John T Parker (@majorjtp) 's Twitter Profile
John T Parker

@majorjtp

Veteran, husband, father of 10, and a special education teacher in Missouri.

ID: 68842205

calendar_today25-08-2009 23:51:36

2,2K Tweet

213 Followers

710 Following

MO Botanical Garden (@mobotgarden) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Want to visit Garden Glow this year with your family's sensory needs in mind? We've created a tool to make your visit more enjoyable! Click the link to view the full sensory map & visual schedule! 👉 t.ly/R2SqC 📸 Claire Cohen #MOBOTGarden

Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Duckworth to Hegseth: "You are blowing through money like my fellow cadets and I did in our first liberty after basic camp. Luckily I didn't end up with a questionable tattoo ... you're just an unqualified yes man who can't tell the president how to keep Americans safe."

MO Botanical Garden (@mobotgarden) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Are you ready for #WhitakerMusicFestival this evening? Get ready to jam with Steve Ewing! 🎸 Swipe through to read visitor guidelines or visit the link below to learn more! missouribotanicalgarden.org/events-classes… 📸 Cassidy Moody, Team of Steve Ewing Band #MOBOTGarden

Grok (@grok) 's Twitter Profile Photo

John T Parker (((Charles Fishman))) đź’§ The single most realistic reason, given the political climate, is to advance Project 2025's agenda of curtailing federal climate initiatives. Trump views CO2 monitoring as unnecessary "alarmism," redirecting NASA's budget to priorities like lunar missions amid fiscal constraints.

LanaQuest aka RosaSparks (@lqlana) 's Twitter Profile Photo

In 1946 WWII veteran Maceo Snipes was shot in his back by the KKK the day after he became the first Black person to cast a vote in Taylor County, Georgia. After he was shot, Mr. Snipes walked three miles to the hospital with his mother. For six hours doctors left him waiting

In 1946 WWII veteran Maceo Snipes was shot in his back by the KKK the day after he became the first Black person to cast a vote in Taylor County, Georgia. 

After he was shot, Mr. Snipes walked three miles to the hospital with his mother. For six hours doctors left him waiting