- Evert’s Electables
- How to Save the USA
- Football Player Exposes Diabolical Lies of Feminism
- Our Beloved Republic is in Danger of Becoming a Socialist Country
- A Layman's Awe in the Revelation of Jesus Christ
- Memorial Day - Including the Remembrance the USS Mount Hood
- American Lawfare in New York
- Timmons's Condescending Remarks of a Children's Christian Ministry
- There Is An Operational And Management Concern About Greenville Coroner’s Office
- Are SC State Legislators Spying on Its Citizens?
- Audacy Announces All-Star Lineup on 98.9 WORD
- Evert’s Electables Republican Primary - June 11, 2024
- County Council Candidate’s Shady Practices and Dark Money Ties
- Evert’s Electables - June 25th, 2024 Republican Primary Runoff
- 'Better Greenville' Dark Money Supports Both Republicans and Liberal Democrats
Life Legal Defense Foundation Secures Victory in Qui Tam Action Against Chemical Abortion Purveyor Danco
- By Life Legal Defense Foundation
NAPA, Calif. -- Life Legal achieved a significant victory in a qui tam action filed against Danco, the pharmaceutical company created specifically to import and distribute Mifeprex, the deadly chemical abortion pill. The lawsuit, brought under the False Claims Act, alleged that Danco knowingly and willfully failed to pay customs duties on the abortifacient drug, imported from China, resulting in significant financial losses to the U.S. government.
After a thorough investigation, Danco has admitted to its failure to pay the required Customs Duties on the imported pills, which it failed to label with the country of origin. As a result, Danco has agreed to reimburse the government $765,000 under the False Claims Act, which allows whistleblowers to bring lawsuits on behalf of the government and share in any recovery.
BJU Board of Trustees Elects Dr. Sam Dawson as Chairman
- By Randy Page - BJU
In a specially called meeting today, the Bob Jones University Board of Trustees voted to elect Dr. Sam Dawson, President and Owner of Jackson Dawson in Dearborn, Michigan, as its chairman. Dawson will begin immediately.
First elected to the BJU Board of Trustees in 2001, Dawson has served as a member of the Board of Trustees Executive Committee since 2021 and had been recently elected as secretary/treasurer for the board.
A Morning In April, 1775 - Part 2
- By W.H. Lamb
![embattled farmers king george III](/images/18-08/embattled-farmers-king-george-III.jpg)
“No King But King Jesus”!
“By the rude bridge that arched the flood,
their flag to April’s breeze unfurled.
Here once the embattled farmers stood
and fired the shot heard ‘round the world”
I’ve always loved Emerson’s famous “Concord Hymn”, the first stanza of which I’ve quoted above. It’s carved onto the famous “Minuteman Statue”, erected in 1875, that stands on the west side of The Old North Bridge in Concord, Massachusetts, on the spot where our American patriots fired volleys of musket fire at the British troops on the east side of the original bridge (the graves of two of the three British soldiers killed at this battle are buried by an old stone wall, near the bridge).
Regulatory Octopus Is Strangling Our Economy
- By Stephen Moore
Every schoolkid knows -- or used to know -- that the United States has three branches of government. At least that's what the textbooks say.
But really, we have four branches of government.
That's because Congress -- the legislative branch -- has for decades delegated lawmaking authority to the unconstitutional fourth branch of the U.S. government: independent regulatory agencies. By some estimates, there are more than 300 of these agencies sticking their nose into every aspect of American life and business, from what kind of car you can buy to the temperature setting on your thermostat to what you can build on your own private property.
Faith Communities Unite in Prayer for Abused Children
- By Blue Sunday Child Abuse Prevention Initiative
HARLINGEN, Texas -- Blue Sunday Child Abuse Prevention Initiative, a non-profit organization dedicated to preventing child abuse and neglect, is calling on communities across the country to recognize the annual Blue Sunday Day of Prayer for Abused Children on April 30th.
Since 1994, Blue Sunday has been raising awareness about the devastating effects of child abuse and providing resources and support to those affected by it. The organization encourages churches and communities to hold a Blue Sunday time of prayer during their service, April 30th, to raise awareness about the issue and to support victims and their families.
