Category: Culture
Judge Blocks Air Force’s Efforts to Discharge Christian Officer with Religious Objection to COVID-19 Vaccines
Our nation’s military is charged with defending the Constitution and the freedoms it guarantees to all American citizens. When one of those citizens is also...
Read MoreDr. King’s “Blueprint Speech” Provides 3 Principles for a Better Life
Do you have goals and a plan in place to pursue them? That was pretty much what the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., asked...
Read MoreUSA Olympic Mom Wins Silver Medal in Bobsled Event and Dedicates Win to Her Special Needs Infant Son
Four-time Team USA Olympian Elana Meyers Taylor just won her fourth Olympic medal in bobsledding – her first since becoming a mother and dedicated her...
Read MoreRams Wide Receiver Wins Super Bowl and Welcomes Newborn Son
Sunday night, the Los Angeles Rams wide receiver Van Jefferson went to bed with much more than a Super Bowl win; he also welcomed a...
Read More‘Critical Social Justice’ in Education – If it Can Happen in Idaho, It Can Happen Anywhere
A recent report shows how much “Critical Social Justice” (CSJ) ideology has been “written into the DNA of Idaho’s public education system.” The report explains...
Read MoreVictory for Students and Parental Rights as Virginia Legislature Passes School Mask Opt-Out Law
Virginia has arguably been ground zero over the past couple years for parents objecting to out-of-control school districts issuing objectionable policies on any number of...
Read MoreA Great Love Story
What makes a great love story? A man and woman who love each other. Choosing devotion to one another day after day, year after year,...
Read MoreOn His 213th Birthday, Abraham Lincoln Still Has a Relevant Message for Today’s Americans
It’s been 213 years since the birth of Abraham Lincoln in rural Kentucky on February 12, 1809 – and 157 years since an assassin’s bullet...
Read MoreDHS Threat Advisory Targets ‘False or Misleading Narratives’ that ‘Undermine Trust in U.S. Government Institutions’
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) issued a “National Terrorism Advisory System Bulletin” that said, The United States remains in a heightened threat environment fueled...
Read MoreCelebrating Giants Like Justice Clarence Thomas During Black History Month
Nearly halfway into Black History Month, an ideal time to celebrate the significant and consequential contributions of African-Americans, I’ve yet to see mainstream media shine...
Read MoreInflation Increases to 7.5% in January, a 40-Year High. Here’s How Families Can Respond.
If you’ve felt a substantial pinch in your wallet over the past few months, you’re not imagining things. Inflation surged to 7.5% in January, the...
Read MoreTruck Drivers Move America – In More Ways Than One
My dad with his truck and his two oldest grandsons.
Read More9 Things Families Can Do Instead of Watching the Super Bowl Halftime Show
Sunday’s Super Bowl LVI Halftime Show is expected to feature Dr. Dre, Snoop Dog, Kendrick Lamar, Mary J Blige and Eminem – an eclectic mix...
Read MoreStates Where It’s Safest To Be a Girl Athlete
South Dakota became the first state this year – and the tenth across the country – to pass legislation making it safe to be a...
Read MoreCanadian Courts Deny Visitation Rights to Unvaccinated Parents
Two recent cases arising from divorce and custody arrangements in Canada highlight the extreme consequences of vaccination mandates for our neighbors to the north. In...
Read MoreIf You’re Eligible, Consider Giving Blood to Help Solve the Blood Shortage Crisis
The Red Cross is warning of “life or death consequences” of a decreasing national blood supply – yet another casualty of the COVID-19 pandemic, which...
Read More5 Things a Former Winter Olympian’s Brain Tumor Can Teach Us About Life
Horatio Alger couldn’t have scripted it any better. On February 13, 1980, with a stiff cold breeze blowing off Lake Placid’s Whiteface Mountain, twenty-one-year-old figure...
Read MoreBLM at School Week – Indoctrinating and Training Radical Activist Children
We’re smack in the middle of “Black Lives Matter at School Week of Action,” which runs Monday, January 31 to Friday, February 4. The week...
Read MoreDid COVID Lockdowns Work? ‘Marginal at Best’ Conclude Researchers at Johns Hopkins
When the COVID-19 pandemic began spreading across the globe in 2020, it caused near-panic as doctors and governments struggled to understand and control it. Deaths...
Read MorePfizer Requests FDA Approve COVID-19 Vaccine for Infants, Young Children
Pfizer has requested the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approve its COVID-19 vaccine for use in children as young as six months old. The...
Read More28 Years Later, Mother Teresa’s Plea to President Clinton Takes on Renewed Significance
The 70th National Prayer Breakfast, scheduled for Thursday inside the U.S. Capitol Visitor Center Auditorium, will look different this year. Unlike in the past, only...
Read MoreCooper Kupp Helps the Rams Win NFC Championship. But Faith and Family are His Real Wins.
Any fan of pro football was glued to their television on Sunday, watching the Los Angeles Rams clinch a spot to Superbowl LVI with a...
Read MoreArizona Legislation Would Ensure Parental Rights in Their Children’s Education and Health Care
The Center for Arizona Policy (CAP) has reported on some disturbing incidents of overreach in education and health care, as teachers, school counselors and health...
Read MoreLiberalism is like Bill Murray’s ‘Groundhog Day’ – Only Without the Laughs
If it’s 6:00 A.M. on February 2nd inside Phil Connors’ room on the second floor of the 1895 Queen Anne “Cherry Street Inn” in downtown Punxsutawney,...
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