‘HOTTER THAN THE NY KNICKS’: Steve Moore praises US economy
Economist Steve Moore discusses the latest May jobs report, U.S. economic strength and the impact of President Donald Trump’s pro-business policies on ‘Maria Bartiromo’s Wall Street.’
Citizen Writers Fighting Censorship by Helping Americans Understand Issues Affecting the Republic.
Economist Steve Moore discusses the latest May jobs report, U.S. economic strength and the impact of President Donald Trump’s pro-business policies on ‘Maria Bartiromo’s Wall Street.’
American self-governance rests on one indispensable foundation: that elections reflect the will of eligible citizens, counted accurately, administered transparently. Republicans and election integrity advocates argue that this foundation has been progressively undermined — not necessarily by a single grand conspiracy, but by a systemic pattern of loosened safeguards, dirty voter rolls, exploitable mail-ballot systems, and aggressive Democrat opposition to the audits and reforms that would resolve public doubt once and for all.
Mom was middle-aged. Maybe early fifties. Her daughter was maybe 18. You could tell it was her daughter because of the way she kept rolling her eyes whenever the middle-aged woman opened her mouth.
I’ve been to quite a few Donald Trump rallies as he’s campaigned for president. Every one was huge, with tens of thousands of people in attendance. In every case, there were lines of people so long, that the venues couldn’t hold all those that wanted to be there. The rallies were enormous because the majority of Americans are desperate for some good news, an optimistic message, a little hope for a return to the good, old fashioned American dream. And “Make America Great Again,” with an emphasis on rebuilding the foundations of our country’s glory days, resonated with so many.
Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins discusses the USDA confirming a second New World screwworm case in Texas cattle and the Trump administration’s crackdown on alleged food stamp fraud on ‘The Big Weekend Show.’
For decades, hunters and fishermen have quietly funded conservation while everyone else took credit. In Oregon alone, sportsmen contribute nearly a billion dollars annually to the economy and generate tens of millions more through Pittman-Robertson excise taxes that fund wildlife habitat, hunter education, and conservation programs. Yet lawmakers continue treating these same people as a problem rather than partners. Perhaps Oregon should proceed and learn the lesson firsthand. Numbers don’t care about politics. When the funding shrinks, the jobs disappear, and conservation budgets start hurting, the state may discover who was paying the bills all along.
AARP CEO Myechia Minter-Jordan explains how the aging population is redefining market dynamics, the economy and more on ‘The Claman Countdown.’
December 6, 1944. Somewhere in Germany. Colonel Leander L. Doan sat down and wrote a letter home. He spoke casually of fighting Panzer Lehr and the Adolf Hitler SS Panzer Division, being wounded, surrounded for 36 hours, and watching the men beside him die. Yet there was no bravado, only the quiet matter-of-fact tone of a combat commander doing his duty. What makes the letter extraordinary is that it was written just ten days before the Battle of the Bulge erupted. Doan had survived Normandy, the breakout across France, and the Siegfried Line, but neither he nor his family knew that some of the war’s hardest fighting still lay ahead. Preserved for more than eighty years, this remarkable letter offers a rare glimpse into the mind of a future Major General standing between two of the most consequential campaigns of World War II.
Don Surber’s take on this week’s news items are more informative than the actual news items. Enjoy!
The“Get Real” pundits discuss the ever increasing depravity amongst Democrat candidates. This election year there are so many we cannot name them all in this one podcast. Just a few current examples: Graham Pratner running for US Senate in Maine is a Nazi sympathizer with sexual perversions.
Fox News’ Lucas Tomlinson joins ‘Varney & Co.’ to discuss warnings from educators about a growing discipline crisis in schools, as new data shows rising threats and violence against teachers since the COVID-19 pandemic.
If you think it’s hot this summer, think again. For some, the afterlife will be the hottest spot in the universe, whether they’re in Sheol, Gehenna, or Hades.
I remember when social media used to be a bunch of friends sharing stuff. And that was all.
Back then, social media was mostly a youngish person activity. Older folks thought we whippersnappers with our newfangled phones were ridiculous for engaging in something that “wasn’t even real.” They told us Facebook wasn’t “true socialization.” They told us to “get a life.”
We just laughed and went back to posting pictures of our food.
This lesson is not written to tell anyone how to vote.
It is written to remind Christians that our first loyalty is not to a political party, a social movement, a news network, a favorite politician, or a cultural tribe.
Architecture of a Godly Marriage–Will your marriage be a source of incredible joy, or a source of intolerable pain? In this eye-opening session of Dr. John Barnett’s Proverbs masterclass, we explore God’s unvarnished truth about the reality of marriage. God promises that if we follow His design, marriage is a profound blessing—but if we ignore His wisdom, we can easily destroy the joy in our homes.
Most Americans would laugh at the idea of worshipping a golden calf. Then they spend forty years organizing their lives around debt, career advancement, asset accumulation, and the approval of “the economy.” Solomon warned that the borrower becomes servant to the lender. Jesus warned that no one can serve both God and Mammon. The old gods demanded temples, priests, and sacrifices. The modern god simply asks for your time, your attention, your family, your peace, and eventually your identity. The question isn’t whether modern society worships. The question is whether we’ve mistaken our servant for our master.
The Washington Post, one of our nation’s truly great newspapers, a national newspaper of record as far as the Federal Government is concerned, and the exposers of the Watergate coverup, has once again struck bigly with a major, major, yuge scoop. Another Pulitzer Prize is almost certainly headed their way. The hair-loss drug Trump took …
‘The Big Money Show’ panelists discuss the exodus from blue states as California lost its Fortune 500 lead to Texas.
Hamilton continues in Federalist 71 to explore the nature of the presidency, specifically limits on how long presidents may serve.
Three important things happened in 1953: Eisenhower began his peaceful and prosperous presidency, I was born, and the Keep America Beautiful campaign began.
The American Can Company and Owens-Illinois Glass Company got it rolling with the simple idea of not living like pigs who litter the streets, the parks and other things. Don’t be a litterbug! they said. And we stopped being litterbugs.
Well, most of us.