Cleburne County Republican Women

Cleburne County Republican Women We are a group of God fearing, freedom loving women.

06/07/2026
06/07/2026
06/07/2026

I would like to revise my statements about the RPA convention.
I was tired and frustrated.
It was a very long day. I would like to say thank you to everyone who gave their support and time to come. This is a democratic process and we need to appreciate that. We need to follow the rules and do what’s best for our state.
It’s always great to see friends from across the state. Hopefully, we are making a difference and we need all conservative voices involved. I hope that my first comments didn’t sway anyone from getting involved.
God Bless America and God bless Arkansas!!

06/07/2026
06/07/2026
Today the RPA had its annual summer convention in Little Rock. It was conducted as normal. Not letting “we the people “ ...
06/07/2026

Today the RPA had its annual summer convention in Little Rock. It was conducted as normal. Not letting “we the people “ speak. They wouldn’t allow putting New Business on the agenda. What do they have to hide by not allowing new business to be heard. It can always be voted out.
They also didn’t seat the counties in alphabetical order or by districts. Seemed to be part of a bigger plan!
We did get to vote on one resolution that made it so that you had to be a registered republican to run as a republican on the ballot. That actually seemed like a No Brainer, but at least it was voted on an passed.
Overall it was a long day of hardly any business getting done. I hope the November convention is more organized and runs smoother.

06/06/2026

She looked at the dog like he was a threat.
He was a German Shepherd — big, scarred, battle-worn. He had a slight limp when he walked down the aisle and took his place beside his handler. The woman in the next row leaned over and said it loudly enough for everyone to hear:
"Why is that animal even on this plane?"
The handler — a quiet man in his late thirties with calloused hands and tired eyes — didn't raise his voice. He just looked at her and said:
"Ma'am, his name is Duke. And he's the reason I'm still here to sit next to you."
Duke spent six years as a Military Working Dog deployed with special operations forces. He wasn't trained to be friendly. He was trained to walk into the most dangerous places on earth so that the men beside him didn't have to walk in blind.
He found explosives buried in roads before boots ever touched that ground.
He tracked through mountain passes in the dark.
He was wounded in the field — not once, but twice — and both times, he didn't stop working until his handler was safe.
That scar along his shoulder? Shrapnel from a blast that would have killed three men if Duke hadn't detected the device first and alerted his team to stop.
The limp the woman was staring at? That came from an ambush. Duke threw himself into the line of chaos and confusion to protect the men he'd trained alongside every single day. Because of what he did in those minutes, a young Marine made it home to his family.
Duke doesn't know he's a hero.
He just knows his job: find the danger, protect the team, keep moving.
He doesn't ask for recognition. He doesn't need applause. He sat quietly in that airplane aisle, gray around the muzzle now, retired from a life most humans couldn't survive a single day of.
The woman said nothing more.
But the veteran in the seat behind her leaned forward quietly, reached out his hand, and rested it gently on Duke's head.
"Thank you for your service, buddy."
Duke's tail moved — just once, slowly.
That was enough.

06/06/2026

For decades, June has been associated with one cultural movement.

Now, a different message is beginning to emerge.

It started in Tennessee.

On April 9, Governor Bill Lee signed a joint resolution officially designating June 2026 as "Nuclear Family Month." The measure passed with strong support in both chambers of the state legislature and defines the nuclear family as a husband, wife, and their biological, adopted, or foster children. The resolution also describes the family as a foundational institution that has shaped society throughout history.

Then something unexpected happened.

Other states followed.

Indiana Governor Mike Braun issued a proclamation recognizing June as Nuclear Family Month. Arkansas Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders declared June "Fidelity Month." Alabama has also recognized "Strong Families Month" in recent years.

Four states. Four governors. One common theme.

Family matters.

Supporters say these declarations are not intended as attacks on anyone. Instead, they see them as affirmations of the importance of strong families, faithful marriages, committed parenting, and stable homes in a culture often marked by division and uncertainty.

Tennessee Senator Marsha Blackburn praised the effort, saying, "The nuclear family is under attack, and the Volunteer State is fighting back."

Regardless of where people stand politically, the conversation has struck a nerve because it touches something deeply personal.

Every person has a family story.

Some come from strong homes. Others carry wounds from broken relationships, absent parents, or painful childhood experiences. Yet across generations, people continue searching for belonging, stability, love, and purpose.

Perhaps that is why discussions about family resonate so deeply.

The family was never merely a political issue. Long before governments existed, families were raising children, passing down values, building communities, and shaping future generations.

For Christians, the significance goes even deeper.

Scripture presents the family as part of God's design for human flourishing:

"Therefore a man shall leave his father and his mother and hold fast to his wife, and they shall become one flesh." (Genesis 2:24)

Strong families do not happen by accident. They are built through sacrifice, forgiveness, commitment, prayer, and love that endures through difficult seasons.

In a world constantly chasing what is new, these governors are pointing back to something ancient.

Not because it is trendy.

Because they believe it still matters.

Whether one agrees with these proclamations or not, they have reignited an important national conversation about marriage, parenting, faith, and the role families play in shaping the future.

And perhaps that conversation is long overdue.

❤️ Strong families build strong communities.
🙏 Strong communities help shape strong nations.
📖 And God's design for family remains as relevant today as ever.

What do you think? Should more states recognize a month dedicated to strengthening families and encouraging marriage, parenting, and faith-centered homes?

06/05/2026

I got over 10 reactions on one of my posts last week! Thanks everyone for your support! 🎉

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