The Fed Has More Than a 'Credibility' Problem
- By Veronique de Rugy
I have heard some people say that the Federal Reserve has a credibility problem. The agency missed the biggest inflation spike since the 1980s, was slow to start rolling back pandemic policies and failed to spot the risks that some banks, such as Silicon Valley Bank (SVB), were facing. Instead of instilling confidence and stability, the Fed's policy communication has at times been so unclear and confused that it has only served to exacerbate market volatility.
Credibility is a big enough problem, but unfortunately the Fed's issues go beyond that. The Fed as an institution, along with its policies, seem to be a main source of the economic instability America faces. In fact, David Stockman, Budget Director under President Ronald Reagan, calls the Fed "an SDI" -- a Systematically Dangerous Institution.
Peace Comes From Strength
- By Anne Schlafly
This week, the Russian parliament voted to toughen their laws on military conscription, because thousands of Russians have fled their country rather than be drafted for the war against Ukraine.
Russia needs more fighters on the front lines. The new law puts severe penalties on non-compliance, including the government preventing the draft dodgers from working, driving, owning property, getting a bank loan, or accessing social benefits.
Human Life International Hungary Marks April 18 Anniversary of Pro-Life Constitutional Protection of the Preborn
- By Human Life International
Dr. Imre Téglásy Leads Decades-Long Battle to Defeat Socialist Abortion Mindset to Save 50k Babies
FRONT ROYAL, Va. -- April 18 marks the anniversary of Hungary's constitutional protection of preborn children by parliament. Drafters and supporters called the country's new foundational document the Easter Constitution, as it was signed on Easter Monday 2011. It is a date known well by Dr. Imre Téglásy, Director of Human Life International Hungary. At its adoption by Hungary's parliament in 2011, the constitution established that "the life of the fetus shall be protected from the moment of conception." Téglásy explained that while this was a step in the right direction, it meant very little without any laws to support pro-life practices. A September 2022 passage of a Hungarian law that requires expectant mothers to hear their baby's heartbeat prior to obtaining an abortion is the only one of its kind in Europe. Even this "heartbeat law" did not shift societal attitudes in the traditionally Catholic country, and a similar initiative failed in neighboring Slovakia. Nonetheless, Téglásy and his Hungarian team are working hard to foster a culture of life in the eastern European nation.
Lawfulness of Biden Administration Cabinet in Question Upon Failure to Produce Oaths of Office
- By VaxxCHOICE
Disabled Rights Advocates, PLLCDRAdvocates.com
Ferguson Law, P.A.
WASHINGTON -- On April 12, 2023, Todd S. Callender, Esq. of Disabled Rights Advocates PLLC, and Kenneth W. Ferguson, Esq. of Ferguson Law, P.A., filed on Petition for Writ of Quo Warranto, on behalf of Petitioner, Lisa McGee, to the US Attorney in the District of Columbia, requesting: 1) true, correct and non-defective required affidavits of Oaths of Office for the appointed and elected cabinet members of the Biden Administration; or the immediate removal of all named parties for failure to abide their this statutory requirement; and 3) if removed, then to void all their official acts ab initio.
Bob Jones University Students Awarded SCICU Research Grants
- By Randy Page - BJU
Several Bob Jones University students—Vivian Smith, Becca Gomes and Emily Stark—were recently awarded a Student/Faculty Research Grant from South Carolina Independent Colleges and Universities (SCICU).
Vivian Smith, a freshman kinesiology major, will be working with Dr. Stephen Chen on a study examining the “Relationship of Physical Activity and Sleep on Mental Health Among College Students.” She will receive $3,270 to conduct the study.
The Only Way Out Is Through
- By Josh Hammer
In 2017, my friend Rod Dreher published his popular book, "The Benedict Option: A Strategy for Christians in a Post-Christian Nation." Dreher's basic prescription, already intimately familiar to Orthodox Jews, is a localist focus on the cohesive formation of tight-knit, virtuous, religious communities as the best way of enduring the cultural onslaught of progressivism and secularism.
