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Unity Minister urges firm action over upside-down Jalur Gemilang incident
Unity Minister urges firm action over upside-down Jalur Gemilang incident

Malay Mail

time3 days ago

  • Politics
  • Malay Mail

Unity Minister urges firm action over upside-down Jalur Gemilang incident

KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 9 — National Unity Minister Datuk Aaron Ago Dagang has urged the police to take firm action over the incident of flying the Jalur Gemilang upside down, stressing that it should serve as a lesson to all parties. In a post on X today, he said that the Jalur Gemilang is a symbol of country's sovereignty, unity, and dignity that belongs to all Malaysians regardless of race, religion, or background. 'Flying the flag correctly is every citizen's responsibility as a sign of respect and love for the country. I would like to remind everyone that displaying or flying the national flag improperly is an offence under the Emblems and Names (Prevention of Improper Use) Act 1963 (Act 414),' he said. — Bernama

Crypto Meets Patriotism: $25,000 Check Presented to Veteran Organization by $VETS Token and Dog the Bounty Hunter
Crypto Meets Patriotism: $25,000 Check Presented to Veteran Organization by $VETS Token and Dog the Bounty Hunter

Associated Press

time01-08-2025

  • Business
  • Associated Press

Crypto Meets Patriotism: $25,000 Check Presented to Veteran Organization by $VETS Token and Dog the Bounty Hunter

Crypto Meets Patriotism: $25,000 Check Presented to Veteran Organization by $VETS Token and Dog the Bounty Hunter Richmond, VA, United States, August 1, 2025 -- In a powerful show of support for America's heroes, the team behind the $VETS crypto token has donated $25,000 to Liberation Veteran Services (LVS), an organization dedicated to helping homeless and at-risk veterans regain their independence. The donation was personally presented by television icon and longtime veteran supporter Dog the Bounty Hunter during a special ceremony in Richmond, Virginia. This donation marks the largest single contribution from the $VETS community to date, and is part of a broader mission to merge the power of cryptocurrency with purpose-driven philanthropy. In total, $37,500 has already been donated to veteran-focused organizations through the $VETS token initiative. 'We created $VETS to show that crypto can do more than promise returns - it can deliver real-world change,' said a spokesperson for Vets For The Cause. 'We're proud to stand behind our veterans and give our holders the chance to invest with purpose.' Liberation Veteran Services provides emergency shelter, transitional housing, and critical services for veterans in need. Their work directly impacts lives - offering dignity, support, and a path forward for those who served. The $VETS token represents a new wave of digital assets designed for good. Built on community, transparency, and patriotism, it offers Americans an easy way to join the crypto world while giving back. With each transaction, a portion is earmarked for donations to verified veteran organizations. 'It's not every day you see crypto making this kind of impact,' said Dog the Bounty Hunter at the ceremony. 'This is what it's all about - supporting those who served.' To learn more or join the mission, visit VetsForTheCause About VetsForTheCause Vets For The Cause is a purpose-driven crypto project dedicated to supporting U.S. veterans through blockchain-based donations. Through the $VETS token, the platform enables users to invest in cryptocurrency while contributing directly to nonprofit organizations focused on veteran housing, recovery, and wellness. Built on values of patriotism, transparency, and service, VetsForTheCause bridges the gap between innovative finance and meaningful impact for America's heroes. Contact Info: Name: Gregg Hoffmann Email: Send Email Organization: Vets For The Cause Website: Disclaimer: This press release is for informational purposes only. Information verification has been done to the best of our ability. Still, due to the speculative nature of the blockchain (cryptocurrency, NFT, mining, etc.) sector as a whole, complete accuracy cannot always be guaranteed. You are advised to conduct your own research and exercise caution. Investments in these fields are inherently risky and should be approached with due diligence. Release ID: 89166243 Should you detect any errors, issues, or discrepancies with the content contained within this press release, or if you need assistance with a press release takedown, we kindly request that you inform us immediately by contacting [email protected] (it is important to note that this email is the authorized channel for such matters, sending multiple emails to multiple addresses does not necessarily help expedite your request). Our expert team will be available to promptly respond and take necessary steps within the next 8 hours to resolve any identified issues or guide you through the removal process. We value the trust placed in us by our readers and remain dedicated to providing accurate and reliable information.

