My hometown of Flint Hill, Virginia, has been blessed with forests that make it ideal for a rustic lifestyle, which my wife and I enjoy. On walks with my dogs, I marvel at the poplar, red maple, oak, ...
On Tuesday, a landslide caused China’s newly built Hongqi Bridge “to fracture and collapse,” NBC reports, “sending large pieces of concrete far below in a cloud of dust.” There were no casualties but ...
Kim Davis’s request that the U.S. Supreme Court overturn Obergefell v. Hodges was, to put it mildly, a long shot. There was, it seems, perhaps a little bit of hope among those of us who subscribe to ...
Scott Galloway is nothing if not a brand. With the zeal of a televangelist and the charm of a keynote crusader, he markets himself as a savior for the stranded male — the messiah of masculine malaise.
California lawmakers increasingly complain about the past abuses of eminent domain — the government’s ability to take property by force provided it affords due process and pays just compensation, per ...
In recent days, the tech magnate has made headlines by distancing himself from the climate apocalypse fan club. Many analysts ...
World War I ended in Russia on March 3, 1918, with the signing of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk. The signatories included Germany, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, Turkey, and Lenin’s Bolshevik regime. Lenin ...
Bob Capano makes an earnest and considerate point in his recent essay, “Trump’s Right: Nuke the Filibuster,” that the Senate filibuster is paralyzing the government and “empowers the minority party to ...
In August, Washington Post columnist George Will told HBO host Bill Maher on “Real Time” that he wanted Zohran Mamdani to win ...
The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) once fancied itself the gold standard of journalism — the global voice of calm ...
This year, the number of Amish people in the United States passed the 400,000 mark, according to the Amish Studies Center at Elizabethtown College. The U.S. Amish population now totals 404,575, with ...
When Coleman Hughes first opened a Thomas Sowell book, he wasn’t searching for an ideology — he was searching for clarity. At 19, adrift after dropping out of Juilliard and mourning the loss of his ...
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