ESG Battles Heating Up Over State Pension Plan
- By Rick Brundrett - The Nerve
As S.C. lawmakers move closer to banning liberal ESG factors in state pension plan investments, the commission overseeing those funds is reducing at least one global management firm’s control over shareholder votes that come with the billions of public retirement dollars flowing to companies.
But some conservatives are skeptical of the commission’s latest actions.
Michael Hitchcock, the S.C. Retirement System Investment Commission’s (RSIC) chief executive officer, recently told The Nerve that in “response to the criticism over ESG” (environmental, social and governance) policies, New York-based BlackRock Inc., which as of last fiscal year managed more than $10 billion in state pension investments, developed a “Voter’s Choice Program” that will allow the commission to direct how its shareholder proxy votes will be cast “as if we owned the shares directly.”
Shaming Students into Silence
- By Capitol Resource Institute
WARNING: Forced silence coming to a school near you on April 14, 2023
SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- Friday, April 14th, is the Day of Silence, sponsored by the Gay, Lesbian, & Straight Education Network (GLSEN). Each year, GLSEN promotes this event nationwide and the extreme Left once again uses our schools to push their agenda.
GLSEN, the Gay, Lesbian, and Straight Education Network, is rallying the troops for their Day of Silence. And by troops we mean, students in schools. And no, don't expect them to ask your permission. For some reason schools feel the need to bow to GLSEN and allow the Day of Silence to take place on campuses all across the US without informing parents.
WHO Vies for Global Dominance
- By Eagle Forum
Sovereignty Coalition Upholds U.S. Independence Against WHO
Over 246 years ago, our founding fathers declared the American colonies sovereign by signing the Declaration of Independence. The ideals of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness were central to our national identity. The founders put their lives on the line to ensure that generations to come would have the freedom of self-government. However, those fundamental freedoms have been under attack since our nation’s founding from various nations, ideologies and international organizations. And as we have seen in recent years, the problem is only getting worse.
Over 32,000 Fewer Abortions Occurred as a Result of Dobbs, Report Finds
- By Dan Hart - The Washington Stand
A new report released Tuesday revealed that in the six months following the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision that overturned Roe v. Wade, over 32,000 fewer abortions were carried out in the U.S. compared to the average monthly number that occurred before Dobbs. While pro-life advocates are praising the news as compelling proof that pro-life state laws passed in the wake of Dobbs are saving lives, medical experts are also expressing concern that the decrease in surgical abortions is leading to an increase in dangerous chemical abortions.
Congress Considering RESTRICT Act to Expand Federal Power
- By Peter Rykowski - The New American
Members of Congress are seeking to enact a bill that — despite ostensibly being just a “TikTok ban” — would give new, tyrannical powers to the federal government.
S. 686, titled the “Restricting the Emergence of Security Threats that Risk Information and Communications Technology (RESTRICT) Act,” is sponsored by Senator Mark Warner (D-Va.) and is cosponsored by 25 other senators, both Republicans and Democrats.
S. 686 is being sold to the American people as merely a “TikTok ban.” However, this bill would do far more than just that — in reality, it would amount to a second “PATRIOT Act.”
Richey Returning to Tigerville to Deliver Commencement Address
- By Billy Cannada - NGU
North Greenville University graduate Bob Richey, whose Furman Paladins claimed the national spotlight by advancing to the second round of the 2023 NCAA Division I Basketball Championship Tournament, will deliver the Address at NGU’s Spring Commencement Exercises on May 5 at Younts Stadium in Tigerville.
Radioisotopes and the Age of the Earth
- By Charles Creager, Jr.
Radiometric dating is the best argument there is for an old Earth. In fact, dating methods based on long lived radioactive elements has been the toughest area for young earth creationists to deal with. This is because at first glance it seemed to prove that the Earth is billions of years old. In fact, it has then more to persuade people of the evolutionary view of earth history than anything else that exists. On the surface it may seem almost ironclad but studies involving healing diffusion rates in zircon crystals have shown a fundamental flaw in the assumptions behind radiometric dating.
