The Founders Warned Us: How America’s Founding Fathers Feared Political Parties
This is part 2 of a 4-part series on The Founders and their prescient fears and warnings on the dangers of Political Parties.
Citizen Writers Fighting Censorship by Helping Americans Understand Issues Affecting the Republic.
This is part 2 of a 4-part series on The Founders and their prescient fears and warnings on the dangers of Political Parties.
Red China is run by pretty clever men who figured out a way to make the USA dependent on them. But in trying to chain the U.S. economy to them, the communists also chained themselves to the U.S. economy.
The U.S. government’s computer systems are rapidly decaying relics — a patchwork of incompatible systems, outdated computing languages, and decades-old hardware.
When Values, Ethics And Morals Get Contorted By Aberrant Belief Systems And Violations Of Law, The Chaos Is Predictable
This is part 1 of a 4-part series on The Founders and their prescient fears and warnings on the dangers of Political Parties.
If you’ve studied history or lived it, you should be able to add the last name and put context into these lines:
“From my cold dead hands….” Heston
“Et tu Brute.” William
Harvard University founded in 1636 in Cambridge, Massachusetts believes itself to be the Cullinan Diamond of American academia. What was once a theological seminary to train Puritan ministers for the Massachusetts Bay Colony, has been a willing hostage of the Left for the last three generations.
The phrase “My Body, My Choice” sounds empowering. It sounds liberating. But beneath the surface, it’s nothing more than a clever disguise for a brutal lie.
Fifty years ago today, I was scrambling aboard a U.S. Marine CH-53 Sea Stallion heavy helicopter along with some 70 or so other terrified people as we were evacuated from a place called Saigon as it fell to invading Communist North Vietnamese troops.
Howard Zinn wasn’t a historian. He was a bitter activist with a word processor and a grudge against Western Civilization.
Justice Robert Jackson wrote, “We are not final because we are infallible, but we are infallible only because we are final.”
In a world where opinions are currency and every smartphone is a pulpit, America suffers not from a lack of intelligence — but from an overabundance of confidence untethered to competence.
A Generational Decline Of American Education
Once upon a time—say, about four years ago—if you so much as breathed the phrase “lab leak” or dared question the holiness of Dr. Fauci’s ever-changing gospel, you’d be digitally drawn and quartered by Big Tech. YouTube would demonetize you faster than a fact-checker could say “misinformation,” and Facebook’s Ministry of Truth would slap a …
An old friend of mine indicated he intended to attend a protest against President Trump, for reasons summed up in an article by Yale Professor David Brooks posted in the New York Times calling for a civil uprising.
My Twitter — I refuse to call it 𝕏 — feed was full of chortling posts claiming that the Vatican denied Vice President J D Vance a meeting with Pope Francis, sending the Vatican’s second-ranking official instead, in what the left loudly proclaimed was a deliberate snub to Mr Vance. That’s not quite what it …
Senator Chris Van Hollen, D-MS 13, went to El Salvador to visit a deported violent criminal rather than meet with the mother of a Maryland woman slain by an illegal alien.
There was a time when Americans agreed—at least in principle—that the government should not promote or establish an official religion.
Officers cannot pick and choose the superiors they follow. Either execute to the best of your ability or get out.
We The People can take heart that, in both percentage and in actually numbers, there are far fewer Americans promoting America’s destruction in 2025. Regardless the ratio of Useful Idiots to Enemies Of The People, every single American who is screaming in the streets is promoting America’s demise. Period.