge. The clean scene created one of the most difficult financial crime cases in the country, and federal agents later stated they believed additional accomplices never surfaced. The breakthrough came when an accomplice attempted to use a group of bills still in a sequence traceable to the depot inventory. Federal investigators followed the trail and identified multiple conspirators. Arrests followed as associates made large purchases or moved cash in unusual patterns. The organizer received a 24 year sentence and several accomplices received 7 to 10 year terms. Authorities recovered only 5 million dollars, leaving 13 million dollars missing, and the crime remains America’s largest heist. #History #USHistory #USA

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

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

America's Worst School Tragedy: The Event that Stunned A Nation

On May 18, 1927, Bath Township, Michigan, became the site of one of the worst school massacres in history. The man responsible was Andrew Kehoe, a fifty-five-year-old farmer, electrician, and school board treasurer. Known for his mechanical skill and stern temperament, Kehoe was respected publicly but feared privately for his temper and control. Years of financial struggle and anger over rising taxes used to fund the new Bath Consolidated School pushed him over the edge. When foreclosure loomed over his farm, his bitterness turned into a detailed plan for revenge against his own community. Over several months, Kehoe began purchasing explosives under the pretense of clearing land. He bought dynamite from local hardware stores and pyrotol, a World War I surplus explosive, from a government outlet that sold it cheaply to farmers. Using his school access, he planted hundreds of pounds of dynamite and pyrotol beneath floors and in the basement, wiring them to clocks, batteries, and detonators to explode during classes. At home, Kehoe set another trap. He wired his barn and house with explosives, killed his wife, and set the property on fire. As neighbors ran to help, the first blast tore through the Bath Consolidated School at 8:45 a.m. The north wing disintegrated in a roar heard for miles. Parents raced toward the school, shouting their children’s names through smoke and debris. While rescuers searched for survivors, Kehoe drove up in a truck loaded with dynamite, gasoline, and scrap metal. He called the superintendent over, then detonated it, killing himself, the superintendent, and several others. In the ruins, investigators found another three hundred pounds of unexploded dynamite wired beneath the school’s south wing. In total, thirty-eight children and six adults died, and more than fifty were injured. The Bath School disaster remains one of the deadliest school attacks in American history. #History #USHistory #America #USA #HistoryNerd #Michigan

America's Worst School Tragedy: The Event that Stunned A NationAmerica's Worst School Tragedy: The Event that Stunned A NationAmerica's Worst School Tragedy: The Event that Stunned A NationAmerica's Worst School Tragedy: The Event that Stunned A NationAmerica's Worst School Tragedy: The Event that Stunned A Nation
1776 Patriot

Miracle Over Missouri: George Lamson, Sole Survivor of TWA Flight 128, 1967 On November 20, 1967, TWA Flight 128, a domestic passenger flight in the United States, collided midair with a United Airlines aircraft over Missouri at approximately 11,000 feet. The collision destroyed both planes, killing all 7 crew members and 93 passengers aboard TWA Flight 128 and all 58 people aboard the other plane. George Lamson, a passenger from Missouri, survived, making him the sole survivor of 151 fatalities from the two aircraft. Lamson was seated near the rear of the plane. Investigators concluded that structural debris formed a partial protective space around him, absorbing much of the impact energy. He sustained multiple fractures, including a broken leg, several broken ribs, and a crushed pelvis, as well as internal contusions and significant blood loss. His vital organs avoided fatal trauma, a rare outcome in high energy midair collisions. Rescue crews located him within 20 minutes. Emergency responders stabilized him, controlled hemorrhage and shock, and transported him to a regional hospital. Surgeons performed orthopedic stabilization, blood transfusions, and intensive monitoring. Lamson spent 6 weeks hospitalized and underwent 3 major surgeries. Recovery included months of physical therapy to restore mobility and strength. Later in life, Lamson lived a relatively private life in Missouri. He reportedly returned to work in civil service and rarely spoke publicly about the crash, though he occasionally participated in interviews and safety studies. His survival, one of the rarest in American aviation history, demonstrates how seat location, debris orientation, rapid rescue, and sheer chance aligned perfectly. Analysts estimate that in similar midair collisions, the chance of a single passenger surviving is less than 1 percent, underscoring the extreme improbability of sole survival in catastrophic crashes. #PlaneCrash #Aviation #America #USA #History #Survivor

1776 Patriot

Finding an Assassin: The Manhunt for John Wilkes Booth

On the night of April 14, 1865, after assassinating President Abraham Lincoln at Ford’s Theatre, John Wilkes Booth vanished into the darkness of Washington. He crossed the Navy Yard Bridge into Maryland, his leg broke from the leap to the stage. Within hours, Secretary of War Edwin Stanton launched one of the largest manhunts in U.S. history. Telegraphs carried his description to surrounding states and mounted patrols sealed the capital. Rewards of $100,000 prompted tips, rumors, and informants. For days, Union forces pursued Booth and his accomplice David Herold across Maryland and Virginia. Cavalry swept roads, infantry scoured forests, and scouts tracked footprints through barns, and swamps. Detectives questioned locals, tavern keepers, and ferrymen, compiling leads that shifted squads across counties. At Surratt’s Tavern, Booth and Herold collected a carbine (gun), whiskey, and field glasses (portable telescopes for observing distant roads), left earlier, evidence later used against Mary Surratt. Farther south, they bartered for food and supplies, which locals soon reported. At Dr. Samuel Mudd’s home, Booth’s broken leg was set, as patrols pressed closer. The chase became a deadly game of anticipation. False sightings and misdirections tested Union coordination, but telegraph lines kept updates flowing. Cavalry patrolled roads, foot soldiers scoured farms, and units redeployed with every lead. Booth’s options dwindled as the net tightened, forcing him deeper into Virginia. The pursuit ended on April 26 at Richard Garrett’s farm near Port Royal. Lieutenant Edward Doherty’s cavalry surrounded the barn. Herold surrendered, but Booth refused, declaring he would never be taken alive. Soldiers torched the structure. Booth came to the door, raised his gun, and was struck in the neck by a bullet fired by Sergeant Corbett. He lingered for five hours before dying at dawn. The twelve-day manhunt was over. #USHistory #History #USA #America #Virginia #AmericanHistory

Finding an Assassin: The Manhunt for John Wilkes BoothFinding an Assassin: The Manhunt for John Wilkes BoothFinding an Assassin: The Manhunt for John Wilkes BoothFinding an Assassin: The Manhunt for John Wilkes Booth
Abraham Lincoln

Fellow citizens of the NewsBreak community, I am honored to join you in discourse and reflection. My aim is simple yet solemn: to examine the matters of our day through the steady lens of history. The events that stir debate, the policies that divide, and the choices that shape our nation are best understood when placed upon the firm foundation of precedent and principle. By drawing lessons from the past, we may better navigate the trials of the present and guide the Republic toward a future of justice and unity. I pledge to approach each issue with candor, reason, and devotion to the truth, seeking neither favor nor applause, but only the betterment of our common cause. Together, let us consider not only what is, but what ought to be, remembering that the work of a free people is never finished, and that wisdom is the surest safeguard of liberty. #ReflectingOnThePast #History #USA #Lincoln #HonorThePast #USAHistory

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