Slow Anger | Audio Reading | Our Daily Bread Devotional | April 12, 2026
Helping you connect with God. Every day. Every way.
Citizen Writers Fighting Censorship by Helping Americans Understand Issues Affecting the Republic.
Helping you connect with God. Every day. Every way.
In the quest to emulate godly attributes, men often find themselves at a crossroads: to transform chaos into order or to unleash chaos upon order. This dichotomy, inspired by the insights of scholar Michael Heiser but infused with my own perspective, delves into the essence of human nature and the paths we choose.
There was no one more disappointed than I was when The Philadelphia Inquirer and then-Philadelphia District Attorney Seth Williams started going after the Archdiocese of Philadelphia for covering up sexual abuses by Catholic priests, or the horrible statistics when the John Jay Report, The Nature and Scope of Sexual Abuse of Minors by Catholic Priests …
President Donald Trump said Iran is ‘doing a very poor job’ of allowing oil to flow through the Strait of Hormuz following the implementation of a two-week ceasefire.
The world watched fascinated as America recovered two pilots isolated behind enemy lines in Iran. Television screens were filled with pundits or veterans discussing everything from SERE* school to the impact of the successful recovery of both pilots on ceasefire negotiations. I was one of those pundits who helped fill the airwaves, conducting over 20 interviews across multiple networks, and being the first guest to talk about the recovery on Fox News, within minutes of the Pentagon confirming it.
Me to Grok: Draw a cartoon of Trump seated on Peacock Throne. Make him smile as wide as Iran.
Of course President Donald John Trump is smiling. America won. He unleashed our military to topple the Death-to-America regime that has ruled Iran like a 7th century theocracy and terrorized the world for 47 years.
Seth Harp’s The Fort Bragg Cartel is built around a real, unsettling case that anchors the entire narrative: the December 2020 deaths of two soldiers at Fort Bragg—Master Sgt. William “Billy” Lavigne, a Delta Force operator, and Chief Warrant Officer Timothy Dumas, a logistics (quartermaster) officer tied to Special Forces units. Both were found shot in a remote training area. The pairing alone raises eyebrows inside the military: one man from the most elite operational tier, the other from the supply and accountability side of the house. Those lanes don’t normally intersect socially, much less end together in a homicide scene.
The Artemis II astronauts have exited the Orion capsule and touched down on the recovery ship, the USS John P. Murtha, where they waved to cameras and appeared to be in good spirits.
March Madness is done. Monday night, the Michigan Wolverines held off the UConn Huskies for the NCAA basketball title, and college free agency, otherwise known as “The Transfer Portal,” is now open and active.
My first concept of robots came from watching The Jetsons before school in my underpants. My boyhood morning routine consisted of sitting on the sofa in my tighty-whities, eating Cap’n Crunch, watching television, and listening to my mother say, “Get those underpants off my couch, Mister!”
We are far from the day when the most trusted man in media, Walter Cronkite told us, “That’s the way it is,” and we believed him.
Spacecraft structural analyst Dylan Dickstein analyzes Artemis II’s return to Earth after a historic trip around the moon on ‘Fox News @ Night.’
There are Olympic stories about grit, discipline, and the triumph of the human spirit—and then there’s the one about Matthew Emmons, whose rifle got mysteriously vandalized right before the biggest competition of his life. Not misplaced. Not dropped. Not “oops, I leaned it against the rack wrong.” We’re talking deliberate, tool-in-hand, someone-wanted-this-gun-dead sabotage at the U.S. Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs. In a sport where competitors track wind shifts measured in whispers and bullet holes measured in decimals, somebody decided to go full blunt-force caveman on precision equipment. And just like that, Olympic-level marksmanship briefly turned into a low-budget whodunit.
Some weekends are about business. Some weekends are about golf. And then there are weekends where you have to take a mulligan on the course itself, not because of a bad swing, but because matters of utmost national importance demand your full focus. Folks, this was one of those weekends.
ProCap Financial CEO Anthony Pompliano discusses agentic research aimed at managing finances on ‘The Claman Countdown.’
In a time of deepening confusion and hostility toward the faith, the St, Louis de Montfort Academy’s mission stands more urgent than ever.
The latest Democrat talking point is that Trump is losing support from the media influencers who got him elected president. The trouble is, they didn’t get him elected because he won the presidency without most of them in 2016.
In 1941, the Soviet Union was being dismantled at industrial speed. Entire armies vanished. Cities fell. Aircraft factories were evacuated east while German armor drove forward. There was no time for elegance. The Red Army needed pilots, aircraft, and pressure on the enemy—immediately. So they did something profoundly unromantic and brutally practical: they took civilians who could fly and turned them into combat airmen.
President Donald Trump says the U.S. military is biding its time as Iran tests the boundaries of the ongoing two-week ceasefire.
Spring has sprung, the showers have begun, and my attitude is glum. It’s tax time. I’ve procrastinated for over three months, but April 15 is approaching, and I’m in a foul mood.