Fox News' Joey Jones honors first responders in No. 1 book: ‘If life doesn't feel difficult, you're probably not living'
Fox News' Joey Jones honors first responders in No. 1 book: ‘If life doesn't feel difficult, you're probably not living'

New York Post

time14-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Post

Fox News' Joey Jones honors first responders in No. 1 book: ‘If life doesn't feel difficult, you're probably not living'

Fox News contributor Johnny Joey Jones' first book spent eight weeks on The New York Times Best Sellers list — yet he was shocked when his latest debuted at No. 1. 'It was quite a surprise for me,' the former Marine Corps bomb technician tells The Post. 'Unfortunately, there was a war that broke out the week we decided to release the book, and so my job trumped my promotion of the book. I had a lot of shows scheduled here at Fox and other interviews for the book and had to work on covering the war,' he explains. Advertisement 'You don't want to go from 'Israel dropped bombs today' or 'Iran fired rockets' to 'And check out my new book!'' So seeing 'the energy around the book' has been 'really reassuring and fulfilling.' 6 Joey Jones' new book debuted on The New York Times Best Sellers list at No. 1. Tamara Beckwith / NY Post Advertisement This weekend saw the tome atop the hardcover-nonfiction list for the third straight week. In 'Behind the Badge: Answering the Call to Serve on America's Homefront,' Jones talks to 'nine first responders who've all had an impact on my life' — most 'lifelong friends, some family, and all of them heroes to me' — to get a 'raw, unfiltered look into the duty they fulfill and the burden they carry,' as he writes. He had the idea for it about as soon as he turned in his first book, 2023's 'Unbroken Bonds of Battle: A Modern Warriors Book of Heroism, Patriotism, and Friendship.' That one focused on veterans. Yes, Joey Jones has written two books centered on other people — when his own story could easily fill hundreds of pages. Advertisement 6 Jones (second from right) stands next to Vince Vargas (right), an Army veteran, actor, entrepreneur and former Border Patrol agent who's featured in 'Behind the Badge.' Courtesy of Johnny Joey Jones Jones will celebrate his 15th Alive Day next month. Working as a Marine bomb tech in Safar Bazaar, Afghanistan, Aug. 6, 2010, he stepped on an improvised explosive device the Taliban left. It killed his buddy Cpl. Daniel Greer. Jones, just 24 and a new father, lost both his legs. He wears prosthetics. Advertisement 'If life doesn't feel difficult, you're probably not living,' he says. 'We all have something. I don't know what it's like to have cancer or at least to know it,' he continues. 'People lose their business, they lose their marriage, they lose a child. These things feel insurmountable, yet people do those things, and they continue on with their life, and they rebuild their life, and they find happiness again. So it's kind of hard for me to sit around and say, 'Well, I shouldn't or I can't,' because I see people do it every day. My inspiration are the people in this country that I fought to protect because I just know it's not easy, and they do it anyway. Sure, yeah, the legs are uncomfortable and at times painful, and it's frustrating when you've worked all day, and all your friends are going out for a drink, but, hey, I have to take time off my legs so I can't go. But you learn to enjoy the time. You do have appreciate it a little bit more and just be happy that for most of the day you're up on two legs walking.' Being on those two legs, with all its challenges, is a decision — Jones could have stayed in a wheelchair. 'I say this with a little bit of reservation because there are those that don't have the choice of a normal chair and may not agree or understand what I'm about to say, but I made the choice early on that when I walked into a room, I wanted to look people in the eye, if that was an option, and that's how I've chose to live my life. There are people that say, 'We forgot that you don't have legs.' And, well, that's kind of the point,' he says. 'So all the way from wearing suit pants now instead of shorts to trying to overcome physical obstacles when they're put in front of me without complaining, if I don't want to be defined by my legs,' then 'I can't use them as an excuse every time I'm asked to do something I don't like to do. Or when a wheelchair might be easier.' 6 Joey Jones discusses his new book — and much else — with The Post's Kelly Jane Torrance. Tamara Beckwith / NY Post A decade and a half after the accident that changed his life, it's truly a milestone time for Jones, who lives with his wife and two kids on a Georgia farm but spends a lot of time in New York City. Advertisement And pivoting from promoting his book wasn't the only change in plans he's had to make. When Donald Trump named 'Fox & Friends' weekend co-host and ex-Army National Guard officer Pete Hegseth his defense-secretary nominee, Jones had to drop everything to stand in for him at the last minute. It must have been quite the moment. Jones chuckles. 