- Better Government and Better People: John C. Calhoun and the Most Powerful Cause of Moral Character
- SC’s Largest Multi-Candidate Primary Event Brings Republicans Across the Ballot Under One Roof
- The SC Freedom Caucus Becomes a Target in District 10
- The Greenville GOP’s Candidate Kiss of Death Strikes Again
- After “Political Spanking,” Ehlers Joins Hoard in Backing Joe Dill
- Greenville Grassroots 2026 Republican Voter Guide
- At First Monday, Timmons and Simpson Connect Washington Reform with South Carolina Soil
- Norman Picks Morgan for “Strong, Bold, Conservative Ticket”
- The Caspian Sea—Iranian Backdoor to Russia
- Reddy and Wilson Pile on Norman as 3rd Televised GOP Debate Turns Personal
- Joey Hudson Receives South Carolina’s Order of the Palmetto at Freedom Farm Fest
- Briefing on Persian Gulf and Red Sea Nations
- Finding Truth in a Blizzard of Propaganda
- Ranked Choice Voting: Reform or Recipe for Confusion?
- Briefing on Persian Gulf and Red Sea Nations
Syndicated Columnists
'But Gorsuch' Is Still Trump's Best Argument
- Details
- By Neil Patel
Attention readers: Neil Patel is off this week. Please enjoy the following column by David Harsanyi.
This week, the Supreme Court struck down a Montana constitutional provision barring religious schools from benefiting from the state's tax dollars. There are similar now-unconstitutional laws on the books across the nation -- many of them borne of anti-Catholic bigotry -- that subvert religious liberty and further empower government, rather than parents, to make educational choices for their kids. In most cases, those laws are now dead.
Is Antifa on the Trump Campaign Payroll?
- Details
- By Neil Patel
There is a fanatical and increasingly violent form of fascism growing on the streets of our country. Civil debate and free speech are out. Power on the streets is in. If that scares you, the fact that our country's political, corporate and media leaders seem to be OK with this mob violence should scare you even more.
The spark that ignited our current unrest was the brutal murder of George Floyd by police officer Derek Chauvin in Minneapolis, all caught on video. President Donald Trump, for all his skills, is unable to effectively lead at a time like this, especially on a sensitive issue like race. His talks have veered from awkward to unhelpful.
Welcome to America's Cultural Revolution
- Details
- By David Harsanyi
Attention readers: Neil Patel is off this week. Please enjoy the following column by David Harsanyi.
We're in the dawn of a high-tech, bloodless Cultural Revolution, one that relies on intimidation, public shaming and economic ruin to dictate what words and ideas are permissible in the public square.
"Words are violence" has always been an illiberal notion meant to stifle speech and open discourse. Popularized by a generation of coddled and brittle college students, it now guides policy on editorial pages at newspapers such as the Philadelphia Inquirer, The New York Times and most major news outlets.
The First Steps to Fixing America
- Details
- By Neil Patel
We just had riots from coast to coast. Downtown Seattle is currently a lawless zone under the control of anarchists. It may be time to start asking what's going on in our country. People are not happy. The national unrest started with the brutal killing of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer, but it is not solely about police brutality or race. People on the left and on the right are unhappy about a host of issues. Maybe now that it has become this bad, we can stop pretending otherwise.
Time for Normal People to Take Back Our Country
- Details
- By Neil Patel
Our country is hurting. Culturally, as a society and how we relate to each other, we are in the midst of a steep drop, almost a free fall. Race is just one aspect; we are talking past one another, and we are less of a community than I ever recall. If you love this country, the question is how did this happen, and how can we turn it around.
Why Was Biden Spying on the Trump Team?
- Details
- By Neil Patel
We have now had time to digest the news of senior Obama political appointees -- including Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden -- spying on President Donald Trump's 2017 incoming national security advisor, Michael Flynn. It has been weeks since the news broke, but we have few answers as to what actually happened -- and very few questions have even been asked.
Who's to Blame: Trump or China?
- Details
- By Neil Patel
The big coronavirus debate is between blaming President Donald Trump and blaming China for the pandemic. The usual suspects are lined up on each side. To anybody who pauses to think for a second, it's clear the two options are not mutually exclusive. But that's still how the debate is playing out in the press.
- How We Get to the Bottom of the Obama White House's Domestic Spying
- Protect Americans With American Supplies
- The Legacy Media's Failing Biden Cover-Up
- Keeping Score: Coronavirus Heroes and Villains
- Either We Heal as a Country or We Are Going To Crumble
- Coronavirus Stage 1 Is Nearing an End. Does Anyone Know What Comes Next?
- Now Is Not the Time for Politics
Subcategories
Henry Lamb's Column

