The American Flag: ‘A Threat’?

It’s the very symbol of patriotism — Old Glory, as William Driver, a 19th-century American sea captain, nicknamed it. But even as we close in on Independence Day, more and more people across the country are calling the American flag a threat and inappropriate home garnishing. A week ago, the landlord of a Texas man […]

 

Blocking Faith, Family And Freedom Websites

As most kids are screaming “School’s out for summer,” 18-year-old high-school student Andrew Lampart is still trying to figure out why his school’s Internet service blocked him from gathering conservative facts for his side of the argument on his school debate team. Andrew told Fox News, “I knew it was important to get facts for […]

 




Veterans, PTSD and US Government Abandonment

Combat veteran Kryn Miner, 44, served 11 deployments in seven years. He suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder and a traumatic brain injury after a bomb blast in Afghanistan in 2010 threw him into a wall. It was one of 19 blasts he endured over two decades of service to his country. On April 29, Kryn […]

 

The White House’s Cover-up of Benghazi

The Obama administration continues to suppress documents that could finally explain why U.S. officials lied to the world that the September 2012 attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya, occurred as a protest over an American-made anti-Muslim video. And the families and friends of the four brave Americans murdered there continue to suffer without […]

 

My Granny’s Advice for America (Part 2)

A year ago, I wrote a two-part series titled “My Mom’s Advice for America.” There’s no better time than now — between my mother’s 93rd birthday (May 4) and Mother’s Day (May 11) — to talk about her mother’s advice, which my mother recorded in her autobiography, “Acts of Kindness: My Story.”  Last week, I […]

 

My Granny’s Advice for America (Part 1)

A year ago, I wrote a two-part series titled “My Mom’s Advice for America.” Those columns became two of my most read pieces. With both my mother’s 93rd birthday (May 4) and Mother’s Day (May 11) on the horizon, I decided to write a two-part series this year on her mother’s advice for America. Grandmother […]

 

Government-Forced Retirement at 57?

These words of Thomas Jefferson’s are etched under the dome of the Jefferson Memorial in Washington: “I have sworn upon the altar of God eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man.” Imagine if Jefferson had finished that thought with these words: “Unless, of course, you’re 57 years old and a […]

 

3 Myths About Thomas Jefferson

This week holds some critical dates. April 15 haunts most Americans as a tax deadline. April 18 and 20 this year commemorate the pinnacle in Holy Week — Good Friday and Easter. But April 13 still stands as an important day that eludes most Americans. It’s the birthday of Thomas Jefferson. We patriots love to […]

 

3 Lessons Our Politicians Should Learn From Fort Hood

As with all Americans, my wife, Gena, and I had our hearts broken again last Wednesday as we heard about another killing spree at Fort Hood, Texas, in which four people died and 16 more were injured at the U.S. Army’s largest active-duty installation. Chelsea Schilling, WorldNetDaily’s commentator editor and journalist extraordinaire, reported shortly after […]

 


Obamacare’s Oh-bummers for Americans

With Obamacare’s March 31 sign-up deadline and subsequent penalties looming over the heads of young and old Americans, citizens are wondering more than ever — and with good reason, I might add — whether Washington has dished out another bill of bad goods. And here are a few more solid reasons our skepticism about socialist […]

 

Living Beyond Limits

At 15 years of age, Amy Purdy took up snowboarding and quickly advanced in the sport she came to love and master. At 19, Amy contracted meningococcal meningitis. She had less than a 2 percent chance of living. Amy miraculously survived, but not without the life-altering loss of her spleen, her kidneys, the hearing in […]

 





What Is Your ‘Back 16 Japan’?

(Editor’s note: Chuck has postponed the second part of his series “Alcohol vs. Marijuana” until after the Winter Olympics so he can address some moments of inspiration from the games.) American snowboarder Sage Kotsenburg, a native of Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, made the decision of his life in Olympic competition over the weekend, and it paid […]

 


Alcohol vs. Marijuana (Part 1)

I understand the arguments for the legalization of marijuana: It can generate tax revenue. It can reduce illegal supply and demand. It can strip power from cartels and lessen crime across and at our borders. And it isn’t so dangerous as other illegal drugs or alcohol. President Barack Obama even claimed one of those arguments […]

 

Obama Bullying Nuns (Part 3)

With the 41st anniversary of Roe v. Wade this week, it’s time to blow the whistle on the greatest advocate of abortion in the modern age: President Barack Obama. To date, it is still unknown when U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor will rule on whether or not Obama and Obamacare will force a group […]

 

Obama Bullying Nuns (Part 2)

Last week, I pointed out how PolitiFact crowned the promoter in chief’s sound bite for Obamacare the “Lie of the Year” for 2013: “If you like your health care plan, you can keep it.” I also made a prediction that among his top 10 falsehood contenders for 2014 will be a reversal of what he […]

 

Obama Bullying Nuns (Part 1)

PolitiFact has crowned the promoter in chief’s sound bite for Obamacare the “Lie of the Year” for 2013: “If you like your health care plan, you can keep it.” And let me make a prediction that among his top 10 falsehood contenders for 2014 will be a reversal of what he emphatically stated back on […]

 

The Case For Christmas (Part 2)

Last week, I cited “The Case for Christmas,” an excellent little book that is full of evidence of the reason in the reason for the season, by Lee Strobel, an investigative journalist at the Chicago Tribune who was educated at Yale Law School and was once an atheist. I gave snapshots from scholars he interviewed […]

 

The Case For Christmas (Part 1)

Lee Strobel earned a Master of Studies in Law degree from Yale Law School, became the award-winning legal editor of the Chicago Tribune and was a spiritual skeptic until 1981. I recently read his short 91-page booklet titled “The Case for Christmas,” in which he viewed the sacred holiday as an investigative journalist and interviewed […]