Distinguished Scholar and Preeminent Expert on Black Confederates Passes March 11, 2023
- By Gene Kizer, Jr., Charleston Athenaeum Press
He was a warm, extremely witty, engaging speaker
![Professor Edward C Smith](/images/18-08/Professor-Edward-C-Smith.jpg)
I was deeply saddened to hear of the passing of Professor Edward C. Smith of Washington, D.C. in March. He was a beloved friend of many in the Sons of Confederate Veterans and when he spoke at the SCV National Reunion in Lexington, Kentucky August 12, 1993, he was introduced with thunderous applause as "Professor Ed Smith, black Confederate."
He taught at American University for 45 years becoming the first tenured African-American professor at AU, and he co-founded American University's Civil War Institute.
At the 1993 Reunion, Professor Smith said that blacks fought enthusiastically for the South in the War Between the States for the same reason they fought for the Colonists in the Revolutionary War, which he called "the first Confederacy." It was about defending home and family, same as for whites. Remember, Crispus Attucks was the first man killed in the American Revolution and he was of African and Indian descent.
Google's Gmail Has Been Blocking Times Examiner Emails
- By Press Release
It was reported last year that Google was blocking Conservative emails. It became so noticeable that the Republican National Committee had filed a lawsuit against Google, alleging the company has been suppressing its email solicitations ahead of the midterm elections last November — an allegation Google denies — an obvious attempt to affect the elections.
We have noticed that since last April 2022, many of our Gmail recipients were not getting our newsletter. Our Online TE Newsletter was not even reaching our recipients' spam/junk folders, let alone their inboxes. So they had no choice to either accept or reject our newsletter. Google assumes that responsibility itself. In all our Newsletter emails we have an unsubscribe link that we honor and will accept when requested.
Abortion Pill Rulings Could Send FDA Approval to the Supreme Court
- By Joy Stockbauer - The Washington Stand
Friday afternoon, a U.S. district court judge in Texas issued a long-awaited ruling in the case Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine v. U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The judge decided in favor of the plaintiff, agreeing that the FDA’s approval of the chemical abortion drug regimen was politicized and bypassed safety concerns in the rush to put abortion drugs on the U.S. market. The judge gave the federal government one week to file an appeal before the ruling would go into effect, revoking FDA approval of the chemical abortion regimen and removing it from the market.
Muslims Turning the Tide in the School Culture Wars
- By Betsy McCaughey
In a slap to Muslim girls at Stuyvesant High School, the school is cancelling single-sex swim lessons, even though swim instruction is required to graduate. That forces the girls to choose between preserving their modesty and getting a diploma.
Count on Muslim families to fight back and likely prevail. Nationwide, Muslims are taking up the battle in schools to protect traditional religious values, including modesty.
Move over, Roman Catholics, evangelical Christians and conservative Jews. Reinforcements have arrived, and they're turning the tide.
BJU Division of Music Receives $1M Gift to Create Endowment
- By Randy Page - BJU
The Bob Jones University Division of Music announced today a $1 million gift to begin and fund the Robert O. Jones and Mary B. Jones Scholarship Fund. This endowed fund will support music scholarships for students studying music at BJU.
“We are so grateful for the generosity of friends who share our vision for preparing Christian musicians for careers in the ministry and marketplace,” said Dr. Michael Moore, chair of the BJU Division of Music. “This is truly a transformative gift that will make an impact now and for generations of students to come.”
Biden Regulation Could Deny Christians, Conservatives Government Employment: Critics
- By Ben Johnson - The Washington Stand
The Biden administration has proposed new federal guidelines that would politicize the civil service and potentially bar Christians and others who hold disfavored opinions from government employment. Critics say the president’s proposal essentially states, “Conservatives need not apply.”
Current federal law deems an applicant “unsuitable” for federal employment if the applicant engages in “[k]nowing and willful engagement in acts or activities designed to overthrow the U.S. [g]overnment by force.” (Emphasis added.) But the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) proposal would strike the words “by force with a collection of provisions that are broad, ill-defined, and over-inclusive,” said a comment offered by Family Research Council. “We urge the OPM to withdraw the proposed rule changes.”
