When Our Lawmakers Side with Terror Apologists
Maryland’s Shameful Three – When Our Lawmakers Side with Terror Apologists

By / June 10, 2025
This past week, the U.S. House of Representatives took up two powerful resolutions. They weren’t complicated. They didn’t contain legal trickery, obscure riders, or budget fights. They simply condemned antisemitism and denounced a terrorist attack that unfolded on American soil during a peaceful hostage rally in Boulder, Colorado.
The attacker? An Egyptian national on an overstayed visa, who shouted “Free Palestine” as he opened fire on Jewish Americans rallying in solidarity with the Israeli hostages still being held by Hamas.
In the wake of such a hate-fueled assault, the House responded with clarity — or at least, most of the House did.
Read moreLet’s not fear progress

Much has been said about President Donald Trump’s performance during his first 100 days in office, but what does the broader picture reveal? While opinions vary, one undeniable fact is that certain economic indicators have improved — such as a notable drop in egg prices, which had soared in previous years due to inflation and supply chain issues.
A Gen Z Reflection on D-Day, 81 Years Later

By / June 6, 2025
Eighty-one years ago today, over 150,000 Allied troops stormed the beaches of Normandy in what became the largest seaborne invasion in history. We call it D-Day now — June 6, 1944 — but for the men who lived it, it was just Tuesday. A Tuesday that altered the course of the 20th century and helped secure the freedoms so many of us now take for granted.
As a 17-year-old Gen Zer, I didn’t grow up with WWII veterans on every street like my grandparents did. Most have passed. Their stories now come secondhand — through movies, textbooks, grainy black-and-white photos, or the occasional Memorial Day speech. But for me, it’s more than history. It’s personal. My great-grandfather, Thomas Anderson, was a Navy machinist in the Pacific Theater. He didn’t storm Normandy, but his war was just as brutal — island-hopping in the searing heat, dodging enemy fire, fixing engines under pressure with lives on the line. He didn’t talk about it much. But when he did, it was never about medals or glory — it was about the guys beside him, the chaos, the sacrifice, the purpose.
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