'I was more so bummed because I had to miss out on the hunting trip I had planned all year. And I ended up having to miss out on all my hunting trips to fill in for Pete. But it was an honor to do it,' he says. 'I was hosting a gala for Tunnel to Towers a few years ago, and some of the executives from Fox were there, and I made the joke that I plan to make, which is that I've made a career out of filling in for Pete Hegseth. And then this year, that came to fruition in a larger sense than I realized.' Advertisement 6 Jones (right) jokes he's made a career filling in for Pete Hegseth (left) — including right after President Trump named Hegseth defense secretary. Fox News The 'good friends' still talk. 'We don't talk about work because everybody, I'm sure, wants to talk to him about work,' Jones says. 'I'll send him a meme or something and try to remind him that he's still one of us.' Jones is an avid hunter who did a series on the subject for Fox Nation. 'For me, the most fun way to hunt is to hunt with your friends. And a lot of big-game hunting is about stealth. So you've got to be quiet. You can't talk. So the majority of hunting I do is bird hunting, like duck hunting. You can pile as many guys in there as you want to, and until you see ducks, you don't have to be quiet,' he says. Advertisement 'So it's social, and that's what I like. And with my visibility, both with Fox News and my injury, I get offered a lot of fun hunts, and it's a way to share that with the guys that have done way more than me that don't have the same peacock personality.' 6 Jones fit right in at the 2023 Fox Nation Patriot Awards at Nashville's Grand Ole Opry. Getty Images And he knows his stuff. 'Those ducks up in Canada — before they migrate south, they are fluffy and fat, and they don't fly as much,' he said when this writer mentioned being from Alberta. 'If you're a big duck hunter, on your bucket list is an early-season Canada hunt. A mallard duck will be twice the size in Canada at the beginning of the season than it will be in Arkansas or Texas at the end of season.' Advertisement Even so, he says, 'if we go kill a dozen ducks, we're going to eat eight to 10 of them.' He's gone hunting with some of the people profiled in 'Behind the Badge'; the book has a picture of game warden Jeremy Judd carrying him on one trip. Judd was called into a 2011 search team to find a suicidal police officer — and ended up being the one to shoot him when he pointed his gun at the team and refused to drop it. Such fatalities can haunt first responders for years. 6 Jeremy Judd, a game warden, carries Jones on his back during a duck-hunting trip. Courtesy of Johnny Joey Jones Jones knew the subjects and their stories before writing the book but still learned something important in the process. 'In this country, we have Memorial Day and Veterans Day,' he says. 'There are several holidays throughout the year oriented towards either war or military service, and in that has been this 20-year growth where the country has accepted that veterans have mental health resulting from their time in service. Society has accepted their own culpability in it. Hey, we ask you to go to war for us, and that hurt you that way, and we have a responsibility to help you get better. We have everything from veterans' courts and local municipalities to the Department of Veterans Affairs, so from a local level to the national level to a corporate level — Applebee's would give me a free meal on Veterans Day — there's this acknowledgment and call to action for veterans' mental health. 'Then you look at first responders. And name an organization that's nationally active, name a department of the government that works to support their mental health. None of that exists. It's still very much in the precinct, in the fire hall, on the SWAT team, at the Border Patrol outpost. It's very much just peer to peer.' Jones hopes his book can help change that. 'We expect the same level of perfection from them, and they're all governed by the Constitution, so there is a federal interest in their mental health,' he says.

Trumps drop 'Made in the USA' label for new phone and a debate ensues: How to define 'made'?
Trumps drop 'Made in the USA' label for new phone and a debate ensues: How to define 'made'?

Washington Post

time26-06-2025

  • Business
  • Washington Post

Trumps drop 'Made in the USA' label for new phone and a debate ensues: How to define 'made'?

NEW YORK — When the Trump family unveiled a new phone before a giant American flag at its headquarters earlier this month, the pitch was simple and succinct, packed with pure patriotism: 'Made in the U.S.A.' The Trumps are apparently having second thoughts. How about 'proudly American'? Those are the two words that have replaced the 'Made in the USA' pitch that just a few days ago appeared on the website where customers can pre-order the so-called T-1 gold-toned phones with an American flag etched on the back. Elsewhere on the site, other vague terms are now being used, describing the $499 phone as boasting an 'American-Proud Design' and 'brought to life right here in the U.S.A.'

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