A Second Look at the Bucha Massacre
- By Mike Scruggs
Skepticism about the Ukrainian-NATO Narrative
![A Second Look at the Bucha Massacre](/images/18-08/A-Second-Look-at-the-Bucha-Massacre.jpg)
Orthodox Church in Bucha, Ukraine
On April 11, 2022, I published an article in the online Times Examiner, entitled Behind the Bucha Massacre. I believe I got some important things right, but I was probably wrong on other important issues and conclusions about its magnitude and who was most likely responsible.
Bucha is a small city of 37,000 about 15 miles northwest of the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv, bordering the Hostomel (Antonov) Airport. Shortly after the invasion of Russian forces into Ukraine on February 24, 2022, Bucha was captured by Russian forces on March 12 and recaptured by the Ukrainian Army on March 31.
Christian Author Calls for a Congressional Investigation into Possible Death Protocols at U.S. Hospitals
- By Flood Water Productions
BOLIVAR, Mo. -- "My heart is breaking for somebody who didn't get to be a part of the medical decision-making for her husband. This should not be happening in America!" said registered nurse Priscilla Romans in an emotional video appeal for prayer. Romans, founder of the patient advocacy agency Graith Care, left mainstream hospital practice after becoming disillusioned with the system and witnessing the loss of patient rights. The wife, Romans mentions, is just one of many clients across the U.S. represented by the advocacy service.
"They removed the ventilator without (the wife's) consent," added Romans. "They're giving IV fentanyl medication that she asked not to give. The nurse proceeded to give it because the doctor told her to. I am heartbroken right now because I don't know if he is going to survive this. Because they are clearly giving IV medication to hasten his death," said Romans.
Hating Christianity — and Attacking Believers — Becoming More Acceptable
- By Selwyn Duke - The New American
“I expect to die in bed, my successor will die in prison, and his successor will die a martyr in the public square,” said then-archbishop of Chicago Francis George in 2010. Whether his successor, Archbishop Blase Cupich, 74, will die in prison may depend on whether he’s blessed (cursed?) with longevity. What’s for certain, however, is that 13 years after George’s statement, hatred of Christianity and attacks on its adherents have increased. So has tolerance for these dark phenomena and, sometimes, even tacit endorsement of them.
A Morning In April, 1775 - Part 1
- By W.H. Lamb
Lexington’s Brave Parson
![A Morning In April 1775](/images/18-08/A-Morning-In-April-1775.jpg)
Note: A version of both parts of this article appeared in the Times Examiner about four years ago. I wrote them at that time so that we who are the descendants of determined and stalwart patriots would remember our history and those who made it, and would appreciate their sacrifices. Today I republish them, not so much that we merely remember our patriot ancestors’ determination, but that we might emulate their example in all ways necessary.
-------------------------
Throughout much of the night of April 18, 1775, the tired man rode his lathered “verygood horse” along the muddy road that led past the small settlements and homesteads belonging to the people of his colony. Mud and road grime spattered both man and horse, but both were concerned only with the completion of the night’s dangerous work—the horse to find rest and food, and the man to warn his fellow colonists of the extreme danger swiftly closing in on them. His mount felt the urgency of its rider—some type of calamity was imminent, it realized as it gathered its last reserves of strength. The man was shouting strange words as he stopped briefly at desolate lone homes, or hurried through the silent dark streets of the few small groupings of homes in his path—words that sounded like, “To arms, to arms—the regulars are out!”
Diplomas Have Lost Luster
- By Anne Schlafly
For decades, the price of tuition at most colleges rose faster than the rate of inflation. Administrations bloated, lots of new buildings were erected, and professors taught fewer classes. University employees thought the gravy train would never end, because high school students were taught that a college degree was a necessity for life success.
- Public Advocate is with Freedom Riders -- Joe Biden is Today's Ku Klux Klan
- Nullify The WHO in South Carolina
- Female Athletes’ Rights Ignored
- Dems Learning from Putin
- The Left Has Killed Our Great Cities
- The Times Examiner Endorses Common Sense for GCRP
- Happy Resurrection Day!
- Freedom Caucus Forum Attracts Hundreds
- Not Just Nashville: Attacks Against Churches Nearly Tripled in 2023, Report Finds
- The School Choice Fraud Accountability Myth
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