- American Legion Hears about US and China Relations
- Timmons Expresses Support for DEI’s Doppelganger for Hiring Practices in Washington
- Local Republican Leaders Seeking Advice from Democrats
- The Chairman of the Greenville County Republican Party & Co. Vs Republican Party Priorities
- A Puppet Master Entangles His Republican Puppets in Greenville County GOP
- Dale Arterburn for Greenville County Coroner
- Why is Greenville County Council Pickpocketing Us Again?
- Evert’s Electables - GOP Presidential Preference Primary - February 24, 2024
- The 1861 Cherokee Declaration of Independence
- America’s Existential Immigration Crisis
- Yemen and the Houthi Rebels
- Danger: The Proposed South Carolina "Health Czar" Legislation will be Hazardous to Your FREEDOM!
- Adam Morgan Pledges to Support Term Limits on Congress
- Advertising Rates and Specifications
- The Tucker Carlson Interview of Russian President Vladimir Putin
Local Columnists
Union Army Total War Policy in Missouri
- By Mike Scruggs
The Palmyra Massacre 1862
Following the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854—which allowed Kansas to allow or reject the institution of slavery by popular sovereignty—a destructive and sometimes bloody border war between Kansas and Missouri partisans raged for six years. The grizzly Manson-style murder of five settlers from Missouri in Pottawatomie, Kansas, in 1856, by the radical abolitionist, John Brown, helped fuel a growing flame of regional distrust. Brown was later hanged in 1859 after an unsuccessful attempt to capture the U.S. arsenal in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia. He had planned to start a bloody slave insurrection. The fact that Brown was praised in many of the pulpits, newspapers, and political debates in New England greatly alarmed the South. This added more fuel to the already smoldering issues of States Rights and enormous, unfair tariffs.
- Hits: 2817
Liberty Is Always At Risk
- By W.H. Lamb
All Americans should be familiar with the immortal words that did much to ignite the American Revolution back in 1775. Surprisingly, some Americans, victims of modernist/progressive “unteaching” of history, have no clue as to who said, “…Give me liberty or give me death”, and the circumstances leading to one of the most famous speeches of American history, nor when it was orated. Indeed, there are many Americans walking among us who have never heard of Patrick Henry, have barely heard of the American Revolution, haven’t a clue as to the years it was fought, or the country our Revolutionary patriots struggled against to attain their liberty. How very sad! How frightening! To forget or ignore the past is to condemn the future! If history teaches anything, it teaches that truth.
- Hits: 3063
Hunger: the Anti-Drama
- By Ben Graydon
Dog Whisperer Cesar Milan says that, if you’re hungry, you won’t have drama in your life. Cesar, who understands dogs so well that he also understands people, speaking about people in third world countries where they don’t spend food money on dog leashes, was pointing out that when you are totally focused on finding your next bit of food in order to survive, your life will not look like a soap opera. You don’t have the time or energy for it.
- Hits: 3488
Our Political Circus
- By Ray Simmons
I have written in several places about the political circus I am observing. When Donald Trump was elected I thought we might find a way back to sanity. Some few have, but factors beyond Trump’s reach are working to remove him from Office and undo the elements of common sense he put in motion. If most Americans will see to his reelection next year a slim possibility to preserve our nation will remain.
- Hits: 2339
Corn Chip Christianity
- By Ben Graydon
Pop open a bag, grab a handful, and munch. They’re salty, savory, and snack-worthy. But there’s nothing to them – no nutrition, no satisfaction, and no filling.
Many Christians have the same sort of spiritual life. They pop into a church on Sunday, observe a performance, get some emotional stirring and hear a good word or two, but then go out the door the same way (internally) they came in. That is the way it is designed to … by “church leaders.” Because it sells and, in some shallow way, keeps the church relevant in the eyes of enough consumers to keep the doors to the church (a business) open.
- Hits: 2943
A Hedge of Allegiance
- By Tony Perkins - Family Research Council
Until recently, most people didn't know that a town called St. Louis Park, Minnesota even existed. And if you asked most residents, a vote against the Pledge of Allegiance isn't how they'd choose to be introduced. But thanks to five misguided council members, the suburb of Minneapolis is officially on the map. And not in a way anyone's proud of.
- Hits: 2607
Crushing Peoples, Truth, Values, and Freedom
- By Mike Scruggs
Statist Ideology and Total War Doctrine
In 1870, Union General Philip Sheridan was assigned as a guest of the King of Prussia to observe the Franco-Prussian War. At a dinner honoring Prussian Chancellor Otto von Bismarck, he shared some of his military experience and philosophy with Prussian Army officers:
“First, deal as hard blows to the enemy’s soldiers as possible, and then cause so much suffering to the inhabitants of the country that they will long for peace and press their government to make it…Nothing should be left to the people but eyes to lament the war.”
- Hits: 2467
- Is President Trump’s USMCA “Free Trade” Agreement The T.P.P. In Disguise?
- 'Real America' Inside the Beltway
- Are The Present SC College/Career Ready Standards Quality Standards?
- Total War on the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia
- Freedom’s Eternal Hymn—Thoughts for Independence Day, July 4, 2019
- The United States and Just War Doctrine
- Moving The Stones Is Dangerous
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