We Nominate Charlie Kirk to Sainthood
In Christian belief, a saint is a person who is recognized as having an exceptional degree of holiness, likeness, or closeness to God. However, the use of the term saint depends on the context and denomination.
Citizen Writers Fighting Censorship by Helping Americans Understand Issues Affecting the Republic.
In Christian belief, a saint is a person who is recognized as having an exceptional degree of holiness, likeness, or closeness to God. However, the use of the term saint depends on the context and denomination.
This week, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth did something extraordinary: he swung a wrecking ball into the bloated bureaucracy and reminded 800 generals that their job is not to manage feelings — it’s to win wars.
Charlie Kirk’s life mattered because Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield’s lives mattered. Likewise, Charles Finney and Lyman Beecher. Dwight Moody after that. Those ministers may not be household names, but Americans think and live differently because they lived.
Charlie Kirk was assassinated. He will be an American political and cultural icon for some time to come. He is an explicitly American Christian martyr for the ages.
We love to brag that the Constitution keeps us free from a national religion. But America does have a religion. And many in this country practice it. It’s not Christianity, Judaism, Islam, or Buddhism. It’s Satanism.
There is a huge difference between Conservative Republicans and the ever-increasingly violent left now executing a hostile takeover of the Democrat Party.
Pearl Harbor was a turning point. 9-11 was not. Trump2 most certainly was/is. Charlie Kirk might be.
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is everywhere in today’s headlines, often surrounded by both excitement and fear. Some imagine it as a revolution that will upend everything; others fear it as a runaway machine that will replace us.
By all accounts Charlie Kirk lived the porecpts of Matthew 5: 3-12. Everyone seems to put his mission in terms of politics. Certainly he was as MAGA as they come. And many said he could have been president someday.
Jimmy Kimmel was not fired because ABC was threatened with censorship. He was fired because his presence threatens to cost ABC a fortune.
I woke up looking for God. I always look for Him in the mornings. Sometimes, however, He’s hard to find. Sometimes He hides.
Forget iPads, TikTok, and whatever overpriced “educational STEM toy” parents are guilt-tripped into buying today. For three generations of American kids, nothing screamed freedom, danger, and backyard glory like the Daisy Red Ryder BB gun.
Charlie Kirk was not a politician, but he was political and was murdered because he preached the truths from the scriptures.
By now, most everyone would agree that we are in a dangerous political climate. By opening our minds and observing our surroundings, we can determine how we arrived at this point.
For decades, we’ve been told that masculinity is a problem to be solved, a threat to be managed, or a relic of the past to be discarded. But when you step back and look at the research—it paints a different picture.
We should not be surprised by the assassinations of Mr. Charlie Kirk or Ms. Iryna Zarutska, nor the prior attempted assassinations of President Trump or Justice Kavanaugh. For the last several years. It was inevitable.
There is a pervasive mood of shock and bewilderment besieging our nation. Just when citizens think nothing more disturbing can happen, we receive a gut-punch.
I joined social media in my thirties. Back then, social media was still a new, exciting frontier. Sort of like outer space except no zero-gravity toilets.
In April 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. was gunned down in Memphis. His death was not random. It was not the product of chance. It was the deliberate silencing of a man who dared to challenge power, expose lies, and stand firm for truth.
From a purely tactical standpoint, the September 11th attacks were devastating. But from a psychological warfare perspective, they were almost surgical in their symbolism. Striking America’s tallest towers and its military headquarters was not just about destruction—it was about message.