Sanctions, Syria, and the Struggle Between Compassion and Caution

President Trump’s decision to lift U.S. sanctions on Syria has lit up the headlines and kicked off some serious coffee-table debates. It’s not just a policy shift—it’s a geopolitical curveball. Syria, once the epicenter of chaos and terrorism, is now slowly crawling toward the light of recovery, and President Trump believes it's time to extend…

Justice, Race, and Refuge: President Trump’s South African Refugee Policy

President Trump’s recent move to grant expedited refugee status to 59 white South Africans—mostly Afrikaners—has ignited a fierce debate across both sides of the Atlantic. Citing racial discrimination, violence, and the threat of land expropriation, President Trump argues that these individuals are fleeing state-backed persecution. The South African government vehemently denies any racial targeting, accusing…

Wings of Diplomacy or a Trojan Horse?

When President Trump confirmed his administration’s intent to accept a luxury Boeing 747-8 from the Qatari royal family to temporarily serve as Air Force One, it was bound to spark a lively debate. The aircraft, reportedly worth around $400 million, was initially built for Qatar’s ruler but never used. Now, it's being offered to the…

Compassion and Cost: Navigating Medicaid Reform

Early this morning, after a grueling overnight session, the House Energy and Commerce Committee advanced a critical piece of the GOP’s broader tax legislation: a health care provision that includes sweeping reforms to Medicaid. The plan proposes to slash federal Medicaid spending by hundreds of billions of dollars over the next decade—part of a larger…

The Constitution, the Courts, and the Call for a Leaner Government

The American government has long been bloated beyond reason—so when President Trump launched an executive order aimed at trimming the fat by laying off tens of thousands of federal employees and even eliminating some agencies altogether, many conservatives gave a hearty cheer. But not everyone was thrilled. On May 9, 2025, U.S. District Judge Susan…

Liberty, Law, and Loyalty: The Case of Rumeysa Ozturk

On March 25, 2025, federal agents descended on Somerville, Massachusetts, and arrested Rumeysa Ozturk, a Turkish Ph.D. student at Tufts University. The agents, dressed in masks and black uniforms, detained her without any public warning. The reason? Her student visa had been revoked by the U.S. government, reportedly in response to a pro-Palestinian op-ed she…

David Souter: A Conservative Cautionary Tale on the Supreme Court

When Americans think of Supreme Court justices, they often picture towering legal minds who leave a clear, principled mark on the nation's laws. But sometimes, a justice’s legacy serves more as a cautionary tale than a beacon. Such is the case with David Souter, who recently passed away and left behind a complex judicial record…

Germany’s AfD Under Fire: Extremism or Censorship?

Germany’s domestic intelligence agency, the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (Bundesamt für Verfassungsschutz, or BfV), recently dropped a political hammer on the Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) by officially designating the entire party as a “confirmed right-wing extremist” group. This dramatic move now allows German authorities to increase surveillance on the AfD—phone tapping,…

The Senate’s Crypto Crossroads—Regulation, Responsibility, and Righteousness in the Digital Age

In a moment that could have paved the way for a new era of financial clarity, the U.S. Senate failed to advance what would have been the nation’s first major cryptocurrency legislation. The bill, aimed specifically at regulating stablecoins—those dollar-pegged digital assets promising to bridge the gap between traditional finance and blockchain technology—was shelved after…