"Happy birthday, Karl Marx," is what the president of the European Commission is slated to, in effect, say on May 5, the occasion of the radical philosopher's 200th birthday.
Steve Byas at New American
"Happy birthday, Karl Marx," is what the president of the European Commission is slated to, in effect, say on May 5, the occasion of the radical philosopher's 200th birthday.
The late U.S. Senator Edward Kennedy drove off a bridge, and a girl in his car died. Though he was never held accountable, the facts say that Kennedy clout let a guilty man go free.
It's clearly evident that the globalists who run the CFR and its publication Foreign Affairs are antagonistic to President Trump.
Not surprisingly, there have been diverse opinions about the movie Chappaquiddick, just as there have been about the episode it dramatizes.
Would Americans and Europeans allow white South Africans to seek asylum, or would they be stymied by charges of racism?
Did former CIA Director John Brennan — a man who voted for a communist in a presidential election because he thought America needed change — travel to Russia as part of the Trump-Russia collusion story creation?
The Republican leader in the Senate — Mitch McConnell — seems more concerned with pleasing the Democrats than his fellow Republicans.
Twenty-five years ago today, the U.S. government used chemical weapons on its own people — but no foreign nations retaliated against America.
"Trust but verify," President Reagan used to say of the Soviets. History indicates that Americans need to apply that same principle to our own government.
Judge Moore and accuser Leigh Corfman had exchanged competing defamation lawsuits over her accusations, which probably cost Moore a seat in the U.S. Senate from Alabama.
Three major events have etched forever in Americans' collective memory the date of April 19.
New Jersey's Senator Cory Booker is following the path set by Vermont's Bernie Sanders: Bible-believing Christians should be rejected for government service.
The vote for a balanced budget amendment to the Constitution failed, but it was just political theater anyway.
Speaker of the House Paul Ryan's record, as he begins his countdown to retirement, is lackluster to say the least. Will his successor be any better?
There is more than meets the eye to the teacher strike in Oklahoma; it is less about fair pay than it is about accomplishing a Democrat party wish list.
What would happen if a pro-life governor defied the Supreme Court's Roe v. Wade decision? Is a Supreme Court ruling really “the law of the land?”
There is more than meets the eye to the teacher strike in Oklahoma; it is less about fair pay than it is about accomplishing a Democrat party wish list.
Nebraska's senators defeat yet another Con-Con effort, thanks to the work of their informed constituents.
If you are hoping to see a credible cinematic portrayal of a corrupt U.S. senator, intoxicated with power, privilege, and prestige, who leaves a girl to die and then swings into damage-control mode to rescue his own political career, this movie will not disappoint.
A new poll indicates that a majority of Amercans question the media's honesty in reporting, even to the point that they believe much of the news isn't even real.
Since England banned handguns in 1997, the murder rate has gone up 50 percent. Especially troublesome is a surge in the number of murderers using knives.
Congressman Massie of Kentucky blames House Republican leadership for the passage of the monstrous Omnibus spending bill, but he also blames the entire Republican caucus for voting for such leadership as Paul Ryan. He argues that Republicans need to quit voting for members of Congress that choose such leadership.
The resurrection of Jesus Christ is the principal cause of the spread of the Christian faith. But is it history?